many of the bodies were left in the woods, far from home, unlike most murder victims who are found where they fall. unsolved murders of children is very rare. if a 9-year-old got killed, it was because somebody slapped him across the room, he hit his head and he died. police did not create a task force until a year after the first murders began. fbi profiler roy hazelwood came down to help. three detectives drove him around the city and turned into jefferey mathis neighborhood. as soon as we turned on to that street, everything stopped. a guy cutting the grass stopped. guys playing dominos on the porch stopped. i said, what s going on? everything stopped. they said, laughingly, that s because we have a honky in the
it would be another year before jefferey mathis body was found in the woods, miles from his home. his mother would join camille bell in forming a committee to confront the city s leaders. the reaction of the police was that we were overreacting and that there was no serial killer. even though by now six black children were dead. four others were missing. perhaps we were like distraught parents that really needed everyone s sympathy, but nobody needed to do anything. for years, it has been a dirty little secret among the press and the police. deaths of blacks draw less attention than deaths of whites. nobody cared. so you could have several killings go on and if the people were poor, then no one discovered there was a serial killing. if you were black and poor, then really nobody looked. especially the black and poor and southern. police were slow to recognize these deaths were different. many of the bodies were left in the woods, far from home, unlike most murder victims
found where they fall. unsolved murders of children is very rare. if a 9-year-old got killed, it was because somebody slapped him across the room, he hit his head and he died. police did not create a task force until a year after the first murders began. fbi profiler roy hazelwood came down to help. three detectives drove him around the city and turned into jefferey mathis neighborhood. as soon as we turned on to that street, everything stopped. a guy cutting the grass stopped.
in the spring of 1980, police were still reluctant to listen to camille bell. children were dying on the streets of atlanta in the daytime. among them, jefferey mathis, only 10. like yusef bell, he walked down the street on an errand to this gas station to buy cigarettes for his mother. she never saw him again. what we had here was a predator. and what he was looking for was somebody who was cut off from the herd. and if you don t realize you re in trouble until you re in trouble, then you have no way of getting out.
poor and southern. police were slow to recognize these deaths were different. many of the bodies were left in the woods far from home, unlike most murder victims who are found where they fall. unsolved murders of children is very rare. if a 9-year-old got killed, it across the room, he hit his head and he died. police did not create a task force until a year after the first murders began. fbi profiler roy hazelwood came down to help. three detectives drove him around the city and turned into jefferey mathis neighborhood. as soon as we turned onto that street, everything stopped. a guy cutting the grass stopped. guys playing dominos on the porch stopped. i said, what s going on? everything stopped. they said, laughingly, that s because we have a honky in the car. john glover, who took over as fbi chief in atlanta that summer, said that s why he and