We are past the protests of Black Lives Matter over the deaths of George Floyd and Tawanna Bailey and others and that magnificent summer of racial enlightenment of 2020 is long over...or at least out of the news...but Black people are still dying at the hands of the police... whether the press wants to talk about it or not..
Trumps trials and war in Israel and Gaza and Ukraine take up all of the news now of days and lost in it all is this curious story down in that great state of Mississippi.
Bettersten Wade Robinson searched for her son, Dexter Wade, for more than five months before she learned that he was killed on March 5 and buried in a potter's field after he was struck by an off-duty Jackson police officer in a police cruiser. Wade Robinson, who is accusing the county and police of an alleged "cover-up," spoke with ABC News Live's Linsey Davis in an interview that aired on Prime Wednesday night and demanded "accountability."
"Right now I'm hoping I can get to some kind of answer as to why it happened and what was the reason that it happened. But right now I'm still not satisfied," she said.
"It's a steady cover-up," she added.
"Now I asked, can I exhume my child and try to get some peace … now y'all take that from me," a tearful Wade Robinson said as she stood near her son's burial place outside the Raymond Detention Center. "I couldn't even see him come out the ground. Yall didn't give me the time to see him before he took his last breath. I didn't get to see him come from the ground. Cover up!"
ABC News reached out to all five members of the Hinds County Board of Supervisors to inquire about the letter and the timing of the exhumation but requests for comments were not returned.
County Administrator Kenny Wayne Jones told ABC News affiliate in Jackson, WAPT, that the incident was "very unfortunate," but said there was "no cover-up or anything like that. Just miscommunication."
ABC News reached out to Jones for further comment.
Wade Robinson told Davis she is "disappointed" that no one is "willing to take responsibility" for her burying her son and then exhuming him -- both without the family's knowledge or permission.
"How many mistakes you can have before you take responsibility," she said.
"Nobody has came to me and said that they are sorry," she added.
Wade Robinson said that she reported her son missing on March 14, nine days after she had last heard from him on March 5. She didn't learn until Aug. 24 -- more than five months after his death – that her son had been struck and killed by an off-duty Jackson police officer the night of March 5, when he was walking across a local highway.
Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba previously acknowledged during his State of the City address on Oct. 26 that there was a "lack of communication" that led to the months-long delay in letting Wade's family know what had happened to him.
According to Lumumba, Wade had no ID on his person when he was killed but he did have a prescription drug bottle that eventually allowed the medical examiner's office to identify him.
"The failure was that ultimately, there was a lack of communication with the missing person's division, the coroner's office and accident investigation," Lumumba said.
Lumumba said that "at no point have we identified, nor did any investigation reveal that there was any police misconduct in this process."
"The accident was investigated and it was determined that it was, in fact, an accident and that there was no malicious intent," he added.
ABC News reached out to the Jackson Police Department but a spokesperson declined to comment.
Crump told Davis in an interview that aired on Wednesday it is "unbelievable" that it took police more than five months to inform his family of his death, especially when "they know who Ms. Bettersten was" because she filed a missing person report with the Jackson Police Department and provided her name and address to police.
"They knew where he lived because he had medication in his pocket that had his doctor and the doctor told them that Ms. Bettersten was his next of kin," Crump said.
Following the exhumation, the Jackson Police Chief deferred ABC News' questions regarding allegations of a "cover-up" to the city of Jackson.
Melissa Payne, a spokeswoman for the city of Jackson, told ABC News that it would be "inappropriate" for the city to comment because "the City had no part in either his burial or exhumation. That was entirely with the county."
Crump, along with family attorney Dennis Sweet, are now calling on the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the circumstances surrounding Wade's death, burial and exhumation.
"Attorney Sweet and I will absolutely make the case for transparency that continues to be denied to Ms. Bettersten. Just a low down dirty shame what happened here today – lowdown dirty shame," Crump said on Monday. "And as Ms. Bettersten said when she first called us … it was a cover."
ABC News has reached out to the Department of Justice for comment.
The office of Hinds County District Attorney Jody Owens said in a statement on Oct. 27 that his office working with the Jackson Police Department, Hinds County Coroner's Office, and other relevant agencies to investigate Wade's death, the failure to notify his next of kin in a timely manner and the "irregularities surrounding the disposition of Mr. Wade's body."
"We ask for the public's patience as this important work is undertaken," Owens added.
Something is very very fishy about all of this!
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