The Atlanta Child Murders
Jefferey

The very next day after Angel's body was found, Jefferey Mathis, aged ten, had left his home to buy cigarettes for his mother in the early evening. Like Yusef Bell, Jefferey would never return from his errand, which was only a few blocks away from his home. His mother Willie Mae Mathis became worried when he was gone over an hour and sent her other sons to look for him. Later that night, a patrolman told Mrs. Mathis to call the missing person's department if he did not come home by morning.
What she did not immediately understand when she contacted that department the next day is that the missing person's department at that time in the Atlanta Police Department — and in many major cities — did very little to investigate the disappearance of young people. It was assumed that children and teenagers were runaways and not the victims of foul play.
Jefferey had last been seen by a friend getting into the backseat of a blue car, possibly a Buick. Thirteen days after Mathis had gone missing, Willie Turner, who had recognized Mathis' picture from the newspaper, claimed that he saw Jefferey in a blue NOVA car, driven by a white adult man. Willie Turner also told police that the man he had seen with Mathis had later in the week pulled a gun on him before taking off in his car. Police did little in response to the information given by Turner. The report was filed away and forgotten. The blue car that was earlier seen by Mathis' friend in connection with Jefferey's disappearance was very similar to the description of a car seen by an eyewitness in a later disappearance case of a boy named Aaron Wyche. Jefferey Mathis' two brothers had also reported seeing a blue Buick in the driveway of a house that Jefferey frequented. Interestingly, shortly after Mathis' disappearance, boys from his school had complained to their principle that two black men in a blue car had attempted to lure them away from the schoolyard. The youngsters had memorized the license plate and reported it to police. Once again, police did little to investigate the matter.


- Setting the Stage
- The Looming Crisis
- Ominous Beginning
- Two More Boys
- End to the Lull
- Jefferey
- A Murderous Rampage
- STOP
- Ransom
- Witnesses to Murder
- The List
- Making Sense of the Crisis
- No End In Sight
- Links
- A Murderous Change of Pace
- The Jo-Jo Connection
- Chaos
- A Deadly April
- The Last to Make the List
- Dettlinger and His Map
- A Splash From the Bridge
- Wayne Bertram Williams
- Up to No Good
- Building the Case
- Pulling it Together
- Gearing Up
- The Trial
- Patterns
- Damaging Testimony
- Mounting Evidence
- On the Stand
- Going Down!
- Fiber Analysis
- Under a Microscope
- Challenging Evidence
- Probability
- Reasonable Doubts
- Unfair Trial?
- Race War?
- More Than One
- A New Investigation in 2005
- New Chapter 2006 — Ku Klux Klan Connection
- New Chapter 2006 — The Child Molester Theory
- Bibliography





























