Charlene Thompson, 61, was arrested on Dec. 2, for allegedly pouring hot grease on a victim, according to police, who posted her mugshot online.
They got into a dispute in Cincinnati on Dec. 2, and the subject of the argument was not immediately clear. The fight escalated and Thompson tossed grease on the person, police stated. The victim wasn’t identified by police.
The victim suffered burns to their arms and back. Officials said the injuries were visible when they arrived, the Fox affiliate report said.
Prosecutors said they were working to establish a “high bond” for Thomspon during her Dec. 5 court appearance.
“As the court is well aware, burns are some of the most devastating, painful, debilitating, long-term injuries that someone can suffer,” Assistant Hamilton County Prosecutor David Wood said, according to Fox19.
A judge set her bond for $15,000, telling her to stay away from the victim.
Thompson is no stranger to police. She was arrested in 2016 and 2017 for breaking a neighbor’s window with rocks in two separate incidents. And in 2006, she was charged with striking her daughter on Christmas Eve, although those charges were dropped.
Cincinnati police also accused her of kicking an officer and spitting several times inside a police car at on an officer in July 2008, according to the Fox report.
Thompson was convicted of criminal trespass charge August 2007 after she was arrested for entering an assisted living facility before hitting a resident, the report said.
Violent Crime Down in 2018
The FBI says that in 2017 violent crime had dropped by 0.2 percent, according to a release, but aggravated and rape offenses increased by a respective 1.0 percent and 2.5 percent. The murder rate dropped by 0.7 percent, the agency said.“In 2017, there were an estimated 1,247,321 violent crimes. The estimated number of robbery offenses decreased 4.0 percent, and the estimated number of murder and nonnegligent manslaughter offenses decreased 0.7 percent when compared with estimates from 2016. The estimated volume of aggravated assault and rape (revised definition) offenses increased 1.0 percent and 2.5 percent, respectively,” said the FBI.
The agency added: “By violent crime offense, the arrest rate for murder and nonnegligent manslaughter was 3.8 per 100,000 inhabitants; rape (aggregate total using the revised and legacy definition), 7.2; robbery, 29.3; and aggravated assault, 120.4 per 100,000 inhabitants.
Meanwhile, the FBI said that there are now 670,279 sworn officers and 286,662 civilian officers in the U.S, which is a rate of 3.4 employees per 1,000 inhabitants.