Pregnant Mom Stabbed — Intent To Kill!

Police activity on a city street with emergency vehicles.

A repeat offender allegedly stabbed a pregnant woman in Charlotte, and the charge says he meant to kill.

Story Snapshot

  • Police booked a 31-year-old man on charges including intent to kill after a knife attack [1].
  • A pregnant woman was injured and a man was seriously hurt outside a Charlotte complex [2].
  • North Carolina law makes “intent to kill” with serious injury a Class C felony [12].
  • Key primary records like the warrant and incident report are not yet public.

What Police Say Happened In Charlotte

Local reports state that Charlotte officers arrested Paul Abdul Hicks, 31, after a knife attack outside an apartment complex. Jail records show he was booked into Mecklenburg County Jail. Reported charges include assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, and assault on a pregnant woman. Coverage says a pregnant woman was injured, and a man suffered serious harm. These details come from booking and aggregation reports, not from a released affidavit yet [1].

Follow-up summaries echo the same core facts. They say the attack happened outside a Charlotte complex and list the same charges. They identify two victims: a pregnant woman who was injured and a man with serious injuries. The reporting points to formal arrest processing and active prosecution. But it does not include body camera video, an incident narrative, or a recovered-weapon log at this stage, which limits outside confirmation of the sequence [2].

What The Charges Mean Under North Carolina Law

North Carolina’s statute treats assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill that inflicts serious injury as a Class C felony. Prosecutors must prove both the intent to kill and a serious injury to secure that top charge. If only one of those is proven, the offense can fall to a lower felony. If neither is met, the case can be a misdemeanor. The “intent to kill” element can come from words, actions, or the mechanics of the attack, if proven in court [12].

Defense and prosecution often argue over “serious injury” and “intent” because those define sentencing ranges. Law firm explainers note that when both factors are present, the charge sits at the Class C level. When only one factor is present, it can be a Class E felony. If prosecutors cannot prove either, it may be a Class A1 misdemeanor. The line between these levels shapes bond, plea talks, and trial strategy in Mecklenburg County courts [10].

What We Know, What We Do Not, And Why It Matters

Public reports say police booked Hicks and listed the specific charges. The reports also say a pregnant woman was injured and a man was seriously hurt. Those claims rely on jail booking details and local aggregation coverage, which are common early in a case. We have not yet seen the incident report, 911 audio, probable-cause affidavit, or medical records. Until those are public, key facts about motive, statements, the weapon, and forensics remain sealed to the public [1].

For readers worried about rising street crime, the stakes are clear. When a pregnant woman is attacked, families feel unsafe in their own neighborhoods. Voters expect swift arrests, tough charging, and judges who protect the public. They also expect transparency. Releasing the warrant, the incident narrative, and court hearing records would show why prosecutors believe “intent to kill” fits here, and would let citizens judge the system’s strength and fairness for themselves [2].

Accountability, Public Safety, And Next Steps

City leaders and state officials must lock in a simple standard: protect victims first. That means using every legal tool for pretrial detention when a suspect is charged with a violent felony, especially one involving a pregnant woman. It also means speeding the release of basic records so the public sees facts, not rumors. North Carolina law gives prosecutors the tools. Citizens should watch the court calendar for the first appearance, bond decisions, and any prosecutor proffer under the Class C framework [12].

Sources:

[1] Web – HORROR: Homeless Man With Countless Arrests Charged for Attempting to …

[2] Web – Pregnant woman injured, man seriously hurt in knife attack outside …

[10] Web – List of attacks related to secondary schools – Wikipedia

[12] Web – Assault With a Deadly Weapon Charges in Charlotte, NC

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