The family of a 16-year-old girl who was found dead on the side of the 110 Freeway in early January is demanding answers.
Tioni Theus visited her father at his Inglewood workplace on January 7, in what he explained as a depressed and distraught state. Less than 24 hours later she was found dead, shot in the neck twice.
Darien Jackson, Theus’ father, detailed the events of the day prior to the discovery of his daughter’s body on the southbound 110 Freeway in South Los Angeles, California, saying that ever since her mother was critically injured in a hit-and-run accident, his daughter had been living with him. He said that she hadn’t been the same girl he knew since that tragic incident turned her life on its head.
“She said, Daddy, nobody loves me. The only person that loved me was my mama,” he continued, “I said that’s not true, I said I love you.She just was crying, crying, I felt her pain.”
Jackson said that as his daughter was planning to leave he had a bad feeling, and begged her to stay with him. Despite denying his requests, he gave his daughter a kiss and a hug, before she left for a party with an unnamed friend, leaving him for what he said he “didn’t know was a last goodbye.”
Tioni’s body was found the next morning, and investigators disclosed that the teenager was murdered – shot twice in the neck.
Now, her family is beside themselves, searching for a reason in how somebody could take a life so heartlessly.
“Dumped on the freeway like nothing,” Jackson said, “Yeah. That just broke me down. It hurt me, it’s like who could be so cold like that?”
“We have so many questions. Everybody is so in disbelief,” said her cousin Rashida Kincy.
They want to make sure that their loved one is remembered for her beauty, vibrancy and intelligence, rather than dehumanized as the investigation of her death ensues. “Let’s speak up, let’s stand up for one another. Talk for those who can’t, save the next child’s life,” Kincy continued, “It could be your child, it could be your cousin.”
According to details provided to The Los Angeles Times by some of Theus’ family members, when her mother’s accident occurred in 2019, she began to rebel, disappearing for extended periods of time, and being pulled into theft and prostitution.
“We’re definitely not pretending that Tioni was an angel,” her cousin Nafeesah Kincy told The Times, “She faced trauma. I want to humanize her. I don’t want her to be seen as a prostitute or a runaway or somebody that people feel like ‘Oh, well, they live that lifestyle.’ … It’s so many young women out here being victimized and being taken advantage of physically and sexually,” she said, “So it’s my cousin today. But it could be your cousin, your daughter, your friend tomorrow.”
A GoFundMe for Tioni Theus can be found here.
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