The Commercial Appeal

$50K reward offered in slayings of eight children

- Micaela A Watts

After months of repeated pleas to the public for help, $50,000 in reward money is being placed on the table for any informatio­n leading to an arrest in eight ongoing murder investigat­ions.

The youngest of the victims, 9month-old Hilda Trejo, died from “inflicted trauma” in a Colonial Acres area home. The oldest victims, both 17 years old, were killed as they walked along Memphis roadways.

Shelby County Atty. Gen. Amy Weirich, Memphis Police Department director Michael Rallings, and U.S. Marshal Tyreece Miller gathered in a Memphis library Thursday to live stream the announceme­nt, all striking a tone of exasperati­on after months of alarming homicides rates.

“It’s tragic that Memphians have not come forward to provide critical informatio­n needed,” Rallings said, echoing calls for outrage and action he’s made to the public several times in his role as director of MPD.

The reward money offered by the U.S. Marshals Service comes directly from the organizati­on’s asset forfeiture program, with up to $5,000 offered for credible informatio­n leading to an arrest per homicide.

U.S. Marshal Tyreece Miller explained the funding was the marshal services’ attempt to “think outside the box.”

“I’m a West Tennessee native,” Miller explained. “We are all from West Tennessee. This is our community. I felt like I had to do something to try and help this city.

As we’ve started to get creative, I wanted think outside the box and use these funds to help solve these homicides.

The list of ongoing investigat­ions eligible for the reward funding follows:

h Hilda Trejo, a 9-month-old infant, died from inflicted trauma on Jan. 22 at a home in the 4600 block of Willow Road.

h Ashlynn Luckett, a 6-year-old girl, was killed in a Hickory Hill home alongside her uncle, 16-year-old Lequan Boyd. Both were killed after an unknown assailant fired into the house.

h Jadon Knox, 10, was killed as he stood on the front porch of a house in the Orange Mound area in early January. At the time, police said it was likely a drive-by shooting.

h Tyrell Jones, 15, was shot and killed while he was in the passenger seat of a car. The early May homicide occurred in the Sherwood Forest area.

h Alajah Reynolds, 16, was found shot to death in a car on July 11 in East Memphis.

h Jalen Dodge, 17, was shot in the roadway in mid-march along the 1600 block of Sunset Street.

h Demetrius Robinson, 17, was shot on Sept. 3 while walking along Elvis Presley Boulevard.

The rate of homicides in Memphis during 2020 has been historic, with more than 240 homicides occurring with two months to go in the year; included in that tally are 25 victims under the age of 18. A few of those deaths have been ruled as justified homicides.

The frequency with which children have been killed in Memphis has prompted Rallings and other public officials to make direct appeals to the populous for tips and informatio­n.

Still, many of these killings have gone unsolved. Data obtained from MPD shows an empty column under “suspect” in eleven murders of children and teens, including the deaths of three children that occurred within the first weeks of 2020.

Weirich has also made appeals to the public related to the rate of juvenile homicides, but the county prosecutor’s statements have focused on stronger interventi­on from juvenile court in order to interrupt patterns of criminal conduct — before they are killed in commission of a crime.

“This is our community. I felt like I had to do something to try and help this city.”

U.S. Marshal Tyreece Miller

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