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8-year-old girl killed biking to friend's for sleepover when she 'wasn't quick enough' to avoid speeding driver: Cops

 
Inset, left to right: Nyomi Summers (Family photo/WSOC) and Khaliyal Burney (Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office). Background: The road where Burney allegedly struck and killed Summers (Google Maps).

Inset, left to right: Nyomi Summers (Family photo/WSOC) and Khaliyal Burney (Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office). Background: The road where Burney allegedly struck and killed Summers (Google Maps).

A 23-year-old man in North Carolina was allegedly speeding through a residential neighborhood when he struck and killed an 8-year-old girl riding her bike to a friend's house for a sleepover before driving away from the scene.

Khaliyal Burney was taken into custody last week and charged with one count of misdemeanor death by motor vehicle in the death of Nyomi Summers, court records show. He is also facing charges of driving while license revoked, no liability insurance, failure to register, and fictitious registration in connection with the incident.

Nyomi Summers was riding her bicycle in a north Charlotte neighborhood Saturday evening while visiting a friend for a sleepover when Burney, driving a 2006 Chrysler 3000 sedan, struck her in the roadway, according to a report from Charlotte NBC affiliate WCNC.

The child was taken to a nearby hospital, where she later died, authorities said.

Charging documents allege Burney was "unlawfully and willingly" driving approximately 35 mph in a 25 mph residential zone at the time of the crash, and that the speeding violation "was the proximate cause of death."

When officers arrived, they reportedly located Summers in the roadway, along with her damaged bicycle.

Surveillance footage from a nearby home allegedly showed the driver of the Chrysler 3000 revving the vehicle's engine multiple times then accelerating just before the fatal collision, Charlotte ABC affiliate WSOC reported.

Neighbors described a chaotic and heartbreaking scene in the moments surrounding the crash, with several saying they heard the impact from inside their homes.

"And I heard it when he hit her," a neighbor told WCNC. "I heard the bump of a body. He just went down the street … he didn't even put on no brakes."

Others said the area is filled with children and that drivers are expected to slow down, especially on residential streets where kids frequently ride bikes and play.

"The way this neighborhood is, the way the streets are made, you shouldn't be driving all fast like that down here," another neighbor told WCNC.

"I heard him when he took off," Mae Lynn, another neighbor told Spectrum News. "I heard him when he hit her body. I heard him when he went down, yielded and kept on going. Then, they were out here calling him and telling him he had hit a baby in the street."

Lynn also claimed Burney had a history of driving too fast in the neighborhood.

"Someone hollers at him every day to slow down, because he comes through here like that all the time," she told the station.

Another witness described seeing children scatter moments before the collision.

"The other two kids got out the street. Nyomi wasn't quick enough with her little legs," the woman told WSOC. "She had eyes on her. She wasn't unattended. She did not run in front of no car. That car hit her like she was an animal. It kept going until he probably got a phone call saying he hit that baby."

Following the impact, Burney reportedly returned to the scene. Investigators later said he was not impaired at the time of the crash.

In the days since the crash, a memorial has grown near the scene as community members mourn the loss of the young girl.

Neighbors described Summers as a child who regularly played in the area and was well known in the neighborhood.

"She didn't have to lose her life because of a reckless driver," one person said. "That could have been anybody."

Burney was released after posting $1,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in court on June 5, according to court records.

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Jerry Lambe is a journalist at Law&Crime. He is a graduate of Georgetown University and New York Law School and previously worked in financial securities compliance and Civil Rights employment law.

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