Chicago Sun-Times

MOTHER OF WOMAN FOUND DEAD IN FREEZER TO SEE SURVEILLAN­CE TAPE

- BY SAM CHARLES Staff Reporter Contributi­ng: Mitchell Armentrout Email: scharles@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ samjcharle­s

Investigat­ors with the Rosemont Police Department are planning to show Kenneka Jenkins’ mother hotel surveillan­ce footage from the night the 19- year- old was found dead in a walk- in freezer at the Crowne Plaza.

But even as police emphasized that the case was being handled as a “noncrimina­l death,” more than 100 protesters took to the streets Thursday night near the northwest suburban hotel, amid theories spreading on social media that there was foul play in Jenkins’ death.

Activists chanting “No justice, no peace” and carrying signs calling for “Justice for Kenneka” marched down River Road near Balmoral, shutting down traffic in the busy entertainm­ent district.

Gary Mack, a spokesman for Rosemont Police, told the Chicago Sun- Times that Jenkins’ mother, Tereasa Martin, would be shown the footage by Thursday afternoon.

“We want to be as understand­ing as we can with the family, particular­ly the mother,” Mack said.

Investigat­ors continue to review about 30 hours of surveillan­ce footage collected from 47 cameras in the hotel, according to a police statement.

Martin will be shown “any of the relevant parts that would potentiall­y include images of her daughter. They’re not going to make her sit through 30 hours of videotape,” Mack said.

An autopsy performed to find Jenkins’ cause and manner of death was inconclusi­ve pending further study, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. A spokeswoma­n said the results “will likely take several weeks.”

Meanwhile, police in Rosemont have classified Jenkins’ case as a noncrimina­l death.

“It’s a full- blown investigat­ion, but it is a death investigat­ion,” Mack said, adding that there was “no credible evidence at this point” that would prompt police to reclassify Jenkins’ death as a murder.

Jenkins left her home near the United Center at 11: 30 p. m. Friday to go to a party in a room of the Crowne Plaza Hotel, according to Rosemont Police. Jenkins’ sister last heard from her via text message about 1: 30 a. m. Saturday.

About 4 a. m., Jenkins’ friends called her mother to tell her they could not find her, according to community activist Andrew Holmes. An hour later, Martin was at the hotel. She filled out a police report and Jenkins’ sister reported her missing.

Jenkins was last seen at a party on the ninth floor of the hotel in the early hours of Saturday, police said. She was reported missing at 1: 16 p. m. that afternoon. Police told Martin that surveillan­ce footage showed Jenkins inebriated near the front desk, according to Holmes.

Hotel staff and management searched the hotel and discovered Jenkins inside a freezer at 12: 24 a. m. Sunday, police said. Holmes said Martin was told by police that Jenkins, while drunk, let herself into the freezer and died inside — a narrative disputed by her family.

“It takes strength to open these doors,” Martin told reporters Monday. “So if she could barely hold herself up — she needed the wall to support her — how did she find strength to unlock both the double doors?”

 ?? | NVP ?? Protesters who claim there was foul play in Kenneka Jenkins’ death march near the Crowne Plaza hotel in Rosemont on Wednesday night.
| NVP Protesters who claim there was foul play in Kenneka Jenkins’ death march near the Crowne Plaza hotel in Rosemont on Wednesday night.
 ??  ?? Kenneka Jenkins
Kenneka Jenkins

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