What’s “Missing” from the Media? Missing Black Women

by Michelle Says So | June 1, 2007 at 08:50 am
4306 views | 9 Recommendations | 5 comments

Photos

What’s “Missing” from the Media?  Missing Black Women

What’s “Missing” from the Media? Missing Black Women

see larger image

uploaded by Michelle Says So

It is obvious that the mainstream media does not pay attention to missing black women. Especially considering this case is almost identical to that of Natalee Holloway (http://arubanboycott.blogspot.com), who went missing on a school trip to Aruba for her high school graduation.


The difference? Phylicia is black, Natalee is white. Phylicia was found, Natalee has not. Phylicia Moore, an 18-year old honor student from New Jersey, earned and saved every penny in order to go to Africa for a goodwill class trip to Ghana to donate books to orphaned children suffering from AIDS. 23 classmates joined her, along with nine chaperones. Phylicia Moore died on April 15, 2007.


This is almost two months later! Why didn’t the media pick up on this? Another 18-year old girl murdered in another country?


Moore was last seen at 10:30 p.m. at the pool of her hotel with all the students and chaperones when she decided to go back to her room for the evening. Around 9:00 a.m. the next day, Moore was found dead, partially submerged in the hotel pool with her clothes on and no shoes. Did Phylicia share a room with another student? Are there security cameras at the hotel? If so, were they checked? Why weren’t the students and chaperones officially questioned instead of submitting vague statements to Ghana officials before leaving? Moore’s father, Douglass charged, “The chaperones didn’t do a bed check…someone murdered her and made it look like a drowning.” Ghana officials ruled her death as “an accidental drowning”; however, two months later no toxicology tests have been completed to rule out other possibilities!


The preliminary autopsies in Ghana and the United States opined “an undetermined cause of death”. Moore family hired an independent pathologist who determined that Phylicia Moore had been placed in the water only a short time before she was found. Douglass Moore is questioning the autopsy and is urging federal agents to step in. However, Ghana is not required to petition assistance from the United States over a murdered American unless they ASK for help. Since April 15, Ghana has not asked federal officials for help in solving this case. The Moore family believes that Ghana officials are a part of a cover-up in the murder of his daughter. Two months later…what has Ghana done?


See Part II for new information!


http://www.nowpublic.com/phylicia_moore_keeping_her_alive_on_the_internet

recommend This comment thread is now closed
neilmaynard
neilmaynard
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:01 on June 1st, 2007

Michelle Says So, I like this story. It's good stuff.

angryindian
angryindian
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:41 on June 1st, 2007

Finally, someone outside of the African community understands.

0
Michelle Says So

That was a compliment...thank you! 

People always judge a book by its "cover".  I may be white and blonde, but I grew up in a very diversified environment.  I have always been perplexed by the blatant racism that exists even in today's world and I cannot tolerate or understand such ignorance.  I mean, I read the book "Roots" and marveled over the "Harlem Renaissance" at age 11...I have a degree in Political Science with minors in African American Studies and Criminal Justice. If that's not proof that a white person actually cares and is interested in what happens in the black community, I don't know what is.

I will always stand up for those who cannot defend themselves...whether they are black, white, green, purple.  I don't care.  

Injustice is color blind!

0
education

I saw this story on CNN on May 30th. They dedicated nearly half of the evening news to this story on that day, but I agree they did cover the white girl a lot more. They had the parents talk about what happened to their daughter, students and chaperons.

0
runningwaters

phylicia was my friend. i was a freshman when she was a senior, she took me under her wing and became a very good friend of mine, she was a peer leader and one of the best people i know. please CNN, we owe it to her to figure this out, because deep in my heart i know this was not an accident and we need closer. we owe it to phylicia.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from