Miami Zombie Attack:
Victim 'Living Happily'
MIAMI -- The homeless victim who lost his eyesight and most of his face in a bizarre attack last Memorial Day weekend is playing the guitar and following the Miami Heat as he continues to recover.
"He
wants the world to know he's not traumatized by this ... and that
he's happy and grateful for being alive after such an incident," said
Desai, later adding, "Things are very positive for Mr. Poppo."
Nurse
manager Adolfa Sigue said Poppo doesn't talk much about the incident:
"The only thing that he always tells me is, 'I'm sure that that man
had a bad day that day,'" she said.
Victim 'Living Happily'
Ronald Poppo, 66, is "living happily and
adjusting to his new life," according to a press release from doctors
at Jackson Memorial Perdue Medical Center, a long-term care facility
where Poppo has been since about a month after the attack.
"He's had a long year, but has managed to
cope quite well," Jackson Memorial Hospital plastic surgeon Dr. Woody
Kassira said at a press conference Tuesday morning, describing Poppo
as "a pleasure to work with."
He has also put on roughly 50 pounds and has
learned to dress and feed himself, shower and shave after working with
an occupational therapist.
Poppo has undergone four surgeries already.
Kassira said there is further reconstructive work that could be
performed, including prosthetics, but that Poppo is "content" with
"how his life is now."
"He was a simple guy before this, and a
simple guy now ..." said surgeon Urmen Desai. "He's older, he is
blind, he can't see what he looks like, and it's not important to him
how the world sees him."
Poppo has been in hospital care since a
year ago May 26. He was lazing on the MacArthur Causeway's exit ramp
sidewalk when attacked in broad daylight by naked 31-year-old North
Miami Beach resident Rudy Eugene, who had stripped his clothes off as he
walked over the bridge from South Beach.
Surveillance video from the nearby Miami
Herald building captured Eugene confronting Poppo, then trying to pull
off Poppo's clothes before brutalizing his face in a savage, 18-minute
attack. The mauling made international headlines and left Poppo
blind, without a nose, and covered in a patchwork of mangled flesh.
“He just ripped me to ribbons," Poppo calmly
told police on interview recordings obtained by CBS Miami. "He chewed up
my face. He plucked out my eyes..."
Drivers and cyclists passing the scene called
911, and a responding police officer shot and killed Eugene as he
crouched over Poppo, reportedly ignoring the officer's orders to stop
chewing the older man's face.
"[Eugene] was like a zombie, blood dripping,
it was intense," witness Larry Vega told the New York Daily News. "The
closest thing I've seen to it? 'The Walking Dead.'"
Eugene was widely speculated by police
officials and media to have been on some form of synthetic drugs like
bath salts, or suffering a drug-induced psychosis. But a battery of
tests identified only marijuana in his system; experts have suggested
that while the coroner's tests were thorough, laboratories have been
unable to keep pace with the speed at which new synthetic formulations
are hitting the streets.
Poppo, who had been homeless in Miami since
the 1970s, is "fully funded" by Medicaid, according to Jackson staff. A
hospital-administered fund had raised $100,700 in the seven weeks
following the incident, and a second fund at giveforward.com was to
contribute $24,406. The funds are available for Poppo to use, according
to hospital administrators.
Nursing assistant Patricia Copalko said Poppo
played the guitar 40 years earlier in a band, but hadn't played again
until recreational therapists purchased one for him. He has also been
speaking to his sister by phone, though he declines to have visitors
and resists staff's attempts to get him to walk outside for exercise
by continually promising, "Maybe tomorrow."
"He's a wonderful person," Copalko said. "I
couldn't ask for a better patient. He's never negative ... he's got a
heart of gold."
Poppo doesn't turn on the TV but enjoys
listening to the radio. The Miami Heat, the caregivers said, "are the
love of his life."
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