Editor’s Note: February 2, 2016
An earlier version of this story included a quote falsely attributed to an individual identified as a criminal justice professor. The subject told us that she had not spoken to our reporter, had never taught criminal justice, and had no expertise in the matters on which she was quoted. She requested that her name not be used.
The relevant section read: “‘There is a serious problem with black homicide in St. Louis, and when black people get a cold, black women get the flu.’ [She] echoed the Violence Policy Center Missouri, noting that most of the black women murdered in St. Louis are killed by male acquaintances. ‘Domestic abuse, sexual assault, gender-based violence is a huge problem here,’ she said, ‘and until we deal with that and get people the help and resources they need, black women will continue to be murdered at alarming rates.’ … ‘No matter what anyone does in life, her life doesn’t deserve to be ignored and forgotten,’ [she] said. ‘It’s a clear, sad truth that the lives of black women don’t matter.’”
The problems with this story reflect a pattern of misattributed quotes in stories written by Juan Thompson, a former staff reporter. This piece includes additional quotes that The Intercept could not verify, including one from an unnamed source and one from Angelia Mangum’s mother, who we were unable to reach. We apologize to our readers.
ON MARCH 30, with the sun about to set on Park Avenue in downtown St. Louis, Angelica Wysinger, 26, was sitting in a car with her romantic partner William Crume, 23. As the couple talked, Wysinger’s three children — ages nine, seven and two — sat in the back seat.
Suddenly, someone in a silver car pulled up alongside the family’s vehicle and unleashed a hail of gunfire.
Crume was pronounced dead at the scene, the nine-year-old survived a gunshot wound to the hand, and Wysinger, who won $55,558 in a state lotto two years ago, died at a local hospital.
A relative of the dead mother said the family is still grieving and that “we hope police find the people who did this. Right now we’re not being told anything by anybody.” Police refused to comment. The murders remain unsolved.
In the early morning, a month after the murders on Park Avenue, 25-year-old Korie Hodges’s father visited her apartment in North St. Louis to drop off a child for Hodges to babysit. As the father approached the front door, he found it ajar.
Upon entering the flat, he discovered Hodges and another woman named Keerica Bolden, 22, in a bedroom, dead of apparent gunshot wounds. In a nearby room, the grandfather found two young children unharmed. In an insulting twist, days after Hodges’s death, local media splashed her mug shot across St. Louis’s television screens as they reported she had been charged with looting during the Ferguson riots.
A mere three days after the murders of Hodges and Bolden, another pair of women were killed just blocks away. Sisters Antquonette Hale, 20, and Tahnaizja Smith, 15, were found dead of gunshot wounds in a trashed vacant lot surrounded by condemned buildings.
It was the second double homicide involving black women in the North Side St. Louis neighborhood of Greater Ville in five days.
One can’t help but think: If four white women had been murdered in a such way, in such a short period of time, in such a confined area, wouldn’t their deaths be front-page news across the country? Alas, the response has been muted.
Six months into 2015, St. Louis is grappling with an increased homicide rate. Through May, there have been 70 homicides in the city — which is roughly 18 more than at this point last year. Over 88 percent of the victims have been black, and women accounted for nearly a third of those killed. Almost all of the murdered were killed by firearms.
Missouri, according to a January report from the Violence Policy Center Missouri, was the country’s leader in black homicide victims in 2012. It is the fourth time in five years that the Show Me State has garnered the grim honor.
Black Missourians were murdered at a staggering rate of 34.98 per 100,000 — the highest of any state in the union and twice the national average, according to the report, which went on to highlight how bad things were for black women specifically:
While black females have the highest rate of death at the hands of male offenders — two and a half times higher than white females (2.59 per 100,000 versus 1.06 per 100,000) and two times higher than all women combined (2.59 per 100,000 versus 1.22 per 100,000) — the circumstances, relationships and weapons remain mind-numbingly constant for virtually all females of any race killed by males: someone they know, usually an intimate partner, during an argument or other non-felony event, and most commonly with a gun.
Despite the data, murdered black women receive, at best, hit-and-run coverage. Local news outlets will report such stories, but rarely is there follow-up; and, as many families will argue, the same is true with regard to law enforcement.
The unsolved murders of Florida teens Angelia Mangum and Tjhisha Ball — a pair of black women discovered nude, hands bound, dead in a pool of blood on the side of a highway last September — is emblematic of this pattern.
Mangum’s mother told me the police have refused to offer any details, and that she hasn’t spoken to them in months. A spokesperson from the Jacksonville Sheriff’s office declined comment. Meanwhile a quick Google search shows major media outlets haven’t covered the homicides since last October.
When the Florida homicides first came to light, lazy members of the media reported that both girls worked as sex workers. In reality, only Ball worked as a stripper, meaning — in explaining why the case has been largely ignored — she had multiple strikes against her: sex worker, poor, black and woman. Local news outlets elected to use their dispirited mugshots in news broadcasts.
For comparison, the 2014 murder of University of Virginia student Hannah Graham has received ample coverage — CNN, NBC, and the New York Post are among the outlets providing updates in the last month alone. This kind of discrepancy leaves observers to wonder when black women will receive the same sort of compassionate coverage from the news media and attention from the police.
“If they was two white girls from St. Johns — a wealthy, mostly white Jacksonville suburb,” Mangum’s mother told me, “this would be different.”
Back in Missouri, the St. Louis Metropolitan Police department is 63 percent white in a city where black residents constitute a plurality of 49 percent. The disparity has convinced some black St. Lousians that white cops don’t care about dead black homicide victims.
It should be noted that all of the St. Louis cases detailed above are open investigations, according to the police, and the perpetrators could still be brought to justice. But it’s hard to hold out much hope when two-thirds of St. Louis’s 2014 homicides — visited, again, on overwhelmingly black victims — remain unsolved.
It’s not clear that the families of black female homicide victims can even take some small comfort in protest movements. Even as demonstrators across the country confront a police state over its killings of unarmed black men, critics have charged the Black Lives Matter movement with excluding dead black women from the broader discourse around police brutality.
Indeed, black women and girls killed by the police, such as Rekia Boyd in Chicago, Aiyana Stanley-Jones in Detroit and Yvette Smith near Austin, Texas, did not receive the sort of media attention and protests that followed the killings of Michael Brown, Eric Garner and Freddie Gray.
In her book Ghettoside, Los Angeles Times crime reporter Jill Leovy reported that Los Angeles police officers regularly referred to a murder in one of the city’s black communities “as a nothing murder. ‘NHI — No Human Involved,’ the cops used to say.”
Does a similar sentiment exist among St. Louis police when it comes to murdered black women? In what researchers call a racial empathy gap, studies have purported to show that white Americans feel less empathy for their black counterparts.
Thus when black women — one of the most neglected, pilloried and marginalized groups in the country — are murdered, it makes sense that law enforcement and the news media, two institutions disproportionately stocked with white people, wouldn’t care much, if at all.
Photos from left, clockwise: Angelica Wysinger, Angelia Mangum, Ke-Erica D. Bolden, Antquonette Hale, Tjhisha Ball, and Korie Hodges.


I would like to. Be a frontline for this type of thing …How can I HLP….It’s been 8Years bow and no one has called me about the REDRUM of my BBY boy….who was gunned down…I really believe the police set my child up…and they made it they business to let him stay at the sence 1he and a half bleeding to death before they call him emg HLP….and told me when I arrived at the sense that my son body was already getting cold…dam shame…U would like to be the voice and the poster child for a lot of the REDRUMERD that has gone home…It ain’t over…somebody. still cares what happens to others out here in this world…which is me…I WANT TO HELP AND BE A VOICE FOE THE LOSS…PLEASE SOME ONE CONTACT ME…I’M NOT SCARED…I’M A CHILD OF THE MOST HIGH…NO WEAPONS FORMED AGAINST. ME SHALL PROSPER….I FEAR NO EVIL..AS I WALK THOUGH THE VALKEY OF DEATH…FOR MY GOD IS WITH ME…THIS HAS TO END.
A Preview of Coming Wars: Do Black Lives Matter in Africa?
http://davidswanson.org/node/4740
You say that police don’t place enough value on the lives of black women.
I think you have the answer right here…
“someone they know, usually an intimate partner”
It would appear that black men don’t either.
“For reasons others are more qualified to analyze than I, the typical male role model for young black men is exaggeratedly masculine, physical rather than intellectual and tends toward violence; he is a sports star, a “gangsta” or a “bad-ass” action hero. And one doesn’t need to be a sociologist to recognize that this self-inflicted stereotype is related to a deep current of misogyny in the black community”
https://maggiemcneill.wordpress.com/2010/09/18/black-men/
Homo Sapiens Sapiens vaunted intelligence at work again. It is quite obvious that compassion for life, which is the highest form of intelligence, is sorely missing here. And with compassion missing in such great quantity, it has to have been replaced with its opposite, which is unrelenting hate. It is obvious that unrelenting hateful individuals and groups cannot act intelligently. History seems to show that humans have not been able to live with any group that has a noticeable difference from us. It looks more and more like it was the same problem with the Neanderthals. War, and man’s inhumanity to man are not signs of intelligence, but ‘Red in Tooth and Claw’! Not even the wild animals we claim to not be like at all would destroy the planet.
The supreme irony is that when blacks kill other blacks, blacks lives don’t matter. In the cases of the black female homicides mentioned in this story, odds are that the people who kiiled these women were probably black men. This story doesn’t mention that; however, statistically that is probabbly the case since people of the same race tend to kill eeach other since they tend to live and work in closer proximity to one another.
One can’t assume these are black on black crimes when they remain unsolved. Plenty of whites, especially white cops, frequent black communities and hold positions of authority which could allow them to commit these crimes and go unnoticed and unprosecuted by the police….even if there were black witnesses who saw what happened. The other possibility is that these women were witnesses to crimes and are now being killed off. Would be interesting to learn more about the circumstances surrounding their deaths…and the police silence speaks volumes!
Aren’t most local murder cases covered only by local media with only occasional national focus in certain limited instances? How much benefit does national media attention bring to the cause of identifying and apprehending the perpetrators? If there are not witnesses or significant physical evidence (e.g. biological), then the police are mostly at the whim of people coming forward with information. If there are steps that the police could be taking but are not taking, what are they? Do any of the family members of the victims have anyone who would want to harm or kill a relative and have those names been given to police? Were the two teenage girls sexually assaulted? I am familiar with the Magnum/Ball case, as both girls were from my hometown of Tampa, though they were staying in Jacksonville, about three hours away, when the murders occurred. Magnum’s mother wants the police to be doing more. When you talked to her, did you ask her what it was she believed the police could be doing more of?
it would be also worthwile to mention the proportion of black population in st louis. to provide some context
males are killed at a far higher rate than females. By that logic aren’t we then neglecting male deaths. In general I agree though murders of black people are unjustifiably neglected. There is perverse human nature that the more common an event is the more accepted and less controversial it becomes.
I remember watching that show “Making The Band” when I was a student, and a scene where they flash to Kimberly Bert (Mysterious) crying because she got a phone call that her sister is dead and they know this because they found body parts in trash cans in their neighborhood. Body parts. In trash cans. I found it jarring because, if I remember correctly, that was about it. No memorial episode, no followup on Kimberly flying home for the funeral and slowly dealing with it. I think Johnny Fairplay’s fake dead grandmother, who died of fake old age, got way more airtime. That always sticks out in my mind as an example of what a weird message we send regarding the death of black women. If that were Laci Peterson we’d still be hearing about it, in the case of this young woman, no one would have even heard about it in passing if it didn’t happen in the midst of filming a reality show, and even then it was treated as a footnote to the reality tv drama.
I only skimmed the article. Aren’t 60-70% of these homicides done by non Caucasian’s. I’ve read in most cities it is 80% of higher. The closing statement:
“No matter what anyone does in life, her life doesn’t deserve to be ignored and forgotten,” Curtis said. “It’s a clear, sad truth that the lives of black women don’t matter.”
It seriously misses the mark. It is clear black lives mostly do not matter to non Caucasians. If black lives did matter they would not be slaughtered on a daily basis. I have had the ability to murder many people throughout my life. The thought has never once crossed my mind for a nano second. Because to me Lives Matter. I guess I am weird. Your narrative, story or argument needs to be addressed to them, the killers of black women. You need to figure out why they do not value black women like I do and address it. It has been written about for decades, “written activism” is not an effective tool in this war.
This is a very simple comment. B/c black people kill black people doesn’t mean that black lives don’t matter to black ppl. Just as the 80% of white lives taken by other white doesn’t mean white ppl don’t care. This isn’t that difficult unless you’re prepared to peddle nonsense ” It is clear black lives mostly do not matter to non Caucasians”.
Also, writing and education is an effective in any war.
I think the point of the article is that black lives do not matter to the mainstream media b/c the reporting record of black women murdered is trite when compared to (let’s say ) if a slew of white women were to be murdered in St. Louis. The media would be 24/7 reporting about the white murders. Also, inferred from this is that the police investigations–perhaps b/c there is no media frenzy about black women being murdered–is not as diligent as it would be if there were white female victims of murder b/c of the lack of coverage. There is no pressure from the media constantly probing the police about any information covering the investigation of these black women whereas if they were white the media would be probing the police more diligently. Also the way the media does portray the black women as “underclass” sex workers and showing mug shots or less than complimentary photos of them.
The lives of black women do matter!
To me, those referenced experiments are suspect. Too many unmentioned variables that could be affecting the outcomes in addition to detecting what a person is thinking or how they feel by their sweat response is considered junk science by the scientific community.
Good point
Serial killer?
That was the first thing I thought. Blacks have our murders but very few are serial killers. Whites rate really high when it comes to mass shooting, shooting sprees, just killing for the hell of it. Or they were whipped when they were a child. Or to rich to know right and wrong.
As one who documents domestic violence related homicides in the United States, I have long lists of unsolved homicides of men and women, black and white, that are forgotten. The homicide clearance rate is at about 64% these days so that leaves about 6,000 homicides unsolved each and every year. White girls aren’t getting any more attention than the black girls. The police don’t want a lot of focus on ANY case where they can’t figure out who did it.
And this:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/fatal-police-shootings-in-2015-approaching-400-nationwide/2015/05/30/d322256a-058e-11e5-a428-c984eb077d4e_story.html
Violence by cop has increased dramatically just in the first half of this year.
Absolutely, and 2/3rds of those shot, who were unarmed, were black/brown. I don’t see how anybody can read that stat and not think there is something terribly wrong here.
Only someone who thinks that it’s quite appropriate for black/brown people to be shot under whatever circumstances, and unfortunately there are way too many of those who are in a position of power to do so. Those people will find nothing wrong with that.
C’est vrai
The lives of black women SUPPOSEDLY don’t matter. But they matter to me. I confess that, concerning the police murders of black men, I never even thought about black women murdered by police; and that is inexcusable of me. I should have thought, “What about black women being murdered by police? There must be such women; and, since there have to be, why don’t we hear about them, and why aren’t their deaths being protested as much as the deaths of the black men?” The U.S., and particularly its cops, are inexcusable in the way(s) they treat black Americans. (I refuse to call them African-Americans, unless they’re recently from Africa and have gained U.S. citizenship—do we go around calling Americans whose families, several generations ago, came from Germany, “German-Americans”? No, of course we don’t, not generally anyway; so, unless the majority of black Americans WANT to be called African-Americans, I think it’s ridiculous, and racist, to do so, especially since they are descended from direct African ancestors so long ago. Somebody enlighten me: Do most black Americans WANT to be called African-Americans? I would think that being called African-Americans would lead to more racism because of the level of racist attitudes that must exist towards Africa and black Africans.)
And I add the following:
For God’s sake, black Americans are ONE HUNDRED PERCENT human beings, and ONE HUNDRED PERCENT Americans! Enough of this treating people like “animals” who bleed 98% percent the same blood! Enough of the racism, and let it be NO MORE!
A lot to unpack here. . . I prefer black American.
Right-on.
…Or, now about just plain American?
Excuse me… …how (not “now”)… I’m getting worse and worse in missing my grammatical errors.
I Need Justice for My Baby Sisters Im Not Gone Stop Till u Find The Ppl Who Killed My Hearts Im Serious….
I think society may be more capable of equal opportunity indifference than the author imagines. A companion article, by Erika Eichelberger demonstrates that authorities don’t care if inmates at the Rikers Island Women’s Jail receive lethal medical care. Society may not yet be indifferent to everyone’s fate, but it’s getting there. We should at least acknowledge that progress is being made.
fair point
The media always focuses on white women and ignores black women in abduction cases too. And even in that Iraq case with nonstop Jessica Lynch coverage, ignoring Shoshana Johnson. Police departments and officers are certainly very culpable but I think the media is even worse.
C’est vrai Dave.
Just another day in Murica. Death only looks good in “WHITE” .
Is St. Lousians correct, Juan, I thought they lived a couple states south of St. Louisans…?
I tried your email first, about an hour ago.
It’s fucked up beyond words that ALL lives don’t matter equally in OUR country – but they still want kids to pledge allegiance saying, “…and justice for all.”