RiverRat
Patsy Ramsey to the Left
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2003
- Messages
- 2,909
- Reaction score
- 45
NORTH PORT -- More than two weeks after 6-year-old Coralrose Fullwood was found dead two blocks from her home, her family is slowly trying to regain some sense of normalcy.
Her mother, Ellen-Beth Fullwood, plans to return to her job as a speech therapist in Port Charlotte today for the first time since Coralrose was found Sept. 17. Her father, Dale Fullwood, returned to his job as a bartender in Fort Myers last week, and both parents have returned to their Calabash Lane home.
"It's hard to return to a normal life," said Marci Bartoe, Ellen-Beth Fullwood's sister. "Even though they are grieving for a daughter, unfortunately, they need to make a living. There are still bills to be paid, no matter what happens."
Meanwhile, the family is waiting for answers or an arrest, hoping that both will come once evidence collected from the Fullwood home, the family's minivan and the wooded area where the first-grader was found is processed and the results are released.
Bartoe said the results are expected next week, but it is unclear if police will make an arrest at that time. Investigators have mostly refused to speculate on what they are looking for or what direction the investigation is heading.
"It's the same thing we've been doing: following up on leads, waiting for forensics," said North Port Police Chief Terry Lewis, who would not specify what forensic evidence had been collected. "I don't see anything earth-shattering coming today or even tomorrow."
With no arrest more than two weeks after Coralrose was killed, speculation in the community is widespread, even showing up on Internet message boards.
Bartoe said a message posted on a heraldtribune.com message board under the screen name "efullwood" on Sunday was from Ellen-Beth Fullwood. It appeared to be in response to people who have blamed the family for Coralrose's death.
"If it makes you all feel safer by blaming us, then you go ahead. The worst has happened to us," the message said. "The sticks and stones you throw cannot truly hurt us ... I can face my maker with nothing but a messy house on my conscience, can you say the same?"
Days after Coralrose's death, Sarasota Circuit Court Judge Rick De Furia ruled that the Fullwood children could only see their parents during supervised visits. During that proceeding, De Furia described conditions inside the home as "deplorable."
Meanwhile, the four youngest Fullwood children also are trying to settle into a new routine, Bartoe said. A tutor has been hired to teach the children at their maternal grandparents' home in Fort Myers.
http://www.heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061003/NEWS/610030369
Her mother, Ellen-Beth Fullwood, plans to return to her job as a speech therapist in Port Charlotte today for the first time since Coralrose was found Sept. 17. Her father, Dale Fullwood, returned to his job as a bartender in Fort Myers last week, and both parents have returned to their Calabash Lane home.
"It's hard to return to a normal life," said Marci Bartoe, Ellen-Beth Fullwood's sister. "Even though they are grieving for a daughter, unfortunately, they need to make a living. There are still bills to be paid, no matter what happens."
Meanwhile, the family is waiting for answers or an arrest, hoping that both will come once evidence collected from the Fullwood home, the family's minivan and the wooded area where the first-grader was found is processed and the results are released.
Bartoe said the results are expected next week, but it is unclear if police will make an arrest at that time. Investigators have mostly refused to speculate on what they are looking for or what direction the investigation is heading.
"It's the same thing we've been doing: following up on leads, waiting for forensics," said North Port Police Chief Terry Lewis, who would not specify what forensic evidence had been collected. "I don't see anything earth-shattering coming today or even tomorrow."
With no arrest more than two weeks after Coralrose was killed, speculation in the community is widespread, even showing up on Internet message boards.
Bartoe said a message posted on a heraldtribune.com message board under the screen name "efullwood" on Sunday was from Ellen-Beth Fullwood. It appeared to be in response to people who have blamed the family for Coralrose's death.
"If it makes you all feel safer by blaming us, then you go ahead. The worst has happened to us," the message said. "The sticks and stones you throw cannot truly hurt us ... I can face my maker with nothing but a messy house on my conscience, can you say the same?"
Days after Coralrose's death, Sarasota Circuit Court Judge Rick De Furia ruled that the Fullwood children could only see their parents during supervised visits. During that proceeding, De Furia described conditions inside the home as "deplorable."
Meanwhile, the four youngest Fullwood children also are trying to settle into a new routine, Bartoe said. A tutor has been hired to teach the children at their maternal grandparents' home in Fort Myers.
http://www.heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061003/NEWS/610030369