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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMissing Alabama woman found dead in police van parked outside police offices
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Natasha ⚯͛
@ndelriego
Christina Nance, 29, who was reported missing 2 weeks ago, was found dead inside a police van parked outside the law enforcement offices in Huntsville, Alabama.
The coroners report showed no signs of foul play or any findings of trauma but the family isnt buying it.
11:05 AM · Oct 14, 2021
vanlassie
(5,695 posts)Baitball Blogger
(46,777 posts)They probably left her in the van and she died from heat stroke.
Arkansas Granny
(31,542 posts)one of our local law enforcement brought a woman in for questioning. They put her in an interrogation room and forgot about her. She was there for 3 days with no food, water or bathroom facilities. Luckily, she survived the incident.
Celerity
(43,749 posts)ananda
(28,906 posts)I want police heads to roll over this.
imaginary girl
(864 posts)Wouldn't foul play include leaving her in a van? It has to have been too hot for that in Alabama!
ColinC
(8,351 posts)sakabatou
(42,204 posts)a kennedy
(29,772 posts)Rocknation
(44,586 posts)Last edited Fri Oct 15, 2021, 12:57 PM - Edit history (1)
But then again, why would they?
Rocknation
Bluethroughu
(5,206 posts)Here we go again.
ColinC
(8,351 posts)...isn't that the definition of "foul play"?
a kennedy
(29,772 posts)is just so wrong, and murder charges need to be filed. 🤬 🤬 🤬
ColinC
(8,351 posts)And it is absolutely, without a doubt, murder in my book. I would say it's unbelievable but at this point, it would be a downright lie.
malaise
(269,292 posts)Good effin' grief!
niyad
(113,940 posts)malaise
(269,292 posts)Still banging head
niyad
(113,940 posts)SoCalDavidS
(9,998 posts)But it's the police, and it's Alabama, and it's a dead black woman, so I'm not holding my breath, as usual.
Best case scenario is probably some half hearted apology, and internal investigation leading nowhere.
mn9driver
(4,431 posts)Apparently they have vehicles that are parked for extended periods and they are not checked-and not locked either, I guess.
This is messed up.
captain queeg
(10,297 posts)yardwork
(61,785 posts)ecstatic
(32,786 posts)rurallib
(62,482 posts)and she was inside, why didn't she get out?
Something really stinks in 'Bama
uponit7771
(90,371 posts)onetexan
(13,080 posts)yonder
(9,686 posts)after being reported missing two weeks earlier, my protests of innocence aren't going to get me very far.
yardwork
(61,785 posts)I assume there are surveillance cameras on the parking lot.
Joinfortmill
(14,511 posts)berni_mccoy
(23,018 posts)That is the sad state of affairs in this country
Rocknation
(44,586 posts)and had previously called family members to pick her up there. Police noted that she had been arrested for multiple nonviolent offenses over the past eight years."
link
A self-selected final resting place?
Rocknation
stopdiggin
(11,412 posts)Kinda' sounds like she ended up in the parked vehicle of her own volition. Fairly well known behavior. Stairwells, entryways, sheds - any kind of shelter out of the elements - hidey-holes of every possible description come into play ... It's certainly sad - but this doesn't surprise me nearly as much as it does some here. There might be some slight negligence involved - if somebody failed to lock something that should have been secured (and that's just assumption) - but, based on what's been reported here, I don't know if I'm ready to conclude anything like, "homicide!"
yardwork
(61,785 posts)stopdiggin
(11,412 posts)femmedem
(8,213 posts)The vehicle didn't open from the inside because it had been used to transport inmates. And yes, it was negligent to leave it unlocked.
So, so sad.
https://www.al.com/news/2021/10/video-shows-christina-nance-in-huntsville-police-van-12-days-before-her-body-was-found.html
rpannier
(24,350 posts)Didn't get out of the van, just stayed and died.
I may have been born in the morning, but it wasn't this morning
femmedem
(8,213 posts)Champp
(2,114 posts)and not the Huntsville PD.
femmedem
(8,213 posts)"The van was purchased in 1995 and had formerly been used to transport inmates. It has also been used to carry evidence released by courts to be destroyed after its use in trial. Because the van had formerly been used for inmate transportation, it was possible for a person to open the van doors from the outside, but not possible to open them from the inside, McCarver said. It is department policy that vehicles should be locked, he said."
There is video showing her entering the van, apparently.
This is an awful tragedy, but it appears that it was human error: someone failed to lock a car that was no longer in service and which proved deadly, like a junked refrigerator that still has its door.
https://www.al.com/news/2021/10/video-shows-christina-nance-in-huntsville-police-van-12-days-before-her-body-was-found.html
Rocknation
(44,586 posts)of a mentally disturbed person who had a love/hate relationship with the police.
rocktivity
femmedem
(8,213 posts)Last edited Sat Oct 16, 2021, 01:48 PM - Edit history (2)
I think she was just looking for a safe, quiet place to sleep out on the streets, and it turned out not to be safe at all.
She had no way of knowing that the van wouldn't open from inside, but it is baffling that she never cried out for help. I suspect her mental health problems prevented her from understanding what was happening. Or perhaps she was afraid to ask for help from the police who walked by.
https://patch.com/alabama/huntsville/huntsville-police-department-huntsville-police-provides-update-christina-nance
Sympthsical
(9,192 posts)Was she homeless? Was she dealing with mental illness? Both? The article says quite a bit without outright saying quite a bit.
There is video, and it appears she did go in and get herself locked inside. Think of kids in the woods and abandoned refrigerators.
It begs the question why she went inside a van.
And, oh yeah. The negligence here, not locking that van up. This was an accident waiting to happen. If it wasn't her, it could have been children. And is no one checking surveillance? Why have the cameras at all then?
Poor her, though. Terrible way to die.
Ah, article downthread answers my question:
McMurray also said the department had been working with Nances family for more than a year through the Crisis Intervention Team (CIT), a program designed for first responders who handle crisis calls involving people with a mental health condition.
Rocknation
(44,586 posts)when her family described her simply as someone who was very nice and lovely. At the age of 29? No mention of a job or even interests?
Then I read that she's though she was working with the CIT, she's been arrested many times.
rocktivity