Amber Alert Cancelled: Missing Harris Children

19 08 2009

Four children, taken by a relative from Texas, were found in Pontiac this afternoon unharmed, Pontiac Police Chief Val Gross said.

He said an Amber Alert for the children, who were abducted from the San Antonio, Texas area without permission, has been canceled.
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According to police, Alphonse Harris, 53, took his daughter, Briana Harris, 13; and three grandchildren: Nichelle Denise Harris, 9; Kenneth Dominic Harris, 6; and Dantae Lamar Harris, 5.

Gross said Pontiac police and FBI agents found them all at a home on Judson Street this afternoon and Alphonse Harris has been arrested and the children have been turned over to child protective services.

Gross said he had been in contact with the children’s family members throughout the day.

Making sure the children came in unharmed, he said, “was my main concern.”

[Source]





Missing: Tamika and Mariah Fray (Mesa)

19 08 2009

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Mesa police are looking for a woman and her 20-month-old daughter who have been missing since Saturday.

According to a press release, police are worried about the welfare of the child and are looking into allegations that the mother, Tamika Shauneice Mollet Fray, has threatened to hurt the girl, Mariah Grace Fray.

Police are working on limited information and are asking for the public’s help.

Police do not know of any vehicles associated with the woman.

She is described as a black female, 23 years old, 5 feet, 6 inches, 180 pounds, brown hair and brown eyes. The little girl is about 2 feet tall and weighs about 35-40 pounds.

[Source]





Interview with Stephanie Jones of M.O.M.S.

18 08 2009

Black and Missing but Not Forgotten Interviews Stephanie Jones of M.O.M.S.

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1. Why did you start M.O.M.S? My family members are the reason why I started this. Something just kept pushing me saying “Stephanie do something.” I couldn’t help my family members so I decided to help someone else.

2. How are you related the NC serial killer victims? I’m not related to any of the women by blood, but since I started doing this they feel like family. It’s like we are a big family because the victim’s family are going through the same thing I went through.

3. Did you lose someone the same way? Not the same way, but [it ended the same]. My family members’ cases [either] didn’t get solved or have the proper investigation.

4. Did the media portray the victims accurately (as prostitutes) or are they being misunderstood? What can you tell me about them that we don’t already know? Not exactly, I know they had a drug problem, but everybody make mistakes in life and that was one of their mistakes. As far as the prostitution goes I don’t know if all of them have done it. [The media] didn’t mention [that] they were mothers and daughters. Their families loved them just as much as a parent who love their daughter who is a doctor or a lawyer. Some of the women had a career, but got off track. The women have families that love them [regardless of their situations].

5. What do you hope to accomplish with this organization? I hope to accomplish that all missing and murder cases get the same attention regardless of the situation.

6. Where can one donate to M.O.M.S and what will the donations be used for? Anyone can donate at any Wachovia bank (www.wachovia.com) [Account name is “M.O.M.S” or Missing or Murdered Sisters”]. Donations will be used for school supplies for victims children and clothes for the children. It will also be used to bring awareness to the victims using things like billboards, commercials, and flyers of the victims.

7. How much do these billboards run for? The billboards are $1300 a month.

8. Do you have a Myspace/Facebook/Twitter/website set up for this organization? Where can we find it? M.O.M.S website is http://missingormurderedsisters.ning.com . M.O.M.S Myspace page can be found at http://www.myspace.com/493498010.

9. Are you looking for volunteers? We need all the support we can get. I’m reachable by email [stephaniejones@embarqmail.com].

10. Why do you think it took the media so long to talk about this? Do you think race or social class plays a role? I feel that race and social class play a part in this but more social class than race. I say this because if one white person goes missing you hear about it everywhere. There was a murder about a year ago [around the same time of the NC serial killer murders] to two [white] Christian women who participated extensively in their communities. One was shot, and the other killed. The police blocked all the streets off, had press conferences and they quickly caught the guy. I don’t have a problem with that and they should have done that, but at the same time when they found the second [serial killer victim’s] body in the same area and both women fitted the same profile why didn’t they have a press conference? Why didn’t they block those streets off? When the parents first reported the girls missing, the police did not get a search crew, and no police officers walked the streets with the missing girls photos asking if any one seen them. I know this situation is different because it’s a lot of people involved, but the officials could have done more to help the situation. I just want all people to get the same treatment as anyone else. It shouldn’t matter your color, income or where you from.

11. What is your next step in making M.O.M.S known? I will talk about it where ever I can because I want to help families all over. We are here to bring awareness to communities about women of all ages and races that are missing or murdered. I’m also doing a local TV station call WHIG TV in Rocky Mount NC.

Stephanie also wants us to be aware of what America’s Most Wanted calls the West Mesa Bone Collector. Since Feb of this year, 11 female bodies and one fetus has been found buried in southwest Albuquerque. So far, Seven victims have been identified: Victoria Chavez, Cinnamon Elks, Michelle Valdez and her unborn child, Juliean Nieto, Veronica Romero, Monica Candelaria and Doreen Marquez. The case is very similiar to the NC murders, so I posted the article below from AMW for your information:

Dog Uncovers Southwest’s Largest Crime Scene

Just like on any other day, Christine Ross and her dog Ruca left their home on Albuquerque’s west side to go for a walk. But on Feb. 2, 2009, the stroll took a strange turn.

Ruca sniffed out a large bone protruding from the path, and Christine did a double take.

“It didn’t look normal. Our gut instinct told us it wasn’t supposed to be there,” Ross said.

So she took a picture of the bone with her cell phone’s camera and messaged it to her sister, who is a nurse. Just a short time later, her sister confirmed what she had feared: the femur bone looked as though it belonged to a human.

When police arrived to check the area, they didn’t uncover just one body; over the course of several weeks, they uncovered the bodies of 11 women and one unborn child.

Seven victims have been identified: Victoria Chavez, Cinnamon Elks, Michelle Valdez and her unborn child, Juliean Nieto, Veronica Romero, Monica Candelaria and Doreen Marquez.

Albuquerque’s Police Department had a grueling task ahead of them. The area where the original bone was found is surrounded by at least 100 acres of dirt and desert.

A massive team of investigators and forensic scientists collaborated to collect every bone and every piece of evidence, and, they say, the only way to do it is by sifting through every inch of dirt, one speck of dust at a time.

“We estimate we’ve moved over 40,000 cubic yards of dirt,” said Albuquerque Police Chief Ray Schultz.

But moving dirt is just one of the tasks the department is tackling. Detectives are also working long hours in an effort to identify the women who were left in the makeshift grave.

Victims’ Families Ask For Justice

So far, police say they’ve identified seven of the 11 bodies and one unborn child. Medical examiners say the bodies belong to Victoria Chavez, Cinnamon Elks, Julie Nieto, Doreen Marquez, Veronica Romero, Monica Candelaria, and Michelle Valdez, along with Michelle’s unborn child.

While four women remain unidentified, police are making progress since the case first surfaced. Police say with the help of forensic odontologists, they now know that one of the unidentified women is an African-American female who was likely only 16 years old when she died.

Not only that, police say the teen had bridge-work done to her teeth. Officials have since released the girls’ x-rays in hopes that a dentist somewhere can compare her records with their records and then use this information to unlock the girls’ identity.

Police are also still working to identify a suspect. There is no telling if the women were buried by the same person, and police are not yet saying if there is a suspect or suspects. The identified victims do have a common link: cops say the women have ties to drugs and prostitution.

Now, the women’s families are collaborating with the police in hopes of finding out what happened. The victim’s families say that despite the rocky paths the women may have taken while they were alive, it doesn’t mean they don’t deserve justice after their deaths.

“Number one, she was a human being, she was a beautiful human being,” said a teary-eyed Dan Valdez, whose daughter Michelle Valdez was found in the grave site.

“She was my daughter, she was a sister, a mother a granddaughter,” Dan says. “Everybody’s got skeletons in their closet. This is a cruel and inhumane act that took place upon my daughter and her unborn fetus and I’ve thought many times, I’ll go to my grave looking for who did it. I will not let it rest.”

Police hope to learn who the women may have last been seen with. Detectives say they’d like to hear from women who may have been working the street between 2001 and 2005, or anyone who may have hired the women during that period of time.

One of the victims was found to have an unusual set of acrylic nails, which police are hoping might be an important clue in determining her identity.

Reaching out to area nail shops, detectives have found that this type of nail art was not available in the Albquerque at the time when they believe the victim was killed. Police belive that she might have been from, or traveled to, another state.

Authorities are hoping that somebody who recognizes the nail art will come forward and help identify the victim.

[Source]

Full Coverage of the West Mesa Mystery





Amber Alert: San Antonio Harris Children

17 08 2009

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It’s been a tough weekend for the family of Alice Harris. The 49-year-old’s loved ones decided to take her off of life support Saturday following a stroke earlier last week. The mother of two died. Then, less than 24 hours following her death her 13-year-old daughter and three grandchildren were kidnapped by her ex-husband.

There is a multistate search for the four children and the Michigan man authorities believe abducted them from their Bexar County home Sunday afternoon. He’s no stranger to the kids. In fact, investigators said Alphonse Harris is father to the oldest of the kidnapped children and grandfather to the other three. They think he’s taking them back to his home in Pontiac, Mich.

Sunday night authorities issued an Amber Alert for four children: 13-year-old Briana Harris, 9-year-old Nichelle Harris, 6-year-old Kenneth Harris and 5-year-old Dante Harris.

According to Bexar County Deputies, he took them in his former wife’s van from her home in the 7200 block of Montgomery Sunday afternoon. Investigators said he’d been alone with the kids following a dispute with a 27-year-old daughter by his deceased wife. Family members said he also stole belongings from the home too.

Deputies said Harris is driving a 1999 tan Dodge Caravan with Texas license plate number 5-2-P-G-X-5. They recieved reports he called his mother while driving in Oklahoma City, OK sometime Sunday. She reportedly advised him to return the children back to San Antonio.

The children’s family said Briana had been using Harris’ cell phone to send text messages about their whereabouts without her father’s knowledge. But, when Harris reportedly discovered the secret texts he threatened his teen daughter.

The family called this a tremendously difficult time. They are praying for the safe return of four children as well as mourning a loved one’s death that’s only a few days old.

If you have any information, please contact Bexar County deputies at (210) 335-4603.

[Source]

I apologize if the pictures of the children is not clear, those are the only clear pictures I can find. Nevertheless, let’s circulate their photos and get them found.





North Carolina Serial Killer on the Loose; Stephanie Jones, founder of M.O.M.S

14 08 2009

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They spent their nights jumping in and out of strange cars, trolling otherwise empty streets lined with decaying storefronts and boarded-up homes. Many sold sex to support drug habits or children left in the care of worried, hardworking grandmothers.

Even when they were picked up for drugs or prostitution, nights in jail looming, they called home to let their families know they were OK. Then, one by one, the calls stopped.

Since 2005, nine women who lived at the edges of the poor community in this small North Carolina city have disappeared. Six bodies were found along rural roads just a few miles outside town, most so decomposed that investigators could not tell how they died. At least one of the women was strangled, and all the deaths have been classified as homicides. Three women are still missing.

Police will not say whether they suspect a serial killer, but people in the community about 60 miles northeast of Raleigh do, and they’re impatient with law enforcement efforts to investigate the slayings.

After the latest body — that of 31-year-old Jarneice Hargrove — was found in June behind a burnt-out house that was once a crack den, local law enforcement and state police formed a task force. In July, the FBI got involved.

But friends and family say it didn’t happen soon enough.

“We got someone out here that’s snatching up females,” said Stephanie Jones, a 28-year-old nursing student. “I mean, next person could be your grandmother, it could be me, it could be my mother, it could be my daughter.”

Jones, who knew two of the victims, has founded a group that is raising money to publicize the slayings and search for those still missing. She says the cases are being swept under the rug because of the victims’ lifestyles.

The lead investigator, Sheriff James Knight, said he cannot comment.

Rumors swirl about the identity of the killer, if there is just one. Some say he is an ex-military man or an ex-police officer because he leaves no evidence. Others believe he is exacting revenge on local women after contracting HIV from a prostitute.

Forensic psychologist Dr. Michael Teague said the killings are probably the work of one person.

“You’re talking about a man who didn’t finish high school, probably doesn’t have a regular job, probably not married or in a stable relationship,” he said.

Vivian Lord, chairwoman of the criminal justice department at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, said that if one killer is responsible, he is likely trying to cleanse the world of prostitutes or deliberately picking victims he knows won’t be missed.

If it’s the latter, he chose wrong when he killed Ernestine Battle. Her sister, Tynatta James, 64, remembers the February 2008 day the family reported Battle missing. It had been less than 48 hours since they last heard from the 50-year-old, but she always checked in, even from jail.

“We knew something wasn’t right because she hadn’t called,” James said.

A month later, a man putting up a wire fence around his property down a rural stretch of road outside town found a badly decomposed body. The bodies of two other victims were found in the same area in 2007 and 2009.

In May, a DNA test identified the remains as Battle’s. She was wearing only her underwear and police told James she was probably strangled, but they couldn’t be sure because animals had dragged away a small throat bone that typically breaks when someone is killed that way.

“I’m still frustrated,” James said. “I didn’t really feel like they were doing all they could. I just feel like they recently started to get involved in the cases after the last lady.”

For Alecia Johnson, the killings were a wake-up call. She knew most of the women: They all walked the streets of Rocky Mount together. She said she didn’t wait for police to catch a killer. She stopped after the body of the first woman, 29-year-old Melody Wiggins, was found dumped in the woods in 2005.

“I used to walk these streets and jump in and out of cars. But then when that first girl Melody got killed I stopped that because I knew he would kill another,” said Johnson, 41. “I hate for that to happen to her, but it probably saved my life. I have five babies.”

Counting the names on one hand, she added, “There’s probably five or six girls left around here that will jump in and out of cars. He really did kill the whole neighborhood.”

Jones’ group has raised enough money to post billboards with the faces of the missing and slain women. Now she is raising more to organize search teams for those whose bodies have not been found.

Juray Tucker, the mother of 37-year-old Yolanda Lancaster, missing since February, said she wants to help with fundraising but doesn’t get much time now that she has to care for her daughter’s children.

“Every day, every minute, every hour, I’m worried,” she said. “It’s constant on my mind and there ain’t nothing I can do, ain’t nothing I can do.”

[Source]

I’m hoping to set up an interview with Stephanie (founder of M.O.M.S) to find out more about M.O.M.S. I’m glad this group and this case is getting the attention it deserves! Please do your part and pass along this story to others!





MOMS (Missing or Murdered Sisters)

5 08 2009

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I found out about this organization through a reader and just had to post about it. I think it’s a great thing they are doing and hope that one day Black and Missing but Not Forgotten can get to that point.

The images of five missing and murdered Rocky Mount women now flash on billboards in Rocky Mount. The signs were placed on Tuesday to help raise awareness about the murders, which are being probed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

A community group, MOMS (Murdered or Missing Sisters) used fish fries and motorcycle rides to raise money for the three electronic billboards. The signs show each woman individually and then screen with all of them. A question mark represents a sixth unidentified victim.

“It lets me know that somebody does care,” said Diana Nicholson, mother of Taraha Shenice Nicholson, whose remains were found in March 7 on Marriott Road in Edgecombe County. The 28-year-old had been reported missing on Feb. 22.

Jackie Wiggins has waited nearly two years for answers in the murder of her daughter Jackie Thorpe, whose body was found Aug. 27, 2007 behind a house on Seven Bridges Road, between Battleboro and Whitakers in Edgecombe County. The 35-year-old had been reported missing on May 8, 2007.

“Questions and doors that were closed before are now being answered and opening,” Wiggins said on Tuesday.

Members of the community group told WRAL News that the billboards are a reflection of the heightened community awareness. Five bodies of African-American women have been found in the county in four years.

In addition to Nicholson and Thorpe, the bodies of Jarniece Latonya Hargrove, 31; Ernestine Battle, 50; and Melody LaShae Wiggins, 29, were all found in the same area.

A sixth body discovered in February has yet to be identified, and three other missing women with similar descriptions and backgrounds – Christine Marie Boone, Renee Joyce Durham and Yolanda Renee Lancaster – remain missing.

Both mothers say they were recently interviewed by members of the FBI. Wiggins said the agent told her the agency does have some “outstanding leads.” She said the conversation gave her new hope, especially after hearing authorities do have some possible suspects.

Lamar Advertising gave the community group a significant discount on the billboards. The signs will stay up for at least a month. Supporters said they hope to raise more money to keep them up longer, if needed. Two of the billboards are on US-301 and the other is near the intersection of Winstead and Sunset avenues.

[Source]

We should all follow their example, I know I will step up. I know you guys noticed that I haven’t been posting for a while. As I said before, it’s hard with a baby and full time job. My baby girl is now 6 months old and more and more demanding of mommy’s attention. If I’m lucky, I can get type from work – but work is demanding of my attention as well.

On that note I need some help. I finally admit that I cannot do this by myself. (For those who don’t know, I’m the only one behind this blog)

I need:

1. Guest posters: Those that can help me keep up with news on the missing by posting on certain days.
2. Checkers: Those that will go through the blog once a week and tell me what I need to delete, edit or update.
3. Researchers: Those who want to just give me information about the missing through email.
4. Going Viral: Those who will help me spread the news through Twitter, Myspace and Facebook accounts.

If you are interested in any of these positions please email me at: mzdeidra@yahoo.com. I will follow up with detailed instructions within 24-48 hours. Keep in mind these are not paid positions, just volunteer. Your girl is broke, so bear with me :0p