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From the files of "No Good Deed...........

.........Remains Unpunished"

NEW CASTLE, Ind. - A woman who tried to help after a car crash was punched and bitten by the man she was trying to assist, police said. "It was just crazy. I was just trying to help," 28-year-old Danielle Herndon of New Castle said Wednesday.

Rex Allen Shannon, 21, Middletown, was being held Wednesday night in eastern Indiana's Henry County Jail on charges of battery resulting in bodily injury, battery by body waste:scared:, intimidation, public intoxication, driving while intoxicated and resisting law enforcement. His bond was set at $39,500.

Two of the charges are felonies with a possible penalty of two to eight years in prison; three are felonies punishable by six months to three years in prison.

Authorities said Herndon was riding home from Indianapolis with her mother on Interstate 70 Tuesday night when a car driven by Shannon passed her in the grass, crossed the highway, flipped and landed south of the road.

"I thought he was dead," Herndon said.

Her mother, who was driving, pulled over and Herndon called 911, then ran to the other car. Shannon already had climbed out, she said.

"I leaned down and asked him 'Are you OK?' I didn't see any blood or anything. 'Are you OK? Is everything OK?' And he started cussing me," Herndon said.

Shannon then charged toward her mother and hit and bit Herndon when she got in the way, Herndon said.

"He was still biting me when the cops finally showed up," Herndon said.

When Indiana State Police Trooper Dave Whitinger arrived, he handcuffed Shannon. When another police officer and a medic arrived, Shannon kicked and spat on both men, Whitinger said.

"In 11 years I'd never seen anything like it," Whitinger said. "Definitely a weird one."

Herndon said the ring finger on her left hand was broken and doctors told her that her nose might also be broken.
 
Some people need to be treated like animals--poke them with a stick and see how they react before you get any closer.

Human bites are nasty.
 
Noose.........Unless of course this is just another.."Does anyone even realize that the original post was posted simply because I though it funny? Are you that clueless or welcome any opportunity to go into attack mode? Jeez! You guys really need to lighten up." post.....
 
Noose.........Unless of course this is just another.."Does anyone even realize that the original post was posted simply because I though it funny? Are you that clueless or welcome any opportunity to go into attack mode? Jeez! You guys really need to lighten up." post.....

Not really! I just wanted to see if you're still trolling.
 
Boy, my first instinct would be that the nasty guy had some sort of brain injury that made him combative, but hey, that's just a guess based upon the fact that something made him drive very poorly. There's also the possibility of drug abuse. In either case, combative behavior in such a situation shouldn't be a surprise.

Thank the next EMT you bump into. This is what they encounter every day.
 
ever notice how drunks always seem to survive their wrecks?:confused:

Yep! Not just drunks. I have an good friend and motorcle riding buddy that was in the Navy, stationed in San Diego. This was the 60's and he would occasionally take a toke or two.......or three. Of course this never stopped him from riding his motorcycle under the influence. Anyway, he managed to run off the road damaging the bike badly but walked away from the wreck pretty much unscathed. He firmly believed that his "relaxed" state was the reason he didn't get hurt. Of course he never openly admitted that he might have avoided the accident in the first place if he hadn't been "high". He still a good friend, still rides and drives very fast and hard - and still indulges at the age of 67.
 
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