Chicago Sun-Times

SEMAJ’S DEATH RULED HOMICIDE

Ruling: Toddler found dead in home that later burned down died from asphyxia

- BY SAM CHARLES Staff Reporter Email: scharles@suntimes.com Twitter: @samjcharle­s

Semaj Crosby — the toddler found dead in a Joliet Township home that days later burned to the ground — is a homicide victim who died from suffocatio­n or some other form of asphyxia, the Will County coroner’s office ruled Friday after a months- long investigat­ion.

The homicide determinat­ion was based in part on “the unusual circumstan­ces surroundin­g her disappeara­nce and the subsequent discovery of her decomposin­g body under the couch in her own home,” as well as “the multiple previous contacts by the [ state] Department of Children and Family Services” with her family.

In a statement, the Will County State’s Attorney’s Office called Semaj’s case the “highest priority” for Will County authoritie­s, who are vowing to “bring justice for Semaj.”

“All available resources are being deployed in this investigat­ion,” the statement from Jim Glasgow’s office said. “The tragic death of this little girl has had a profound impact on all of the prosecutor­s and investigat­ors involved in this case.”

Glasgow’s office called the matter “an extremely active and sensitive investigat­ion.”

Neil Patel, an attorney representi­ng Semaj’s mother, Sheri Gordon, said the coroner’s ruling was “not a finding that surprises us.”

“We are doing everything we can to cooperate with the sheriff’s investigat­ion to the best of our abilities,” Patel said. “Our concern right now is bringing to justice the people that did this horrible thing.”

Asked to identify who those people might be, Patel declined to elaborate.

Semaj lived in an 864- squarefoot home in the 300 block of Louis Road in Joliet Township with her mother, three siblings, paternal grandmothe­r, paternal aunt, her aunt’s two young children and her aunt’s parolee boyfriend. Gordon’s Section 8 housing voucher was allotted for only her and her children, Joliet housing officials previously have said.

The sheriff’s office said the home was in “very deplorable” condition when the child was found dead under a couch shortly before midnight on April 26.

The day before, DCFS had been at the home investigat­ing a child- neglect allegation but saw “no obvious hazards or safety concerns” for Semaj or her siblings, state officials said. Semaj, her three siblings and mother all slept in the same bedroom.

About two- and- a- half hours after the visit from DCFS, the toddler was reported missing, prompting a massive search of her subdivisio­n near Joliet. Eventually, police sought to search the home, but police said a lawyer for Gordon wouldn’t let them do so until they obtained a search warrant, which they did.

Less than two weeks after Semaj was found dead, the house burned to the ground. Authoritie­s said arson was “most likely” the cause.

In response to a Sun- Times’ Freedom of Informatio­n Act Request in May, the Will County sheriff’s office disclosed that either sheriff’s police or Will County probation officials had come to Semaj’s Joliet Township house 59 times between February 2016 and April 2017.

Forty of those calls were for probation checks. And two of those calls were for “welfare checks,” one of them in October 2016 and one on March 4, 2017, records show.

In the October call, officers were not able to make contact with the family.

It was unclear if contact with the family was made during the March visit, and officers wrote that a follow- up report would be filed, though it is unclear whether that occurred.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED BYWILL COUNTY LAND USEDEPARTM­ENT ?? KEY POINTS Semaj Crosby was found dead inside a Joliet Township home on April 26. • The sheriff’s office said the home ( at left) was in ‘‘ very deplorable’’ condition. • The day before, DCFS was at the home but found ‘‘ no obvious . . . safety...
PHOTO PROVIDED BYWILL COUNTY LAND USEDEPARTM­ENT KEY POINTS Semaj Crosby was found dead inside a Joliet Township home on April 26. • The sheriff’s office said the home ( at left) was in ‘‘ very deplorable’’ condition. • The day before, DCFS was at the home but found ‘‘ no obvious . . . safety...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States