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Narrator
A vicious attack leaves a Cleveland woman fighting for her life.
Lead Investigator
She was bleeding heavily from her head, her scalp.
Police Officer
She's trembling in fear and screaming that they're trying to kill her.
Narrator
But the investigation quickly turns into a case of she said, she said, they
Melissa Latham
tried every which way to discredit me.
Lead Investigator
She was yelling that that's her, that's the lady that tried to kill.
Narrator
When detectives finally unravel the truth, it turns out to be stranger than anything they could have possibly imagined.
Prosecutor
We were dealing with somebody that was just incorrigible.
Lead Investigator
She faked her way into Yale University.
Defense Attorney
She gives her story about being abducted.
Prosecutor
She snapped when she actually realized she was going to have to face justice.
Federal Prosecutor
I've never seen anybody try to fake their own death to avoid going to jail.
Lead Investigator
This was easily the most diabolical incident I ever had to investigate.
Police Officer
Do you remember what the female looked like?
Melissa Latham
She's seated right there.
Narrator
April 21, 2001. It's a pleasant spring afternoon in East Cleveland, Ohio. But for the work inside a fast food restaurant, things take a violent turn.
Lead Investigator
On that particular day, there was a 911 call that came in from the Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Police Officer
What they are witnessing is a woman who bursts into the restaurant, trembling in fear, bloodied about the head and screaming that they're trying to kill her. Not knowing whether this is something that is drug induced or otherwise, they pick up the phone, call 911.
Narrator
When first responders arrive, they find the woman, 27 year old Melissa Latham, in a state of shock.
Lead Investigator
She had a large laceration or cut on her forehead and was also bleeding heavily from her head, her scalp. She was very coherent at the time, but she was definitely hysterical. Melissa was telling that there was a woman across the street and her male cousin that assaulted her and tried to kill her. She did mention that she was injected with insulin during her assault, but she did not go into why or anything that led up to it. Melissa is very believable, but at the same time, due to the fact we don't know the parties or who's involved, it's a big question mark.
Police Officer
As the first responders are taking in what Melissa is telling them. Suddenly, unseen appears another woman, well put together. And she has her own story contradicting what Melissa is relaying to them.
Lead Investigator
A black female walks in yelling at the victim that she tried to take her money from her $1,000. Melissa saw her and actually climbed over the counter to get away and was yelling that that's her, that's the lady that tried to kill me.
Narrator
While first responders tend to Melissa inside, police take the new arrival outside.
Lead Investigator
She was asked her identity, and she identified herself as Tonica Jenkins.
Police Officer
The story that Tonika gives is that Melissa stole money from her and from her cousin Kyle Martin.
Lead Investigator
Tonika seemed very believable. She didn't have any mark on her. She seemed very clean cut and pretty much kept with her story that Melissa took $1,000 from her. She didn't indicate that she was involved in no way, shape, or form with the assault of Melissa. So based on the totality of statements, it was imperative that we find out what was going. On.
Narrator
Melissa Rochelle Latham was born July 14, 1973. She grew up in East Cleveland, along with four siblings.
Melissa's Sister
My father was a truck driver and my mother was a nurse. And we lived good. Everything was structured. We had chores. We had bible studies. We sat down at the table and ate breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Coming up as kids, my sister Melissa was the one that I could communicate with effectively. We just had that bond. Melissa was bubbly, outgoing, always energetic, always making us laugh.
Narrator
Despite a happy early childhood, the 90s brought on a difficult era for the Latham family.
Melissa's Sister
When my mom was going through her addiction, that was the time when we were supposed to be being nurtured. And, you know, it was hard. My father did all he could. I didn't know what was going on. I was a kid. We end up. I remember moving from place to place with my mom's friends. Melissa started acting out from trying to replace what was missing from what we knew to be normal. When she was 13 years old, she got pregnant and had a baby, her first child. She really tried, but she was a baby herself.
Narrator
A second child followed a few years later, and Melissa, like her mother before her, began using drugs as an escape from reality.
Melissa's Sister
The drug didn't take over her like that. She still was functional. So I really didn't know the difference until it was obvious. She started looking different, she started acting different. She would be out in the streets all night. That's what addiction does.
Narrator
Melissa eventually had seven children, and to fund her increasing drug use, she turned to a life of petty crime.
Melissa's Sister
She was a booster, a thief, still out of stores, clothes, you know, selling to other people. Often she'd get caught, and she would have to go sit down in the county jail for lengths of times until she, you know, go to court and she'd come out. Then she'd go right back to doing what she do and get back in trouble and end back up in jail.
Narrator
As a result, the state declared Melissa an Unfit mother and placed her children in foster care.
Melissa's Sister
When she found out the kids was gone, it crushed her. I think it made her slip deeper into her addiction. Addiction feels like helpless, hopeless, dark. It made her forget about everything that made her her. I can remember her trying to seek help, but everything she did, she always found herself going back to the drug.
Narrator
As Melissa entered her late 20s, the family moved from east cleveland to the suburb of oakwood in the late 90s, hoping to help turn her life around.
Melissa's Sister
When we moved to oakwood, Melissa started working off and on. She gets a job at McDonald's and things getting a little bit better. It gave her more clarity. It gave her more purpose having a job. But she still would go and do what she wanted to do. Eventually, she would find a way to get high, and unfortunately, that's what happened that night.
Narrator
Instead of escaping her addiction, it appears Melissa might have become the victim of a drug deal gone wrong. As officers continue speaking with Tonika, Melissa's condition worsens.
Lead Investigator
EMTs on scene definitely need to stabilize her. Melissa mentioned she was just injected with amounts of insulin. That definitely started to affect her, so they needed to rush her to the hospital. So as Melissa is being wheeled into the ambulance, she points at the residents, letting officers know that is where the assault occurred. That was definitely indicative for us to get over to that house and find out who was there, but also corroborate what happened.
Narrator
Coming up, one of the women that this bizarre scene is lying to. Officers, the question is who?
Police Officer
Melissa tells the police that the attack happened across the street. Tonika says, no, it didn't.
Narrator
And investigators hear the details of a diabolical scheme.
Lead Investigator
She wanted to know if he knew any females that wanted to make some money.
Melissa Latham
When the car pulled up on me, she say, what you doing tonight?
Narrator
While Melissa Latham is rushed to the hospital, police continue questioning her alleged attacker, Tonika jenkins. According to her, Melissa has the story all wrong.
Lead Investigator
Tonika gave the impression that for that day or previous days, Melissa was doing drugs with her cousin, Kyle Martin.
Police Officer
Melissa tells the police that the attack happened at the family home across the street from the fast food restaurant. Tonika says, no, it didn't happen at the house. It happened at an abandoned building next door.
Lead Investigator
Tonika indicated whatever occurred that happened between Kyle and Melissa Latham. She had no involvement.
Narrator
Although Tonika seems to be the more believable of the two. Often decide to check for themselves.
Police Officer
They've been directed to the family home by Melissa, and tonica agrees to let them into the home. But then there's delay.
Lead Investigator
Tonica Indicated it was hard to get in. She had to ring the doorbell because her parents were inside and they were in fact elderly. But after a few minutes, officers were able to make entry with Tonika into the residence. But officers did notice that she was being evasive.
Narrator
Since Melissa claimed she was attacked in the basement. That's the first place the officers look.
Lead Investigator
The basement was not finished and pretty much appeared to be used for storage. There were bikes, boxes, a refrigerator. The first thing they noticed was a strong order of bleach. And they noted that tanika's mother was cleaning.
Police Officer
They ask her what she's doing and she says that she's cleaning after the dogs because her grandbabies play down there.
Narrator
Officers notice the coincidence and quickly spot something that doesn't add up.
Lead Investigator
Officers noted blood splatter on the stairs and a couple other locations in the basement. It was indicative to officers that something definitely happened and further investigation was needed to follow up on what physical evidence might still remain at the house.
Narrator
Based on their findings, police put Tonika in police custody While other officers focus on tracking down her cousin Kyle.
Lead Investigator
His officers are in the basement with Tonika and her mother. Another set of officers happened to be checking next door to both residences, and that's where they happen upon Kyle Martin.
Police Officer
Kyle martin is sweaty. He's scratched up.
Lead Investigator
They handcuffed him and led him outside. We encounter tonika, who's also handcuffed. At that point, Kyle noted she was handcuffed and said, hey, you can uncuff her and let her go. This was all me.
Police Officer
Kyle martin tells the police he is the one that attacked and assaulted Melissa. So with that admission, police then do release tonica jenkins at that point to further their investigation by taking Kyle in for further questioning.
Lead Investigator
Checking into Kyle, he had a long, extensive criminal history. Receiving stolen property, carrying concealed weapons, selling of substitute illicit drugs, and also grand theft.
Narrator
While waiting on a warrant to inspect the scene, investigators employ a little trickery to get Kyle to talk.
Lead Investigator
We indicated that Melissa had passed away. There is no clean cut rule that you have to tell the entire truth or be transparent during an investigation.
Narrator
The tactic works. And with the added pressure from detectives,
Lead Investigator
Kyle breaks Once he was advised that Melissa latham passed away. He was very cooperative at that point and wanted to give his side of the story. What we learned. I think this was easily the most diabolical and thought out incident I ever had to investigate.
Narrator
April 24, 2001. Police have Kyle Martin in custody for the attack on Melissa Latham, and he has agreed to reveal what really happened. Kyle starts by Explaining how he and his cousin first encountered Melissa Latham, he
Lead Investigator
mentioned that Tonika wanted to know if he knew any females that wanted to make some money. It was through an insurance fraud where they could find females who would get examined. Whether it was dental visits, pap smears, breast examinations, and they would make money from doing this.
Narrator
Kyle says he didn't know the details on how the scam would work, but Tonika offered him compensation for his help, so he agreed without question. Four days ago, on April 20, he and Tonika went cruising for volunteers.
Lead Investigator
They drive around East Cleveland and happen upon Melissa Latham. She's walking westbound late at night on Euclid Avenue by United Furniture in East Cleveland. They approach her in a red small mid sized vehicle with Pennsylvania plates. Kyle is seated in the back of the vehicle and Tonica is Dr. They ask her would she be interested in making some money just doing some insurance fraud and she agrees to do so.
Police Officer
Kyle says Melissa was under the impression that she was doing this insurance scam for medical payout.
Narrator
According to Kyle, they stopped to buy drugs and return to the house on Delmont. The next day they took Melissa to the dentist for X rays.
Lead Investigator
They went to Strongsville, Ohio to the dental appointment and he remained in the car while Tonica and Melissa went in for the appointment. About an hour later, they come back to the car and from there they go to retrieve more drugs. And then after that they went back where they smoked the drugs.
Narrator
Their scheme had been a success, but Kyle says the following morning things took a turn for the worse.
Lead Investigator
Kyle Martin wakes up and he's paranoid from using drugs the night before. Latham is still there, which kind of upset him. He didn't feel comfortable with her being there. While she's in the bathroom, Kyle notes that $800 and some crack is missing. When Melissa comes out of the bathroom, Kyle's agitated and strikes her in the forehead and also in the back of the head. Tonica, hearing a commotion, comes downstairs and asks what's going on? What's the problem? At this point, Cal says she's your problem. Kyle then mentions that Tonika assaults Melissa with a brick. She was laying in a pool of blood and Kyle is watching Tonika inject her at least four times in the left arm when insulin. At this time, Kyle's like, wow, Dr. Kevorkian, what are you doing?
Narrator
Kyle claims he left the basement at that point to get some air, but Tonika joined him. A few moments later, Tonica mentions that
Lead Investigator
Melissa has gotten away. At this point, Tonica takes the brick and also the syringe that was used in the assault, wraps it in a gray plastic bag and takes it next door to the abandoned area between the house and throws it over the fence.
Police Officer
They have Kyle Martin in custody. He's detained upon the basis of his admission that he's the one that assaulted Melissa.
Lead Investigator
It was imperative to not only corroborate this interview with Melissa, but also check on Melissa's condition. Upon arriving to the hospital, we were unable to interview her because she was still out of it. She had six stitches to the front of her forehead, and she had 25 to 30 staples to the back of her head from the attack with the brick. Due to the insulin that was injected with her, her blood sugar was dangerously low.
Narrator
When investigators talked to Melissa's doctors, her injuries seemed to match the story Kyle told them.
Lead Investigator
It was corroborated that a heavy, blunt object caused a lot of the bruises and contusions and lacerations to Melissa Latham, which is consistent with the brick that was mentioned by Kyle Martin.
Police Officer
Her insulin levels are off the charts. That corroborates what Kyle is telling the police.
Lead Investigator
Melissa was in a very critical state. We were very worried that she was going to pull through with this.
Melissa Latham
All right, spit Melissa Latham. L a t h a m. I just remember them saying I was lucky. Miracle of God. Most definitely. I remember waking up looking. I had, like, scabs all across my face, a lot of staples in my head, and I had stitches in my forehead. I couldn't believe I was in that situation.
Narrator
The day after Kyle Martin's confession, investigators get good news. Melissa Latham has regained consciousness and is finally able to talk to them.
Lead Investigator
We definitely wanted to be sensitive to her and her condition.
Defense Attorney
First.
Lead Investigator
We wanted her to be able to identify the possible suspects. So she was shown one photo array where she positively identified Kyle Martin, and she was shown another photo array where she was able to identify Tonica Jenkins. So that helped us immensely, and she established that those were the two individuals that attacked her.
Narrator
After identifying Kyle and Tonika, Melissa tells police everything she can remember about what happened.
Lead Investigator
It was pretty much identical to Kyle's from starting with her walking westbound down Euclid, that they offered her some money so she could do this insurance fraud.
Melissa Latham
When the car pulled up on me, she say, what you doing tonight? I'm like, I'm trying to make some money. She say, well, we can have you make money. All you gotta do is, you know, go to the dentist. I'm like, well, ain't no dentist's Office open at 2 o' clock in the morning. She like, no, we gonna take you in the morning. She gave me a shirt, a sweatshirt, which was a Yale shirt. Then she said, okay, when we go, we're gonna make up a name to put on the paperwork. And she was acting like she was making up a name, right, for this insurance scam. At the time, I didn't know it, but she was putting her name under my dental work.
Narrator
The reason wouldn't become clear until they got back from the appointment.
Melissa Latham
She takes us back to the house on Delmont, go back to where we was at in the basement doing the same thing, which was smoking drugs. I had went to the bathroom to, like, brush my teeth and stuff. The light was on the bathroom. So when I came out, wasn't no lights on. I'm like, could y' all turn the lights on? I can't see. And that's when I felt Kyle swing at me. I'm asking, why y' all doing this to me? What did I do? I know I didn't steal nothing. I'm asking them, what did I do? They was hitting me and punching me. And then she picked up a sledgehammer, and she was like, no, don't use that. Don't use that. Just use the bricks. So he hit me in the head with the brick about three times. He was like, she ain't passed out yet. And that's when she grabbed the brick and hit me two more times. I started putting up a fight and was fighting for my life. Fighting and fighting and fighting. But I had ran out of energy. All of a sudden, I feel needles going into my body. Kyle was like, what is you doing? What is you sticking her with? She was like, oh, this mama's insulin. I just want her to pass out. I'm like, lord, I got to play dead. Cause if I don't play dead, I'm gonna be dead. They was talking while I was. While they thought I was unconscious. She was telling Kyle, this is your cousin right here with. We're gonna get this ankle bracelet off me, put it on her, because she's gonna be me, and I'm gonna be dead. She was like, we're gonna take her to this abandoned apartment next door and burn her up. All they gonna have to identify is by her dental records. I was scared to death. I just knew I was about to
Lead Investigator
die at that point. Tonica has Kyle go up with her to find something to wrap up Melissa's body so they can burn her in the garage outside.
Melissa Latham
Soon as I hear the doors close and I heard them upstairs, I got Up. I was a little dizzy from the insulin and the spoon that me and Kyle was cooking drugs up on. I used the end of that stuff to unlock the door, and I got out the door. On the outside of the door was a pit bull. I'm scared as hell of pit bulls, but I wasn't scared this day. I got that door open, ran across the street, went into kfc, and I say, they tried to kill me. They trying to kill me. Could y' all please call 91 1.
Narrator
For investigators? Melissa Alyssa's story changes everything.
Lead Investigator
So at this point, the whole plot became very nefarious to us. It went from a robbery over drugs and money to basically an attempted murder case. Why was it important for Tonika to kill Melissa Latham to make her appear to be hurt?
Narrator
Next, homicide detectives look into Tonika Jenkins. Background.
Police Officer
Tanika grew up in east Cleveland. She grew up with two brothers.
Defense Attorney
She was living in the greater Cleveland area with her mother and father. Her father was a retired police officer.
Police Officer
The relationship between mother and daughter seemed to be as one would expect. They seemed to be very tight, very close, traveled together, and I'm sure leaned on one another for support. Tanica was always the person that was labeled as a smart one of the family and attended Cuyahoga county community college for a number of years back in the early 1990s. She then applies for a graduate program at the Yale University in their neuroscience department.
Lead Investigator
She was able to get a full ride as well as $16,000 additionally with the grant.
Police Officer
It's during her classwork that the professor is perplexed because she's not at the level where she should be, based on her transcripts, based on the letters of recommendation. So he picks up the phone and calls one of the professors from her community college and wants some insight as to how can I help Tanika succeed here. And that's when it starts to unravel. They have no record of her.
Defense Attorney
What she'd done was apparently created a paper trail that represented her to be a gifted young neuroscientist, when in fact, she was not.
Narrator
When they pull up her criminal history, detectives discover the ankle bracelet Melissa Latham described is actually an ankle monitor Tonika is required to wear. From a previous conviction, we were able
Lead Investigator
to see that in 1998, she was charged with fraud.
Narrator
Once her deception was under uncovered, Tanika was charged with counts of forgery and larceny. But on the morning of her court date, she failed to show up.
Defense Attorney
I'm like, this is not good. This is going to come out in a few minutes. And he's spitting nails today. Where is she? They made efforts to call her, but we were unable to find her.
Narrator
Eventually, Tonika returned to her home in East Cleveland with a dramatic explanation.
Federal Prosecutor
She said the reason she didn't make it to court was because she had been kidnapped, raped, thrown in the back of a trunk, and driven to Philadelphia, where they dumped the car. I mean, this is the kind of stuff that shows up in fiction, in novels, you know?
Narrator
Coming up, Tonika Jenkins motive is revealed.
Federal Prosecutor
She lied to get into Yale. She lied about what happened to Melissa. She's a liar.
Prosecutor
She'd already been convicted of fraud. She just was stepping up her game.
Narrator
Detectives look into Tonica Jenkins history and discover a stunning pattern of lies and deceit. A charge from 1997 for forgery and larceny. After being admitted to Yale under false documentation, Tanika failed to show up for sentencing, claiming she was kidnapped.
Defense Attorney
Tanika gives her story about being abducted and raped. Then I hear stuffed in the trunk of her car, and somehow she managed to get out and drive home. That stretched credulity. I'm willing to go a long way toward believing the narratives my client tells me, but this was difficult.
Narrator
Her attorney even receives an anonymous delivery.
Defense Attorney
I was shown photographs of her purportedly in the trunk. Who took the photographs, how she got them. They raised some pretty significant credibility questions.
Narrator
Despite the outlandish excuses, Tonika's attorney was able to negotiate a plea deal for her to repay the money she took from Yale and serve three years of probation.
Defense Attorney
I was prepared to try the case rather than and agree to a plea bargain that involved prison time. Then the state insisted that she get a felony. But after several court appearances, the state agreed to submit her to what's called accelerated rehabilitation, which is a program that says if you'll complete a brief period of probation, the charge will be dismissed.
Narrator
Tonika's police record shows that months after starting her probation, she was arrested again, this time in Florida.
Lead Investigator
We learned that Tonika and her mother, Tanika, were up for a trial for trafficking drugs. We spoke with the head agent at that particular time.
Prosecutor
I was in a narcotics group. We had undercover agents contacted by two ladies from Cleveland about coming down here and negotiating a drug dealer. So we set up a time, and they met at a restaurant here in Tampa.
Federal Prosecutor
Tonica said that she had people that she could sell this cocaine to, and ultimately, what she wanted was she wanted to take 10 kilos.
Prosecutor
We made an arrangement for them to show up to a location here in Tampa, warehouse that we controlled, and they were to bring $100,000. When they came in the warehouse, undercover was letting them know that he needed to see the money. The two ladies pulled the money out of vacu seal bags. Once he saw the money, he made a phone call where the second undercover showed up with a flash amount of cocaine. The mother actually cut it and taste tested it, which no professional drug dealer does, that. Nobody with any sense puts their finger in anything and puts it in their mouth. They don't know what it is. So we thought they've definitely been watching too much television.
Narrator
Once Tanika and her mother committed to the exchange, the rest of the undercover team swept in and made the arrests.
Federal Prosecutor
They were charged with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 5kg or more of cocaine. With those charges, they were facing a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years up to life imprisonment.
Prosecutor
They had their initial appearance in federal court here in Tampa, and the judge granted them a bond so they could go home to Cleveland prior to trial. As a condition of her bond, Tonica Jenkins was going to be required to wear an ankle monitor.
Narrator
To detectives in east Cleveland, Tonika's motive for using Melissa to fake her own death is now clear.
Lead Investigator
Just as Tonika faked her way into a rape and kidnapping, she was trying to make this into an ag murder where she can avoid her charges. In Tampa, Florida.
Federal Prosecutor
She lied to get into Yale. She lied about where she was when she was supposed to show up for court. She lied about what happened after Melissa was attacked and escaped. She's a liar.
Prosecutor
She'd already been convicted of fraud. She just was stepping up her game. It's troublesome to think that Jenkins thought Melissa was so worthless and that her life meant nothing, that she was going to kill her to avoid going to prison for something that she did. I believe Tonica Jenkins snapped when she actually realized she was gonna have to face justice.
Lead Investigator
So after speaking with the U.S. attorney and also with the head agent for her case, we were able to get two warrants. One for Tonika for attempted murder and for her mother for tampering with evidence, complicity, and obstruction.
Narrator
Investigators return to the Delmont address and discover both women are gone.
Police Officer
So the only person detained is Kyle Martin. At this point, police go to look for Tonika and her mother and find that they have already left the state on their way down to Florida to stand trial for the drug case that they're trying to avoid.
Narrator
Kyle Martin, Tonika Jenkins, and her mother, Tanika Clement, have been charged in connection to the attempted murder of Melissa Latham. But prosecutors in Cleveland will have to wait. Their Turn to try them.
Prosecutor
April 2001, they returned here to Tampa for trial. Once I found out about the attempted murder of Melissa Latham, I figured we were dealing with somebody that was just incorrigible. To go from committing fraud to deal in cocaine is one thing, but taking her house arrest bracelet off and putting it on a dead body so you could fake your own death, there's really no explanation for that.
Federal Prosecutor
Tanika and Tanika were both found guilty on each of the two counts. Conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five kills or more of cocaine, and possession with intent to distribute 5kg or more of cocaine. The judge ended up sentencing Tanika to 24 years and seven months, and Tanika was sentenced to 15 years and seven months.
Police Officer
We had to wait a couple of years before we were able to extradite them back from Florida.
Narrator
In February 2003, mother and daughter returned to Ohio to face the attempted murder charges.
Police Officer
We presented 16 witnesses that testified the picture that was painted was one that Tonica Jenkins, the daughter, was the mastermind behind what happened to Melissa. Melissa had to relive that night when she saw her life almost snuffed out. Telling the story in the factual sense was easy, but in an emotional sense, I'm sure it took a toll on her. Do you remember what the female looked like?
Melissa Latham
Yes.
Police Officer
Could you point out for the record where she is seated and an article of clothing that.
Federal Prosecutor
And she is where she's seated.
Melissa Latham
Right there with the maroon sweater on.
Police Officer
Your honor, if the record would reflect that Ms. Latham has identified Hanukkah Jenkins.
Narrator
The defense has no witnesses to call, but they insist Melissa's testimony can't be trusted.
Police Officer
Kyle will not testify. And one of the challenges was our witnesses, for the most part, were all either recovering drug addicts or still under the influence, still in the grips of addiction, Starting with Melissa herself.
Melissa Latham
They tried every which way to discredit me.
Police Officer
You were convicted of a theft offense in Maple Heights, were you not?
Melissa Latham
Yes.
Police Officer
When did you begin using crack cocaine?
Melissa Latham
About four years ago. The evidence spoke for itself. They had the dentist, they had the clothes, the brick, the staples in my head. I ain't hit myself. And they found traces of my blood in the basement. The mama was trying to clean it up. And I think that they believed me
Police Officer
because Kyle confessed In her corner was the truth. And I think it really struck a chord with the jury.
Narrator
In just one day, they return their verdict.
Police Officer
Taka Jenkins was found guilty of two counts of tampering with evidence, attempted aggravated murder, complicity to commit murder, kidnapping and felonious assault. She was sentenced to 20 years in Ohio penitentiary. The mother, Tanika Clement, was found guilty of obstructing justice and was then sentenced to one year.
Narrator
In a separate trial. Kyle Martin is found guilty of kidnapping and sentenced to 10 years.
Melissa Latham
Kyle said that he was scared of Tonica because she would have had him killed, too. He was just trying to make it seem like he didn't have nothing to do with it.
Lead Investigator
I felt Tonica definitely received the appropriate time meted to her for her actions. I felt Kyle should have received a lot more. He had a lot more involvement than I think he alluded to or admitted to. As well as the mother.
Prosecutor
This case is different on several different levels. Her prior criminal history, for example, is something that was that one would never hear of. That literally is a made for TV movie.
Federal Prosecutor
In 30 years as a federal prosecutor, I mean, I've seen people who have been killed, mostly witnesses, so that they wouldn't testify. But I've never seen anybody try to fake their own death to avoid going to jail.
Melissa's Sister
Tonica Jenkins is the kind of person that would befriend somebody and smile in their face and laugh and tell jokes with promises and just for the control to complete whatever objective she got planned. That take an emptiness she cold she
Melissa Latham
ain't cold enough though. I got scars but I'm still me me I'm still Melissa Rochelle Latham. At the end of the day, I know addiction is a beast. I'm just saying be careful and be aware of your surroundings and try to get help because there is help out here, y'.
Prosecutor
All.
Melissa Latham
It's help, you know, and forgive yourself. It.
This episode of Snapped: Women Who Murder delves into the chilling case of Tonica Jenkins, a woman whose web of lies, fraud, and criminal intent led her to orchestrate an elaborate attempted murder in order to fake her own death. Fueled by the desire to escape justice on federal drug charges, Jenkins’ scheme involved exploiting a vulnerable woman, Melissa Latham, who narrowly survived a shocking assault. The episode reconstructs the events through investigative detail, first-person accounts, and courtroom testimony, revealing a story that’s “stranger than anything they could have possibly imagined.”
Snapped: Women Who Murder presents Tonica Jenkins’ case as a disturbing descent from fraud to attempted murder, all to escape accountability. The episode highlights law enforcement’s dogged investigation, the resilience of victim Melissa Latham, and the insidiousness of Jenkins’ schemes—a true crime story stranger than fiction.