KANSAS CITY, Mo., May 5, 2005

Charges In 'Precious Doe' Case

Headless Body Of Little Girl Was Found In K.C. In 2001

  • Video Passion For 'Precious' Case

    The four-year-old child, known only as 'Precious Doe,' now has a name: Erica Michelle Maria Green. Police are charging the parents with her murder. CBS News' Cynthia Bowers reports.

    • Erica Michelle Marie Green

      Erica Michelle Marie Green  (AP)

    • Michelle Johnson of Muskogee, Okla., was charged May 5, 2005, with murder and endangerment of a child's welfare in the death of her daughter Erica Michelle Marie Green.

      Michelle Johnson of Muskogee, Okla., was charged May 5, 2005, with murder and endangerment of a child's welfare in the death of her daughter Erica Michelle Marie Green.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP)  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 girl. The FBI took blood samples from family members of missing black girls, and the case was featured on television's "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. On Thursday morning, among flowers and balloons, a handwritten sign announced the news: "My Name Is Erica Michelle Maria Green."

Authorities said the little girl was killed in Kansas City, where the family had been staying with a friend. 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.

"There's something about it that just bothers me that a child could be thrown away and people forget about it," said Washington, who has worked to raise awareness of missing black children.

Washington said a grandfather of one of the individuals involved in the case came forward, talking with him and detectives last weekend. He said the source, who had spoken to police before on the case, sent photographs of the child as well as hair samples from the child and the mother.

Continued



©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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