logo
New Details Emerge in the Case of Angelina Resendiz, the 21-Year-Old Sailor Who Was Found Dead Near a Navy Base

New Details Emerge in the Case of Angelina Resendiz, the 21-Year-Old Sailor Who Was Found Dead Near a Navy Base

Yahoo12-07-2025
New information has been revealed tied to the disappearance of a 21-year-old Navy sailor who was found dead on June 9
A Department of the Navy memo, sent to Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar, confirmed that sailor Angelina Resendiz was last seen with another, unnamed sailor
'Angelina was a kind and compassionate young woman who brought light into our lives,' her mother previously said in a statementNew details have emerged in the case of the sailor who disappeared from her Virginia Navy base in May and was found dead days later.
Authorities previously said Angelina Petra Resendiz was "last seen at her barracks in Miller Hall at Naval Station Norfolk" on May 29. She was later found dead in an off-base wooded area days later on June 9.
Now, a Department of the Navy memo obtained and published this week by both CBS affiliate WTKR and NBC affiliate WAVY sheds more light on the timeline of events tied to Resendiz's death.
In the memo, sent to Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar, the Navy confirmed that Resendiz — who was assigned to the USS James E. Williams prior to her death — was last seen at the barracks of an unnamed sailor around 10 a.m. local time on May 29 during a wellness check on another sailor.
Per the memo, Resendiz was on "authorized liberty" on May 29, meaning she had "no assigned duties" on the ship that day and was "not required to muster with her chain of command."
Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up for for breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.
The Naval Station Norfolk Base Police first conducted a wellness check at 5:45 a.m. that day when an officer "reported that he could not locate CSSN Resendiz after she contacted him requesting to be picked up at the barracks."
Police eventually entered her room, per the memo, and she was later located in the room assigned to another sailor hours later.
Resendiz was expected to muster, or check in for duty, at 7:30 a.m. the following day but did not report, the memo said.
At 9:30 a.m. on May 30, another wellness check was conducted on both her room and the room of the other sailor, whom she was last seen with, but "neither Sailor was located," according to the timeline of events provided by the Navy. The other sailor's name has not yet been released.
The new details come weeks after Marshall Griffin, an attorney who represents Resendiz's mother, told WAVY that the Navy confirmed a man named Jermiah Copeland was detained or confined "on suspicion" in the case following an initial review officer's hearing at the Naval Consolidated Brig in Chesapeake.
At the time, Griffin and a spokesperson for the U.S. Navy did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment.
Griffin told WAVY that Copeland would remain in pretrial confinement and charges were not known at the time. Such hearings, Griffin added, determine 'whether the individual is a flight risk, or they're likely to engage in other misconduct, and consider the government's evidence whether a crime actually occurred.'
A spokesperson for the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) also confirmed in a statement to PEOPLE last month that a Navy sailor had been placed in "pretrial confinement" in connection with the case.
Resendiz's body was found by the NCIS on June 9 in an off-base wooded area in Norfolk. The Norfolk Medical Examiner's Office verified on June 10 that her body was positively identified.
The young woman's remains have since been transferred to the Valley International Airport in Harlingen, Texas. They were returned home by military personnel, according to KVEO, a local NBC and CBS affiliate.
According to WAVY, Resendiz's mother, Esmeralda Castle, said that 'the person responsible for this horrific loss made deliberate choices that ended Angie's life." She added that their actions were "not a mistake."
'Angelina was a kind and compassionate young woman who brought light into our lives,' Castle said in a separate statement following her daughter's death, calling the loss 'a void in their hearts.'
Read the original article on People
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ICE Chief Doubles Down On Arresting Undocumented People With No Criminal History
ICE Chief Doubles Down On Arresting Undocumented People With No Criminal History

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

ICE Chief Doubles Down On Arresting Undocumented People With No Criminal History

President Donald Trump once promised to focus on the 'worst of the worst' as he sought to ramp up immigrant deportations, but a recent interview from his acting ICE chief underscored just how far the administration has departed from that vow. ICE is doubling down on arresting undocumented immigrants without criminal histories, Todd Lyons, the acting head of the federal body, told CBS's Camilo Montoya-Galvez in an exclusive interview. 'Under this administration, we have opened up the whole aperture of the immigration portfolio,' he said. 'If we encounter someone that isn't here in the country legally, we will take them into custody.' That approach marks a sharp break from the policies of the Biden administration, which directed agents to apprehend undocumented immigrants with criminal backgrounds, those who posed a national security threat and those who had entered the U.S more recently, CBS notes. It's also counter to claims that the Trump administration once made about focusing on those with serious criminal records, and prompted sharp blowback as ICE agents have targeted everyone from a high school student driving to sports practice to immigrants attending routine court hearings. Of the roughly 100,000 deportations ICE has documented between January 1 and June 24, about 70,000 involved a person with a criminal conviction, a CBS review of internal government data found. And just a small fraction of those who faced criminal convictions did so for violent offenses, Montoya-Galvez noted. (Living in the U.S. without documentation is a civil offense and not a criminal offense, Vanity Fair notes.) 'We can't look at it just based on violence,' Lyons said in the CBS interview. A July Axios review also determined that noncriminal ICE arrests increased in June, and that 'people without criminal charges or convictions made up an average of 47% of daily ICE arrests' in the early portion of that month. Lyons claimed in the interview that deporting immigrants who are 'the worst of the worst' was still a chief priority for the administration, and DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Lyons also outlined other ways that ICE will ramp up enforcement as it receives a staggering funding infusion from Republicans' recent tax bill, which will make it the highest funded federal law enforcement agency in the U.S. The agency will continue workplace raids, despite the concerns that have been raised about racial profiling and the trauma they've caused for immigrant communities. It will also penalize companies that hire undocumented immigrants, he said. 'We're focusing on these American companies that are actually exploiting these laborers,' Lyons said. Lyons noted, too, that agents will continue to wear masks during enforcement actions, due to concerns for their privacy and personal safety, a move that has garnered criticism for shielding officers from accountability and inspiring fear in immigrants who are approached by them. 'I'm not a proponent of the masks; however, if that's a tool that the men and women of ICE use to keep themselves and their families safe, then I'll allow it,' he said. Such moves come as the president has reportedly set a goal of a million deportations by the end of this year, one which Lyons said was 'possible' to achieve as ICE's sweeping and controversial tactics continue unabated. 'We hear a lot about the administration deporting the worst of the worst. And as far as we can tell from all available data up to this point, the data has not really supported that,' Austin Kocher, a professor at Syracuse University, told ABC News in July. Related... Volunteers Flock To Support Migrants Targeted By ICE At Immigration Courts Army Veteran And U.S. Citizen Arrested In California Immigration Raid Old Clip Of Stephen Miller Praising Torture Resurface Amid Aggressive Immigration Enforcement

Man dead in shooting at St. Paul homeless encampment, police say
Man dead in shooting at St. Paul homeless encampment, police say

CBS News

time19 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Man dead in shooting at St. Paul homeless encampment, police say

A man was shot and killed at a homeless encampment in St. Paul on Sunday, police say. Authorities say officers responded to the encampment near the 1200 block of Jackson Street at about 1:15 p.m. Officers were directed to a tent in the encampment where the man was, police say. Several people rendered first aid to the man, including police and medics from the St. Paul Fire Department. The victim was later pronounced dead on scene. No arrests have been made. The Ramsey County Medical Examiner's Office will conduct an autopsy to identify the victim and determine exact cause of death. Investigators are working to determine what led to the shooting and who is responsible. Anyone with information is asked to call the St. Paul Homicide Unit at 651-266-5650. Authorities say this is the fifth homicide of 2025 in St. Paul.

Lawrence County couple facing over 70 charges related to animal cruelty, neglect
Lawrence County couple facing over 70 charges related to animal cruelty, neglect

CBS News

time19 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Lawrence County couple facing over 70 charges related to animal cruelty, neglect

A couple in New Castle, Lawrence County, is facing charges after police found dead animal carcasses and nearly a dozen neglected dogs inside a home. Michelle Wimer and Travis Laughrey are facing 18 counts of aggravated cruelty to animals, 14 misdemeanor counts of cruelty to animals, and 42 counts of neglect of animals. These charges are allegedly for a lack of sustenance and veterinary care.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store