Tierne Ewing, a 48-year-old from Pennsylvania, had a protective order against her husband. In June this year, he abducted her and held her hostage in their Washington County home. He spat on her, taped her mouth shut, bound her hands and tied a cord around her neck. He savagely pistol-whipped her, later stapling up a severe gash on her head.
After 12 days, a bruised and battered Tierne escaped when her husband sent her into the bank to withdraw money. The police arrived and he, Kevin Ewing, was charged with kidnapping, aggravated assault, terroristic threats, false imprisonment and other offenses.
So why was Tierne found dead โ at her husbandโs hands โ on Tuesday?
Just days after Kevinโs arrest in July, he unexpectedly posted the $100,000 bond. One prosecutor asked Common Pleas Judge Gary Gilman to raise the amount and put him back in jail โ given the severity of his charges. The judge declined.
Kevin walked free.
Judge Gilman ordered that Kevin be confined to his home with an ankle monitor (while awaiting his trial). But the ankle monitor was all too easy to cut off. And his victim โ all too easy to track down.
On Tuesday night, Tierne was found dead in a deserted barn near the border of West Virginia. According to police, she had been shot twice โ once in the body, once in the head.
Kevin Ewing was found alive in the barn with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He has since been ruled brain-dead.
โIโm lucky [the police] got him before I did,โ Tierne Ewingโs grieving father, Richard Kopko, told reporters.
โHe threatened her all the time. Heโs beat her up several times. I tried to get her away, but I donโt know what the deal was, but, well, itโs over now โฆ
โShe told me years ago, โDad, if you canโt ever find me, Iโll be buried on his dadโs farm.'โ