
Letter America Dear Southwest Airlines, I’m writing to complain about the unfair way I was treated on a recent flight from San Francisco to Phoenix. ... More
Kylene Holmes, the driver who died after colliding head-on with an EMT on I-25 last month, is pictured on multiple websites offering her services as a adult escort.
Santa Fe Police Chief Aric Wheeler confirmed to SFR that photos from Eros-albuquerque.com, date-check.com and New-mexico.date-check.com listed under the name "Olivia Secrets" were of Holmes, 27.
The stats posted on Olivia Secret's profile pages listing her as six feet tall, weighing 145 pounds, with blond hair and green eyes, are close to the computer aided dispatch printout from Santa Fe Emergency 911 Center for the crash incident. There Holmes is listed with the same statistics except her weight is 150 pounds.

Datecheck.com lists Olivia Secrets as an "El Paso, Texas private escort."
Olivia Secrets advertises rates of $200 for a half hour, $250 for a full hour, and $1,500 for an "overnight stay." She is shown in various poses wearing lingerie, and is surrounded by airborne dollar bills in one shot. In another she wears a large yellow crown on her head.
In a cruel irony for a driver who was allegedly exceeding 100 miles per hour headed the wrong way on the highway, Olivia Secrets describes herself on the site as "never in a rush," and adds, "I never rush or hurry you in any way!"
Wheeler said Holmes' profession is outside the scope of his investigation.

Why would you print this? It had nothing to do with the accident. You are simply causing more grief to a family who lost someone they loved.
What relevance does any of this have to the tragedy? This is mudslinging and ambulance chasing at it's worst. And I would wager that a copyright infringement case could be made as well.
IS THE EMT OK???????????????? And I'm with Lore. This isn't a news story and you're objectifying women to get a few clicks? This isn't good role modeling for our daughters! We're more than meat, and they need to KNOW that!
This is National Enquirer 'journalism', at best, and hardly what we'd expect from the Reporter. It's a *second* head-on crash for her family, friends and those close to this woman, to read this story. It offends me and I didn't know her at all.
It's as if to say her life was worth less, so easily judged by the rest of us, living our safe, respectable middle class lives. >Wren Abbott, is this how you learned your journalism 101? Really a low swipe at a stroy.
story.