American prosecutor killed in Micronesia after a run with her dog
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Friends said Tuesday that lawyer Rachelle Bergeron planned to soon return to the U.S. after a challenging stint prosecuting criminals on the Pacific nation of Micronesia, but she was shot and killed as she returned home from a run with her dog.
Bergeron’s husband was inside the couple’s house Monday night baking brownies with a local child the couple was helping care for when somebody fired three shots at Bergeron as she pulled up and opened the back of her Subaru hatchback, killing both her and her dog, said one friend, Amos Collins.
The killing has shocked the tiny island of Yap, home to 11,000 people, where Bergeron served as acting attorney general of Yap state. Authorities say they’re investigating the crime but haven’t yet arrested any suspects.
“Yap’s spirit is broken and our pride and reputation is tarnished,” Constantine Yowbalaw, director of youth and civic affairs for Yap state, said in a statement.
Bergeron was from Wisconsin and first moved to Yap in 2015 to take a job as assistant attorney general. She had previously worked in Washington, New York and India.
The Federated States of Micronesia, about three-quarters of the way from Hawaii to Indonesia, has close ties with the U.S. under a compact of free association, and the U.S. dollar is its primary currency.
Collins said Bergeron’s husband, Simon Hammerling, called him a few minutes after the shooting at 7:15 p.m., and he arrived about the same time as police.
Bergeron had been shot in her upper leg and her upper chest and was unconscious, Collins said. He and a nurse used a blanket to move Bergeron onto his flatbed truck, and they drove to the hospital.
Yowbalaw said Bergeron was pronounced dead on arrival at Yap Memorial Hospital.
Collins said he didn’t know who shot Bergeron but that some of those she had prosecuted might hold grudges. He said he considered Yap a safe place and didn’t lock his car or worry when walking at night.
He said Bergeron had a passion for fighting for justice for those who had been abused, especially women and children. Her husband is a pilot with Pacific Mission Aviation, a Christian missionary organization in the region where Collins also works.
Another friend, Julie Hartup, who lives in nearby Guam, said the couple was about to celebrate their first wedding anniversary and hoped to start a family soon.
She said she had joined the couple and their families in July for a celebration of their marriage, when they retook their vows. She said Bergeron’s father gave a speech about how his daughter had always wanted to be a voice for the voiceless, and to give strength to those who didn’t have it.
“Her family came out for a couple of weeks, and she was showing them the island, how pretty it was,” Hartup said. “It was quite joyous for everyone.”
But she said Bergeron was feeling the strain of her new role, which she had taken on in January, and was eager to return home.
Hartup said it was hard to believe what had happened to her friend.
“She had a fun laugh; she loved her dogs; she loved going running; she really cared about the community,” Hartup said in describing her friend. “She was trying her hardest to do the best job she could, and ultimately somebody took her life for being so good at her job.”
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