BISMARCK, N.D. – Authorities have
dropped a second charge against a Bismarck woman accused of abusing and
exploiting her elderly mother during protests against the Dakota Access
oil pipeline in North Dakota.
Authorities last week dismissed a charge of felony
exploitation of a vulnerable adult against Kathleen Bennett, saying the
case had become too difficult to prove, The Bismarck Tribune reported . A
defense attorney said Bennett's mother died a few months ago.
Bennett, 59, was accused of leaving her 82-year-old
mother with dementia tied to a chair in a protest camp in North Dakota
while she attended demonstrations in December 2016. Protesters were
trying to block construction of the oil pipeline, which is operated by
Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners.
Bennett's mother was taken to a hospital during a blizzard. Hospital staff said she was frail and malnourished.
The exploitation charge resulted from Bennett allegedly
using $1,200 of her mother's money without consent to rent hotel rooms,
buy meals and pay legal fees while her mother was hospitalized.
Bennett had also been charged in Morton County with
endangering a vulnerable adult, but the defense and prosecution agreed
in November to dismiss that case with $2,050 in fines forfeited from
Bennett's bond.
"The victim is deceased and the case became difficult
to prove once the Morton County companion case was dismissed," Burleigh
County Assistant State's Attorney Marina Spahr said in court documents.
It's not clear when her mother, Mary Trujillo, died.
She had been living with family in Nevada. Defense attorney William
Kirschner said Trujillo's death happened a few months ago, but he did
not have an exact date.
Full Article & Source:
Pipeline protester's elderly exploitation case dismissed
I've never heard of "the case is too difficult to prove."
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