AUTOPSY RESULT RELEASED IN KENEEKA JENKINS DEATH,7 THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT TEEN FOUND DEAD IN HOTEL FREEZER
This story has been updated to reflect new details in the Kenneka Jenkins case.
The mysterious death of Kenneka Jenkins, 19, who was
found dead in the freezer of a suburban hotel, has sparked national
outcry and questions about the circumstances surrounding her death.
The teenager left her home for a party Sept. 8, according to the Chicago Tribune.
After her mother, Tereasa Martin, demanded hotel staff search for her
daughter, Jenkins body was found in the hotel freezer of Crowne Plaza
Chicago O'Hare Hotel & Conference Center in Rosemont, Illinois.
Here is everything we know so far about the tragic death of Kenneka Jenkins.
1. Autopsy results released Friday determined that Kenneka Jenkins death was an accident.
Cook County medical examiner’s
office has determined the cause of Kenneka Jenkins’ death at the Crowne
Plaza Hotel on Sept. 10, the Chicago Tribune reported.The
19-year-old died from hypothermia due to exposure in the hotel’s walk-in
freezer, according to the results released Friday. The freezer Jenkins
was found in was capable of getting to a temperature of 8 degrees, the
medical examiner's office noted.
In addition to freezing exposure, alcohol intoxication and the
use of topiramate, a drug known for treating epilepsy and migraines were
“contributing factors.” Her family said Jenkins had not been prescribed
topiramate, but the level of the drug was within therapuetic range.
The office also found mucosal erosions, a type of lesion, that
indicated Jenkins had suffered from hypothermia and an abrasion on her
right ankle. The autopsy results showed her brain was swollen, but that
finding does not indicate a specific cause of death, according to the
autopsy.
Her blood alcohol level was 0.112, higher than the legal limit
of 0.08 for legally driving. The alcohol and the drug can enhance each
other, the office said.
Last month, Jenkins’ mother was convinced that the delay in
investigating her daughter’s death could have made a difference. It’s
not clear who found Jenkins or if there were any signs of trauma.
"If they had taken me seriously and checked right away, they
could have found my daughter much sooner and she might have been alive,"
Martin said.
2. Police believe Kenneka walked herself into the freezer where her
body was found the morning of Sept. 10. Rosemont police have rejected
calls for FBI to get involved with the Jenkins case.
Kenneka Jenkins was pronounced dead at 12:48 a.m. Sunday.
Police informed Martin and other family members after 1 a.m. Sunday,
that Kenneka’s body was found in a walk-in freezer at the Crowne Plaza,
according to the Tribune. Police told Martin that her daughter was
inebriated and likely stumbled into the freezer, which was not being
used to store food, on her own.
Rosemont police officials announced they would continue investigating Kenneka Jenkins death without support from the FBI.
During a weekend vigil for Jenkins, Martin and others called for the
FBI to open a federal investigation into what happened the night of
Jenkins death, according to Newsweek.
“This investigation has been and remains the utmost priority
for us,” said Chief Donald Stephens III. “Throughout this investigation
we have used any and all outside agencies necessary to complete a
thorough investigation and will continue to do so as needed.
On Sept. 15, Police released Crown Plaza hotel footage of Jenkins
apparently staggering through the hotel hallways, stumbling into a
stairwell and, lastly, wandering into the hotel’s kitchen. The video footage, pieced together by the Chicago Tribune, can be found here.
The video clips released do not show Jenkins entering the walk-in
freezer where her body was found. However, the security video appears to
be captured by a motion-activated camera, which did not display anyone
coming into the area until her body was found.
3. Kenneka Jenkins’ funeral drew thousands of mourners from across the country.
Mourners gathered at Chicago’s House of Hope Saturday, expressing their deepest grief and fondest memories of the 19-year-old during the 2 ½-hour service.
Friends, relatives and complete strangers processioned pass
Kenneka Jenkins open casket, which was surrounded by modest flower
bouquets on either side. Her loved ones honored Jenkins during the
service by donning purple or wearing tribute shirts that read “Justice
for Kenneka.” Though little was revealed about Jenkins’ life during the
funeral, a poignant poem read by her nieces touched on their
relationship with her. “Every time I feel upset she makes me feel like a
princess. Neka was so funny she would make me cry,” one of her nieces
said during the service.
House of Hope pastor Rev. James Meeks comforted those in
attendance and sought to keep the service protected from the media
frenzy that has surrounded Jenkins’ death. His staff monitored social
media throughout the service to ensure no one live-streamed.
More than 1,000 people attended the service, including those
like Denise Mitchell, who did not know Jenkins but was moved by her
mysterious death.
"We've been following this ever since it happened — crying,
staying up late at night — it's heartbreaking. It feels like a
relative," Mitchell told the Tribune.
4. According to CBS Chicago, there is no video of Kenneka Jenkins entering the hotel freezer, where her body was found.
According to a spokesperson for the Crowne Plaza Hotel, there
is no footage available of Kenneka Jenkins walking into the hotel
freezer, CBS Chicago reported Wednesday.
The Rosemont, Illinois, hotel does not have a “video camera trained on
the freezer,” where Jenkins body was found, the station reported. The
video clips released show Jenkins roaming around the hotel for more than
an hour.
Earlier this month, an attorney for Jenkins mother, Tereasa
Martin, demanded extensive hotel footage. Family attorney Larry Rogers
Jr. said the family had only been given “snippets” from the surveillance
footage.
“The family has not been provided any video or other evidence
of Kenneka Jenkins walking into a freezer,” Larry Rogers Jr. said in a
statement. “Serious questions remain as to how she ended up in a Crowne
Plaza Hotel freezer and why it took a day and a half for the hotel to
find Kenneka.”
During a protest in honor of Jenkins, Martin also said she had
not seen surveillance footage to prove that her daughter walked into the
hotel’s freezer alone.
"I want to see her literally, actually walking into this freezer," Martin said last week.
5. On Oct. 6, Rosemont police announced though “no sign of foul play
exists,” they are still investigating Jenkins’ death and looking for
two individuals that checked in the hotel for the party.
One of the two people police are searching for is Shaniqua
Watkins, who is wanted by police for theft or unauthorized use of a
credit card and is being sought on four “active’’ arrest warrants,
police said.
Police continue to identify others in attendance at the hotel
room party. They’ve generated 127 related police reports and conducted
44 interviews, 36 of whom were people who were inside the hotel room.
There are a few remaining, who are only known by “street names,’’ and
police have not been able to locate them yet.
Four cellphones have been recovered from people at the party,
including one that belonged to Jenkins, police said. A forensic
examination of the cellphones was conducted and they are being analyzed
by detectives. Video surveillance from the hotel was sent out to be
“enhanced for further examination,’’ and police are waiting for access
to a Facebook account, to examine a video ''in its native format,’’
police said.
Police said they are working with the Cook County fugitive task
force to locate Watkins but if anyone knows where she is, they are
urged to call police, 847-823-1134, ext. 373.
6. Tereasa Martin searched for her daughter for more than a day.
Kenneka Jenkins left her house around 11:30 p.m.
Friday for a bowling party, according to what she told her mother.
Jenkins friends called Tereasa Martin around 4 a.m. Sept. 9, to report
they had not been able locate Jenkins. The friends left with Jenkins
phone and in the car Martin lent her daughter for the night.
Martin said she headed to the hotel to search for her daughter
at 5 a.m. Saturday, but without a missing persons report, hotel staff
refused to search for Jenkins. It wasn’t until around 3 or 4 p.m. police
began reviewing video footage that led to discovering Jenkins. Martin
and her family visited the hotel three times Saturday to find her.
7. Her mother Tereasa Martin is contesting the police report that Kenneka walked herself into the freezer.
Martin has quesioned the validity of the police’s conclusion on
her daughter’s death. If her daughter was drunk, she said, she would
have had a hard time opening the freezer door on her own.
"Those were double steel doors, she didn't just pop them open," Martin said.
Martin was angry about what she said was hotel workers' lack of
urgency in the face of her pleas for help finding her daughter Saturday
morning, directing her to the police rather than immediately reviewing
hotel footage. The unusual circumstances have ignited huge interest on
social media with many observers blaming police and Jenkins’ friends.
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