Ex-bishop to be released after serving half her prison sentence for bicyclist's death [View all]
Ex-bishop to be released after serving half her prison sentence for bicyclists death
By Jonathan M. Pitts
May 1 at 6:35 PM
Heather Cook, the former Episcopal bishop who garnered national and international headlines after fatally striking a Baltimore bicyclist with her car while driving drunk two days after Christmas in 2014, will be released from prison this month after serving a little more than half her original sentence.
Gerard Shields, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services, said the department withholds prisoners release dates for safety reasons, but Cook would be freed sometime around the middle of May. ... If thats the case, Cook, 62, will have served just over 3½ years of the seven-year sentence she was given on four criminal charges in connection with the crash that killed bicyclist Thomas Palermo, a software engineer and married father of two, on Dec. 27, 2014. ... Cook pleaded guilty to the charges including automobile manslaughter, drunken driving, texting while driving and leaving the scene of a collision in 2015.
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Cook had applied for early release several times, including for parole in 2017, for a work-release program in 2018, and for home detention in 2018 and earlier this year. She was denied each time. ... Members of the Palermo family have vehemently opposed each of Cooks efforts to be released early and have harshly criticized her behavior, including the fact that she admittedly left the crash scene and did not return until 30 minutes later.
Each of Cooks attempts to reduce her sentence applications for parole, house arrest, work release, now . . . one for modification traumatizes my sister and her family anew, Palermos sister-in-law, Alisa Rock, said of Palermos widow, Rachel, and the couples children in November. This trauma will affect them all for the rest of their lives, and its only appropriate that Heather Cook serve out her original sentence not only for the act of killing Tom, but for leaving him there. Especially for leaving him there, for abdicating responsibility for what she did.
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Baltimore Sun