Missing Persons

10.03.05

Missing Monday

Inspired by the story of LaToyia Figueroa, bloggers Tazzy and Piggy, along with Pax Romano, created Missing Monday, an attempt to highlight local missing persons stories on the first Monday of every month.

Blogs are perfect vehicles for spreading the word on missing persons cases. All it takes for one of these cases to be solved is for the right pair of eyes to catch sight of a familiar face. And what are blogs good for, if not to do good?

If you blog, please consider joining us — it requires only one post, once a month. A list of resources may be found in the post and comments to my first Missing Monday contribution.

Samantha Gail Garcia, who went missing in July, is an endangered runaway from Allentown, Pennsylvania.

More information about her can be found on the website of The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Anyone having information about her whereabouts should contact the Center at 1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST).

09.08.05

On Looking at Photographs of the New Orleans Dead

 

What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow
Out of this stony rubbish? Son of man,
You cannot say, or guess, for you know only
A heap of broken images, where the sun beats,
And the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,
And the dry stone no sound of water.

– T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land


Rick Bowmer/AP

Some will see these photographs as an exploitation of tragedy; others will see them as unduly macabre;

and some will recognize that only when we are willing to look at what our nation has wrought can it be saved, if it still can be saved.

Found via Talk Left and Pam’s House Blend, they are graphic and disturbing. Click on them at your own risk:

Avoid them at your nation’s risk.

In an essay that appeared in an 1863 issue of The Atlantic Monthly, Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote about Matthew Brady’s photographs of the Civil War dead — the first wartime photographs that brought the reality of war to American breakfast tables. Holmes wrote:

Many people would not look through this series. Many, having seen it and dreamed of its horrors, would lock it up in some secret drawer, that it might not thrill or revolt those whose soul sickens at such sights. It was so nearly like visiting the battlefield to look over these views, that all the emotions excited by the actual sight of the stained and sordid scene, strewed with rags and wrecks, came back to us, and we buried them in the recesses of our cabinet as we would have buried the mutilated remains of the dead they too vividly represented.

We cannot allow the dead of New Orleans to be locked in a secret drawer or buried in the recesses of our cabinet. Not if we want our republic to rise from its knees and live again. Not while these people hold the reins of power.

There are too many stories yet to be told. We need to hear them. We need to see them.

But even that is not enough.

There I saw one I knew, and stopped him, crying: ‘Stetson!
‘You who were with me in the ships at Mylae!
‘That corpse you planted last year in your garden,
‘Has it begun to sprout? Will it bloom this year?
‘Or has the sudden frost disturbed its bed?
‘O keep the Dog far hence, that’s friend to men,
‘Or with his nails he’ll dig it up again!
‘You! hypocrite lecteur! –mon semblable,–mon frere!

– T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land

Clearly, the federal officials purportedly in charge of the disaster recovery efforts bear the heaviest burden for these deaths. The President who appointed them, and those who continue to support him, have revealed themselves for the callous, inhumane, immoral creatures that they are.

But I can’t help feeling that we are part of the problem, too. By continuing to participate in this corrupt and morally bankrupt society, we all bear some measure of the burden.

We live in a country whose President openly wonders “what didn’t go right?” as FEMA orders 25,000 body bags.

He will never know, because he will never face these dead.

But we can, and we must.

The last five posts I’ve written, and then deleted, have all been titled “What’s the Point?” In the face of our failed efforts to make a change before this disaster, I’m still trying to figure out the answer to that question, but the one thing I do know is that everything is different now. After Katrina, things cannot continue to go on as they did before. Something has to change. Everything has to change.

We need action. We need to open the doors of this cabinet of horrors, this grotesque nation of repulsive privilege and old bigotry.

We need a revolution.

09.05.05

Missing Monday

One of the small bits of good to come out of Latoyia Figueroa’s disappearance was that it engaged bloggers both here and abroad, and made many of us acutely aware that Latoyia was only one of many missing persons whose stories needed to be publicized.

Philly blogger Pax Romano, along with British bloggers Taz and Piggy, came up with the idea to have bloggers set aside one post on the first Monday of every month in order to publicize a missing persons case in their area. It’s called Missing Monday. Other Philly bloggers participating in Missing Monday can be found here.

Blogs are perfect vehicles for spreading the word on missing persons cases. All it takes for one of these cases to be solved is for the right pair of eyes to catch sight of a familiar face.

If you blog, please consider joining us.

I’d like to focus on two cases today. The first is a Pennsylvania case:

Alfred Yersevich

DOB: Jan 30, 1990
Missing: May 2, 2005
Height: 5′9″ (175 cm)
Eyes: Brown
Race: White/Hisp
Age Now: 15
Sex: Male
Weight: 130 lbs (59 kg)
Hair: Brown
Missing From:
ALLENTOWN
PA
United States

Alfred was last seen on May 2, 2005. He may be traveling with a male companion and an adult female companion. They may still be in the local area, or they may have traveled to Reading, Pennsylvania. They may be traveling in a white Honda Civic with Florida license plates X66JVU. Alfred may use the alias first names Christian or Cris, or the alias last name Campos.

ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION SHOULD CONTACT
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST)
Allentown Police Department (Pennsylvania) 1-610-437-7753

The second case involves children who were separated from their caretakers in the New Orleans airport after Hurricane Katrina:

Lyndell and Demarco Robinson

Lyndell:

DOB: Sep 3, 1993
Found: Sep 4, 2005
Age Now: 12
Sex: Male
Race: Black
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Height: Unknown
Weight: 43 kg (95 lbs)
Found:
NEW ORLEANS
LA
United States

Demarco:

DOB:
Found: Sep 4, 2005
Age Now: 4
Sex: Male
Race: Black
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Height: 91 cm (3′0″)
Weight: 27 kg (60 lbs)
Found:
NEW ORLEANS
LA
United States

These are pictures of children who became separated from their caretakers by Hurricane Katrina. They were picked up from the New Orleans airport on September 4, 2005. They were in the company of their cousin, Johnny Robinson, who is also featured on www.missingkids.com. Lyndell has scars on both his knees.

ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION SHOULD CONTACT
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST) or contact NCMEC Cold Case Review Unit at 1-877-446-2632, ext. 6235 or 6295
Louisiana Missing Childrens Clearinghouse - 1-225-342-8631

I found all of these cases on the website of The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, which has a page devoted to connecting children missing after Hurricane Katrina.

More Katrina-related missing persons links (via Disenchanted Forest):

Again, if you blog, take a good look at those faces, and please consider joining Missing Monday.

One post on one day a month. Surely, that’s not too much to ask.

08.20.05

Latoyia Figueroa: The Seach Ends

The search for Latoyia Figueroa is over, and the news is not good.

Police officers found Latoyia this morning in Chester after following her former boyfriend, Stephen Poaches. He and a friend, unaware that they were under surveillance, attempted to move Latoyia’s body. Poaches was the father of her unborn child; when the police apprehended him, he was wearing a bullet-proof vest and carrying a .45 caliber gun. (update: here’s how it went down)

All-Spin Zone has further details, as does The AP.

In his comments to reporters this morning, Latoyia’s father said that this brings closure to the family. He also emphasized that the search for Latoyia built a movement that was not just about her, but also about the thousands of minority women currently missing in the United States.

With news like this, concentrating on that larger picture seems like the only way to find a silver lining. Latoyia’s story has affected many of us, and has helped bring attention to the mainstream media’s skewed coverage of missing persons cases.

At Philly Future, we’re working to build a Missing Persons Ad network that will enable bloggers to publicize local cases on their blogs. If this story has affected you the way it has affected so many of us, please consider donating some of your time to help bring this network into being.

May Latoyia find in death the peace that escaped her in life, and may her family find solace as they grieve.

08.07.05

A Change is Gonna Come

The New York Times has published a story on the Latoyia Figueroa case, and the role of the Philly blogosphere in promoting it:

After weeks of frustrating obscurity, the case of Mr. Figueroa’s daughter, Latoyia Figueroa, 25, has finally captured the national news media’s attention, spurred by the persistent nudging of Philadelphia-based Web logs and a city councilman distantly related to the Figueroas.

In the process, the case has become a flashpoint for the growing unease in minority communities across the country about the way they believe many national news outlets focus relentlessly on missing white women, while giving little attention to equally compelling stories involving poorer minority women.

“Certainly, everybody hopes that they find out what happened to Natalee Holloway in Aruba and to all the other missing young women,” said Juan F. Ramos, the city councilman, as he handed out leaflets on the teeming corner of 52nd and Market Streets. “But for a while there, you had to wonder: why not Latoyia?”

[snip]

You just had to listen to the simple facts of the story to realize that there was something seriously wrong here,” said Richard Blair, who runs a Philadelphia-based political blog, allspinzone.com, writing under the name Richard Cranium.

“The fact is, this issue of news organizations’ obsessive coverage of missing white women has been simmering in the blogosphere for a while now,” Mr. Blair said.

What the Figueroa case has done, he said, is give people something on which to focus their attention.

“When black women disappear, the media silence can be deafening,” began an article in the June issue of Essence magazine, which chronicled cases of eight missing black women.

While we continue to hope and wait for Latoyia’s safe return, we can take some measure of solace in the national attention that her case has received — thanks, in large part, to the efforts of Philadelphia bloggers.

This story highlights the fact that all of us — from the smallest bloggers to the largest — can have a real effect on the world we spend so much time documenting. Freed from the demands of commercial pressures, freed from the false imperative of objectivity, we can help point to the stories that matter, the stories that need to be told.

As Sam Cooke wrote:

It’s been a long time coming, but I know
A change is gonna come, oh yes it will

And if it doesn’t come soon enough, you can bet that they’ll be hearing from us.

(cross-posted on Philly Future)

08.03.05

Feeling Wired

Wired News has published a story on the Latoyia Figueroa case. I spoke with the reporter, Cyrus Farivar, on the phone over the weekend; my quote appears at the end of the story.

During our conversation, Cyrus asked me where things were going to go from here. It was a good question; unfortunately, Latoyia is not the only woman missing in our area.

In the comment thread of a post written by ol cranky of Disenchanted Forest, bloggers at Philly Future have begun to organize an ad network to publicize missing persons cases.

Ol cranky wrote:

I suggest blog PSAs (public service announcements) for missing persons; yes, I’m suggesting blogs become today’s milk cartons. My ultimate goal (with which I need help, since I have no idea how to do this myself) is for bloggers to be able to register somewhere so they can place missing person PSAs on their blog that will be generated randomly to rotate those currently on police/FBI blotters as missing persons. Yep, I’m thinking national: a blogger can input a zipcode that will autogenerate 2 or 3 local/regional missing persons + one from outside their region to maximize coverage. This way, my blog could have PSAs like the one for Latoyia, one for Khalid (if you’re in South Philly, check him out, he’s right below my profile at The Disenchanted Forest), one for Richard Petrone & Danielle Imbo who are from the Philly metro area, and one for someone like Tamika Huston or any one of the whole host of other folks listed here.

We’re working on making this network a reality. Until then, please consider the idea that two British bloggers, Tazzy and Piggy, have had: Missing Mondays. Pax Romano summarized the idea:

Taking this further, the boys have proposed that bloggers everywhere designate the first Monday of the month as “Missing Monday” where bloggers the world over are invited to post the picture and information of someone who is missing from their state or country. I think this is a great idea and plan to follow through with it. If you are interested in details go HERE for information.

One post, one day a month: that’s not asking too much, is it?

07.29.05

Latoyia Figueroa: The Search, and the Questions, Continue

Finding Latoyia: Your Actions Can Make a Difference

The blogswarm is having a noticeable effect: Latoyia’s picture was all over the place today. Please help us keep up the pressure.

The reward fund for Latoyia continues to grow, but it remains far short of the goal. If you’ve thought about giving, but haven’t done so yet, please consider doing so. Every contribution, no matter how small, will help.

If you’re a blogger, please consider putting one of the following ads on your site, and linking it to this ASZ post. (ad 1 | ad 2). Remember: our best chance for finding this young woman is to bring her image before as many eyes as possible. Please do your part.

A detail I’ve just read about, and that could be a good identifier, is that she has the word “Angel” tattooed on her wrist.

SpinDentist Drills Tucker Carlson

Even as he has received accolades for his role in pushing the MSM to cover Latoyia’s disappearance, Richard Cranium has received accusations of political bias. He deals with them effectively in this post:

. . . on an issue like Latoyia Figueroa’s disappearance, the lines of politics disappear completely. Latoyia could be any one of us, our children, or other family members. So, keep this in mind as you peruse articles on ASZ other than those relating to Latoyia.

Some people, unfortunately, refuse to hear that message. During an interview last night on MSNBC with All-Spin Zone’s own SpinDentist, Tucker Carlson had this to say:

Read the rest of this entry »

07.28.05

Latoyia Figueroa: the Philly Blogosphere Makes Good

Today will be remembered as the day the Philly blogosphere made good.

Philly bloggers have certainly done good before, but it’s hard to remember another time when a group of bloggers in this city had such an immediate and powerful impact on the mass media. Today’s efforts on behalf of Latoyia Figueroa — the pregnant, missing woman from West Philadelphia whose case had received little publicity since she disappeared nine days ago — demonstrated the power of blogs to bring important local stories to the attention of the entire country.

Read the rest of this entry »



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