LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. (AP) — A
10-year-old girl whose malnourished body was found in a suburban Atlanta
trash bin had tried to run away from home and showed up at school with
bruises and welts on her body, police reports show.
Emani Moss' stepmother also had been charged with child cruelty after beating the girl, according to the reports from the Gwinnett County Police Department.
Moss' burned and emaciated body was found in a trash bin in unincorporated Lawrenceville on Saturday, police have said.
The girl's father, Eman Moss, and the stepmother, Tiffany Moss, have been charged with murder, concealing a body, and child cruelty, and were being held without bond in the Gwinnett County jail. It's unclear if they have attorneys.
Authorities conducted an autopsy on Emani on Sunday and determined that her body was burned after she was dead, likely in an effort to conceal the crime, said Gwinnett County Police Cpl. Jake Smith. Emani may have died as early as Oct. 30 and was severely underweight when her body was found, Smith said. He said the autopsy showed the girl had been denied food for several days before her death.
On March 19, 2010, then-6-year-old
Emani told a school nurse she was afraid to go home with her bad report
card because she was afraid her parents would hurt her, according to one
of the police reports. When the nurse investigated further, she found
the girl had bruises on her body and reported it to police.
Police took Emani and her stepmother to department headquarters for interviews that day and said Emani had severe bruises and welts on her chest, back, shoulders, arms and legs, the police report said.
Tiffany Moss told police she only
hit the girl with a belt three times, the report said. She was arrested
on a child-cruelty charge.
The Georgia Division of Family and Children Services signed a 2010 plea deal ordering Tiffany Moss to serve five years of probation for beating Emani, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Monday.
In July 2012, Emani tried running away from home, the police reports show.
The girl's grandmother, Robin Moss, was quoted by local news media on Sunday and Monday as saying that she suspected Emani was being abused, but couldn't persuade state authorities to grant her custody. Emani's mother, Danita Leaks, told Atlanta FOX affiliate WAGA-TV on Monday that she and Eman Moss fought over custody for two to three years and she was unaware that her daughter was being abused.
"If I would have known that him and
his wife were abusing my baby, I would not have let her stay over
there," she told the television station.
Authorities initially said Eman Moss called police early Saturday saying he was suicidal and that his daughter died after drinking some type of chemical substance. Smith said Monday that the detail about Moss being suicidal was a miscommunication during the 911 call and was later clarified with the dispatcher.
No comments:
Post a Comment