Ivana Gomez is alleged to have sped her BMW through Miami, Florida, and is said to have careered into Kathryn Kipnis – who was not homeless – so hard she died from the impact
23:46, 07 Aug 2025

A suspected drunk driver careered her car into a pedestrian – killing her – and then callously told police the victim was “just a homeless person”.
Ivana Gomez, 32, is said to have ploughed her BMW into 41-year-old Kathryn Kipnis – who was not homeless – an impact which dragged the woman for more than 230 feet before she was “violently thrown off” the vehicle. A police officer who witnessed the horrific crash in Miami, Florida, had to drive at more than 100 mph to keep up with Gomez as she sped off.
But the motorist was eventually caught when she got stuck at a red light, police say. Gomez, who faces manslaughter and vehicular homicide charges, “spontaneously stated that it was just a homeless person that I hit and it is just an accident,” according to the crime report.
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Police noted that Gomez smelled like alcohol, had red, watery eyes and there was fresh vomit in her car, WSVN reports. She struggled with a field sobriety test and demanded a lawyer, the police report added.
Bodycam footage released this week shows Gomez in handcuffs and without shoes moments after her arrest on the DUI manslaughter and vehicular homicide charges in Miami. However, it does not capture her dismissing the victim as “just a homeless person” — which Gomez denied ever saying when it was raised at her initial court hearing in May.
But police continue to allege this, as they prepare a case for Gomez’s next court appearance. They have already released to the media shocking images of the mangled BMW and a gaping, head-shaped hole in the windshield.

Gomez “hit the victim so hard that the victim’s head went into the vehicle, through the windshield, and some of the victim’s hair got caught on the passenger’s seat belt,” said prosecutor Laura Adams at the May hearing.
Yet at that hearing, in relation to the “homeless person” remark, Gomez told the judge: “Your Honour, I never said that. I did not say that whatsoever. That’s false.”
Ms Kipnis, from Miami, was in fact not homeless and was on her way home after a night out with friends, her father told reporters earlier this year.
Gomez, whose blood level was .112 — above the US legal limit of .08 — five hours after the crash, remains locked up on a $251,000 (£187,000) bond.