Tag Archives: Jelani

Jelani Day’s mother wants the answers she believes national attention got for the Petito family

Amid the questions are clues. His car was found in woods in Peru, Illinois, nearly 70 miles from where he was last seen alive. His wallet, some clothes, and an ID lanyard were all found individually at separate locations in the same general area of the car, but at distances as large as over a mile apart from where the body was found, according to investigators.

“It’s been way too long not to have answers,” Carmen Bolden Day, Jelani’s mother, said on Tuesday. “I need to know why. I need to know the hows.”

Bolden Day, along with supporters including the Rev. Jesse Jackson, traveled to Peru, Illinois, Tuesday, where Day’s vehicle and other belongings were found.

“Help me find justice,” Bolden Day implored the crowd outside the Peru Police Department who had gathered to travel to where evidence was found in the case in order to raise awareness and questions about what happened.

Jelani Day was last seen on August 24 in Bloomington, Illinois, entering a Beyond/Hello retail store.

Two days later, his car was found about an hour’s drive north in Peru, Illinois, dumped in the woods behind a YMCA and in the middle of a residential community.

Where the car entered, according to the former family attorney, looks like a dead end from the paved road.

The license plate had been removed. The clothes Day was seen wearing on a surveillance camera on August 24 were in the car.

His wallet was found “somewhat in the bushes” about a half-mile away, according to investigators. Neither the car nor wallet was found near the water, yet Day’s body was recovered more than a week later over a mile away off the bank of the Illinois River.

According to investigators, an ID lanyard was found just across the river from the body. Clothing was also found further east along the river next to the Illinois Route 251 Bridge.

Bolden Day doesn’t believe her son would have harmed himself, certainly not through drowning in a river in a town where he had no ties.

“There are plenty of bodies of water in Bloomington!” Bolden Day told CNN. “We’re in Peru. A town that Jelani doesn’t have any friends. His car was parked in a wooded area that you wouldn’t have even knew how to get you had you not heard about this.”

She raised national attention for the case of her son during the search for Gabby Petito, when she still did not know the fate of Jelani.
Petito’s remains were found in a remote campground near Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming and were soon identified. Day’s remains were found in the Illinois River, west of Chicago, and it was nearly three weeks before his identity was confirmed.

Bolden Day has commissioned two independent autopsies after she told CNN it’s been hard to keep faith in local authorities.

Jelani Day’s body was found in a severe state of decomposition, so much so that Bolden Day does not believe the coroner could say with such certainty in his report there was “there was no evidence of any injury, such as manual strangulation, an assault or altercation, sharp, blunt, or gunshot injury, infection, tumor, natural disease, congenital abnormality, or significant drug intoxication.”

The LaSalle County Coroner even wrote in his report, “the examination was suboptimal” based on the level of decomposition after over a week in the hot summer weather. According to the former family attorney. Hallie Bezner, his organs were “completely liquid.”

Bolden Day told CNN, “He doesn’t have any skin to determine bruising so none of this makes sense and you wanna tell me there’s no physical trauma done to my child?”

“Do I accept this if they tell me this is my son? I accept it but I still need to know why my son is not here anymore. Because somebody knows,” she added.

The coroner’s report was “an insult to not only myself, but to my son,” she said. They’re sentiments civil rights campaigner Jackson. shares, saying “it assumes there’s a kind of suicide planned.”

Bolden Day has consistently pushed back on that narrative.

“Jelani was an avid swimmer and an avid swimmer doesn’t drown himself,” Bolden Day said. “So Jelani ended up here against his will, he ended up in that river against his will. He was drowned against his will. So that is all equivalent to murder.”

She wants the investigation to be taken over by state or federal authorities and says there must be more evidence out there showing how her son got from Bloomington to Peru, if only someone would look.

CNN asked Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office if he had plans to investigate, but had not received a response as of Tuesday night.

A statement from the Peru Police Department to CNN stressed the death of Jelani Day was being worked on by officers from various forces every day.

“There are hundreds of hours of video to look through, numerous follow-ups to conduct, and a plethora of social media, bank records, phone records, and other pieces of information to investigate,” it read, adding the unit was dedicated to getting answers for the family.

Bolden Day got support from US Rep. Bobby Rush of the nearby Illinois 1st District, who backed her call for the FBI to take over the case, though that usually only happens when a federal crime may have been committed.

Rush wrote to US Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray asking them to intervene, in a letter first reported by CNN.

“The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has been leading the investigation into the disappearance of Gabby Petito, who went missing around the same time as Jelani Day. While the outcome was also unfortunate and tragic, I am hopeful that having received timely answers will provide her family a level of comfort and closure,” he wrote.

“As I learned the details of Day’s case, I was reminded of the lynching of Emmett Till, whose body was found floating in a river in 1955 and still, decades later, no one has been held legally accountable for his death.”

He continued, “Appropriately, the FBI has aggressively pursued justice for Petito, and Day’s family deserves the same urgency as they continue to seek answers to the many questions surrounding his tragic death.”

Siobhan Johnson, spokesperson at the FBI’s Chicago Field Office, said agents were always willing to offer help if requested and were in touch with the Peru Police Department to provide resources.

For now, Bolden Day says she is still angry at how her son’s case has been handled and wants the answers she believes national attention got for the Petito family.

“Jelani deserves the same thing,” she said. “I deserve the same thing.”

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Jelani Day’s Mom Sets Record Straight After Reports Autopsy Showed Organs Were Missing – NBC Chicago

The LaSalle County Coroner on Monday released the cause of death for Jelani Day, the Illinois State University graduate student who was found dead in the Illinois River in September just days after he was reported missing.

Day’s cause of death was ruled as a drowning, LaSalle County Coroner Richard Ploch said in a news release Monday, adding the manner in which “Mr. Day went into the Illinois River is currently unknown.”

Day disappeared on Aug. 24 and was reported missing soon after by his family and a professor after he did not show up for class for several days. Day’s mother said it was not like him to disappear without telling someone about his whereabouts.

His car was found just days later in a wooded area near where his body was ultimately discovered in the Illinois River near Peru, a far southwest Chicago suburb miles from where Day was last seen. It wasn’t until late-September that a positive identification was made, however.

Authorities noted “unusual” circumstances surrounding both his disappearance and the discovery of his body. While the cause of death was released Monday, the manner of death remained unknown.

Police previously declined to offer many specifics surrounding the ongoing investigation, but said Day disappeared under “unexplained suspicious circumstances.”

“It’s a suspicious or unusual circumstances while he was missing, and then [the car’s location was] also, you know, pretty suspicious or unusual and I’ve been a police officer 10 years,” Bloomington Police public information officer John Fermon. “That’s very unusual to just find a car like that.”

Day’s mother also recently cited undisclosed discrepancies between an autopsy done by the LaSalle County Coroner’s office and an independent autopsy ordered by the family.

Reports had surfaced indicating Day’s body was missing several organs when an independent autopsy was ordered by the family, but Day’s mother and the coroner later dispelled those rumors.

Ploch told NBC 5 in a statement “some were severely decomposed due to the body being in the water,” but he noted that no organs were missing.

Still, Bolden Day said questions lingered following the two autopsies.

“There were contradicting facts from the first preliminary autopsy compared to the second independent autopsy, but this is not a case of organ harvesting, however, my son did not put himself in a river,” she said in a statement.

She did not comment further on the “contradicting facts” she cited between the autopsies, but continued her cry for answers.

“My son was murdered and my goal and purpose are to find out what happened and hold those responsible accountable!!!” Bolden Day wrote.

Day’s siblings wrote in a post that due to the confusion surrounding the autopsies, they had ordered a third autopsy be done, delaying a burial for Day.

Police investigating the disappearance of an Illinois State University graduate student are asking the public for tips as the search for the young man continues nearly a month after he vanished.

Bolden Day said she doesn’t think her son ran away and believes someone may have hurt her son.

“He wasn’t depressed. He didn’t have any kind of pressures that would make him want to escape from life,” she said. “So I do feel as if there was someone involved.”

Several departments, including the FBI’s Springfield, are involved in the investigation, authorities have confirmed, though their exact role remains unclear. The FBI’s Springfield office previously told NBC 5 it was “in communication” with Bloomington authorities in connection with the case.


Bloomington Police

But in the days since Day’s body was identified, thousands have signed a petition started by an Alabama fraternity seeking heightened federal involvement in the case.

With more than 28,000 signatures as of Tuesday, the petition, started by members of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Inc. and the Nu Epsilon chapter at Alabama A&M University, calls for federal and state authorities to take over the investigation, alleging the Bloomington Police Department “has shown the inability to handle a case of this nature.”

The petition follows similar criticisms from Day’s family, who alleged his case did not receive the attention of other missing persons like that of Gabby Petito, whose disappearance and subsequent death made national headlines and spawned a multi-state search from numerous law enforcement departments.

Day graduated from Alabama A&M University with a degree in speech language pathology. Bolden said her son was inspired to go down this career path after seeing a friend struggle.

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Mystery of Illinois Grad Student Jelani Day’s Death Deepens ‘Missing Organs’ Report

From trending hashtags to circulating an online campaign to increase media coverage, social media users are demanding answers in the case of Jelani Day, a 25-year-old Black graduate student who went missing in August before washing up in a river a week later.

The case took a twisted turn last week when the Chicago Sun-Times reported that an independent pathology report, commissioned by the family, found that some of Day’s organs and body parts were missing, seemingly contradicting an official autopsy. While Day’s family have not publicly addressed the contradictions, his mother clarified Monday that Day’s organs weren’t missing—but she nevertheless suspects foul play and is furious with the lack of media attention.

“[M]y son did not put himself in a river,” she said in a statement.

Day was a graduate student at Illinois State University, where he was pursuing a medical degree in speech pathology. He was reported missing on Aug. 24 after not attending classes for several days. The morning before he disappeared, he was captured on surveillance footage entering a Bloomington dispensary. On Aug. 26, his car was found about 60 miles outside of Bloomington. His body was discovered “floating near the south bank of the Illinois River” on Sept. 4, according to a Chicago-area coroner, but it was not identified until Sept. 23 because of its condition.

The LaSalle County coroner said that Day’s organs had decomposed due to the length of time his body had been submerged in water. No cause or manner of death was given.

But the family’s attorney, Hallie Bezner, said she was looking into other reasons the body deteriorated as much as it did. According to the Sun-Times, the family’s independent pathology investigation found that Day’s jaw may have been “sawed out,” and his brain, liver, spleen, and eyes could not be found. The report didn’t determine a cause or manner of death either.

“No organs were missing… There were contradicting facts from the first preliminary autopsy compared to the second independent autopsy, but this is not a case of organ harvesting,” Day’s mother, Carmen Bolden Day, said in a statement Monday to Chicago’s Fox affiliate.

She added, “My son was murdered and my goal and purpose are to find out what happened and hold those responsible accountable!!!”

At an Oct. 10 funeral for Day, she said, “The journey does not stop here. I’m only getting ready to lay Jelani to rest. But I can’t rest because I don’t know what happened to him.”

Social media users have turned up the heat since the memorial, with some criticizing the lack of media coverage in comparison to the disappearance of Gabby Petito in Wyoming.

“Day’s mother had been basically begging the media to pay her son’s story the same attention that it had paid to Gabby Petito, and she’d been concerned that the authorities had been dragging their feet investigating her son’s disappearance,” one Instagram user said.

“[Carmen Day] says the focus on missing white women and not Blacks is an abomination,” journalist Roland Martin wrote on Instagram.

“Incident brings me back to learning about Emmett Till,” Twitter user @SwoleWorld wrote. “I just can’t believe this still happens, at least I don’t want to believe. I haven’t a clue what it’ll take to heal wounds like this but I’m steadily praying for peace and true justice. Rest in Power Jelani Day.”

The FBI Behavioral Unit has launched an investigation in addition to the LaSalle County Sheriff’s Office’s probe.



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