dissapearance not priority due to race??

Tah - posted on 10/21/2011 ( 6 moms have responded )

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— The grandmother of an Arizona girl missing for more than a week pleaded Thursday for more attention from police investigators and the national media, saying that the case of her granddaughter's disappearance hasn't been made a priority because she's black.



Jahessye (JES'-ee) Shockley was last seen Oct. 11 by her three older siblings at their Glendale apartment in suburban Phoenix while their mother was out running an errand.



Glendale police believe Jahessye left the home through the front door but don't know what happened next. They have no suspects, evidence or promising leads despite search efforts that included more than 100 officers and volunteers canvassing the area within three miles of the girl's home.



Jahessye's grandmother, Shirley Johnson, and about a dozen of her friends and neighbors went to the state capitol in Phoenix on Thursday to draw more attention to the case in hopes of finding the girl alive.



"The Glendale Police Department has not brought this to the forefront. They botched this investigation," Johnson told reporters. "I believe it's because she's a little black girl."



Glendale police Sgt. Brent Coombs said that he can't say strongly enough how the girl's race does not matter to investigators.



"What matters is there's a 5-year-old girl missing," he said. "It's the department's No. 1 priority. There's so much mystery around it and we've got an obligation to get to the bottom of it and try our best to bring her back safely or find out where she's at."



Nine days after Jahessye went missing, the department still had dozens of investigators assigned to the case Thursday. They were combing over all the information they've collected and following up on more than 100 leads that have come into the department so far.



The department is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for anyone who leads them to a break in the case, on top of the $5,000 offered by the girl's family and the $1,000 offered by Arizona's Silent Witness tip line.



"It's still as important as it was the first day that we were working the case," Coombs said. "We're never going to stop."



Authorities say that if the girl had some type of accident, they would have found a sign of her by now. They say the fact that they haven't points to a possible kidnapping.



"It is our belief that if she would have just simply walked away and not been interacted with by anybody that might have had the wrong intention, we would have found her by now," Coombs said.



Police say they have no reason to suspect anyone in Jahessye's family in her disappearance, including her mother, Jerice Hunter, who is eight months pregnant.



State Child Protective Services removed Hunter's three other children from the home after Jahessye disappeared but have not said why.



Hunter declined to speak about her other children earlier this week but told The Associated Press that she just wants Jahessye back home.



"If you have my child, please take her to a safe place, a public place where she can be located," she said. "The family will not be the same until the child is returned, and I will be relentless in my search."



Johnson said Thursday that she feels that she has to take matters into her own hands, saying her granddaughter's disappearance hasn't gotten the attention that it deserves.



"People in California have barely even heard what's going on," she said. "Somehow, somebody's suppressing something because the local media is keeping it local, and with all due respect to the media, it's not getting out. ... This is about my grandbaby."



Johnson wore a purple T-shirt that said "Grandma won't stop!" She chose the color because it was Jahessye's favorite. Her friends and neighbors showed up at the state capitol to support Johnson, also wearing purple shirts that read, "Hope" and "Bring Jahessye home."



Glenn Johnson, who is of no relation to Shirley Johnson and didn't meet the family until after Jahessye disappeared, said that he's been searching the girl's neighborhood and passing out fliers for a few hours every day on his motorized scooter.



"I've got very little confidence in the police, mostly because they have no logical place to look," he said. "I don't see how she could be in this area and not be found at this point."



He said that he doesn't think the police department has been racially biased, adding that it conducted an "aggressive" search of the neighborhood.



"I don't think it makes a difference whether she's white, black or green. If there's no leads, there's no leads," he said. "Sometimes it's a dead end."





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I'll say this, i think that when little white children go missing it does garner more attention from the media than when black children do. The first i heard of this little girl being missing was from this article popping up on my aol but the little infant "baby lisa" and her parents are all over my tv screen. Every morning i wake up to the parents crying on t.v or the cops talking about the case. When they were brought in for questioning, on t.v, their plea, on t.v, when cops said they stopped cooperating, on t.v, when they came back and said they were cooperation...on t.v, when the cops got a warrant..on t.v..when the couldn't talk, the sister, on t.v. They don't make it any secret. Some people may disagree but thats okay. I think it's sad that people value one life above another. I always see little white children or women on t.v that have gone missing, very seldom do i see any coverage for black people until their families show up shouting about injustice, they don't love their children any less. Some say they have to do more searching themselves or are suspected earlier on than white people.



what are your thoughts on this??



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6 Comments

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Jaime - posted on 11/06/2011

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my first thought: they live in an apartment complex and the police don't have any suspects??? wtf, every damn person in that complex would be a suspect to me unless they had video proof that they weren't around at the time of that baby's disappearance! i'd have them search every single apartment, pull up everyone's name who's got a record, find every single sex offender in the county and interrogate them, search in all of Jahessye's favorite places, find every person that her mom has associated with, etc. there should be no stopping anyone until this girl is found.

it shouldn't matter what color a person is, if they need help they ought to get it, we all have rights and it's not fair for one case to take precedence over another. this case shouldn't be localized, it needs to be broadcasted all over the state, if not the country! someone HAS to know something.

Rosie - posted on 10/29/2011

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i think the media definitely gives more attention to white missing persons over minorities.
i don't believe authorities work any less harder for a minority missing person than they do a white person though. i feel it's the same whether white or black etc. however i do feel that they give less credability to poor people, and unfortunately a lot of the black population is poor.

Camille - posted on 10/29/2011

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Tah Dula: I don't know if in this specific case police are dragging their feet because the girl is black but I do agree with your opinion. Also, it does go with the color of the skin of the one who commits a crime (changing the subject a bit). Casey Anthony, I strongly believe she killed her daughter, she walked out free. What if the person who killed Caylee turned out to be a black or Hispanic person... would be on death row by now. Sad but true!

Leeann - posted on 10/28/2011

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I blame the media on this one, there really isnt enough coverage. In my state, now I live south of Richmond so I can only say from what I know, they have major coverage of all children. there was a mass search for a missing 13(?) yrs about five maybe more yrs back. Everyone came out to look, his mother had been murdered by her boyfriend and it was suspected that he had taken the boy. He had and then the boy was found um, he was no longer with us. We all mourned for his loss, even the police. the sherif was visibly distraught. So in saying that, yes sometimes the police dont do their jobs, but others it needs to blamed on the media. they are the ones that put it put there, they are the ones that KEEP it out there.

Jurnee - posted on 10/27/2011

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I tend to agree, the first I heard of Jahessye was on a comment page on the baby lisa story, someone commented that there was no coverage of jahessye's disappeance. It also seems that there is more coverage if there are strange circumstance(casey anthony, baby lisa). After reading Amys numbers I think that there really needs to be more media coverage of all missing children or adults, rich,poor, black, white or purple.

Amy - posted on 10/25/2011

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well, stats say "797,500 children (younger than 18) were reported missing in a one-year period of time studied resulting in an average of 2,185 children being reported missing each day."

I sure don't hear that many on the news! No matter what race, it's not being reported to newscenters or the newscenters are paid to cover "bigger stories".

and amber alert...only recovered almost 600? Since 1997!!!?? That's not enough. No matter what race, there NEEDS to be a better way.

Not sure what demographics are....but there are a LOT of kids who don't get publicity to be found. Usually, I'm guessing, because they don't have money to do so. To push it to a top story. Or because they are in a large town and people running news think other crap [movie stars/weather/same politics from last five days] trump a child. And I think police only have so much, so far in jurisdiction and sadly, i think a lot of kids get lost in the shuffle and not found because other crimes happen that police can stop. I don't know. I certainly don't know how the system works beyond the fact that it doesn't work well. And it doens't matter who you are, only takes a second for a child to disappear in a crowd. scary world.

http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/s...