ACIA and SOPHIA JOHNSON - 13 & 2 yo - (2008) Boston MA
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ACIA and SOPHIA JOHNSON - 13 & 2 yo - (2008) Boston MA
04-06-2008 Homicide suspected in fatal Southie blaze |
Photo by Lisa Hornak
Firefighters and police at the scene of a South Boston fire on W. 6th
street that claimed the lives of two young girls, Acia Johnson, 13, and
her 3 year-old sister Sophia.
Sisters, 2 and 13, killed in fire
Boston police believe an early morning blaze in South Boston that killed two young sisters was murder, sources tell the Herald.
Sometime prior to the 3:18 a.m. tragedy, the girls’ mother Anna Reisopoulas, 34, had a fight with another woman, who allegedly threatened the family, sources said.
The siblings have been identified by friends and family as 14-year-old Acia Johnson and 2-year-old Sophia Johnson. Acia’s twin brother Raymond escaped the death trap.
Homicide detectives are said to be embroiled in an “aggressive round of interviews” with witnesses.
“We believe it was most likely a homicide,” one source told the Herald.
Marie Cardinale, 32, Reisopoulas’ close friend, said, “Whoever did this is evil. It’s beyond my mind. It’s just sick. To know that there were kids in that house, to do this, is evil.”
Next-door neighbor Daniel Zyskowski, 50, said Reisopoulas was shoeless and clad only in pajamas when she and others screamed to the girls to jump out a window.
“The flames were too intense,“ Zyskowski said. “She was trying to go back in the house. I had to hold her back.”
Steve MacDonald, spokesman for the Boston Fire Department, said as of this afternoon the bodies were still inside what remains of the home at 154 West 6th Street. He would neither confirm nor deny reports that the sisters were found together in a closet.
“It’s still quite an active investigation,” MacDonald said, adding that a state police accelerant-sniffing dog has already been through the rubble.
MacDonald said the three-alarm inferno caused an estimated $500,000 damage. When firefighters responded in under three minutes from less than a mile away, “The whole front of the building was fully involved,” MacDonald said. “The fire did go through the building and out the back.”
Reisopoulas and her son were being treated at Boston Medical Center for non-life-threatening injuries.
http://bostonherald.com/news/regiona...ome&position=0
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: ACIA and SOPHIA JOHNSON - 13 & 2 yo - (2008) Boston MA
Boston jury convicts woman of setting fire that killed girlfriend’s two children
by Peter Cassels
EDGE Contributor
Wednesday Feb 17, 2010
A Boston jury convicted Nicole Chuminski of two counts of
second-degree murder in connection with Acia and Sophia Johnson’s deaths
inside their mother’s South Boston apartment on April 6, 2008.
A Boston jury on Feb. 16 convicted a woman for setting a fire that killed her girlfriend’s two young daughters nearly two years ago.
The Suffolk County jury convicted Nicole Chuminski on two counts of second-degree murder in connection with Acia and Sophia Johnson’s deaths. The panel also convicted her of arson for setting the blaze and two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (smoke and flames) for injuries the girls’ mother and brother sustained.
A judge will sentence Chuminski on Feb. 18. She faces a mandatory life sentence with the possibility of parole after 15 years on each murder conviction.
The fire in the South Boston triple-decker killed 14-year-old Acia Johnson and 2-year-old Sophia Johnson in April 2008. The children died holding each other in a bedroom closet. The fire burned them so badly the medical examiner needed dental records to make a positive identification.
The blaze also seriously injured Anna Reisopoulos, who is their mother and was Chuminski’s girlfriend at the time. Acia’s twin brother, Raymond Johnson, suffered less extensive injuries.
According to investigators, Chuminski and Reisopoulos had argued hours before the fire. Police arrested Chuminski after they discovered an accelerant on her clothing consistent with the fuel investigators found on a door frame in the dwelling.
"Throughout this investigation and prosecution, our goal was to speak for two murdered children," Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley said after the jury announced its verdict. "Suffolk prosecutors, Boston police detectives, Boston firefighters, state police chemists, our victim-witness advocates and countless others worked toward the result we reached today. But as satisfied as we are with these verdicts, we know they will never replace
the beautiful lives that were snuffed out on April 6, 2008."
Conley said the girls were part of what he called a dysfunctional family, but they loved each other deeply.
"These two young girls should not have died," Conley told news media as prosecutors David Fredette and Julie Higgins stood by. "I hope this gives their family some sense of justice and relief."
Fredette is in the district attorney office’s homicide unit and Higgins is in its domestic violence unit. Catherine Yuan was the victim-witness advocate who worked on the case.
"Nicole and I are disappointed with the verdict," defense attorney William White, Jr., told EDGE. "We believed that there was reasonable doubt and that the evidence was weak and circumstantial. Fire investigators were unable to tell what accelerant was used to start the fire or how the accelerant was ignited. They had no evidence connecting Nicole to the crime. Nicole loved the relationship with the children and she cherished them. Although Nicole was abused in the relationship with Anna, she never had ill will or a notion to harm her or anyone else."
During the trial, Fredette told jurors Chuminski was in "a fit of rage" after fighting with Reisopolous at a relative’s wedding reception in Weymouth the night before the fire. The two women had been together for only a few months.
Fredette told the court the family asked Reisopoulos to leave after the argument. As a result, Chuminski "was embarrassed, she was humiliated, and she was later kicked out herself," the prosecutor said.
A few hours later, Chuminski started banging on Reisopoulos’s door at of her South Boston home, he added. When no one responded, Chuminski then tried to call Reisopoulos on her cell phone, but she didn’t answer.
Chuminski later went to a friend’s house, "and all she kept talking about was the wedding and [the incident]," Fredette said. "She has drugs in her system and she’s angry."
Fredette said Chuminski returned to the street outside the building sometime between 2:30 and 3 a.m. on April 6, 2008.
"She’s banging on the door, no one’s answering, and the kids aren’t supposed to be there," the prosecutor said. "She wants to send a little bit of a message. She takes something with acetone in it and pours it on the steps and lights it. This was an intentionally set fire."
Fredette also told the jury when investigators interviewed Chuminski about the fire she "tried to distance herself" from the crime and changed her story several times.
Reisopolous, who is being held at a county jail on unrelated charges, and her son testified at the trial. They said they called for Acia Johnson to bring Sophia out, but she could not make it through the thick smoke. Firefighters later found the girls huddled together in the closet burned beyond recognition.
The Network/La Red, a Boston-based organization working to end same-sex partner abuse, said domestic violence occurs in 25 to 33 percent of relationships, a rate very similar to that heterosexual women experience.
"Partner abuse is often treated as if it is invisible in LGBT communities, but in reality, many in our communities live in fear of their partners, in fear for their safety and in fear for their loved ones," Beth Leventhal, the organization’s director, told EDGE in a statement. "It’s unfortunate that it’s only after horrendous acts like the South Boston fire that we talk at a community level about this issue."
Kaitlin Nichols, director of organizing and education for The Network/La Red, further discussed how this case highlighted
domestic violence in same-sex relationships.
"One thing we heard from the prosecutors in this trial is that the violence was escalating before the fire," she said. "Because we know that physical and emotional abuse tends to escalate and worsen over time, domestic-violence-related homicides are considered predictable and therefore preventable. One thing we can do as a community is learn the signs of abuse, which will make it easier to support someone who is being abused, sooner rather than later."
http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=&sc2=news&sc3=&id=102430
by Peter Cassels
EDGE Contributor
Wednesday Feb 17, 2010
A Boston jury convicted Nicole Chuminski of two counts of
second-degree murder in connection with Acia and Sophia Johnson’s deaths
inside their mother’s South Boston apartment on April 6, 2008.
A Boston jury on Feb. 16 convicted a woman for setting a fire that killed her girlfriend’s two young daughters nearly two years ago.
The Suffolk County jury convicted Nicole Chuminski on two counts of second-degree murder in connection with Acia and Sophia Johnson’s deaths. The panel also convicted her of arson for setting the blaze and two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (smoke and flames) for injuries the girls’ mother and brother sustained.
A judge will sentence Chuminski on Feb. 18. She faces a mandatory life sentence with the possibility of parole after 15 years on each murder conviction.
The fire in the South Boston triple-decker killed 14-year-old Acia Johnson and 2-year-old Sophia Johnson in April 2008. The children died holding each other in a bedroom closet. The fire burned them so badly the medical examiner needed dental records to make a positive identification.
The blaze also seriously injured Anna Reisopoulos, who is their mother and was Chuminski’s girlfriend at the time. Acia’s twin brother, Raymond Johnson, suffered less extensive injuries.
According to investigators, Chuminski and Reisopoulos had argued hours before the fire. Police arrested Chuminski after they discovered an accelerant on her clothing consistent with the fuel investigators found on a door frame in the dwelling.
"Throughout this investigation and prosecution, our goal was to speak for two murdered children," Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley said after the jury announced its verdict. "Suffolk prosecutors, Boston police detectives, Boston firefighters, state police chemists, our victim-witness advocates and countless others worked toward the result we reached today. But as satisfied as we are with these verdicts, we know they will never replace
the beautiful lives that were snuffed out on April 6, 2008."
Conley said the girls were part of what he called a dysfunctional family, but they loved each other deeply.
"These two young girls should not have died," Conley told news media as prosecutors David Fredette and Julie Higgins stood by. "I hope this gives their family some sense of justice and relief."
Fredette is in the district attorney office’s homicide unit and Higgins is in its domestic violence unit. Catherine Yuan was the victim-witness advocate who worked on the case.
"Nicole and I are disappointed with the verdict," defense attorney William White, Jr., told EDGE. "We believed that there was reasonable doubt and that the evidence was weak and circumstantial. Fire investigators were unable to tell what accelerant was used to start the fire or how the accelerant was ignited. They had no evidence connecting Nicole to the crime. Nicole loved the relationship with the children and she cherished them. Although Nicole was abused in the relationship with Anna, she never had ill will or a notion to harm her or anyone else."
During the trial, Fredette told jurors Chuminski was in "a fit of rage" after fighting with Reisopolous at a relative’s wedding reception in Weymouth the night before the fire. The two women had been together for only a few months.
Fredette told the court the family asked Reisopoulos to leave after the argument. As a result, Chuminski "was embarrassed, she was humiliated, and she was later kicked out herself," the prosecutor said.
A few hours later, Chuminski started banging on Reisopoulos’s door at of her South Boston home, he added. When no one responded, Chuminski then tried to call Reisopoulos on her cell phone, but she didn’t answer.
Chuminski later went to a friend’s house, "and all she kept talking about was the wedding and [the incident]," Fredette said. "She has drugs in her system and she’s angry."
Fredette said Chuminski returned to the street outside the building sometime between 2:30 and 3 a.m. on April 6, 2008.
"She’s banging on the door, no one’s answering, and the kids aren’t supposed to be there," the prosecutor said. "She wants to send a little bit of a message. She takes something with acetone in it and pours it on the steps and lights it. This was an intentionally set fire."
Fredette also told the jury when investigators interviewed Chuminski about the fire she "tried to distance herself" from the crime and changed her story several times.
Reisopolous, who is being held at a county jail on unrelated charges, and her son testified at the trial. They said they called for Acia Johnson to bring Sophia out, but she could not make it through the thick smoke. Firefighters later found the girls huddled together in the closet burned beyond recognition.
The Network/La Red, a Boston-based organization working to end same-sex partner abuse, said domestic violence occurs in 25 to 33 percent of relationships, a rate very similar to that heterosexual women experience.
"Partner abuse is often treated as if it is invisible in LGBT communities, but in reality, many in our communities live in fear of their partners, in fear for their safety and in fear for their loved ones," Beth Leventhal, the organization’s director, told EDGE in a statement. "It’s unfortunate that it’s only after horrendous acts like the South Boston fire that we talk at a community level about this issue."
Kaitlin Nichols, director of organizing and education for The Network/La Red, further discussed how this case highlighted
domestic violence in same-sex relationships.
"One thing we heard from the prosecutors in this trial is that the violence was escalating before the fire," she said. "Because we know that physical and emotional abuse tends to escalate and worsen over time, domestic-violence-related homicides are considered predictable and therefore preventable. One thing we can do as a community is learn the signs of abuse, which will make it easier to support someone who is being abused, sooner rather than later."
http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=&sc2=news&sc3=&id=102430
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: ACIA and SOPHIA JOHNSON - 13 & 2 yo - (2008) Boston MA
A girl's life
Neglected by her parents, overlooked by the state, Acia Johnson was
making a life for herself and her beloved baby sister, until their house
was set ablaze
June 1, 2008
In her final moments, she appeared in her bedroom window. The fire was closing in, raging through the narrow, yellow row house in South Boston. From the window, three stories up, 14-year-old Acia Johnson could see and hear help.
Sirens wailed in the distance. On the ground below stood her mother, her twin brother, and the family dog, all safe.
But Acia was trapped with her 3-year-old sister, Sophia, alone together - as they had been for much of their lives. Their mother was a drug addict, who repeatedly left the children to fend for themselves while she chased quick highs and fed powerful addictions. Their father, a chronic drinker and a petty thief, spent as much time in jail as out.
The parents fought - often violently. Sometimes, the violence turned on the kids.
In that way, Acia in particular was like thousands of children neglected by absent parents. She came up with neither role models nor stability, overlooked by the very state officials charged with protecting her, flush with reasons to give up, act out, or think small. Many children in Boston go bad over less.
But in the months before the fire, even with her little sister on her hip, Acia was finding a way out. She was excelling in her studies and becoming the star of her middle school basketball team. She was falling for a boy, a good boy, and being recruited to play basketball at a championship-caliber high school.
The girl with every excuse to crumble had made options for herself. All she needed was a little help - more inquisitive social workers, sober parents, relatives willing to intervene. Someone, anyone, who would take a stand. No one did.
The fire that swept through Acia's home on that early April morning was deliberately set, authorities say, the act of her mother's enraged lover. But in many ways, it was also the culmination of years of abuse that others could have prevented and that Acia, try as she might, could not overcome. There was only so much a 14-year-old girl could do.
It was 3 a.m. Her mother was half drunk. Her father slept in a jail cell a mile away. The girls stood amid the smoke and flames as people shouted to them from below.Throw the baby.Jump.
Smoke spilled out the window. Flames crept ever closer. Fire engines rumbled toward the row house on West Sixth Street, and Acia made her decision.
She wouldn't let Sophia go."I can't drop her," her mother said Acia shouted.
And with that, Acia slipped into the smoke.***The mother sat on an overstuffed couch in the living room of a friend's apartment, a block from the burned-out house, a few weeks after the fire. There was a large plastic trash bag filled with charred belongings at her feet and soot beneath her fingernails. Anna Reisopoulos was rummaging through the past.Continued...
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2008/06/01/a_girls_life/
Neglected by her parents, overlooked by the state, Acia Johnson was
making a life for herself and her beloved baby sister, until their house
was set ablaze
June 1, 2008
In her final moments, she appeared in her bedroom window. The fire was closing in, raging through the narrow, yellow row house in South Boston. From the window, three stories up, 14-year-old Acia Johnson could see and hear help.
Sirens wailed in the distance. On the ground below stood her mother, her twin brother, and the family dog, all safe.
But Acia was trapped with her 3-year-old sister, Sophia, alone together - as they had been for much of their lives. Their mother was a drug addict, who repeatedly left the children to fend for themselves while she chased quick highs and fed powerful addictions. Their father, a chronic drinker and a petty thief, spent as much time in jail as out.
The parents fought - often violently. Sometimes, the violence turned on the kids.
In that way, Acia in particular was like thousands of children neglected by absent parents. She came up with neither role models nor stability, overlooked by the very state officials charged with protecting her, flush with reasons to give up, act out, or think small. Many children in Boston go bad over less.
But in the months before the fire, even with her little sister on her hip, Acia was finding a way out. She was excelling in her studies and becoming the star of her middle school basketball team. She was falling for a boy, a good boy, and being recruited to play basketball at a championship-caliber high school.
The girl with every excuse to crumble had made options for herself. All she needed was a little help - more inquisitive social workers, sober parents, relatives willing to intervene. Someone, anyone, who would take a stand. No one did.
The fire that swept through Acia's home on that early April morning was deliberately set, authorities say, the act of her mother's enraged lover. But in many ways, it was also the culmination of years of abuse that others could have prevented and that Acia, try as she might, could not overcome. There was only so much a 14-year-old girl could do.
It was 3 a.m. Her mother was half drunk. Her father slept in a jail cell a mile away. The girls stood amid the smoke and flames as people shouted to them from below.Throw the baby.Jump.
Smoke spilled out the window. Flames crept ever closer. Fire engines rumbled toward the row house on West Sixth Street, and Acia made her decision.
She wouldn't let Sophia go."I can't drop her," her mother said Acia shouted.
And with that, Acia slipped into the smoke.***The mother sat on an overstuffed couch in the living room of a friend's apartment, a block from the burned-out house, a few weeks after the fire. There was a large plastic trash bag filled with charred belongings at her feet and soot beneath her fingernails. Anna Reisopoulos was rummaging through the past.Continued...
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2008/06/01/a_girls_life/
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
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