The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia girl kept in cage, starved, beaten, cops say

Details emerge in court hearing tied to deaths of teen siblings.

- By Joshua Sharpe Joshua.Sharpe@ajc.com

SPRINGFIEL­D, GA. — Toward the end, 14-year-old Mary Crocker lived in a dog pen almost 24 hours a day.

Bound with zip-ties, beaten and denied food, she kept losing weight; her joints become swollen because of the contorted position she had to assume in the tight confines, investigat­or Abby Brown testified Tuesday. Someone tooka picture of Mary in front of the cage, which was planted in the kitchen of the family’s home. Mary was nude in the photo, allegedly found on her father’s cell phone, and she looked gaunt and near death, which she was.

The disturbing details emerged during a preliminar­y court hearing related to the deaths of Mary Crocker and her brother, Elwyn “JR” Crocker Jr., who was two years older.

The siblings’ bodies were found buried behind the family’s double-wide trailer some 30 miles from Savannah on Dec. 20 by sheriff ’s deputies. Both children were home-schooled and had never been reported missing. Authoritie­s say five relatives participat­ed in abusing the girl.

The testimony marked the most detailed informatio­n yet released in the high-profile case, which has drawn national attention and led to sharp criticism of the state Division of Family and Children Services. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported in January that DFCS declined in 2017 to investigat­e an earlier allegation of abuse at the home because the complaint was a year old. Child welfare experts said that was a mistake and DFCS has since vowed a policy change.

Tuesday’s testimony centered on Mary because hers is the only death that has resulted in charges, but authoritie­s said JR was also abused and charges could arise from his death as well, once medical examiners finish examining his body. Testing is also ongoing with Mary’s remains, but authoritie­s believe they have enough to charge the suspects already. Authoritie­s believe JR may have died up to two years before Mary, who is thought to have died on Oct. 28, 2018.

The five relatives who are accused of abusing the girl have been charged with felony murder in her death. Mary was beaten with household objects and, on the rare occasion she got a meal, it was food spiked with pungent substances, such as rice vinegar, so she wouldn’t be able to choke it down. She was left nude in the pen and only bathed when someone would haul the cage into the bathroom and spray her with water.

Brown testified it was all said to be punishment for various forms of misbehavio­r: refusing to exercise, failing to do chores and stealing food.

The detective’s testimony elicited mournful groans, even from people who didn’t know the family but happened to be in court for other hearings on the calendar. The strangers closed their eyes in anguish and let out long sighs. Relatives who were there declined multiple times to comment to The AJC.

Meanwhile, the children’s father, Elwyn Crocker Sr., 50, who most recently worked playing Santa at a nearby Walmart, betrayed no emotion and looked disheveled in his orange jailhouse jumpsuit and mussed beard.

Brown said the kids’ surviving brother, James, 11, who has cerebral palsy and requires special lactose-free food, told authoritie­s even he was instructed to hit Mary because his step-grandmothe­r said Mary took his food. “He hit her with a frying pan,” the detective said.

James is now in DFCS custody.

Elywn Crocker Sr. and the children’s step-uncle Tony Wright, 31, were the only suspects in court. Like the others, they’ve been jailed for months without bond. The father and step-uncle sought bond, but they were promptly denied Tuesday by Judge F. Gates Peed. The other suspects are the children’s step-mother Candice Crocker, 33; her mother, Kim Wright, 50; and Wright’s boyfriend, Roy Anthony Prater, 55.

Brown said all of the suspects have spoken to deputies at one point or another.

It was a statement by Tony Wright, who maintains he had no knowledge of the abuse, that brought deputies to the home outside the rural city of Guyton on Dec. 20. He claimed he’d gone to the kitchen the night before to get a drink of water and overheard an argument, which he thought was between Elwyn Crocker Sr. and Elwyn Crocker Sr.’s mother-in-law, Kim Wright. One of them allegedly said something to the effect of, “James can be dead like his sister Mary.”

He said he didn’t know she was dead and grew concerned that she might be. He told an aunt who lives out of town about it and she called the sheriff ’s office.

Deputies spoke with the father, who claimed he’d sent Mary to live with her mom in South Carolina, Brown said. That turned out to be a lie. The father cycled through a series of other lies before admitting she was buried at the edge of the back yard, along with JR. Asked about JR’s death, the father told investigat­ors he’d gotten a call one day from his wife and Kim Wright saying the boy had died. He said he came home to find the boy dead in the bathroom.

The detective said the father admitted burying the children and taking part in Mary’s abuse, but he said he did it at the direction of his wife and Kim Wright.

Neighbors have previously told investigat­ors and The AJC they suspected Mary was being abused because she sometimes had strange markings on her hands, spent long hours doing yard work and seemed scared to go in her home. She looked perpetuall­y frightened in the months before her death, next-door neighbor Gary Bennett said. Then he stopped seeing her.

According to Brown, the abuse got progressiv­ely worse until the father, stepmother and Kim Wright were sending each other texts about things they were doing to her, how she was doing. At one point, her joints were so damaged from the confinemen­t that she was ducttaped to a ladder to see if her extremitie­s would straighten out, Brown said. By then, Brown said, Mary Crocker was spending almost the whole day in the dog pen.

One day, Candice Crocker said she got a call from her husband. He told her Mary was dead. He’d just seen the “light go out of her eyes,” according to Brown’s testimony, and he asked his wife to get some black trash bags and cement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States