This story includes descriptions of alleged domestic violence that may be distressing to some readers.
In just one phone call, Jamie Dickerson's world shattered.
The loving mother was told that her daughter, April Holt, had been found unresponsive in her Antioch, Tennessee home, and taken to hospital on life support.
"I get a call that my daughter isn't breathing," Dickerson told WKRN. "…I just knew."
April, a 29-year-old mother of two, had reportedly been discovered by her husband with a plastic bag taped over her head. The initial ruling? Suicide.
But when Jamie looked upon her daughter in hospital, she knew something was terribly wrong. People reports she saw bruises to April's neck and ankles, as well as broken blood vessels on her cheeks.
"This wasn't a suicide. It was foul play," Jamie alleged to the publication.
Despite her gut-wrenching certainty, police remained firm in their assessment. April's death was ruled a suicide due to suffocation.
Yet, Jamie, a mother who knew her daughter inside and out, couldn't accept that conclusion. She had seen first hand how her daughter had been a fighter, a loving mother, and an entrepreneur running her own lash studio in Nashville.
"I knew my baby," Jamie said. "But they didn't believe me."
And so began Jamie's relentless, year-long journey to prove her daughter didn't take her own life.
A mother's intuition.
April's life had not been easy. In the months leading up to her death, she had been trying to leave her marriage to Donovan Holt, her husband of several years and the father of her youngest child.
Top Comments
I bet if she was blonde and white, not a woman of colour, there wouldn't have even been a question that it was murder