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In 2016, a killer evaded capture for months after murdering four Black women in New Jersey, as systemic biases delayed police action and media attention.
In 2016, Khalil Wheeler-Weaver, a 20-year-old from a law enforcement family, killed four Black women and girls in New Jersey—Robin West, Joanne Brown, Sarah Butler, and 15-year-old Mawa Doumbia—while evading detection for months.
Despite disposing of bodies and committing sexual assaults, police failed to act due to systemic biases that devalued missing Black women’s cases.
Reporters uncovered these failures through interviews, court records, and bodycam footage, highlighting how racial disparities and neglect enabled the killer to remain free.
A podcast, “Someone’s Hunting Us,” centers the victims’ lives and the enduring grief of their families, exposing long-standing media and law enforcement blind spots.
En 2016, un asesino evadió la captura durante meses después de asesinar a cuatro mujeres negras en Nueva Jersey, ya que los prejuicios sistémicos retrasaron la acción de la policía y la atención de los medios.