Harrell Johnson has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the murder of the toddler known as "Precious Doe," later identified as Erica Green, in 2001. Her naked and beheaded body was found in April of that same year in a wooded area of Kansas City, Mo.
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A murdered child whose identity has baffled Kansas City police for four years, finally has a name. The decapitated body of the little African- American toddler, dubbed "Precious Doe," was found in a wooded area near the intersection of Kensington Avenue and 59th street, by patrol officers on April 28, 2001. Three days later, Billy Stegall, a citizen-volunteer searching the area, discovered the child's head inside a plastic bag approximately one hundred yards from where the headless torso had been found. In the four years that have passed since then, Kansas City Police Department homicide detective sergeant David Bernard and his colleagues have followed up on more than one thousand leads, from around the country and even as far away as Jamaica. Hundreds of those leads were generated as a result of the case being profiled on America's Most Wanted five times over the last four years.
From the day her body was found, Precious Doe captured the hearts of the residents of Kansas City, and the quest to find her killer became a mission the community, local media, and the police aggressively pursued in an unprecedented collective effort together. Initially, police released a composite sketch of Precious Doe and an approximate age of three to four years old. There were no children in Kansas City reported missing that fit her description at the time the body was discovered. No relative came forward to claim her body. There were no witnesses to the crime or the dumping of the body parts in the woods. It was as if Precious Doe dropped out of the sky.
During the past four years every lead turned into a dead end. A forensic bust was made in 2002 by renowned sculptor Frank Bender. Citizens in the community raised money for a funeral. Precious Doe was laid to rest. Then, months later her body was exhumed for another autopsy. DNA samples were compared to numerous missing children around the nation, including missing Florida toddler, Rilya Wison. In 2004, another forensic artist made a second likeness of what the little girl may have looked like when she was alive, and the FBI lent its resources to the investigation. Alonzo Washington and other activists in the community raised money to erect a memorial to Precious Doe in Hibbs park near the site where her body was discovered.
On April 28, 2005, a memorial was held in Hibbs park on the anniversary of Precious Doe's murder. That week, community activist, Alonzo Washington took out an ad in the Kansas City African-American newspaper, THE CALL, pleading for someone to come forward with information on the case. On Saturday, April 30, Alonzo told AMW that he received a phone call from a tipster in Oklahoma who subscribed to the Kansas City newspaper Alonzo had placed the ad in.
The tipster gave the crime-fighting community activist specific, verifiable information about an Oklahoma woman named Michelle Johnson, aka Michelle Pierce. The caller claimed to be certain Johnson was in fact, the mother of Precious Doe. Johnson, a thirty-year-old mother of eight with a criminal past, was still living in Muskogee, Oklahoma. According to the tipster, Johnson had traveled to Kansas City accompanied by one of her young daughters and her common-law husband, Harrell Johnson, 29, during the spring of 2001. The caller indicated that the daughter was three years old when she went to Missouri in the spring of 2001. However, the caller stated that the child did not return to Oklahoma from Kansas City with her mother and that he was a relative of the Johnson couple.
Alonzo immediately forwarded the tip to Kansas City homicide detective Dave Bernard. It turned out to be the case-breaking tip Sgt. Bernard had been seeking for four, long years. This week that tip led to the arrest of Michelle Johnson, her husband Harrell Johnson. On Wednesday night Kansas City detectives interviewed Michelle Johnson at the Muskogee City/County Denteion Center. That interview resulted in the announcement today by Jackson County Kansas prosecutor Mike Sanders that Michelle Johnson has been formally charged with the brutal decapitation-murder of her own daughter, Erica Michelle Maria Green. During the press conference, Sanders praised the collective effort of Alonzo Washington, Detective Dave Bernard, the community and the media for tirelessly and collectively pursuing justice for a precious little girl who now has a name...Erica Green, born on May 15th, 1997. A child who in death was adopted and loved by a city she never really got a chance to know in life. Kansas City police say Michelle Johnson confessed and told detectives that Erica was killed by a lethal kick from her husband. Then, she said they dismembered and disposed of her daughter's body in the woods near Kensington and 59th street and left Kansas City. Johnson has been charged with second-degree felony murder has been extradited to Missouri to face justice. She is currently being held on a $500,000 bond. Her common-law husband, Harrell Johnson, has also been extradited and is being held without bond.
For seven years a community waited to bring to justice the killers of a little
victim it had come to know as "Precious Doe."
The haunting case of the
3-year-old girl whose headless body was discovered in 2001 came to an end
Wednesday with the first-degree murder conviction of Harrell Johnson, boyfriend
of the victim's mother at the time.
Johnson, 29, is expected to be
sentenced to life in prison without parole. A sentencing date hasn't been
set.
"I've lived with this case for many years," Kansas City police Sgt.
David Bernard said after the verdict. "It was an emotional case for me and all
the detectives who worked it. We took this little girl to heart."
The
unidentified little girl was dubbed "Precious Doe" until 2005, when a community
activist received a tip from Johnson's grandfather in Muskogee, Okla., that
helped break the case. Johnson had been living at the time in Muskogee with
victim's mother, whom he married a year after the girl's
death.
Investigators learned then that the little girl's name was Erica
Green.
Michelle Johnson, 33, testified during the trial that Harrell
Johnson kicked Erica in the head after the child refused to go to bed. She said
he was high on drugs at the time.
Prosecutors argued Johnson left Erica
to die in the bedroom of the Kansas City house where the couple were staying.
They said the couple did not want to alert authorities because both had
outstanding warrants and feared going to jail.
Johnson decapitated the
body and dumped it in a wooded area in an attempt to hide the crime, prosecutors
said.
The defense argued that Johnson didn't deliberately cause the
child's death.
A pediatric neurosurgeon, who testified during the trial,
said doctors probably could have reversed the damage if the couple had quickly
sought medical attention for Erica.
Michelle Johnson pleaded guilty last
year to second-degree murder. Prosecutors have recommended she be sentenced to
25 years in prison.
Jurors deliberated for about three hours before
convicting Harrell Johnson of first-degree murder, endangering the welfare of a
child and abuse of a child. He stood emotionless as the verdicts were
read.
The only possible sentence on the murder charge was life in prison
without parole. Prosecutors did not seek the death penalty, partly because
Johnson agreed to withdraw his request to have the case moved out of Kansas
City.
The jury recommended sentences of four years on the endangerment
charge and 25 years on the abuse charge.
Alonzo Washington said Erica's
killing shook him and others because of its heinous nature of the
crime.
"It feels good to know that Erica Green has finally received
justice," said Washington, who had received the case-breaking tip from Harrell
Johnson's grandfather. "I think a life sentence is fitting. It's clear this man
was a coward. He wanted to run from what he did.
"He may have taken
Erica's life, but he did not get away with it."
- Associated Press
Body Of Little Girl Unidentified For Five YearsAuthorities said the little girl was killed in Kansas City. According to court papers, Johnson said her husband kicked Erica in the head, and they left her on the floor for two days. They did not seek medical help, she said, because both had warrants out for their arrest.
The child died, and the couple carried the body to a church parking lot, then through the woods, where the stepfather cut the girl's head with hedge clippers, police said. The girl's body was found near an intersection on April 28, 2001. Days later, her head was found nearby, wrapped in a trash bag.
In the months after she became known as Precious Doe, hundreds attended candlelight vigils, volunteered to answer witness hot lines and passed out fliers with an artist's rendering of the gir.
The FBI took blood samples from family members of missing black girls, and the case was featured on "America's Most Wanted."
A makeshift memorial of poems, teddy bears and flowers was eventually replaced by a permanent memorial in a park near where her body was found.