Bunny and I met Karen thru the Lenten Soup for the Soul
program where she volunteered as a hostess. Karen lived her whole life as
a people helper.
I am a 100% disabled veteran, and a published author who
can no longer read or write. Karen has been helping with my research and
editing three afternoons a week. Not only was she kind multi-talented, and
spiritually motivated, but highly intelligent, with a sharp and creative mind,
a quick wit, and a large data bank. We often laughed when we were working
together.
Bunny and I are but two of the many grateful people that
benefited from knowing Karen, and whose lives are enhanced by her presence on
this planet. We cannot help but be saddened by the loss of this beautiful
blessing to our lives.
Revs Sam and Bunny Sewell
Family
and friends remember Naples homicide victim as quick-witted, giving woman
Jessica Rodriguez, Naples Daily NewsPublished 7:05 p.m. ET
July 5, 2019 | Updated 4:10 p.m. ET July 6, 2019
Karen Leiti (Photo: Courtesy of:
Jessica Leiti)
Karen Leiti thrived when helping others. Her energy and
positivity helped friends and strangers alike through difficult situations.
Collier County Sheriff's Office said Leiti, 64, of Naples, was
killed early Wednesday by her roommate, Amanda Cook, 35.
The two lived in a home together on the 1900 block of Imperial
Golf Club Boulevard, but were not related, according to her daughter, Jessica
Leiti.
Deputies responded to a medical call from the house around 2
a.m. and found Leiti dead on the living room floor, according to the sheriff’s
office.
According to an arrest report, a preliminary investigation by
the District 20 Medical Examiner’s office found blunt force trauma to the left
side Leiti’s head.
Investigators arrested Cook and booked her through the Naples
Jail Center.
Jessica and Karen Leiti (Photo: Courtesy of:
Peggy Grady)
Leiti's friends remember her as a quick-witted, humble woman who
went out of her way to help others as often as possible.
Uma Dunn met Leiti when a friend referred her during the
last days of her brother’s life.
Dunn needed someone to help her family while her brother
received cancer treatment. When Dunn’s brother died, Leiti helped with funeral
arrangements and naturally formed a strong bond with Dunn.
“We became more like sisters than friends,” Dunn said. “Her top
attribute was staying positive.”
Dunn and Leiti routinely called each other at 11 a.m. daily. On
Wednesday, Dunn felt sick and postponed their talk.
She then received a phone call from Heather Kearney, another
friend of Leiti’s.
“I was in total shock when I heard the news,” Dunn said. “When I
heard she died, I immediately thought it was of natural causes because I knew
she had a heart condition. I was in complete disbelief when I learned it was a
murder.”
Leiti always wanted to believe in people’s goodwill, Dunn said.
“She never chose to see the bad in people,” she said. “She
always wanted to see the good in people.
Leiti kept Kearney on her toes. Leiti’s quick wit challenged her
sarcasm.
“Not too many people are that witty,” Kearney said. “She had an
interesting sense of humor and meeting her was a true test of my witt. She was
such a natural at making people laugh.”
Kearney and Leiti met while at the 7-Eleven on Granada
Boulevard in Naples. Leiti would wait for her daughter to finish working while
Kearney waited for her wife to finish her shift.
It did not take long for the two to click, Kearney said.
Karen Leiti at a younger age (Photo: Courtesy of:
Peggy Grady)
Following Wednesday’s news, Jessica Leiti struggled to come to
terms with her mother’s death.
Jessica, who lost her father when she was 14, had a close
relationship with her mother.
“She always talked about the afterlife, but we would always
laugh it off and I would always tell her ‘mom, you have so much time here.’”
Jessica describes her mother as her best friend, who always
wanted the best for her.
Peggy Grady, Leiti's sister, found out Wednesday's news through
Jessica's boyfriend, Douglas Ranklin.
Grady said the news was a horrible shock. She
describes Leiti, her only sibling, as the outgoing and talkative one,
while she takes the title of the quiet one.
The two grew up in Pennsylvania.
"I'm going to miss her phone calls, Grady said. "She
had this very amusing way of telling stories."
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