Baltimore police have announced that a 4-year-old boy reported missing has been found dead.
Police said in an update on Saturday that the boy’s mother, Alicia Lawson, admitted to authorities that her son was not missing but was, in fact, dead.
The little boy’s body was found in a dumpster shortly before 5 a.m. Saturday, police said, adding that it bore “obvious signs of injury.” The police did not elaborate on the type of injuries the boy had suffered.
Speaking to reporters at a press conference Saturday, Baltimore City Police Commissioner Michael Harrison said Malachi’s mother, Alicia Lawson, 25, and her partner, Shatika Lawson, 40, will face charges in connection with the child’s death.
“Last night, after extensive interviews with Malachi’s mother, she confessed that her son was not missing but deceased. She subsequently gave detectives the location of the child’s remains, which were in the 5500 block of Haddon Avenue,” Harrison said. “The biological mother and her partner will be charged with child neglect resulting in the death of a minor.”
Harrison added that Malachi’s body had been taken to the medical examiner to determine the exact cause of death.
“This was extremely shocking to the community,” Harrison said during the conference. “I’d like to thank everyone who dropped what they were doing to help us try to locate him. This was a communitywide effort.”
In an earlier statement on Friday, Harrison said the little boy walked with a limp because one of his femurs was broken when he was an infant. Baltimore Police Detective Donny Moses added that officers were told that the child may have been on the autism spectrum.
The FBI issued a statement, saying that the agency “shares in the sorrow the Baltimore community is feeling today regarding the news about Malachi.”
In an earlier statement to WBAL-TV, Malachi’s great uncle, Mike Code, said of the little boy: “He’s quiet, he’s a lovable kid and likes to play a lot, and if anybody has seen him or knows about him, please bring him back.”
Facts About Crime in the United States
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While the overall rate of violent crime has seen a steady downward drop since its peak in the 1990s, there have been several upticks that bucked the trend.
Between 2014 and 2016, the murder rate increased by more than 20 percent, to 5.4 per 100,000 residents, from 4.4, according to an Epoch Times analysis of FBI data. The last two-year period that the rate soared so quickly was between 1966 and 1968.