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A Baltimore County judge ordered a mental evaluation for a mother charged with murder in connection with the death of her 11-year-old daughter.

County police said officers were called around noon Thursday for a cardiac arrest call, according to charging documents obtained by 11 News.
"A neighbor called in and said a juvenile was deceased in the house next door, and the neighbor had come over to her house to tell her," Baltimore County police Detective Trae Corbin told 11 News.
Police said officers found the girl's body in the basement of the house with her shirt pulled down, exposing her upper body. The charging documents state that investigators saw bruises on the girl's neck and arms, as well as blood around her mouth, nose and hands.

The charging documents state investigators found a plastic drain cleaner on the floor that matched ligature marks found on the girl's body. Police said the detectives believe the drain cleaner was used to strangle the girl, who police identified as London.
Police said officers arrested Keyona Dillon, 34, on a first-degree murder charge. Upon interviewing her, police said Dillon acted erratically and said groups of people were trying to set her up.

According to the court charging documents, when police tried talking to Dillon, "she continued to display erratic behavior, including exclamations about exposing child sex rings, transsexuals and Proud Boys.
Police said three additional children were found inside the house unharmed, one of whom told investigators that Dillon used a hammer and her knee to kill the family's two cats, a rabbit and a dog, the charging documents state. Those animals' carcasses were found, as described by the child, disposed of in a plastic bin and in the kitchen trash, the charging documents state.

According to the charging documents, Dillon admitted to killing the animals in an effort to show London "what would happen to her if she didn't tell the truth." Police said Dillon told investigators that she believed London was involved in a relationship with the children's father, the charging documents state.
Detectives did not find any evidence that London was a victim of any type of sexual abuse, and nothing in any interview substantiated the claims Dillon made, the charging documents state.

Police said the other child told investigators that she went to the basement and saw Dillon choking London. Dillon told investigators she was performing CPR on London when the other child came downstairs and that the child "must have thought that she was hurting her," the charging documents state.
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I feel the same way! If that was the case the man would be committing / an illegal sexual assault of a minor child, not capable of consent ! This would not be sex this is rape ! If she really thought that seems she would have taken the man out? Ms Dillon is deranged but she belongs in prison!, she too dangerous to be in free society!
 
Before she was charged with killing her child, Keyona Dillon was convicted of attempted murder when she was just 15-years-old. Following her release from prison, she was later convicted of second-degree assault and accused of threatening to burn down her cousin’s home. In the complaint from December 2021, her cousin calls Dillon ‘dangerous’, ‘violent’, and a ‘threat to society.’ Dillon never appeared in court, triggering warrant for her arrest. However, two and a half years later, it was never served.
Baltimore County police blame the misspelling of her last name and no listed address. Although, in dispatch audio from the day of the deadly discovery, an officer can be heard reporting 10-99 code, signaling he knew Dillon was wanted.

“Is this the same address you went to earlier?” the dispatcher questioned.

“Yes, I was. The mother up here we were looking for earlier is 99,” the officer responded.
Neighbors also claim this wasn’t the first-time police had been called to the house recently.

“The cop said they just got a call three or four days ago for a SA at this location, but they didn’t believe it to be true,” a nearby resident said.
On Monday, FOX45 asked Baltimore County police if the home had received any recent calls for service. We also asked how many attempts officers made to serve Dillon’s warrant. Instead of answering immediately, police required FOX45 to file a formal Maryland Public Information Act request, delaying when we will likely hear back. As for what interactions officers had with Dillon in the last month, a police spokesperson was only willing to say, “Contact was not made with the suspect before the homicide occurred.”
“Had that warrant been served, I have no doubt that she would have been out almost immediately, and so that would not have prevented any crime," said National Police Association spokesperson Sgt. Betsy Smith.
Weighing in, Smith said warrants for low level offenses are typically a low priority for short-staffed police departments. She was much more disturbed by the videos Dillon posted to social media in the days leading up to the alleged murder.
“You gave my daughter HIV. My 11-year-old is walking around with HIV,” she can be heard saying in one of the videos.


Smith questioned, “People in her friend circle on Facebook were seeing them. Did any of them report them to the police?”
The victim’s aunt, Ariel Johnson, claimed she reported them to the Department of Human Services (DHS). But she said by the time a welfare check arrived, “Tragically, it was too late.”


DHS is not willing to comment on the specifics of this case, citing federal and state privacy laws.
Meanwhile, it’s also unclear if the school system could have intervened. Unbeknownst to the victim’s extended family, Baltimore County Public Schools (BCPS) claim the child was unenrolled back in 2023. A BCPS spokesperson tells FOX45, “There is a process that all MD public schools must follow for enrollment, withdrawal/transfer, or homeschooling. The school followed all applicable processes for the student’s specific situation.” However, they would not say where exactly the student went or what specific protocols were followed, arguing that would be a violation of FEPRA, even though the student is now deceased.
“This is literally a case of getting lost in the system. This is why bureaucracy doesn't help children,” Smith said.
 
Kenyona Dillon, 34, was found unfit to stand trial at a competency hearing on March 3. She was facing first degree murder charges for a January murder.
On Monday, Baltimore County State's Attorney Scott Schellenberger said via e-mail, "[Dillon] was found not competent to stand trial and dangerous. She was committed to the Department of Health. Her case will be reviewed every 6 months."
Detectives said they did not find any evidence that Olsen was the victim of sexual abuse or that any of the claims Dillon made were true.
 
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