Los Angeles Times

Death of woman in hotel freezer is ruled an accident

- By Gregory Pratt, Vikki Ortiz Healy and Ese Olumhense Pratt, Healy and Olumhense write for the Chicago Tribune.

CHICAGO — An Illinois medical examiner’s office has determined that the death of a young woman whose body was found in a Chicago-area hotel’s walk-in freezer was an accident.

Kenneka Jenkins, 19, was found inside the freezer on Sept. 10 after she disappeare­d from a room at the Crowne Plaza in suburban Rosemont. She had attended a party with as many as 30 other people on the ninth floor and wasn’t found until nearly 24 hours after her disappeara­nce, after repeated pleas to the hotel and police by the family.

Jenkins’ death captured the public attention and imaginatio­n, and her funeral drew about 1,000 people, many of whom had never met her.

The initial lack of informatio­n released by authoritie­s drew activists and sparked online conspiracy theories that she was attacked and killed. The speculatio­n was fueled by a number of videos on social media appearing to show the party and some of Jenkins’ friends. The case prompted protests from demonstrat­ors who converged on the hotel, stirred by the strange circumstan­ces of the death and complaints by Jenkins’ mother about the initial response from hotel staff and police.

The Cook County medical examiner’s office announced Friday that Jenkins died of hypothermi­a. Alcohol intoxicati­on and the use of a drug for treating epilepsy and migraines were “significan­t contributi­ng factors,” the office said.

The autopsy found mucosal erosions, a type of lesion, that indicated Jenkins had suffered from hypothermi­a, the medical examiner’s office said in a statement.

There was an abrasion to her right ankle and a purple contusion on her right leg, but no other sign of external or internal trauma, the office said. Her brain was swollen, but that is not indicative of a specific cause of death, it said.

Comprehens­ive toxicology tests were conducted for hundreds of drugs of abuse, medication­s and other chemical compounds, and the office said it sought to see whether “date rape drugs” were in her system. None were found, the office said.

The testing found alcohol, caffeine and the epilepsy-migraine medication topiramate in Jenkins’ system, the office said. Her family said she had not been prescribed the drug, but the level was within the therapeuti­c range, the office said.

Her blood-alcohol level was 0.112%, higher than the legal limit of 0.08% for drivers. The alcohol and the drug can enhance each other, the office said.

The combinatio­n of alcohol and topiramate found in Jenkins’ blood can cause “impaired memory and concentrat­ion, poor coordinati­on, confusion and impaired judgment,” among other adverse effects, the office said. This, plus cold exposure, could speed the onset of hypothermi­a and death, the medical examiner’s office said.

Surveillan­ce video showed Jenkins entering the kitchen at approximat­ely 3:32 a.m. on Sept. 9, but the recordings do not clearly show her entering the cooler and freezer because there are no cameras that directly show those doors, the office said.

Jenkins was discovered in the freezer approximat­ely 21 hours after the video documented her entering the kitchen, the office said.

Citing the police investigat­ion, the medical examiner said there’s no evidence Jenkins was forced to consume the alcohol or the drug.

There also was no evidence of another person near the kitchen with Jenkins, and there was no evidence of an altercatio­n or interactio­n with anyone immediatel­y before her death, the office said.

The autopsy results were released the same day that the family filed a legal document in Cook County Circuit Court, claiming several padlocks that could have prevented entry to the unused freezer were available nearby but not used.

Jenkins’ mother, Tereasa Martin, had sought police assistance a few hours after her daughter disappeare­d, but a dispatcher told her Jenkins might have gone to a friend’s place or passed out after drinking too much.

Crowne Plaza staff eventually searched public areas of the hotel, and were later joined by Rosemont police. At 12:24 a.m. Sept. 10, according to video released by the village, a hotel worker went around the corner in the kitchen and summoned police that Jenkins’ body had been located.

 ?? Alyssa Pointer Associated Press ?? TEREASA MARTIN, Kenneka Jenkins’ mother, is comforted by her boyfriend on Sept. 10 in Chicago.
Alyssa Pointer Associated Press TEREASA MARTIN, Kenneka Jenkins’ mother, is comforted by her boyfriend on Sept. 10 in Chicago.

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