8-year-old’s TRAGIC DEATH Sparks Outrage: Protesters Allege Mishandled Investigation
When Georgia officials discovered a missing 8-year-old boy’s body underwater in a construction hole, they assumed he had drowned. However, since then, family and community people have come out, believing there is more to the story.
Hundreds of people gathered in Jesup’s centre to protest what they describe a botched inquiry into the murder of Noah Bush, who was eight years old. Photos, posters, placards, and chants urged that Wayne County Sheriff Robert Moseley find answers, and the protesters refused to accept the county’s “no foul play” verdict, according to WTOC.
According to family members, Noah walked outdoors to play before going missing around 5 p.m. last Wednesday. His body was discovered in a borrow hole for building materials near his home at 8:30 a.m. last Thursday. The sheriff’s office initially stated that they had no grounds to suspect foul play and that Noah looked to have drowned. Noah’s 18-year-old sister, Alayzia McClinton, feels the story is absurd.
“Now you’re denying that anything occurred. You all say he leaped in, but I know my baby was afraid of water,” McClinton added.
Moseley stated Tuesday that the Georgia Bureau of inquiry has been brought in to help with the inquiry, something McClinton claims her family has been requesting for days.
“They say we’re interviewing folks, and that’s it. “They’re not telling us anything,” McClinton stated. WTOC met with Moseley, who stated that the county is doing everything it can, but cases are not always resolved overnight.
“I simply want everyone to have faith. We will continue to investigate this till the end. We will continue to investigate until all questions have been answered,” he stated.
According to the sheriff, the GBI has finished the majority of the planned interviews and the department is close to receiving a response.