Thursday, October 16, 2025 - A 9-year-old boy and a 10-year-old girl have been charged with attempted murd£r and r@pe in connection with an attack on a 5-year-old girl in Cleveland, authorities in Ohio said.
Prosecutors charged the two children with attempted murd£r,
r@pe, felonious assault, kidnapping and strangulation after the attack which
took place in September, according to the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor's
Office. Local outlets reported that they were charged in juvenile
court.
The prosecutor’s office in Cuyahoga County,
Ohio, announced the charges on Wednesday, Oct. 15, saying it was
still receiving information and obtaining evidence.
Lexi Bauer, a spokeswoman for the office, said that the
charges were filed in juvenile court on Wednesday and the two children who have
been accused would be arraigned at a later date.
In Ohio, a juvenile suspect must be 14 or older for the case to be eligible to be transferred to adult court, Ms. Bauer said.
The Cuyahoga County Prosecutor's Office added that it is not
releasing any more information at this time due to the "sensitive nature
of this case."
The 5-year-old girl's mother told WOIO that her
daughter was beaten, assaulted and "scalped" on Sept. 13 in a field
near East 148th Street and St. Clair Avenue. She reportedly said her daughter
was "unrecognizable" after the attack.
Antavia Kennibrew, the victim’s mother, said she dropped her
daughter off Sept. 13 at a family member’s home in Cleveland. Somehow, the
5-year-old walked out the front door and was allegedly badly beaten by a group
of kids outside.
When Kennibrew found out, she rushed over and saw EMS
treating her daughter several blocks over.
“What I saw was unbelievable,” she said.
"I literally saw the worst thing ever," the mom
told WOIO.
“My daughter was not my daughter. Her hair was scalped from
her head. She had bruises and blood all over her body. Her eyes were filled
with blood. Her lips and mouth were filled with blood. Her nails had debris and
dirt stuck in them.”
The Cleveland Division of Police is investigating. In a post on Facebook
from Oct. 7, the department said it could not release more information
"due to the sensitive nature of this case," adding that investigators
do not want to "jeopardize the integrity of the investigation and
compromise the privacy and constitutional rights of those
involved."
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