Justina Morales | |
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Born | February 19, 1987 Brooklyn, New York City, U.S. |
Died | December 31, 1995 Brooklyn, New York City, U.S. |
(aged 8)
Justina Morales (February 19, 1987 – December 31, 1995) was a young American girl from the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, New York, USA who was killed at the age of eight years by her mother's boyfriend, Luis Santiago, on New Year's Eve in 1995. Morales' body was never found. Her murder case gained notoriety primarily through the New York City newspapers.
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Morales' disappearance had gone unnoticed for more than a year. Teachers and school officials failed to take note of her long absence.[1] In February, 1997, a relative informed the police that Morales had been missing and was possibly killed.[2] The subsequent investigation, similar to those in the deaths of Elisa Izquierdo and Nadine Lockwood in the same time-frame, disclosed shortcomings of the New York City child welfare system.[3]
In 1997, Santiago's trial revealed that he had abused the girl physically for several years and that he had beaten her to death when she had refused to take a bath.[4] Morales' mother, Denise Solero, who was Santiago's girlfriend, had likewise been abused by him.[4] Several news reports and editorials portrayed Solero as a victim who was terrified to inform anyone that her daughter had been killed, while other accounts depicted her as an accomplice to the crime who displayed a depraved indifference toward her daughter's plight. Two years after Morales' murder, Santiago was sentenced to a minimum of six and a maximum of nineteen years in prison.[5] Solero had agreed to testify against Santiago in exchange for probation.[6] It was reported in 1999 that Solero wanted to be reunited with another daughter.[7] It was reported that Solero had changed her name to "Forbes" and was seeking supervised visits with her then 2-year daughter, Sierra.[7] Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Joseph Bruno said there was no chance for a mother-daughter reunion that year, saying: "At this point, I see no basis to allow her to visit with any child, particularly her own child".[7] Bruno further said: "It may be disappointing, but it should not be a surprise that this is my position."[7]
In January 2008 The New York Post published an article by Andrea Peyser. It compared Morales to Nixzmary Brown whose murder trial began the same month.[8]