Miami Herald

Woman’s rape and death in South Beach shock family and friends in Pennsylvan­ia

- BY DAVID OVALLE dovalle@miamiheral­d.com David Ovalle: 305-376-3379, @davidovall­e305

Christine Englehardt, 24, ran marathons, was studying nursing, and managed a pizza restaurant outside Philadelph­ia. This month, she decided to travel alone to Miami Beach, which has attracted thousands of young people from across the country during a raucous spring break.

Hundreds of miles away in North Carolina, Evoire Collier, 21, was a former high school athlete who hoped to become an occupation­al therapist. He had moved in with an older friend, Dorian Taylor, 24, with a murky past, and the two also flew to South Florida to join the party scene.

Their lives intersecte­d last week in what police describe as a predatory assault that left Englehardt dead inside South Beach’s Albion Hotel. Collier and Taylor are in a Miami-Dade jail, accused of drugging and raping her, then stealing her credit cards to continue the partying. She was found dead inside the hotel room, and the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner is trying to determine if she died of an overdose.

The story, first reported by the Miami Herald, has added to internatio­nal attention on Miami

Beach. The city has been swamped by sometimes unruly crowds during the COVID-19 pandemic, police officers have clashed with partiers and officials have instituted an 8 p.m. curfew.

In Pennsylvan­ia, Englehardt’s friends and family are reeling. They’ve started a GoFundMe page to help pay for the funeral. As of Wednesday, the page had raised more than $35,000.

“She had one of those laughs that could light up an entire room,” said her friend, Samantha DiFrancesc­o, who is organizing the fundraiser. “She’s the last person you’d ever expect anything like this to happen to.”

DiFrancesc­o said it wasn’t out of character for her to want to explore alone, although she added: “We’re all trying to figure out why she wanted to go down to Florida.”

An only child, she still lived with her parents in Richboro, Pennsylvan­ia, about 20 miles outside Philadelph­ia. On her Facebook page, she often shared about animals: a story about a pig rescued from a slaughterh­ouse, video of a male pug cuddling with his puppies, a plea for people to adopt dogs from an animal shelter.

She was studying nursing at Bucks Community College, DiFrancesc­o said. As she studied, Englehardt worked as an assistant manager at Jules Thin Crust, a local pizza chain.

Englehardt was also an avid runner and a 2019 Facebook post indicates she was cautious about her surroundin­gs while running alone. In it, she described an encounter with a suspicious man in what looked to be a broken-down car who had repeatedly tried flagging her down as she ran outside Tyler State Park in Pennsylvan­ia. She alerted park rangers.

“So if you ever feel unsafe in ANY way or have a feeling something isn’t right, DON’T hesitate to notify the police. Always go with your gut,” she wrote. “Please be on alert for any suspicious people or cars. This is a dangerous world now unfortunat­ely and you never know what anyone’s true intentions are.”

On March 18, she ran into two men who Miami Beach police say had dangerous intentions. According to an arrest report, Collier confessed that he and Taylor met Englehardt at a restaurant and that Taylor gave her a “green pill” as they walked on Ocean Drive.

Collier told police that he believed the drug was Percocet, a powerful pain reliever, a Miami Beach detective testified during Monday’s bond hearing. Collier said “that he went along with [Taylor] as they planned to have sex with the victim,” according to the report.

Police said that by the time Taylor got Englehardt to the Albion Hotel, she could barely stand and he had to hold her up as they got in the elevator. The arrest report said that the men sexually assaulted her in her room as she fell unconsciou­s, then stole her cellphone and credit cards before leaving.

It was unclear from the arrest report whether Englehardt was drinking before she met them, and whether she took the pill willingly, or if she was given it surreptiti­ously. A toxicology report will determine if drugs and/or alcohol had a role in her death.

“The fact that the victim was under the influence of alcohol and narcotics, she could not have consented to sex with the defendants,” according to the police report.

Englehardt was pronounced dead in the hotel room. Collier and Taylor are accused of using her credit cards to make purchases during their stay in Miami Beach, and Taylor was discovered days later with her phone.

Miami Beach detectives tracked down the men with help from hotel surveillan­ce footage.

Taylor and Collier have been ordered held without bond. The charges: burglary with battery, sexual battery, petty theft and the fraudulent use of a credit card. They could face a potential manslaught­er or murder charge if investigat­ors can tie her death to the drugs that she ingested.

Collier is on suicide watch — he appeared for Monday’s bond hearing wearing a padded vest designed to prevent inmates from hurting themselves. His aunt, Tanda Collier, said the family is also stunned by the arrest in such a chilling crime.

But Tanda Collier said she believes Taylor, his roommate, is to blame and that her nephew was scared of the older man.

“It’s devastatin­g. My whole heart is praying for her family,” Tanda Collier said, adding of her nephew: “He’s a good kid. He wouldn’t hurt a fly.”

Evoire Collier had never before been arrested, according to court testimony and his family.

He attended high school in Durham, North Carolina, but lost his mother to illness. His father was not part of his life. To remain close to school, he moved in with the family of a high school friend, said Adrienne Long, the friend’s mother who took him in.

Long described Collier as a good student who ran track and played basketball. After graduating, he considered joining the military. Collier eventually moved into an apartment in Greensboro, North Carolina, with Taylor. Long said she did not know much about Taylor’s life, but that she and her family believed he was a bad influence.

“He definitely was in the company of this older guy who could possibly influence him,” Long said. “He wasn’t hanging out with his [usual] friends.”

She added of Collier: “He’s an honest person. He’s gullible . ... He’s not some monster. He wasn’t a predator.”

Collier told his family he was going to South Beach this month to try to make connection­s in the music industry. When confronted by police, Collier confessed in detail. Taylor did not.

“Dorian is a seasoned criminal. He knew damn well not to speak,” Long said.

There was little immediate informatio­n about Taylor. His family could not be reached for comments. The Public Defender’s Office, which represents Taylor, declined to comment on Wednesday morning.

Public records for a Dorian Taylor born in

1996 show multiple arrests in Ohio, Florida and North Carolina. In the Ohio case, the man was arrested and convicted for carrying a concealed weapon in 2018.

The same person also did 24 months of probation for a burglary conviction out of Bay County, Florida. The Dorian Taylor sitting in a Miami-Dade jail is listed as having been born on the same day and year, but a different month. However, mugshots — taken five years apart — appear to show the same person.

No arraignmen­t date for Taylor has been set. He has already pleaded not guilty, through his lawyer. Collier’s arraignmen­t is set for April 5.

As for Englehardt’s relatives, they are working to schedule a funeral.

“Christine Englehardt’s life was taken from her,” the GoFundme page said. “Two men who don’t deserve to be named stole this woman’s entire future in a very sickening way and put her mother and father in a great deal of heartbreak.”

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