Chicago Sun-Times

SAYING GOODBYE TO SEMAJ

Family, supporters and strangers mourn toddler found dead in Joliet Township home while criminal investigat­ion continues

- STEFANO ESPOSITO REPORTS,

Four men in long black coats carried the white- andpink casket that bore Semaj Crosby to her funeral.

The casket was so small that one of them would have been able to carry it alone.

Shortly thereafter, dozens of mourners came to Prayer Tower Ministries in Joliet Friday, filing past Semaj, wearing a pink dress and a silver tiara. The word “Princess” was written on the inside of the casket lid in purple letters.

On Thursday, the Will County sheriff’s office said there is “an ongoing criminal investigat­ion” into the little girl’s death. The sheriff’s office also said in records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times that its officers visited the Joliet Township house where the toddler was found dead April 26 nearly 60 times in little more than a year.

Previously, authoritie­s have characteri­zed the toddler’s death as “suspicious” but not “criminal.”

“We have a child that has gone away,” the Rev. Warren C. Dorris Jr. told reporters Friday before the service. “We want justice, but we’re here today to give comfort to this family.”

Semaj’s mother attended the service, clutching a bouquet of pink flowers and facing the tiny, open casket. People stopped by and bent lowto hug her. The little girl’s father was there too, sitting in the front pew, but not next to Semaj’s mother.

Family and supporters wore white sweatshirt­s that bore the words “Justice for Semaj Crosby” on the back.

In his eulogy, Dorris railed against the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, saying the agency didn’t do enough to help Semaj and her family.

“DCFS in my opinion failed this family …,” he said, to applause. “They should be held accountabl­e for what has happened here!”

Irma Williams, 68, a lifelong Joliet resident, didn’t know Semaj’s family but came to the funeral having dealt with loss herself: that of her 15- year- old grandson to an asthma attack five years ago.

Williams said Joliet is unaccustom­ed to dealing with this sort of child death.

“We have gangs and shootings and things,” she said. “It affects you. But a child affects you more. It’s just heartbreak­ing.”

As Semaj’s casket was gently rolled into the back of a white hearse to be borne to the cemetery for burial, her mother clutched a tiny pink bunny and silently looked on before climbing into the limousine, eyes forward, her face betraying no obvious emotion.

Semaj and her family moved into the home in the 300 block of Louis about one year ago, according to the sheriff’s office, but — since her biological parents did not live together — it wasn’t clear exactly how much time Semaj spent in the home.

An autopsy didn’t rule on the cause of death, pending lab and toxicology tests. There were no obvious signs of trauma or injury, according to the sheriff’s office.

No one has been charged with any crime in Semaj’s death.

Officials have said DCFS had been working with the family since September 2016.

Photos released earlier this week by the Will County Department of Land Use appeared to support the characteri­zation that the home was in “deplorable” conditions when the child was found dead inside.

During a Legislativ­e hearing Wednesday in Springfiel­d, DCFS Director George Sheldon said his department is conducting a review to determine what it missed — if anything — about the case. He said he expects the agency to complete its investigat­ion within several days.

During the hearing, Sheldon questioned the circumstan­ces of Semaj’s body being found beneath the couch, which had no legs.

“Obviously, something was going on and apparently an individual or individual­s attempted to hide that fact,” he said.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE: Semaj’s grandmothe­r Charlene Gordon ( from left), mother Sheri Gordon and aunt Tarra Sanders sit in the front row Friday for the memorial service.
ABOVE: Semaj’s grandmothe­r Charlene Gordon ( from left), mother Sheri Gordon and aunt Tarra Sanders sit in the front row Friday for the memorial service.
 ??  ?? LEFT: The Rev. Warren C. Dorris Jr. speaks during Friday’s service at Prayer Tower Ministries Church in Joliet.
LEFT: The Rev. Warren C. Dorris Jr. speaks during Friday’s service at Prayer Tower Ministries Church in Joliet.
 ?? MARIA CARDONA/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS ?? The program for Friday’s memorial service for Semaj Crosby.
MARIA CARDONA/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS The program for Friday’s memorial service for Semaj Crosby.

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