Lexington man accused of repeatedly kicking pregnant woman, leading to fetal homicide
by Christopher Leach | Tuesday, January 24, 2023 | 8:10 AM EST
A Lexington man facing a fetal homicide charge allegedly kicked a pregnant woman in the stomach three times during a physical argument, according to court documents.
No, of course the Lexington Herald-Leader did not publish Mr Vasquez-Barradas’ mugshot! I had to look that one up myself.
Rigoberto Vasquez-Barradas, 24, is charged with first-degree fetal homicide, first-degree strangulation and second-degree assault — domestic violence, Lexington police previously said in a news release. Police said they were called to a local hospital that was treating a domestic violence victim Friday morning.
Court documents say Vasquez-Barradas and a woman who was 18 weeks pregnant got into an altercation that turned physical on Thursday. Vasquez-Barradas shoved the woman to the ground four times and kicked her in the stomach three times, court documents say.
Vasquez-Barradas also strangled the woman while she was on the ground, according to court documents.
While speaking with investigators, Vasquez-Barradas admitted to shoving the woman but denied kicking her in the stomach, according to court documents.
There’s a little more at the original.
As of this writing, the murder of the unborn child is not listed in the Lexington Police Department’s 2023 homicide investigations report, but that page is not updated daily. I do wonder, however, if the powers that be will include the murder of an unborn child on that list.
Mr Vasquez-Barradas has been charged with:
- KRS §508.020: Assault, second degree- domestic violence. Assault in the second degree is a Class C felony.
- KRS §508.170: Strangulation, first degree. Strangulation in the first degree is a Class C felony.
- KRS §507A.020: Fetal homicide, first degree. Fetal homicide in the first degree is a capital offense.
Under KRS §532.060(2)(c), the sentence for a Class C felony is imprisonment for “not less than five (5) years nor more than ten (10) years”. The penalty for a capital offense under KRS §532.030 is:
- death; or
- imprisonment for life without benefit of probation or parole; or
- imprisonment for life without benefit of probation or parole until he has served a minimum of twenty-five (25) years of his sentence; or
- imprisonment life; or
- imprisonment for not less than twenty (20) years nor more than fifty (50) years.
Under that fourth possibility, imprisonment for life, a prisoner first becomes eligible for parole after serving a minimum of 20 years in prison.
Me? I’m hoping that Mr Vasquez-Barradas is not allowed some lenient plea bargain arrangement and, if he is guilty, sentenced to life without parole.
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