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Post by WOLVERETT on Dec 4, 2003 12:03:56 GMT -5
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Post by WOLVERETT on Oct 3, 2009 18:26:43 GMT -5
The photo on the missing-children Web site shows what Jamal Abdul'Faruq looked like at 7 and what he might look like now, 18 years later at age 25. Caramel-colored skin, a wide smile and eyes still bright like they were in April 1990, the year he and his 8-year-old brother, Basil, disappeared while playing outside their home on Clarkson Road in South Richmond. Basil's 47-pound body was found three days later in a private landfill in Chesterfield County. He had been stabbed and bound with duct tape. Jamal has never been found. No one has ever been charged in either abduction. "You never get over it," said their mother, Tambra Ellis. She was raising her sons with their father though they no longer lived together. Everette Abdul'Faruq had remarried and had a new baby. The day the boys disappeared, their stepmother had dropped them off after they'd spent time with their father. It was early afternoon, about 2:30 p.m. The boys wanted to go outside. Ellis, who worked a late shift at the Dupont plant in Chesterfield County, let them. She then laid down for a nap. When she awoke a couple of hours later, she went to look for them. They were nowhere to be found. www2.timesdispatch.com/rtd/lifestyles/health_med_fit/health/article/S-MISS30_20081126-183826/122266/
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Post by WOLVERETT on Jan 29, 2010 18:25:34 GMT -5
Update: According to the profile, Jamal and his brother, Basil, were abducted from their Richmond neighborhood in April 1990. Three days after the abduction, police found the older brother’s remains inside a dumpster. The child had been bound, gagged and stabbed in the back. But Jamal Abdul Faruq was never found. After profiling the case on its Web site, AMW received an anonymous tip on June 2, from an anonymous source saying they saw Faruq at the Hinesville Wal-Mart on June 1. The caller said he thought Faruq was wearing blue jeans and red T-shirt with the Nike logo on it. A few days later Baynes received a second tip through the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The person said he had a friend who he thought looked a lot like the missing child. The tipster said he was at his friend’s house in Hinesville where he reportedly spotted pictures of Faruq as a child. The person said the photos appeared to match those on the missing child’s profile. Anyone with information about Faruq is asked to call 1-800-CRIMETV or e-mail information directly to the Web site at: www.amw.com. All calls are answered by AMW hotline operators, not law enforcement and the caller can remain anonymous. To see the complete AMW profile on Faruq and his brother visit: www.amw.com/missing_children/brief.cfm?id=24757www.coastalcourier.com/news/archive/14448/
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Post by apikiqekor on Oct 31, 2019 15:53:29 GMT -5
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