
The Eagle-Tribune reports the woman ran naked into the street, with her hands still bound behind her and screaming that someone was trying to kill her as people seeing her looked and did nothing.
Lawrence Police Officer Ariel Montas, who was the first officer on the scene, told Lawrence District Court Monday that the victim said she ran into a store and was told to leave, the Eagle-Tribune reported.
Eventually, the victim ran past a woman who called 911.
Police found the woman sitting on a stoop crying and wearing a sweater donated by a passerby, WCVB reported. Her face was dirty, her feet were bare, and there were ligature marks on her ankles and wrists where she had been bound, the police report stated.
According to several reports, the victim told police her boyfriend, Keyvin "Ghetto" Gil, was upset and accused her of taking his marijuana. The woman said Gil pointed a gun at her and used it to violate her. She said two days later he raped her and told her he would wait for her daughters to come home so she could say goodbye to them before he would shoot her. It was then, the woman told police, Gil tied her with clothesline. He then burned her body with a lit cigarette, she told police. The woman was able to free her legs and escape with her wrists still bound after Gil fell asleep.
"I'm not dying today. I'm going to see my daughters," she reportedly told herself as she escaped, WCVB reported.
Gil, 27, whose occupation was listed as unemployed, was held without bail following his arraignment in Lawrence District Court Monday. He's being held on 13 criminal charges, including rape, receiving stolen property, illegal possession of a firearm and ammunition, domestic assault and battery, resisting arrest and numerous counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.




Reader Comments
. . . a real prince.
So hopefully, she learns to seek a different sort of friend/lover/mate/partner or whatever next time... when the test will be given again in a 'pass or replay' game we call life.
by the store managers and patrons and others on the street for the victim is the shocking, under-reported story here.
What forces in our culture cause people to risk their lives to take a "selfie" with a bear in Yellowstone park and turn their backs
and ignore an obvious trauma victims cries for help?