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Woman who was arrested after shot in the head during the home dispute, says the Lexington police, says the police

A woman is charged after he allegedly shot a man in his head during a home dispute, according to the Lexington Police Department.

On Saturday at 5:30 a.m., the officials said that they reacted to several 911 calls regarding two vehicles that drive on several streets in a neighborhood in front of the South Main Street. Callers said the two cars had “rammed” each other and they also heard shots.

When the officials arrived, they said they had found a shot sacrifice near a car that crashed into a house in the 100 block of the Peacock Avenue. They also found a wreck scene in the street near the 100 block of the Snider Avenue. Nobody in both house was injured. The house hit by the car is the only property damage that is currently aware of it.

A first examination showed that 45-year-old Tiissha Nelson Coleman and a 61-year-old Lexington man were in a domestic relationship and were in a home dispute when Colman, who drove a white Volkswagen Passat from 2013, and then the man who drove a silver satellite in 2002 was rammed several times.

While both cars were parked on the street in the 100 block of the Peacock Avenue, Colman supposedly shot the man into his head, which has returned at high speed and falls into the Peacock Avenue house.

Coleman was later taken into custody and charged with assault because of a fatal weapon that caused serious bodily harm and dismissed a firearm into a occupied vehicle. She was recorded in the Davidson County prison without bonds and is scheduled to appear in front of the district court of Lexington on April 14th.

The man is still treated in a local hospital. At this point there are no updates to its medical illness.

The police said this was an isolated incident and there is no threat or concerns for the public.

If someone has information about this examination, contact the Lexington Area Crimestopper at (336) 243-2400. We also ask that everyone who lives in this area will continue to help by checking all surveillance cameras in residential areas to determine whether they have covered the vehicles in the area.