Daily Times Leader

Mothers demand answers after sons buried in Hinds County Penal Farm

- By SHAUNICY MUHAMMAD

JACKSON — The frustratio­n of Gretchen Hankins, Mary Moore Glenn and Bettersten Wade was palpable inside Stronger Hope Baptist Church in Jackson on Dec. 20, 2023, as the three women stood shoulder to shoulder, holding up pictures of their sons.

All three mothers, alongside attorneys Ben Crump and Dennis Sweet III, demanded answers from local law enforcemen­t and county coroners' offices about why they did not notify families before burying their sons in the Hinds County Penal Farm.

It's a saga NBC News first reported in October.

“I feel like Rankin County and Hinds County (officials) are not doing their job at all,” Hankins said. She reported her son Jonathan David Hankins missing last summer to the Rankin County Sheriff's Department after he didn't return home following a weekend out with friends.

Hankins said she checked with the Rankin County Sheriff 's Department periodical­ly to see whether they had any new informatio­n about her son. They told her no, she said.

She also posted to social media, asking for anyone who may have informatio­n about her son's whereabout­s to contact her.

Over a year later, on Dec. 4, 2023, an NBC News reporter visited her home and informed her that Jackson Police had found her son dead in a hotel on May 23, 2022, and that the Hinds County officials identified his body the previous year.

“It's very heartbreak­ing,” Hankins said on Dec. 20. “They're incompeten­t, and I will tell them that. I don't see any sense in that if you know their address, you could've went to their house. There's no sense in just throwing people away like that.”

Jonathan David Hankins is the third man so far that NBC News reported that Hinds County officials approved for burial at the Hinds County Penal Farm before their families could be notified or have the opportunit­y to claim their bodies.

WBLT reported on Dec. 27 that the Hinds County coroner's office has buried approximat­ely 330 people at the Hinds County Penal Farm in Raymond, Miss., since 2008. The Mississipp­i Free Press attempted to confirm the number with the coroner's office but did not hear back by press time.

Crump said at the press conference on Dec. 20 that two more families are awaiting news on whether Hinds County officials buried their missing loved ones at the penal farm. “It's more likely than not that their loved ones are there, but we want it verified,” Crump said.

“Once we get that verificati­on, they (may) join this fraternity that no family wants to be a part of,” he added.

‘How Many More Mistakes?' Emotion overwhelme­d Mary Moore Glenn as she talked about what happened to her son, Marrio. Unknown assailants beat Marrio Moore to death on Feb. 2, 2023, and left his body wrapped in a tarp on Gunda Street in Jackson, NBC News reported.

Moore's sister, Marquita Moore, found out from a WLBT news report that he had been one of 24 homicide victims that JPD had previously not released to the public. Officials buried him at the Hinds County Penal Farm after officials failed to notify his next-of-kin of his death.

“My oldest son. I never would have thought that he would leave before me this kind of way. They just threw him in a hole like he wasn't nobody, like he wasn't important. I couldn't get answers from nobody,” Mary Moore Glenn said at the Dec. 20 press conference.

Glenn also questioned why she was told that she had to pay $250 in fees to get ownership of her son's body after Hinds County officials prematurel­y buried him before she was notified.

“We had to buy him back from the state in order to get a death certificat­e or anything,” she said. “Why? I don't get it. I don't get that.”

The Jackson Police Department unveiled a new death-notificati­on policy in November. Jackson Police Chief Joseph Wade said on Nov. 13 that the department did not have a written policy before that date. “You would think we'd have a death-notificati­on policy, but we do not. But we will as of today,” Chief Wade said.

Mississipp­i law states that county officials, during instances when a deceased

person's body is found, are responsibl­e for identifyin­g that person's remains and notifying their next-of-kin.

Bettersten Wade reported her son Dexter missing on March 14, 2023. She learned in August that an off-duty JPD officer driving along Interstate 55 had struck and killed him on March 5, 2023,

and that Hinds County officials approved him for burial at the Hinds County Penal Farm without informing her of his death.

Jackson Mayor Chokwe A. Lumumba said on Oct. 26, 2023, that the City had investigat­ed the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Dexter Wade's death and did not find “any police misconduct in this process or that there was any malicious intent.”

He said Dexter Wade's death was “honestly, an unfor- tunate and tragic accident.”

Bettersten Wade said on Dec. 20 she still does not understand how lawenforce­ment officials had trouble finding her to make a death notificati­on about her son, Dexter. A court had convicted former JPD officer Anthony Fox in 2022 of negligent manslaught­er for the beating

death of her brother, George Robinson.

“I've been living at the same address for 20-something years. My brother, 2019, got killed by JPD. But did I get answers? I still haven't gotten answers. Nobody still (has) come to Bettersten Wade to say, ‘I'm sorry,'” she said.

She rejects the notion that her son's death and burial was simply an error. “A mistake?

How many more mistakes do we have to have in Jackson, Mississipp­i?” Wade asked. “We need justice. We need answers.”

Attorney Ben Crump reiterated his call for the U.S. Department of Justice to open an independen­t investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces leading to Hinds County officials approving burials for the men at the penal farm without their families' knowledge. He called

on local officials and law enforcemen­t to “do better” for the residents.

“Don't make it like trying to solve a Rubik's Cube for them to get answers,” Crump said. “Don't try to cover it up anymore. We need you all to be honest and be transparen­t now with them.”

The Hinds County Coroner's Office did not respond before press time.

 ?? ?? From left: Gretchen Hankins, Mary Moore Glenn and Bettersten Wade held a press conference with attorneys Ben Crump and Dennis Sweet III on Dec. 20, 2023, to demand justice for their sons, who were buried at the Hinds County Penal Farm without their knowledge. (Photo by Shaunicy Muhammad)
From left: Gretchen Hankins, Mary Moore Glenn and Bettersten Wade held a press conference with attorneys Ben Crump and Dennis Sweet III on Dec. 20, 2023, to demand justice for their sons, who were buried at the Hinds County Penal Farm without their knowledge. (Photo by Shaunicy Muhammad)
 ?? ?? Civil-rights attorney Ben Crump speaks to three mothers—(from left) Gretchen Hankins, Mary Moore Glenn and Bettersten Wade—on Dec. 20, 2023. The women said Hinds County officials approved their sons for burial at the Hinds County Penal Farm before notifying their families of their deaths. (Photo by Shaunicy Muhammad)
Civil-rights attorney Ben Crump speaks to three mothers—(from left) Gretchen Hankins, Mary Moore Glenn and Bettersten Wade—on Dec. 20, 2023. The women said Hinds County officials approved their sons for burial at the Hinds County Penal Farm before notifying their families of their deaths. (Photo by Shaunicy Muhammad)

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