Apparently,
it seems that in order to get the FBI involved in a missing person�s
case you need to be the following: white, female, and from a privileged
background. Something that 24-year-old Mitrice Richardson isn�t.
When
17-year-old Chelsea King went missing in Poway, California, after
she went for a run after school on Thursday and never returned home,
she became the subject of an extensive search that not only included
local police authorities but the Federal Bureau of Investigation
as well. Soon after the manhunt began, her car was found at the
Rancho Bernardo
Glassman Community
Park with her cell phone, iPod and school
clothes found inside. It was then that DNA on a piece of her clothing
found along the southern shore of the lake which led to John Albert
Gardner III, a registered sex offender, being arrested. Search crews
looking in the area near where that article of clothing was found,
discovered a body Tuesday in a shallow grave in a tributary about
10 feet from the edge of the water. All of this in the span of five
days.
Mitrice Richardson, a Black
lesbian, who will be 25-years-old on April 30, has been missing
for now 167 days, after last being seen alive in Malibu after being
arrested for not paying an $89 dinner bill at Geoffrey's restaurant.
She was released from custody at 12:30 a.m. on September 17, 2009
without her car from the sheriff's Malibu-Lost Hills Station and
hasn�t been seen since.
Despite pleas from her family
for the FBI to get involved, to date they have not.
Even with numerous pleas to
their local Congressional representative, Maxine Waters, to step
in and demand the FBI to get involved, she has not.
Attempts at working with the
both the L.A.P.D. and the Los Angeles County Sheriff�s Department
to locate Mitrice have gone stale. Neither agency has had any contact
with Michael Richardson, Mitrice�s father, in over a month.
But yet and still, when a white
teenage female goes missing, no expense is spared in bringing in
the appropriate law enforcement agencies to locate her.
What
happened to Chelsea King is horrible and what the King family is
going through is something that I don�t wish for any mother and
father. However, I�d be remiss if I didn�t point out the fact that
the treatment her disappearance received, in comparison to that
of Mitrice Richardson, clearly illustrates - in black and white
- the difference in the value of a Black woman�s life verses a white
woman.
If local law enforcement agencies,
with the help of the FBI, could locate Chelsea King within a week
of her disappearance, imagine what they might have accomplished
had they put forth the same effort when Mitrice first went missing
- 167 days ago.
Now that the King family has
closure, as tragic and sad as that closure is, there needs to be
a call made by Los Angeles Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, Congresswoman
Maxine Waters, the Los Angeles offices of the NAACP, Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, Urban League, every Black church, women�s
group and on down the line for the FBI to get involved in the disappearance
of Mitrice Richardson. Now.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Jasmyne Cannick, is a critic and commentator based in
Los Angeles who writes about the worlds of pop culture, race, class,
and politics as it relates to the African-American community. Her
work has been featured in the Los Angeles Times,
Los Angeles Daily News,
and Ebony Magazine. A regular contributor to NPR, she was chosen
as one Essence Magazine�s 25 Women Shaping the World. Click here
to contact Ms. Cannick.
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