Christian Loving, 28, was arrested for stabbing a woman in the chest with a 9″ knife – a few feet away from her son – now FREE TO GO thanks to NJ Bail Reform guidelines.
- ZERO Accountability
- ZERO Supervision
- ZERO Bail…just a “pinky promise” to return
Mother charged in stabbing released from jail
(reported by NJ.com – Apr 11 2017)
There are differing accounts of Chrishan Loving’s actions in the moments before she was accused of stabbing a woman in the chest just feet away from her own son last week.
Superior Court Judge Peter Warshaw heard both reports at 28-year-old Loving’s detention hearing Tuesday. Following the hearing, Warshaw decided to release Loving with conditions until her next court appearance.
The Trenton woman is charged with aggravated assault, child endangerment and weapons offenses for the incident, which left one woman injured with a puncture wound two inches from her heart last week.
According to court documents, Loving stabbed the woman around 4 a.m. Thursday on the 1700 block of East State Street. Loving’s 8-year-old son was in a car nearby, according to the arrest documents.
Her attorney, Keith Sklar, said Tuesday that the women knew each other because they both had children by the same man.
Mercer County Assistant Prosecutor Amanda Nini said during the hearing that Loving was in the street, cutting up the man’s clothing when the man and the victim arrived at the scene. Nini told the judge they got into an argument and that Loving stabbed the victim with a kitchen knife.
One arrest document has said the knife was 9-inches long while the other said it was a 5-inch knife, Warshaw said in court.
But Sklar told a vastly different story from both Nini and court documents. He said that Loving drove to the scene with her son that morning because she was going to pick up a set of keys that she’d left at a nearby house. He said it was unclear who stabbed the victim.
You’ve been LIED to New Jersey…NJ Bail Reform is RECKLESS, DANGEROUS, and YOU are PAYING for it.
Defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.