Darryl Strawberry says his teenage granddaughter is missing -- she was last seen Wednesday in Nevada -- and the ex-MLB superstar is pleading for help finding her. https://t.co/ZGqVbOlFg0
— TMZ (@TMZ) September 23, 2021
Stephen King has never seen a missing Black woman get the coverage Gabby Petito got https://t.co/rPYIYbAfDR
— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) September 23, 2021
As cases like Gabby Petito's get national spotlight, Black and brown families with missing loved ones say their cases struggle to grab attention https://t.co/THnMNLDRtT
— CNN (@CNN) September 23, 2021
NEW: Coroner confirms that the body found in the Illinois River is Jelani Day.
— Chip Franklin🏛InsideTheBeltway.com (@chipfranklin) September 23, 2021
Who else wants to see Jelani get the same justice Gabby Petito deserves? 🖐️ pic.twitter.com/6wh4StHpSq
Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American Cabinet secretary, said news coverage of the disappearance and death of Gabby Petito should be a reminder of hundreds of Native American girls and women who are missing or murdered in the U.S. https://t.co/rm46lMkOpd
— The Associated Press (@AP) September 23, 2021
400+ Indigenous women went missing in 2011-20 in Wyoming, where influencer Gabby Petito was found.
— AJ+ (@ajplus) September 23, 2021
A UW study found racial disparities in media coverage of missing Indigenous people:
▪️ Only 42% are reported
▪️ 16% receive negative character framing (0% for missing white people) pic.twitter.com/x9xaZG71A3
Gabby Petito's body was identified a day after it was found.
— Trending Liberal (@TrendingLiberal) September 23, 2021
Anyone else wondering why it took NINETEEN days for Jelani's body to be identified? pic.twitter.com/gWT0h8zovx
Relatives say it has been painful to see the disparities between the handling of Jelani Day's disappearance and that of Gabby Petito, whose death drew national attention. https://t.co/XhVtXU1oyy
— MSNBC (@MSNBC) September 23, 2021
“In the same area that #GabbyPetito disappeared, 710 indigenous people— mostly girls—disappeared between 2011 & 2020 but their stories didn’t lead news cycles, Internet sleuths didn’t clog Instagram & Twitter trying to solve the mystery”—@MollyJongFast https://t.co/MN6texaman
— Alex Howard (@digiphile) September 22, 2021
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