Massachusetts

Man Charged After Leaving Teen at Hospital to Be Arraigned

Carlos Rivera, 47, of Lawrence, is facing several charges and will be arraigned Tuesday

The man who police have arrested in the case of a 13-year-old girl who was dropped off at Lawrence General Hospital earlier this week and later died is set to be arraigned in court on Tuesday.

Chloe Ricard of Amesbury was left at the hospital at 4:47 p.m. on Monday, according to police. 

Carlos Rivera, 47, of Lawrence, was arrested early Saturday morning. He is charged with two counts of distribution of class B drugs to a minor, two counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14 and one count of indecent assault and battery on a person over 14.

The case is very upsetting, especially to people with children.

"I have a daughter of 7-years-old and I don't know what a crazy man can give my daughter, give drugs to her," Altagracia Teriero, a Lawrence resident, said.

Teriero lives a few doors down from the home where police say the victim spent her last hours of her young life.

"Drugs making very bad, very bad things for our kids," Teriero said.

Ricard's family is devastated and said this weekend they plan to be at the arraignment on Tuesday.

"I'm going to say something. I am going to say something because I hope he gets his," Ricard's stepfather Brian Dolan said.

Back in the Lawrence neighborhood where Rivera resides, one man did say he would often see the suspect coming and going with younger women.

"It's really important, communication with the kids," Carlos Ospina said.

Rivera was arrested after officials determined that he was the one who brought her to the hospital after learning that Ricard and another female under the age of 16 were at Rivera's Lawrence apartment at 59 Bellevue Street on the evening of May 19 and during most of the next day.

Investigators believe Rivera was accompanied by a female under the age of 16 when he took Ricard to the hospital. According to the District Attorney's office, Ricard died shortly after arriving at the hospital. 

The Eagle Tribune reports that investigators reviewed surveillance video to help solve the puzzling incident.

The girl's mother, Deborah Goldsmith-Dolan, told the Boston Globe that she had dropped her daughter off at a friend's house in Amesbury on Sunday afternoon. When she didn't hear from her by Monday morning, she texted her daughter's friends, who told her she was with a friend in Haverhill. She went to file a missing person's report around 4 p.m. Monday and got a text shortly thereafter from one of Chloe's friends saying that she had been taken to the hospital.

The teen was a student at Solstice Day School, an alternative school in Rowley. Prior to that, she attended Amesbury Middle School.

Amesbury schools released a statement saying Chloe "was kind to the younger students in the school and she showed great empathy for others. We will miss her smile, her creativity and her huge heart."

An autopsy was performed Tuesday, but the district attorney's office said it could be some time before there is a ruling on the cause and manner of death.

Rivera is being held on $750,000 bail. It is unclear if he has an attorney.

The incident remains under investigation at this time. The suspect could face additional charges. 

The cause of Ricard's death has yet to be determined.

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