Latest news with #Sorey
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Yahoo
Hit-and-run victim in Norfolk left with serious injuries, driver still at large
NORFOLK, Va. (WAVY) — A man named Owen Simmons was riding his bike from his occupation as a hairstylist when he was hit by a car and seriously injured in Norfolk on Sunday night, according to police. The hit and run happened at the intersection of Granby St and E Princess Anne Rd. The driver took off and is still yet to be found. 10 On Your Side spoke with Simmons' sister Melissa, who said another driver saw her brother on the road after he was struck and called 911. He was taken to Sentra Norfolk General Hospital for immediate care. 'He was going downhill quite a bit real fast. They ended up putting a breathing tube in him and took him up to the ICU,' said Melissa Sorey, Owen Simmons' sister. Simmons suffered bleeding in his brain, fractures to his face and a C4 spinal cord injury. Police stated his injuries were not life threatening, but Sorey disagrees. 'His face was all messed up and swollen. He had a seizure, and they said he had flatlined also. It was just really devastating to see him the way that he was,' said Sorey. Sorey said it took nearly 24 hours to discover her brother was in the hospital. She did not find out from authorities, but from coworkers who noticed that Simmons had been absent from work. 'I haven't heard anything from the police. He hadn't shown up to work. Another friend started calling around to the hospital and that's when they found him here at Norfolk Sentara,' said Sorey. 10 On Your Side also spoke with Kimberly Bruce, a family friend who had to find where Simmons was hospitalized. 'He had his wallet on him. So, they knew his address, they knew his name. That's the only reason they could identify who he was. Nobody was notified. I had to find him. I called Sentara Norfolk General. After conversing for a little while, I found out he was there,' said Bruce. Bruce and Sorey are calling on anyone with information to come forward so authorities can find the driver responsible. 'Just please come and say something. Anything. Even if you make an anonymous call, ring camera video, anything you've seen, even if it's a half license plate, come and say something to somebody,' said Bruce. The Norfolk Police Department asks anyone with information in this case to call the Norfolk Crime Line at 1-888-LOCK-U-UP. Simmons will have a long road to recovery. If you'd like to help him get back on his feet, a link to his GoFundMe can be found here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Boston Globe
23-05-2025
- Boston Globe
New Hampshire settles wrongful death lawsuit from Harmony Montgomery's mom for $2.25 million
Advertisement Montgomery ultimately beat the 5-year-old girl to death while they were living in a car with his wife and two other children in December 2019. But he hid her body, and her disappearance went largely unnoticed by authorities for two years, until Sorey grew frantic in late 2021 and came to Manchester to find her missing child. Get N.H. Morning Report A weekday newsletter delivering the N.H. news you need to know right to your inbox. Enter Email Sign Up Montgomery was The horrific crime revealed dangerous lapses in child protection services not only in New Hampshire but also in Massachusetts, where the Supreme Judicial Court recently ruled that a recording of the closed-door hearing that led to Montgomery winning custody of his daughter Advertisement Sorey's attorney, C. Kevin Leonard, did not immediately respond Friday to a request for comment about the settlement. A spokesperson for the New Hampshire Department of Justice declined to comment. Sorey will receive half of the $2.25 million settlement, according to a redacted copy of the agreement the DOJ released Friday to The Boston Globe. The other half will be divided equally to establish trusts for four individuals who are identified in the agreement by their initials only. The state hasn't admitted to any wrongdoing, and Sorey must cover her own legal fees, according to the agreement. This lawsuit is at least the third that New Hampshire officials have settled within the past year regarding the deaths of children known to the state's Division of Children, Youth, and Families. The state reached a $5.75 million settlement in July with Danielle Vaughan over the 2019 death of her 5-year-old son, Dennis Vaughan, and the state reached a $2.25 million settlement in December with Dennis Vaughan's grandmother, Sherry Connor, These civil settlements — which were Advertisement Governor Kelly A. Ayotte, a Republican, has said she Steven Porter can be reached at