Crime Junkie - MISSING: Relisha Rudd // Unique Harris
Episode Date: February 17, 2020This week we bring you two mysterious disappearances. Why did it take 18 days for people to notice 8-year-old Relisha Rudd was missing? And how did 24-year-old Unique Harris vanish from her apartment ...without the glasses that were critical to helping her see? Please join us in supporting blackandmissinginc.com For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.com/library/. Sources for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/missing-relisha-rudd-unique-harris/Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi Crime Junkies, I'm your host Ashley Flowers, and I'm Brett, and today I have two stories
for you.
Stories of two people from marginalized communities who don't often get their stories told.
But stories that are no less mysterious than the ones we tell every week here.
Because in each of these stories, things aren't quite adding up, and there is a mystery that
can only be solved by someone out there.
These are the stories of Relitia Rudd and Unique Harris.
The first story I want to tell you today is about Relitia Rudd.
Now, Relitia had to deal with a lot more as a young 8-year-old than I ever have, and probably
more than most of our listeners ever have.
By the time she was 8 in 2014, she had spent much of her life living in a Washington, D.C.
homeless shelter with her mom and her three brothers.
It was not an easy existence, and not one that she even liked.
As much as she could, she would stay at an aunt's house, or with friends, or friends
of family, or family members, but the shelter was impossible to avoid completely.
And outside of school, it is where she spent most of her time.
Now, like staying with friends and family, school was also an escape for Relitia.
But in 2014, she began missing more and more days.
At first, I think it was just maybe a day here, a day there, maybe a week, but then,
they started counting her absences by the weeks.
One of the most thorough reportings I could find about Relitia's case was done by the
team at WUSA 9.
They actually did a three-part series on Relitia's case called 18 Days, and they said
that by March of 2014, we're talking less than three months into the year, Relitia had
already racked up 30 days worth of absences, and the most recent was like this two to three
week consecutive stretch of time.
Now, it's unclear exactly when her school reached out to check on her, and you're gonna
find that a lot with this case.
Everything is just a little fuzzy, and nobody can seem to give any real firm answers.
But at some point, someone at her school takes note that she's been gone for a long time,
and they notify city officials, I assume it's like a social worker or something, who reaches
out.
Like reaches out to her mom, I'm assuming?
Well, no, so that's one of the fuzzy things that I couldn't find a solid answer to.
Everyone's assumption would be that you would reach out to her mom, but I'll kind of get
into that in a little bit.
Either way, they reach out to someone, and they're told that Relitia is very sick, and
she's been under the care of a doctor, and that's why she's unable to attend school.
Now, either this seemed fishy to the person taking this message, or it's just like part
of their regular procedure to verify stuff like this, but they ask for some kind of proof.
Like we actually need a note from her doctor, we need records, something that we can put
in her file.
So according to NBC Washington, on March 10th, the people looking into Relitia's absences
get a call from her doctor, a doctor Tatum, who tells them that yes, Relitia is in fact
very sick.
She has some kind of neurological disorder, and she's under my care receiving treatments.
Now this is good, at least there is some real explanation for where Relitia is, because
unfortunately in Relitia's community, which is full of marginalized and impoverished people,
I think the school and city officials often see a lot of terrible things, kids who stop
showing up for much worse reasons.
So I mean, it's sad to know that she's in the hospital, but at least they know she's
safe.
Now part of their protocol isn't just like taking this doctor's word over the phone,
they need some more information like full medical records, they need to know more about
her condition, how she got to the hospital.
So Dr. Tatum says that he'd be happy to like put these together for them, and he's going
to leave the records at the shelter where Relitia's family lived.
Then nine days later, they go to pick up the records.
I'm sorry, nine days?
Like if it was important enough for them to request these records and all this confirmation,
like shouldn't it be like important enough to go get as soon as possible?
Like she's already been out of school for weeks.
Yeah.
So I, again, I don't know exactly why they waited.
I don't know if Dr. Tatum told them that he needed that long to get the records together.
I don't know if the city officials caseload was just too large.
That was the first time they could actually get there.
One possibility is that they actually could have arranged a face to face with Dr. Tatum.
Again, all of my source material differ a little bit.
They're a little contradictory because NBC said that he was going to leave records,
crime watch daily says that the officials actually arranged a meeting with him.
So I don't know.
But waiting those nine days would prove to be a critical mistake because when they arrived
to pick up the paperwork and or to meet with this Dr. Tatum, they were told, there are
no records here waiting for you.
I have literally no idea what you're talking about.
And even more terrifying than that, they're told that no one at the shelter had even seen
Relisha in weeks either.
Now maybe her condition was so severe that she'd been hospitalized the whole time, but
something about this wasn't feeling right.
So they start asking questions to the people at the shelter about this Dr. Tatum.
And what they learn sends shockwaves of panic through them.
There is no Dr. Tatum, but there is a Mr. Tatum that worked at the shelter.
However, he wasn't any kind of healthcare professional.
He was a janitor and come to think of it, no one had seen him in a while either.
Immediately, Relisha is reported missing and investigators work to figure out exactly how
long she's been missing, how much time had they lost, and the bigger question, how is
it that they are just learning about this?
Yeah.
I mean, I guess I'm incredibly confused too.
Like, are you saying that her mom doesn't actually know where she is?
No.
It is where things get really jumbled and messy because Relisha's mom, her name's Shamika,
she admits that she hasn't seen Relisha in weeks, but she won't admit to being the one
who called her in sick or who said that stuff about her being under a doctor's care.
Okay, then who did?
So I don't know.
It's not super clear.
Shamika points the finger at her own mother, Relisha's grandmother named Melissa.
She says that as far as she knew, Relisha was with her this whole time.
But Melissa points the finger right back at Shamika.
Okay, but this doesn't make a ton of sense to me.
Even if she's with her grandma, the mom would still see her or try to see her or want to.
Or have some kind of contact with her, you'd think?
Right, and she's been out of school for weeks.
The school never tried to contact anybody else.
You have to list multiple emergency contacts when you enroll your kid in school.
No one else was contacted?
Right.
This is what I'm saying.
Nothing about this case makes sense.
Shamika points at Melissa, Melissa at Shamika, and the whole time, I'm just like someone
had to have known that this little girl was missing.
How could not one person be looking out for her?
But what it ultimately comes down to is that police realize that no one, not her mom, not
her grandmother, not anyone at school or at the shelter, had laid eyes on Relisha in 18
days.
18 days where anything could have happened and 18 days that she has been with this 51-year-old
janitor named Khalil Tatum.
Now on the same day Relisha is reported missing, this is March 20th now, police get a trace
on Khalil Tatum that takes them to a local hotel in Prince George County, Maryland.
But what they find in that hotel room will prove to make an already confusing case even
more confounding.
When police enter the motel room where they had tracked Khalil Tatum, they don't find
Khalil and they don't see any sign of Relisha.
According to Colbert King's reporting for the Washington Post, what they find is Khalil's
wife Andrea laying face down on the motel bed deceased from a fatal gunshot wound to
the head.
With this discovery, police are even more determined to find Relisha as soon as possible.
No one ever believed that a 51-year-old man would take a little eight-year-old girl for
anything good, but now Khalil seemed even more unpredictable, the clock was ticking.
And police ask to see the security footage from the motel, looking for just any kind
of clues.
They are even more baffled to see that on the day that Khalil and Andrea checked into
the hotel, Relisha wasn't with them.
They appeared to be on camera alone every time.
So where was Relisha?
Now as police are mobilizing quickly to learn everything they can about Khalil Tatum, where
he had been, where did he use his credit cards, where's his cell phone now, when's the last
time that they can put him with Relisha.
The public is pretty much in the dark.
All the media knows at this point is that an eight-year-old girl is missing, and she
was last seen with Khalil Tatum.
And the public is asked to keep a lookout for either this 51-year-old man or the eight-year-old
little girl.
And so this goes on for a couple more days.
Police working feverishly behind the scenes while the press and the public wait for updates.
But honestly, here's where I just get sick to my stomach, because Britt, 2014, not that
long ago, I don't remember hearing a thing about this little missing girl.
No, me neither.
Like, I compare it to, I think, the Jamie Kloss case.
I know that was just a couple years later in 2017.
When Jamie Kloss went missing, I mean, I couldn't not hear about that news.
It was on every radio station, it was on every TV station, it was on every podcast.
People were flooding our DMs.
It was all over the internet, yeah.
Right.
It was on every podcast in 2014, so people aren't sending us messages, but it wasn't
on our TV stations, it wasn't on our radio stations.
No one, at least here, I'm shocked even outside of DC, knew that we should be on the lookout
for this little girl, which is just heartbreaking.
She's eight years old and somehow was already falling through the cracks, even in the early
days of the investigation.
I mean, I cannot agree with you more.
It's disheartening and sickening and devastating that this coverage isn't there, but we see
this so often in cases of missing people of color, like, they just get treated so differently
by the general media.
Yeah, and I mean, without a doubt, I think Relisha got treated differently by the public.
And even before the public found out, the fact that she was allowed to be missing for
so long without anyone noticing is something inexcusable.
Right.
What I will say is that once police knew, I think they really did put everything they
had into this investigation.
And five days after the search for Relisha began, the FBI released a video to the public
in hopes to garner some new leads.
It was a video from another hotel.
This one was taken on February 26.
And here, Brett, I'm going to send you the direct link to the FBI's website where they
posted it, and I'm also going to post us on our website if anyone wants to follow along.
Okay, so they're walking down the hall.
It seems like really casual, really comfortable, honestly.
I can't quite make out what she's wearing quite yet.
Maybe dark pants and a jacket.
She's carrying a couple of bags, and that's pretty much it, like, you know, they're walking
towards the hotel door.
And it's very casual is what I noticed.
But he's not, like, forcing her to go there, and he's not holding her.
No, like, she's there completely willingly.
You know, he's unlocking the door, and, let's see, she walks in right behind him, and that's
about it.
Yeah, so this is what the FBI puts out.
And what's interesting to me about the bag that she's holding is that religious family
had told multiple people a story about how Khalil was going to take Relisha shopping
for a bathing suit to wear to a pool party at the hotel where she was spotted on video
footage.
So I think the belief is that that could have been what was in that shopping bag.
Okay, okay, we have to pause for a second.
Like, so you're telling me that her family knew that she was with this 51-year-old dude
this whole time?
Yeah, I mean, they knew enough to know that, like, yeah, they're going to go buy a swimsuit
together, they're going to go to this pool party together, they're together most, I mean,
I assume they think they're together the entire time.
I mean, I guess, like, I guess that makes sense because, like, someone had to have told
the school about this Dr. Tatum thing, but, like, especially as a parent, I cannot wrap
my head around being, like, 100% okay with, like, one, my daughter going with this random
dude to buy a swimsuit, which seems already not cool.
And then, like, he just takes off with her for weeks, and they're like, okay, like, I
don't know, they went swimsuit shopping, like, who knows, what?
Then I had, yeah, then I haven't seen her in two weeks, and I mean, this is the part
of what is so baffling about this case.
The more police looked into the relationship Khalil had with Rolisha and her family, it
was one that her family willingly not just allowed, but actually encouraged, they allowed
him to take her for overnight trips, he would buy her things, shower her with attention that
she craved.
I mean, it's, he's grooming her, like, she's eight years old, like, she is not in the place
where she gets to make these decisions, like, she needs protection by, you know, a guardian,
someone saying, like, this isn't okay, this isn't all right.
Yeah, and listen, I don't know if they got stuff out of the relationship, too.
I don't know if it was one less kid that Shamika had to worry about when Khalil had
her, but they said then, and still say now, that they didn't see anything wrong with the
relationship.
Shamika felt like she knew Khalil, thought he was a good guy, so the entire 18 days
she was gone, at least someone knew she was with this guy.
Again, there's so much finger pointing, I can't give you an accurate picture of the
truth.
Shamika says that she thought Rolisha was at her grandmother's grandmother from what
I can gather, did let Khalil take her, but only because she said Shamika did so many
times before that it was just, like, normal.
But to me, there's no excuse that is appropriate for this situation.
No, you do not go 18 days without seeing your daughter.
You do not let her go off with this seemingly nice 51-year-old guy for overnight trips.
Obviously, I don't know, Shamika or her life or the decisions she's had to make for her
children or the hardship she's been through.
Yeah, or even what she went through as a child, I mean, for all we know, this relationship
when she was younger could have been normal.
Could have been really normal, especially with the grandma not being concerned about
it either.
I can't imagine even having my niece for a day and my sister being like, hey, let her
go with this person that I don't know, that I feel uncomfortable with, and being like,
okay, well, my sister said it's okay, I'm just going to go with it if I feel uncomfortable.
I can't imagine being in that situation and being 100% okay with this.
Yeah, I mean, again, this isn't something that I can understand.
I don't think it was anything that was appropriate in any realm, however you're looking at it.
But now police have all of this background about Khalil's longstanding relationship with
Rolisha and her family.
So it wasn't a surprise to them to see her so comfortable with him in that video that
they released to the public.
Now the thing is, this video isn't the only video that police have, but it's the only
one that they've ever released to the press and to the public.
And the biggest question that gets asked over and over again is, is their footage of them
coming out of the room together?
And police won't officially comment on that.
I was just about to ask you if there was any other footage.
Yeah, so I think it's a question that everyone wants to know.
But the question actually becomes a little bit different when you learn a little bit
more about the story.
The question for me becomes not if she was on video coming out, but really how was she
seen coming out?
Because according to information released by WUSA 9 in episode 2 of that 18 day series,
officials do say that Rolisha is captured on footage again March 1st.
So to me, she had to have left, right?
But when or how are a mystery?
Maybe they didn't actually see her because she was transported in something.
And I don't know why they're being so cagey about giving us information about how or when
or where they saw her on video on March 1st.
But then what they do say is that on March 2nd, Khalil is captured on video without Rolisha.
Now the same day that he's captured alone on video, he goes to a Home Depot store and
makes a deeply disturbing purchase.
Large trash bags, a shovel, and lie.
Okay, we know what that means.
It's a murder kit.
Exactly.
Like the Home Depot doesn't have a section, but like I can piece it together for everybody.
Now where he is between March 2nd when he makes those purchases and March 20th when
his wife is found in that motel seems to be a mystery.
Wait, so was his wife with him like the whole time?
So this is like another question mark and I feel like I'm saying this over and over,
I'm sorry.
But how his wife is involved in this is totally unknown to me.
Only before Rolisha went missing, Khalil had filed for divorce from Andrea.
Now I can read into that a million different ways, but it's all just speculation.
I don't know when they reconnected, if she was ever with Khalil and Rolisha together,
if she even knew Rolisha at all, and I have no idea why Khalil killed her.
I'm not even sure police knew that at the time or now, but again, all they can focus
on is now finding Rolisha because with those purchases, knowing that he's killed his wife,
they are up against a ticking clock if bringing Rolisha home is even an option.
A little over a week after finding Andrea, police's investigation leads them to a local
park.
Again, there are some contradictory reports.
Some places say it was Khalil's cell phone pings that led them there.
Other places say it was a tip, but when they searched the park, they were really treating
it as a search for Rolisha's body, hoping that they would find the spot where Khalil
had used that shovel and the lie, but they don't find any freshly dug graves.
They don't find Rolisha.
Instead, what they found was Khalil dead inside a shed with a self-inflicted gunshot wound
to the head.
And no Rolisha?
And no Rolisha.
It has been six years this month since anyone last saw the eight-year-old girl, but police
I think still know stuff that we don't because they said they don't believe this happened
in a bubble.
They truly believe someone else out there knows where Rolisha is right now, whether that's
dead or alive.
They believe that someone knows what Khalil did to her in early March of 2014.
Now the DC police aren't forgetting about Rolisha and crime junkies, we can't either.
A broken system let this little girl fall through the cracks too many times and the
least we can do is try to make this right.
Look at her picture, share it, share her story because someone out there holds the key whether
they know it or not.
And you know, there's one man who's been committed to sharing Rolisha's story for years.
According to a story written for the Washington Post by Teresa Vargas, a man named Keith Davis
has been doing an online radio broadcast about Rolisha's case and he refuses to give up until
she is found.
I think Keith is so dedicated to Rolisha's story because he can understand what it's
like to lose someone mysteriously and get few answers.
He understands what it's like for the public and the press to forget about someone's story
just because they aren't white and they don't fit the media mold.
He knows because his own cousin, Unique Harris, went missing four years before Rolisha and
her case is just as baffling.
In October of 2010, Unique Harris was a 24-year-old mother of two boys who had just relocated
from Richmond, Virginia to Washington DC.
She grew up her whole life in Richmond, but when her mother made the move to DC and then
her relationship with her boy's father started to deteriorate, Unique wanted a fresh start
and she wanted to have that fresh start close to family.
One of that fresh start was going to be a new career too.
According to Monica Hess, who did an article about Unique for the Washington Post, she
had gotten accepted into a massage therapy program and was even going to be getting
some financial aid to help her.
And that was super important for Unique because at the time, money was really tight and because
money was tight, when she moved to DC, she was only able to afford an apartment in an
area of town that has been described as rough by a number of outlets who have reported on
this case.
In an article I found from the Huffington Post, they cover an interview Unique's mom,
Valencia, did where she said that she begged Unique not to take the apartment, to just
come live with her while she was getting on her feet.
But Unique was independent, she was a little stubborn, and she wanted to make it on her
own.
And Valencia tried to calm her own fears by telling herself, like, listen, she's not
far from me, she's just a couple of minutes away.
If anything bad were to happen, at least I can get there quickly.
It's not like she's on the other side of town.
So by October, Unique and her boys had only been in the DC area for about five weeks,
but they were settling in nicely and it was really nice, like I said, to be around family
again.
Now Unique didn't have a car yet, so her family would help her out by driving her places
that she needed to go, help her out with the boys, or even just be around to keep her company.
October 9th was a Saturday and Unique had her little nine-year-old cousin over for a
movie night and a sleepover with the boys.
Now Valencia told the makers of the documentary non-critical that she spoke on the phone too
unique around 8.30 or 9 o'clock that night, as they were making all of their popcorn and
like settling in for their movie.
And she said, listen, everything was normal, Unique sounded fine, it was supposed to be
a low-key night with all the kids, and Unique didn't make mention of anything out of the
ordinary.
Like she wasn't worried, nothing had happened that day, no one was coming by, she was in
the right place doing the right thing, and it was a completely normal night.
She went to bed that night and woke up the next morning like she always did and went
about her day.
It wouldn't be until later in the afternoon that the life she had known would be forever
changed.
According to the Washington Post, sometime after 3 p.m. Valencia gets a call from a family
member named Tiffany.
Now Tiffany is the mother of that nine-year-old cousin that was staying over at Unique's
house with the boys, and what she tells Valencia is disturbing to say the least.
She says that her daughter had called her that morning when she woke up and said that
Unique wasn't in the apartment.
She didn't know where she was, when she had left, or when she was even supposed to be
back.
Now, the young girl is pretty upset, but her mom told her, listen, just keep calm.
She said that Unique's probably just like outrunning an errand or something, it's no
big deal, and at that point she tries calling Unique herself, but she keeps getting no answer.
It just rings and rings and rings, and as the day trickled by, Tiffany starts to grow
more and more concerned, because every time she would check in with her daughter, she
would say the same thing, Unique still isn't back.
By 3 o'clock in the afternoon, Tiffany is making her way up to Unique's third floor
apartment, and this was always the agreed-on pickup time, so she was sure that no matter
what Unique had gotten caught up doing earlier in the day, she would definitely be there
by then.
So, when the kids open up the door and tell her that they haven't seen their mom or their
cousin, she knows that something isn't right.
I mean, I guess I'm kind of surprised that they even waited till 3, like they were checking
in with her daughter this whole time, and they knew that she wasn't there.
Yeah, I mean, I'm sure that's part of this case that honestly probably makes the family
just like stick to their stomachs, because maybe if police would have gotten involved
a couple of hours earlier, it could have changed the smallest detail, but in that article
that she was interviewed for, Tiffany told them that she couldn't get there any sooner.
She was basically stuck on the other side of town, but now that she was there, Tiffany
jumps into action and she calls Valencia to tell her what's happening.
The entire family finds out and steps up to get the boys to their grandmother's house
while they try to figure out what happened to Unique, and really, there wasn't a plausible
explanation anyone could come up with other than maybe she left for a second and like
something bad happened, like an accident or something, or maybe something more sinister,
but like everyone who knew Unique said that she would never in a million years leave
the kids in her apartment alone and just walk off.
Something bad was happening, but the family couldn't quite put their finger on what.
That is, until they start to look around her apartment and what they see sends chills down
their spine.
There, hanging on the dining room table chair was Unique's purse with everything still
inside.
And when they walked to her bedroom on the pillow, laying neatly folded were Unique's
glasses.
Now, I've gotten glasses in the last couple of years, but really just to help me like
read or drive at night, but Brett, you've worn glasses your whole life.
Yeah.
Since I was like 10 and I desperately need them, cannot leave my house without them.
I have like a backup pair in my car.
Yeah.
So you're in.
You're like legit blind without them.
Yeah.
Very blind.
Yes.
So you can help me understand this more.
And Unique was basically the same way you are.
Multiple outlets reported that she had been wearing glasses and she was very, very young
and her vision was literally so bad that she couldn't see the clock on the nightstand
when she was laying there in bed.
I'm about to that point.
Yeah.
It's really, really trippy.
Right.
So her mom said that when they saw those glasses sitting there, any thought that they might
have had that maybe she went outside, even if it was just for a second or down to the
corner store, immediately left their mind.
They said she could never go anywhere without those glasses.
Definitely not.
Like I can't read street signs.
I probably couldn't even like use a key to unlock my own door without my glasses.
But I wear contacts most of the time.
Is there any evidence that she had contacts anywhere?
So my educated guess would be no only because literally no one has ever brought that up
as a possibility.
Like when you talk to her family, they keep referencing the glasses.
And again, more than anything, I go back to the placement.
So her mom told this story about how when she was really little, she got her the glasses.
She used to fall asleep in them because again, her vision is so bad, she has to wear them
all the time.
She'd fall asleep.
Her mom would replace her glasses over and over and it was getting so ridiculous that
finally they like agreed that she could keep them on her pillow because her mom would try
and keep them on her nightstand.
And she'd be like, no, even that's too far away for me for it to be on the nightstand.
So when she would go to sleep, she would fold them and lay them on the pillow next to her.
So they're looking at this and being like, okay, if she's not even gonna put them on
the nightstand because that's too far away, she's clearly getting ready for bed.
She's put her glasses there.
She's not going to go anywhere without them.
She's not going to even step outside of the door as much as step outside of her own bedroom
like room.
So basically like everything is there.
Everything that would tell her parents that she did not leave her apartment willingly
is all right there.
Well, not all.
So her glasses are there.
Her purse is there, but her keys and her phone are missing.
Do we know if the door was locked in the morning when the kids woke up?
Like again, like I think it's unlikely, but if we want to entertain the idea that for
a second she walked out the door for any reason, like I could see her taking the keys to make
sure to like lock the kids in so that nothing happened to them.
So I don't know exactly.
Like religious case, this one is super frustrating because this hasn't gotten half the attention
that some of the other cases we've covered get.
So details like this, which to me are like critical, have never been released.
All I could find were reports that the main door of her apartment building was wonky and
that the intercom system was broken.
So Eunice apartment was the kind where you like have to walk in a front entry and then
everyone's doors are inside the building.
Like you don't have direct access to the outside, but it seemed the intercom system was for
sure busted.
And according to the Charlie project website, Eunice apartment door was quote, not in good
shape, whatever that means.
So again, I really don't know.
I just keep going back to the glasses though.
Like if she did go outside, like you said, for anything for one second and she went of
her own free will, why isn't she wearing her glasses?
Right, like, honestly, the first thing to come to mind, which the timing doesn't make
sense, but like if she were to go like check her mailbox, I couldn't do that without my
glasses or contacts in like there'd be no reason for me to be like, this is the exact
time I need to do this.
I can definitely do this without being able to see, you know, six feet in front of my
face.
It doesn't make sense.
Exactly.
And it's not making sense to her family.
And the more they look at the scene, the more sure than ever they are that this isn't
a question of where did Eunice go.
This is a question of who took Eunice.
Someone was responsible for this.
So they report Eunice missing to the police.
And when they talk to the kids who were in the house, the boys say that they were asleep
all night, didn't hear a thing.
But Eunice's cousin, the nine year old, said that she thought maybe she heard a man's
voice, maybe around 10 o'clock, but she also thought that it could have been the TV and
she never got out of bed to check.
So there could have been someone else in the house.
Not possibly, but when police look at the scene, they say that there's no sign of forced
entry, no sign of a struggle.
It's literally as if Eunice was getting ready to go to bed and then vanished into thin air.
Now when police ask her family if there's anyone they know that would want to hurt Eunice
or anyone in her life that was causing her problems, the resounding answer is no.
She was well liked.
She was kind.
She was a good mother.
Like there was literally no one that they could think of.
But police asked for everyone's information anyway and of course we know they always start
with the people closest.
So they give police the name of her new boyfriend.
Even though they say like he was out of town, they really don't think that he was responsible
for anything.
What about the father that she left in Virginia?
Well, so obviously they give police his information too.
I mean, it obviously wasn't a perfect relationship and police have to look into it.
But before they can do this, there's another lead that sticks out because Valencia remembers
an incident that took place shortly before Eunice vanished and it just might hold the
key to where she is now.
Valencia tells police that not too long after Eunice moved into the apartment, she was a
witness to a murder.
Something had happened outside of her building that Eunice viewed from her apartment window
and now her mom wondered if this could be the reason that she isn't here anymore.
Did we know anything else about this murder?
Was it ever solved?
So here's the thing.
As far as I can tell, no one has been able to figure out exactly what crime she witnessed.
There are people on forums who have like pulled crime reports and they try and make educated
guesses.
But most of the time, like the timeline doesn't totally add up and the lead doesn't totally
pan out.
So it's hard to fully evaluate this as a theory.
But even though people still talk about this as a theory to this day, I heard an interview
done by two women, Donna McIntyre and Jody Newman.
They actually host this show called The Missing Voice through Blog Talk Radio and they actually
spoke directly with Eunice's mom.
And Valencia says that police have actually told her in the last few years that whatever
witness she was, whatever murder, like that lead has been totally vetted and they found
that it's not related to her disappearance at all.
Okay, so that's kind of chalked up to a coincidence or whatever, but like did they ever like look
into like tracking her cell phone or anything like that?
So since that's one of the things that's missing, I assume police have gotten a lot
of data from her phone, but none of that has ever been released.
The only thing that police have ever publicly said is that they used her cell records to
help build their timeline.
Now they say that Eunice was on the phone with someone at three o'clock in the morning
and then the kids woke up at eight thirty, so she had to have gone missing somewhere
in that window.
But they never said who she was on the phone with at that three o'clock call, which to
me would be like a big deal, like that is the first person I want to talk to.
And like, did they ever say that she was in the apartment when that call was made?
Like, do we even know that that's where she was at three o'clock in the morning?
So they, no, they haven't given again any information about that, but I'm making the
assumption because they're using that to build the timeline and they're, they're saying,
you know, she has this call at three, the kids wake up at eight thirty, we assumed
she went missing between then.
I'm assuming that they must know that the call at three o'clock was made from her place.
Otherwise, to me, you could easily say that the timeline widens.
Okay.
So like, what now?
Like, what else can they look into?
Is there anything else that they can go off of?
So that's the frustrating part.
This case will be a decade old this year and there have been almost no developments.
No one has been named as a suspect.
No one's been named as a person of interest.
And this remains to me one of the most baffling cases that we've ever talked about because
nothing makes sense.
Now there was a moment in September of 2018 that everyone thought maybe that this case
had been resolved.
And it's kind of all a little cryptic, but on September 12th, 2018, one of the hosts
that I talked about from that missing boy show posted an update to a Facebook post about
Unique that said, quote, sadly, Unique is no longer missing and her case has come to
the end.
Now her family will begin the process of seeking justice.
Please keep her family members in your prayers, end quote.
So when I found that, I went digging a little bit and I found a Reddit thread started by
user ranger398 who said that there was an update to the case and they posted the following
message, which they say they got as like a direct copy paste thing from Valencia's Facebook
page.
And Britt, I'm going to have you read exactly what they claim was posted.
Quote, it is with my most heartbroken, deepest and saddest regret that I inform Unique's
most loving supporters, followers, partners and donors of her demise.
Unfortunately, this almost eight year journey to find Unique alive has come to these findings
in her missing person's case investigation that Unique's more likely than not deceased.
And now I must memorialize my baby girl.
God knows I never wanted to have to inform all of you that have been remarkably loving
through this ordeal of this news.
My apologies for this not being a happier ending.
I've been fighting so hard to bring you all good news in the end, however, it appears that
I cannot make that happen with the evidence we've compiled in Unique's case.
I hope all of Unique's supporters know I did my very best to find her alive and bring
her home to her sons and all of us.
I can't give any more specific details in the case right now, as I'm sure most, if
not all of you know, this war for justice is not over as far as the judicial portion
of Unique's case goes, which must now take place in our court system.
But I want you all to know all of your prayers, love and support has not been in vain because
we got the murdering mongrel.
Yes, we got him.
I want to thank you all with all of my heart and soul, because without Team Unique Harris'
selfless supporters, this would not have been possible.
I will keep you all posted as we move forward to make sure this diabolical, deviant creature
never does this to another parent and family.
I also want to make it clear that my advocacy and speaking out slash up for missing slash
abducted, unresolved homicide, human slash sex trafficking, etc. will still be an intricate
part of my life.
I will still fight for our voiceless victims and continue to speak to our babies in our
communities and prayerfully be a part of a positive uplifting solution to these God-awful
cases that none of us asked for, wanted or deserve.
I intend to make sure my child's short 24-year life that was so brutally taken away from
her will not be in vain.
Much love and appreciation I'm sending your way.
P.S.
Stay tuned in for further details as the opportunities and information become available for me to
share.
End quote.
Now, I want to be very clear.
I could not find this again on Valencia's Facebook.
So it's either been removed or I don't have the right permissions to view it.
But from what I can piece together, I think around this time, Unique's case got transferred
from missing persons to homicide.
And Valencia was told to apply for a death certificate for Unique.
So I'm thinking that that could have been what prompted these posts.
Though again, I want to be painfully clear, Unique has still not been found.
Her case remains open and her mother remains more desperate than ever for answers.
Okay.
But like in her mom's post, she says, you know, we got him.
We got this murdering mongrel, this deviant creature.
Yeah.
Again, I don't, first of all, again, I don't even know that this 100% came from her mom.
I could only find this in a forum.
So that I'm always super skeptical.
But I could even see if she's told to apply for a death certificate, maybe she was under
the impression she had something.
Or maybe again, the police have more that they're willing to share with family, that
they're not really willing to share for the public.
Either way, I think it's super important to reiterate 100 times that Unique is still missing.
Her case is open.
Her mom is still advocating for her.
And you know, whether it's my permissions on her Facebook or not, if she took down that
post, I can understand her doing that.
If too many people are thinking, oh, this is solved, we don't have to think about Unique
anymore.
But she still should be thinking about Unique because she still needs to be found.
Yeah.
And I know we've seen it before where like, there's enough evidence surrounding the entire
case that it's only a matter of time before they find something.
And you know, they're fairly confident that the missing person is deceased.
Yeah.
And I mean, I think you look at like the totality of the circumstantial evidence and the way
that literally she just disappeared and everyone's saying she wouldn't walk away from her life.
I can see why police would hand it over to homicide after almost 10 years, clearly something
bad had happened to her.
And I think that's what happened here.
It's been almost 10 years without a sign of Unique.
She would have never left her kids.
She physically couldn't have left her apartment on her own without her glasses.
So what the heck happened that night?
I guess I just like, don't get it.
Did they miss somebody?
Like, did the exes officially get rolled out?
Yes, so according to the Charlie Project site, both the current boyfriend and the ex, like
her children's father had been polygraphed and they both passed, though Valencia has
expressed a little bit of frustration because I guess it took like eight months for police
to actually polygraph her ex, the children's father.
Now the only thing anyone can seem to come up with is that this was a stranger attack.
Women who'd maybe been watching Unique since she moved in, like watching her movements
and her habits, getting used to her schedule and knowing when and how they could get her.
Okay, but like how would they be able to take her without a fight and like without waking
the kids especially?
Like you said there was no sign of, you know, struggle or forced entry.
So I've thought a lot about this and really what I see are two options.
One is if it's a stranger, could it have been someone that worked in this apartment complex?
Someone who possibly could have had a key because again, she had just recently moved
in there.
Maybe someone saw her, maybe they got infatuated with her.
You think about like a landlord, a maintenance guy, whatever, I mean, that's the part that
makes sense to me.
Like she's laying down going to bed, like that is when she puts her glasses down.
Like she's not even going to go finish getting ready for bed.
Like she's done for the night, if someone was watching her and saw that she went to bed,
did they just come into the apartment?
Now the other option to me is maybe if someone knocked on the door, now Valencia said like
she would have never opened her door for anyone.
Like she knows maintenance men shouldn't be coming by at that time.
Like that's not happening.
But if someone got her to open the door or even if they had a key and they came in, maybe
they took her without a fight because they threatened the kids.
Like I don't know what I would do if someone, if I had kids and someone broke into my home
and say they had a weapon and they're like, you either come with me or I'm going to go
do something to your children.
Everything that I have read about Unique says that she was an amazing mother and I can see
to me that is the one thing I can see her not putting up a fight for.
And granted I didn't know her, her mom might disagree, but it's one of the only two options
that makes sense to me.
Someone has to know what happened to her.
People don't just vanish into thin air.
So please look at her picture on our website.
Unique still has two boys who are growing up without their mother and even without knowing
what happened to her.
And that's the part that's killing her own mom too, the not knowing.
She told Monica Hess from the Washington Post that sometimes when the not knowing gets
really bad, she'll see something on the side of the road like a trash bag or something
and she will actually pull over and check inside just in case there is part of her daughter
in there.
So please for Unique, for her mom, for her sons, if you know anything, you can contact
Detective Fulton at 202-497-3470 and you know this month is Black History Month and
I was trying to think of a way that we could honor this month within the space that we
operate, this crime space, the storytelling space.
And I mentioned before in our Highway of Tears episode, we really do want to be committed
to helping to try and bridge this media gap that exists when we talk about persons of
color.
And listen, I would love to go out and try and solve these cases myself, but we all
know that that is not where my skill set lies.
I would 100% just get in the way.
So instead, I found an amazing organization that is hands on helping every single day.
And that is the Black and Missing Foundation.
So along with continuing to try and do more episodes like this, we are making a donation
to the Black and Missing Foundation whose mission is to bring awareness to cases like
this and to actually assist in searching for those persons of color who go missing and
even on a broader scale to help change the culture around how missing minority cases
are covered in the media.
I would encourage everyone to go learn more about what you can do to help change this
culture.
Go to blackandmissinginc.com and if you want to help in a more direct way to this case
that you just heard about, Unique's mom actually has a GoFundMe page that we are going to link
out to on our website.
She's collecting funds to continue to bring attention to it in hopes that one day she
will finally get answers as to what happened to her daughter.
Again you guys, I encourage you please visit blackandmissinginc.com.
You can also visit our website to see pictures, to see videos we talked about, and to see
all of our source material for both of these cases that's crimejunkiepodcast.com.
We're also going to have a direct link to Valencia's GoFundMe page if you want to help
out.
And be sure to follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We will be back next week with a brand new episode.
Crimejunkie is an audio check production, so what do you think Chuck, do you approve?