Maryland Had ONE Job — Protect a Blind, Non-Verbal Woman — And a Rapist Walked Right In

Maryland Had ONE Job — Protect a Blind, Non-Verbal Woman — And a Rapist Walked Right In

A 24-year-old blind, non-verbal woman named Kamryn Jones was raped while under Maryland's state-supervised care — and the rapist is still walking free. The state that was literally paid to keep her safe didn't notice she was pregnant for seven months.

Seven. Months. Let that sink in. A woman who functions cognitively at the level of a toddler, who requires a caregiver within 10 feet at all times and checks every 30 minutes overnight, somehow got assaulted, impregnated, and nobody in the entire taxpayer-funded apparatus said a word.

According to RedState, Kamryn was living in a facility run by Dominion Resource Center, a Maryland contractor that operates 18 facilities across the state. Sometime between mid-March and early May of 2024, she was raped. By August 2024, a Dominion caregiver documented irregular menstrual spotting — at which point she was already roughly four months pregnant. Nobody escalated it. Nobody connected the dots.

It wasn't until October 2024 that Kamryn arrived at Sinai Hospital, seven months pregnant. On December 30, 2024, she delivered a healthy baby girl via C-section. Her mother, Marcia Williams, is now raising the child.

Here's the part that should make your blood boil. Independent medical experts concluded that ligature marks on both of Kamryn's ankles — with broken skin — were the result of being "forcibly restrained, likely as she was raped." This wasn't some ambiguous situation. This was violent. This was deliberate. And the person who did it is still out there.

Kamryn's father, Kevin Jones, said what every parent in America is thinking: "He might still be going into these homes."

Yeah. He might be.

The Maryland Attorney General's Medicaid Fraud and Vulnerable Victims Unit collected DNA from the baby, and six candidates have been identified — one has been ruled out. But Baltimore Police say the investigation is "active," and the AG's office won't even confirm the investigation exists. Because that's how government accountability works in a blue state — slowly, quietly, and with as little transparency as possible.

Meanwhile, Kamryn's primary care physician saw her five times between July and November and didn't document an abdominal assessment at the final visit — just four days before the pregnancy was discovered at the hospital. Five visits. No belly check. On a non-verbal patient who can't tell you what happened to her.

And what about the Maryland Office of Health Care Quality — the regulatory body that's supposed to keep places like Dominion in line? They investigated. They "substantiated" complaints. And then they declared the home compliant anyway.

Compliant. The home where a blind, non-verbal woman was raped and nobody noticed for seven months was declared compliant.

You want to know what Dominion Resource Center executive Margaret Owolabi — a nurse, by the way — had to say about all this? "They're just looking for money. I am very, very proud of what we are doing. We didn't do anything wrong."

Didn't do anything wrong. A woman under your care was tied down and raped, and you're "very, very proud."

Governor Wes Moore's Maryland, everybody. This is what happens when government bureaucracy replaces actual human accountability. The state had one job — protect the most vulnerable person imaginable — and every single layer of the system failed her. The caregivers. The doctors. The regulators. The investigators.

Jessica Gallatin, a member of Concerned Citizens of Self-Direction Maryland, put it plainly: "This story just kind of validated everyone's concerns."

No kidding. The rapist is still free. The facility is still open. And a blind woman who can't speak for herself is left with a baby and a system that shrugs.

Marcia Williams now holds Kamryn's daughter up to her and says, "Kam, say hi to your baby." That little girl exists because every person who was supposed to protect her mother didn't. And until someone is in handcuffs, this story isn't over.


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