Chicago Sun-Times

Mural for missing Rogers Pk. woman offers ‘different way’ to approach case

- BY MARY NORKOL

An upbeat tune accompanie­d by somber lyrics rang through a Rogers Park alley Sunday afternoon as friends and family of missing woman Sheena Gibbs hugged, cried and begged for answers.

“Sheena, you are loved,” the lyrics, sung by Gibbs’ aunt, Lela Tarver, echoed over a speaker.

Gibbs, who was reported missing Nov. 3, is depicted in a newly completed mural at The Glenwood bar by artist Damon Lamar Reed with the Still Searching Project. The mural shows Gibbs smiling wide in purple, pink and green hues.

The word “missing” and a phone number for tips and informatio­n on the case frame Gibbs’ face.

Gibbs is a 40-year-old Black woman who lived in Rogers Park when she was reported missing last fall. She was last seen at the corner of West Greenleaf Avenue and North Sheridan Road, according to a flyer from Cook County Crime Stoppers.

Prior to her disappeara­nce, Gibbs had discussed going to visit family in Iowa but never arrived. Police said Gibbs is a “habitual missing” case, which means she is reported missing often.

The latest update in Gibbs’ case came in April, when it was determined that her disappeara­nce is “the result of a crime,” the flyer reads.

The mural aims to call attention to Gibbs’ case and motivate anyone with informatio­n to report it to police.

“Black women who are missing are underrepre­sented in the media,” Reed said. “Artistical­ly highlighti­ng them — it’s a different way. Sometimes we see photos and just kind of go past it. I thought [the mural] would help to put more eyes on it.”

It’s a somewhat unconventi­onal approach to a missing persons case, but advocates, including state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, hope that’s why it works.

“The traditiona­l methods haven’t worked in this case, and they rarely work in these kinds of cases, so we have to think outside the box,” she said. “We have to be willing to invite more viewpoints in to solve these cases.”

Gibbs is bubbly, upbeat and outgoing, her family and friends said. She loves to dance and “meets no strangers,” according to her aunt, Vernita Oliver.

To deal with her disappeara­nce, “It’s torment,” Oliver said.

“It’s unreal right now, to see her face on a missing flier, missing mural,” Oliver said.

Disappeara­nces of Black women have raised alarm for activists and elected officials. In 2020, nearly 100,000 of the total 268,884 women reported missing in the U.S. were Black, according to FBI statistics.

The unsettling pattern hasn’t spared Chicago.

“It’s not that Gabby Petito shouldn’t have gotten attention,” Ald. Maria Hadden (49th) said of last year’s high-profile case of a missing white woman. “It’s how do we raise that level of community care that could captivate a country … for every missing person.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Lela Tarver (left), aunt of Sheena Gibbs, and Vernita Oliver hold each other Sunday while Damon Lamar Reed looks on.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Lela Tarver (left), aunt of Sheena Gibbs, and Vernita Oliver hold each other Sunday while Damon Lamar Reed looks on.

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