BANGOR, Maine — In the estimation of many who were close to her, Nicolle Ashley Lugdon never really had a chance.
Despite athletic talent, intelligence, a sparkling personality and natural beauty, the Bangor-born Eddington resident’s life offered too many obstacles for her to conquer.
“Essentially, my belief is that Nicolle had amazingly difficult odds and struggles to overcome,” said Lisa Melendez, Lugdon’s paternal aunt. “I don’t see how you can see her as anything but a victim.”
Lugdon’s body was one of three found in a burned-out Pontiac sedan in the early morning of Aug. 13. Police have ruled the deaths of Lugdon, 24; Daniel T. Borders, 26, of Hermon; and Lucas A. Tuscano, 28, of Bradford homicides and are investigating the events leading up to their deaths and discovery of their charred bodies around 3:30 a.m. in a back parking lot at 22 Target Industrial Circle.
It was a premature and disturbing end to the life of a woman who several friends said was rarely seen without a smile on her face. Given her background, that smile may have been a mask she used to hide a lifetime of pain and sorrow.
“She had a beautiful living spirit — very kind and giving and thoughtful,” said Melendez. “She had an amazing smile that people saw most of the time, but there were times when she would sit alone and sob.”
A string of family tragedies
When Nicolle was just 2 years old, her grandmother Leanna Lugdon and uncle Theodore “Robbie” Lugdon were killed in a house fire in Bangor, according to BDN archives.
In March 2002, when Lugdon was 13, her mother died of a heroin overdose. Just five months later, Lugdon’s father, Michael Melendez, killed her grandmother Linda Melendez. Both were heroin addicts and the killing resulted from an argument over drugs. Nicolle Lugdon was in the house and hiding in a second-floor room with her 2-year-old brother while her father stabbed her grandmother 36 times. Michael Melendez was given a life sentence without parole in 2004 and is incarcerated in Pennsylvania, BDN reports state.
“She was doomed to fail with all she had happen to her in her family life,” said Lisa Melendez, a social worker for 20 years with a master’s degree in social work. “She was raised in a family atmosphere where things like theft and drug use were commonplace and even encouraged.”
Lugdon lived with Melendez from late 2002 through 2004 in Hampden before moving to Aroostook County to stay with a foster family.
“She was in a lot of pain after all that happened,” Melendez said. “When she first got here with us, we tried to institute rules and boundaries and she wasn’t used to that after being in a free environment for so long. She rebelled and she acted out in school and was suspended.”
That’s when Lugdon entered foster care and headed north to spend three years with Barb Pineau and Dan Robinson in St. David, near Madawaska.
Pineau told the St. John Valley Times that Lugdon was a “wonderful girl” who was “full of spirit.”
Pineau said “she has been my daughter” since coming to live with Pineau in 2005, and “this is where she would come back to for holidays.”
Lugdon was an honor roll student and earned varsity letters playing softball and basketball before graduating from Madawaska High School. She also became involved as a volunteer with the Can-Am Sled Dog Race, youth sports and disabled adults.
She attended the University of Maine at Fort Kent before moving to Boston.
Lugdon would periodically check in with close friends and relatives.
“I was not able to reach her, but she would call me sporadically over the last couple years,” recalled Melendez, who said she last saw Lugdon almost a year ago. “Sometimes we would see her on holidays out of the blue.”
Eventually, Lugdon returned to the Bangor area.
“She was doing amazing up there [Aroostook County], but as soon as she came back down this way, she lost it all,” said Kristina Sprague, a Bradford resident who called Lugdon her best friend for almost a decade.
The party lifestyle
Initially, Lugdon’s return to Bangor was marked with happiness. She reunited with friends such as Sprague and 26-year-old Bangor resident Tiffany Sutherland, and began dating a man with whom she would have a two-year relationship.
Despite having strong feelings for each other, they broke up. Her former boyfriend, who preferred not to have his name used in this story, said he wasn’t into the party life as much as Nicolle was because he had gotten it out of his system in college. That rift broke them up, but not before they had a baby daughter together.
Friends say the birth of Lugdon’s daughter, Mia, in 2010 seemed to inspire her.
“The whole first year Mia was there, she had her own apartment, she had her own job. … She had everything going well,” Sprague said.
But eventually the party lifestyle beckoned again and Lugdon began spending more nights out late. Close friends said that lifestyle, and some of the people associated with it, eventually introduced her to drugs.
“She was the type of person where she could bat her eyelashes at you and you’d toss her $100 because she’s that pretty,” Sprague said. “She could have any man she wanted to, but she always picked the ones who had money because they took care of her. That’s how she was raised. She was really good at getting whatever she wanted.”
Court records, family and several close friends confirm that Lugdon used drugs ranging from marijuana to prescription medications recreationally, but that recreational use became regular use of hard drugs such as cocaine and heroin in her last months.
The father of Lugdon’s daughter, who has been involved in legal hearings to secure primary parental rights for the last few months, said the very quality that endeared Lugdon to so many people was the same quality that led to her undoing.
“Nikki was always the go-to person in her family and group of friends,” he said, adding that she never did any drugs when they were together. “She never wanted to let anyone down or tell them no, but it was that same thing that made it hard for her to say no when she was offered bad choices.”
Sprague said it was Lugdon who personally helped move her back home to be with family and get her away from a bad element shortly after Sprague became pregnant last year.
Lugdon’s younger sister Katelyn told a BDN reporter by messages on Facebook that her older sister took care of her.
“[And] my sister, you already know she was like my mom [because] we have no real family,” Katelyn wrote on Aug. 19. “We only had each other.”
Several close friends and family members agree that the person Lugdon was and the people she associated with in her last two years didn’t typify the woman they came to know and call a best friend, sister, mother, relative or girlfriend.
“It doesn’t matter who she was hanging out with. We just want to make sure everybody knows the Nikki that we knew,” said Sprague, 25. “She’s an amazing person. She always cared about everybody.”
Sprague and Sutherland, who first met Lugdon when they were about 11 and 9, respectively, said they want their close friend to be known for the person she was over the first 22 years of her life, and not for the last 13 months of it.
“Many of us will miss her,” said Melendez, who adopted Lugdon’s younger brother, Mike. “She touched a lot of our lives in a good way.”
That was true both before and after she began using drugs.
“She was always the same person. It didn’t matter what she was doing,” Sutherland said. “She could have been so messed up, she couldn’t even say her own name, but she was still smiling and everyone was smiling back at her.”
Melendez knew her niece was using drugs.
“She told me. She knew she was going down a dangerous path,” Melendez said. “She didn’t want to go there, but it’s what she knew, and she was in a lot of pain.”
Friends and family said things really started spiraling out of control for Lugdon after she allowed her daughter to go live with her daughter’s father last October.
“We were living in Brewer at a hotel and Nikki decided it wasn’t a good place to be with her,” said Sprague. “I think deep down Nikki didn’t want her daughter to be around her with the drugs and she didn’t think she could stop, so that was her way of not dragging her daughter down with her.”
‘A wounded soul’
Lugdon tried more than once to stop using drugs with drug treatment programs and centers.
“In the last three months, Nicolle has tried the hardest she’s ever tried to get off drugs. I saw her do methadone, I saw her do suboxone,” Sutherland recalled. “She came home from New York with 300 methadone tablets and said, ‘I’m not doing anything else. I’m getting off drugs because I don’t like myself.’”
Melendez said Lugdon had just returned to Maine from California less than a week before her death.
“She said she was going to drug treatment twice over the last few months,” Melendez said. “The last time was just a few days before she passed.”
As people reacted to Lugdon’s death and the unusual circumstances surrounding it, Melendez noted a common misconception some had regarding her niece.
“This is purely from a self-centered standpoint. I feel like people have very much discounted the love Nicolle did get,” Melendez explained. “She did get love and support from myself and other family members, but at the same time, she wasn’t able to accept it.
“She was a wounded soul who gave a lot of love and support to others, but I don’t think she knew how to accept unconditional love and support.”
BDN writer Nok-Noi Ricker contributed to this report.



So, is an arrest immanent? 2+ weeks now…
Murders don’t get solved overnight! Get a clue before spouting off!
Thanks Captain Obvious.
This is a very sad story on so many levels.
This poor girl never had a chance. She fought as long as she could.
This story is so sad but real, I truly hope they make an arrest soon on this case. It seems to be taking them forever. These three victims all have a story and all have family that are in mourning right now and it’s time for justice!!
Always best to get it right than fast.
This is a perfect example of why drugs are, and should be illegal. Hopefully she can finally find the peace she was seeking.
It sounds like drugs were pretty easy to get legal or illegal. If they weren’t illegal, people wouldn’t have to kill to stay out of jail. Prohibition breeds violence.
I respectfully disagree with your opinion, however I can understand where you are coming from. I guess it doesnt matter if they are illegal or not, the end result is still destructive. Booze and nicotine kill many as well.
Drugs being illegal can prevent true addicts from going for help. Drugs should be addressed as a medical problem not a criminal problem.
Again I respectfully disagree. Cancer is a medical problem, however no one chooses to get cancer. People choose to do drugs, plain and simple. Once they choose to do them then they become addicted, but it all boils down to personal responsibility which it seems is becoming less and less common these days. Either way I hope at least one person out there can look at a case like this and make the decision not to take drugs.
I disagree. addiction is a cancer
My daughter did not choose to do cancer when she was 12 years old.
That is a ridiculous statement to make.
New Age nonsense.
I pray you never witness what cancer is and can do to a person.
I have witnessed it, and I have witnessed addictions
I have watched two of my spouses die from cancer….cancer is not a choice whereas addition is – no correlation between the two.
taking drugs is a choice, addiction is not
If one chooses not to take drugs, then one does not need to worry that their choice ends in addiction. The entire process starts with a choice, which cancer does not. Addiction is a choice.
Addiction is not a cancer. It is a choice one makes all on their own. The person chooses to pick up those pills, pick up that needle. She had a horrible sad life but the choices she made were her own. her addiction was a choice. nothing in this world is preordained. Nothing is etched in stone. She’s been called a “lost” cause, “she never really had a chance”, a” wounded soul”. She tried drug treatment. The sad truth is, drug treatment just doesn’t work for everyone.
Yes it is a choice….that people from tragic circumstances and not tragic circumstances choose.
What a hot pair of ladies so sad keep in mind they still havent solved the Joyce mclain murder 30 years ago or the ayla murder don’t be surprised if they can’t this one either just sayin
Joyce McLain was murdered August 8, 1980…32 years ago
Nice follow up article BDN, little background into the victim that sheds some light on how somebody can go down that path of drug abuse and how hard it is to get themselves out of it.
A great example of where people of faith can walk the walk and surround ALL of those involved with the same kind of unconditional love and grace that God gave them. It’s the only thing that will turn things around. Empathize instead of criticize. Nicolle is finally at peace. What about her friends and family who saw the struggle she had over the past few months?
Be part of the solution. It really is simple, folks, or I wouldn’t be doing it. ;)
OMG, I’m normally a stoic individual, but, I could feel tears welling up thinking of the life and hardships she had to endure. Particularly, how traumatized she must have been when her father killed her grandmother. You could argue she still ‘made her own bed’ and had every opportunity to escape, but, she was clearly a product of her environment and, sadly, ultimately dragged down the people she hung out with in the end. RIP.
SHE dragged down the other people that were murdered? How would you know that?? Are you saying this was her fault? Maybe I am reading your entry wrong?
I think you are reading wrong. she dragged down the people she was with, but this was not her fault
You started your post off sounding normal, empathetic, but you also missed the part where it said when Ms Ludgen moved back to the Bangor area “her friends introduced to drugs,” not the other way around.
Are you as cyncial when the diabetic dies from sugar overdose from too much bread and booze?
Very deep, compelling story. Brought tears to my eyes several times :(
Just plain sad. R.I.P. Nicholle.
Yes it is truly sad. Why aren’t we hearing about Dan Borders story? Help people learn how to stay out of it all.
why arent we hearing about luke?? I think he is the biggest victim here. why do we not hear anything about him???
Are either of their families/friends/etc… wiling to sit down and do an expose’ on their personal life? If not – then that is probably why we are not seeing it….
Such a tragic story on so many levels.
fabulous work, Andy!
great job, Andy!
What a tragic story. I can’t help but wonder why the aunt, who was a social worker for 20 years, didn’t intervene on behalf of this poor child and save her from the hell that her young life must have been.
Maybe she tried, she couldnt force her niece to stop or force her niece to seek treatment. it is very sad
Sorry, I guess I wasn’t clear in my original post. What I intended to say was that I wonder why she didn’t intervene when Nicolle was a small child, when she was living with her parents who were both heroin addicts. It just seems to me that if someone had tried to help and protect Nicolle when she was a very young child that perhaps she could’ve found her way when she became an adult.
She could have had 50 social-worker aunts. When children are raised in an environment where the norm is to manipulate and scheme to get what you want/need, they often come up as adults without the ability to discern what real love is from what reward for behavior is. Her biological parents were both addicts, and neither lived out their responsibilities to their children. The poor young woman was never shown by the one person who really mattered that she was worth loving simply because she was. Her aunt obviously did whatever she could to counteract that, but Nicolle needed to be totally away from everything she ever knew in order to thrive. Her true mistake was to ever have left that family fold in which she did thrive. She had the world by its tail and she did not know what to do with it. Her true, real friends would have tried anything they could to help her, without a doubt. Her so-called friends will fade away. She was human. She was a beautiful person. Nothing can change what happened now. I can’t even begin to imagine what it would be like to have been present for the murder of a loved one, no matter whether they were an addict or not. May she rest easy knowing that people who didn’t even know her are expressing their love and best wishes for her and her child.
Your fine article provokes empathy and understanding. Very sad that her life ended so tragically and violently. My sympathies to all who cared for her through the years, tried to improve her life and loved her.
If there is such a thing as karma, this poor young woman is at zero balance. She’s had enough. Rest in peace and may you find yourself in the arms of the angels at last.
Sad yes but drugs can be overcome with help and will power and sometimes a higher power I was on this path many years ago
I also could of taken that path. My mom shot my father during a domestic argument, my sister’s and I went through this are entire childhood lives. We would beg are friends to let us sleep over on weekends because,we knew what was going to happen. My parents were alcoholics, even though they both worked Mon-Fri… the weekends were frightening. I could write a book about my childhood as well as my sisters. But, we overcame that, without turning to drug’s or alcohol, all 3 of us. Ya, sure I remember those years but do I use them for a excuse to use ? No, I learned from my past, I didn’t want my children to see that life.. Everyone has choices in life… It’s your own path you choose. R.I.P. Nicholle
im not saying this to be mean but if she had so many friends who were REALLY concerned for her why did she end up with the life she had. If she was smart, wonderful and such a good person why would her friends let her go down that track. I know its hard to stop everyone but this woman although many setbacks had every opportunity and apparently “friends” who were there.
““She was the type of person where she could bat her eyelashes at you and you’d toss her $100 because she’s that pretty,” Sprague said. “She could have any man she wanted to, but she always picked the ones who had money because they took care of her. That’s how she was raised. She was really good at getting whatever she wanted.”
__________________________________________________________
This does not coincide with being nice or a “good person”
I believe she was in the wrong place at the wrong time, but spinning this as she was the nicest person in the world when her best friend said the above just seems odd. If the above is true, it is not a glowing remark about her……and why would her supposed best friend disclose that tidbit to a newspaper?
To answer your question, either her best friend wasn’t really her friend, her best friend isn’t very smart, or her best friend thinks that always picking the guys with money and being good at getting whatever one wants are good personal qualities.
You got it. She was not a nice or “good person”. She was a user, a manipulator. The behaviors of a sociopath.
I’m sorry, but just because someone has pain and tragedy in their life doesn’t absolve them of responsibility for the actions they take going forward. My wife and I lost a baby daughter to a congenital heart defect after she had lived for six months. What did I do afterward? I went back to school and got my Master’s degree with a 3.9 GPA. While we can agree that family struggles might have played a role with Lugdon, it is NOT axiomatic that her behavior and actions should be excused away with a wave of the hand because of them.
I agree with you, but some people, hit with one tradgedy after another just tend to give up some just give up, you did not, but some do…
Perhaps you had enough love in the foundation of your life to overcome that sir.
Please do not ever assume that everyone else got that same love to teach them how to persevere. We all come out of the birth canal perfectly imperfect before our environment manipulates who we become.
One is only as good as one perceives. Perhaps you were taught a proper perception of yourself and given the right tools.
Unfortunately we lost this beautiful soul from the planet because she was doomed from the beginning .
Had this amazing young person ever taken a look at herself from the outside instead of only from the manipulated inside, she could have seen she was worth the changes needed to persevere.
Please remember people without empathy are judging themselves as well. Perhaps not with the same paralyzing severity that she was, but they are.
This girl only knew how to survive because she was never shown how to live.
When the loving people in her life tried, perhaps they did not realize they had to help her break her fears to create a proper fearless foundation to support forward movement such as yours.
Good for you but not everyone is capable or has the family available to do that.
People are not all the same. Some people are born into a life of tragedy and pain.
Although I agree with you regarding personal responsibility and one’s choices, I understand that children who experience traumatic events are no comparison to a well-balanced adult experiencing traumatic events. That being said, I’m so very sorry for your loss and I cannot comprehend the difficulty of losing a child.
…apples to oranges. Good for you that you overcame, but not related.
When Nicolle was just 2 years old, her grandmother Leanna Lugdon and uncle Theodore “Robbie” Lugdon were killed in a house fire in Bangor, according to BDN archives.
In March 2002, when Lugdon was 13, her mother died of a heroin overdose. Just five months later, Lugdon’s father, Michael Melendez, killed her grandmother Linda Melendez. Both were heroin addicts and the killing resulted from an argument over drugs. Nicolle Lugdon was in the house and hiding in a second-floor room with her 2-year-old brother while her father stabbed her grandmother 36 times.
Reminder, Nicolle’s tragedy began at least age 2. Perhaps sooner (I believe it started in utero)
Congratulations to you respectively. Nicoles events, exposure and tragedies began prebirth.
This was not one event or one episode. She was born into an arena filled with violence,drugs and abuse.
It appears she was attempting to turn her life around but her knowledge of how to do this was limited. In meaning she probably didnt how to escape this type of world.
She obviously needed a strong community support system that was lacking.(to include dhs and case management etc……but not limited to.
She grew up watching her parents shoot heroin. Its a little different than your loss
I won’t agree with some of the highly negative statements I read in this article. Maybe she did have a chance to overcome or was close to getting one. What happened to her could easily happen to someone who does a lot less drugs. She didn’t walk out that door expecting to be killed. I doubt that the others at that party were expecting it either. I just don’t think this can be simplified. If it was all that simple, they wouldn’t have left the party or maybe they wouldn’t have even gone to the party in the first place.
this could have happened to me. I do not do drugs. I faked smoking pot in high school. but I wanted to be ‘with the cool kids’ so I did what i had to do. I am now 50 yo, but back then I woulda done anything to be with the cool kids. so sad that this was the end of their lives. I seriously coulda been Nikki
It could have been me many times. I never got far into drugs and crime at all. But I came from a very broken family and lots of times I just made the choice that would get me out of the cold. I was around some bad people and somehow managed to get out of it alive. If I didn’t do the things they did, they would say I was a narc. I had to get completely away from them. I couldn’t even live anywhere near them and feel safe. People who have been through this type of thing understand why a lot of the rehab approaches don’t work so well.
I am personally sick to my stomach every time I read about this murder! First of all, Dan Boarders is the one who owed a drug debt, was summoned to go, and Nikki and Luke decided to go for the ride because SHE didn’t want to miss smoking bud! Wrong Place, Wrong Time, PERIOD!
I knew 2 of the parties involved!
That fits in with the post I made before yours. I don’t think the extent of her drug use is the cause. It could happen to somebody whose only drug use is an occasional toke. She got killed because they didn’t want to leave any witnesses alive. I think people are trying too hard to connect a lot of other things in her life to the way she died.
IMHO, I don’t think Anybody has any business professing to know why this happened. We can surmise that it was drugs from the vicious statement of the burning of the car and the innuendos in the media. I would Not want to be in the shoes of anyone investigating this case. It’s just plain scary. However, the actual motive and individuals who perpetrated this horrendous act will only be revealed if and when all the ducks are lined up and Their coffins can be nailed shut by justice.
Well, she was trying real hard to get off the drugs according to her aunt. People need to respect her for her efforts. Also, she was at a small birthday party. It was not a large whoohoo anything goes party. Who knows she may have been off drugs at this time in her life. Maybe she was at the party just having a few beers. Plus, there is a big difference between smoking pot and doing cocaine and heroin. She really did not want to do hard drugs anymore and was smart enough to change her path.
That photo looks like it was taken at Diva’s.
Most likely was ……She most definitely was exploited……..yes by professional business men in the Bangor area
I really do hope there is a heaven for people like this .This girl has already been through hell,she deserves some Heaven
Nicole has touched many people in her joyful life and the tragedy of her death. I have cried and prayed over the stories published about her in the paper. I know she is in a better place as the power of prayer is tremendous. This article was a wonderful tribute to Nicole. Thank you for sharing.
I do hope they solve this evil crime. There have been a lot of stories about the tragedy and the families. I hope there is some pressure to solve this case. Have there been any updates on the investigation?
What is going on with the proliferation of tattoos lately? Do people actually believe that junk looks good?
It’s the trashy look – instant disfigurement. They call it “body art”, and a lot of people are going to be sorry when it goes out of fashion and they get old and fat and those tattoos stretch and the colors blur and fade.
Many prayers and thoughts to the families involved, how people can get 0n this Comment Page and say the things they do without caring or feeling sympathy to what they may say can and will affect the victims loved ones is absolutely mind boggling to me. RIP to all the KIDS that were lost that terrible night…
Tragic.
What society does to our children.
What people do to themselves when they choose to use drugs.
Both you and bandbox are correct in my opinion. Two sides of same coin.
their is always a chance. I feel horrible that this has happened, but at some point people need to be responsible for themselves. When you get involved in drugs, and as this was major drug dealing…than you take the chance. This will get resolved, its a matter of time, but it will. Maybe this can at the very least wake some people up and get them out of the drug dealing game!!!
Life can treat some people more cruelly than others.
I’m not sure what is tragic about this story. It would have been tragic if this woman had raised her daughter amid drug abuse. It would have been tragic if she had continued to have children who would undoubtedly have been subsidized with welfare and raised under the same conditions the dead woman experienced. It would have been tragic if she had injured or killed an innocent person in a “driving under the influence ” car accident. I’m sure the people who loved her will miss her, but this isn’t a tragedy, it’s just a sad story for her loved ones.
what is different about her up bringing and if she raised her daughter amid drug abuse? isnt that what happened to her? how is that not tragic?
I’m not sure what is tragic about this story. It would have been tragic if this woman had raised her daughter amid drug abuse. It would have been tragic if she had continued to have children who would undoubtedly have been subsidized with welfare and raised under the same conditions the dead woman experienced. It would have been tragic if she had injured or killed an innocent person in a “driving under the influence ” car accident. I’m sure the people who loved her will miss her, but this isn’t a tragedy, it’s just a sad story for her loved ones.
This woman’s death is sad and the circumstances and manner of her death awful, but not tragic. The word “tragic” is overused these days.
tragic: adjective 1. characteristic or suggestive of tragedy: tragic solemnity.
2. extremely mournful, melancholy, or pathetic: a tragic plight.
I would say that definition #2 is an apt description of this story, particularly for her young, formative years.
I am not defending her lifestyle, and to be perfectly honest, I detest these people who are bringing this type of scourge to our community – all these people, the Daniel Borders, the Nicolle Lugdons, the murderer of these three people, the whole lot of them for exposing all of us to the dangerous lives they have chosen to live.
Most of us have chosen to live in Bangor because it is a relatively safe, quiet place to be. If we wanted this type of activity we would have chosen to live in Worcester or Providence or the equivalent. Bangor is on the fast track to become just like those cities unless people pull their heads out of the sand and admit to what is actually happening in this city and do something to stop it before it is completely out of control. Sitting back and saying “it’s not as bad as…”, or “it’s safer than…”, is not going to stop what is coming this way.
That being said, I do think that Nicolle Lugdon’s life was, for the most part tragic, or pathetic if you prefer that term.
…..
Dunno. Guess it’s a good thing that an attempt is made to humanize the person behind the police report. Truly an awful story. Still, I’m aware of a lot that goes on in this town & there are a lot of bad apples who care nothing for anyone including their “best” friends if it gets in the way of their drugs. This person represents a generation, a lifestyle, that is not just “lost,” it is destructive to others. It is selfish & most certainly IS the fault of those who are involved in it.
a.
An untimely and sad end to a difficult life. Such a shame.
Drugs are not recreational products. To party with drugs is to invite disaster every time. The best way to stay off drugs is to never start in the first place. Sometimes it is inevitable when related to medical conditions or to accidents but most of those seem to be able to drop off with no ill effects. Friends who temp one with the use of drugs are not friends at all. regardless of how sympathetic they seem. But regardless, the lifestyle is a choice for each individual and if one makes the wrong choice that person wounds everyone they love to some degree. Drug abuse kills…one way or another. It’s a sad story that keeps repeating itself.
Sad but hardly tragic. She had plenty of chances. She made bad choices. Sadly she paid the ultimate price.
when you meddle in oxycodone, this is what happens!!!
If I were a pharmacist, I’d be quaking in my Sketchers.
“She could have any man she wanted to, but she always picked the ones who had money because they took care of her. ” Pretty much sums up what I thought….
Any man? Seriously, there are limits. I think she means men in Lugdon’s subculture who are attracted to drug-abusing women with tattoos.
go into a WelFareMart, all the females are coated in tattoos.
go into a Target,all clear skinned females.
Not me. I cant stand even looking at a female with a tattoo.
A lot of people don’t stand a chance in today’s corrupt system. How eerily familiar. http://www.norwalkreflector.com/content/willard-resident-injured-during-drug-deal-gone-bad?similar “Why wasn’t all of them arrested on probable cause, if nothing else?
Known drug user and known drug dealers, a loaded gun, shots being fired,
what more do they need to make an arrest?? So where did the stray
bullet go?? Thank God an innocent person or child wasn’t struck, this
time!! Its bad enough we are all dealing with this war on heroin, but
now we have to worry about them carring guns and shooting people. They
should all have been arrested. Now Mr. Sexton thinks its ok to carry
loaded guns and shoot at people for ripping him off, gee Nick, how many
“innocent” people have you ripped off, maybe we should shoot you?? As
far as Tharon and Sheri they are scum. They have both been to prison for
trafficing in heroin, what did they learn?? What everybody else learns
while incarcerated…how to do it better the next time!! I think we need
much stricter punishments for these offenders, espically when they
commit a second and third offense. The judicial system needs to stop
wheeling and dealing with them and just slam their @sses in prison and
leave them there for about 5 years. Maybe then they might think twice
about what they are doing.”
Thank you for such a well written story. It brought tears to my eyes. Such a senseless tragedy.
Interesting twist in the story title. She died in a car fire? That’s not what has been around town since it happened.