Current:Home > MarketsOfficials exhume the body of a Mississippi man buried without his family’s knowledge -NextGenWealth
Officials exhume the body of a Mississippi man buried without his family’s knowledge
View
Date:2025-04-17 20:19:04
RAYMOND, Miss. (AP) — The body of a Mississippi man who died after being hit by a police SUV driven by an off-duty officer was exhumed Monday, months after officials failed to notify his family of his death.
At a news conference, civil rights attorney Ben Crump, local leaders and family members of 37-year-old Dexter Wade said they had hired an independent medical examiner to perform an autopsy on the man’s body. They will also give him a proper funeral. While Dexter Wade’s remains were released Monday, his family said officials failed to honor the agreed-upon time approved by a county attorney for exhuming the body.
“Now, I ask, can I exhume my child and try to get some peace and try to get a state of mind,” said Dexter Wade’s mother, Bettersten Wade. “Now y’all take that from me. I couldn’t even see him come out of the ground.”
Dexter Wade’s family members, his attorneys and other witnesses said they did not get to see the exhumation because it took place hours before county officials said it would. In a letter, a copy of which was reviewed by The Associated Press, Hinds County Board Attorney Tony Gaylor told Dennis Sweet, one of Bettersten Wade’s attorneys, the body would be exhumed at 11:30 a.m.
Gaylor did not immediately respond to emails and phone calls requesting comment.
Revered Ronald Moore of Stronger Hope Baptist Church said he arrived at the pauper’s cemetery near the Hinds County Penal Farm in the Jackson suburb of Raymond around 10:30 a.m. He said officials told him the body was already gone. Then he was told the body still might be there. But Moore, Dexter Wade’s family and the attorneys didn’t see the body until hours later, after it was already exhumed.
“It’s a low-down dirty shame what happened today,” Crump said. “What happened to Dexter Wade in March and what happened to Dexter Wade here today reeks to the high heavens.”
Bettersten Wade last saw her son when he left home on March 5, Crump said. She filed a missing persons report a few days later. Bettersten Wade said it was late August before she learned her son had been killed by a Jackson Police Department vehicle as he crossed Interstate 55 the day she last saw him.
A coroner identified Dexter Wade partly from a bottle of prescription medication he had with him, and the coroner called a medical clinic to get information about his next of kin, Crump said. The coroner was unable to reach Bettersten Wade but told Jackson police multiple times to contact her, Crump said.
Dexter Wade was buried in a pauper’s cemetery before the family was notified of his death, NBC News reported.
City officials, including Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, have said the episode was an accident and that there was no malicious intent. On Monday, Crump repeated his call for a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into the circumstances surrounding Dexter Wade’s death and its aftermath.
A funeral will be conducted Nov. 20.
On Monday, Bettersten Wade wanted to see her son’s body lifted from the ground. Instead, she had to settle for seeing it lifted from the back of the coroner’s vehicle into a funeral home hearse.
“They put him in the ground without my permission,” Bettersten Wade said. “They dug him up without my permission.”
___
Michael Goldberg is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow him at @mikergoldberg.
veryGood! (345)
Related
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Save 80% on Nordstrom Rack Swimsuits, 60% on ASOS, 60% on Gap & More of Today's Best Deals
- Céline Dion Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance With Son Rene-Charles Angelil
- House Speaker Mike Johnson and Trump meet at Mar-a-Lago
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- HBO's 'Hard Knocks' to feature entire NFL division for first time, will follow AFC North race
- Howie Mandel says he saw his wife Terry's skull after drunken fall
- German police shoot man wielding pick hammer in Hamburg hours before Euro 2024 match, officials say
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- A small plane crash in upstate New York kills the pilot
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Ashley Benson Calls Out Speculation She Used Ozempic After Welcoming Baby
- Small plane with 1 aboard crashes into a Massachusetts river
- More companies want you to keep your 401(k) with them after you retire. Should you?
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Chipotle's stock split almost here: Time to buy now before it happens?
- Milwaukee brewery defends home turf with (not so) Horrible City IPA
- Argentina begins Copa América vs. Canada: How to watch Messi play, best bets, and more
Recommendation
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
German police shoot man wielding pick hammer in Hamburg hours before Euro 2024 match, officials say
North Carolina House seeks higher worker pay, child care and voucher money in budget bill
Fisker files for bankruptcy protection, the second electric vehicle maker to do so in the past year
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
German police shoot man wielding pick hammer in Hamburg hours before Euro 2024 match, officials say
GOP claims Trump could win Minnesota, New Jersey, Virginia in 2024 election. Here's what Democrats say.
Who has qualified for WWE 2024 Money in the Bank matches? Men's, women's participants