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Man faces murder charge cold case of his missing stepson
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SAN DIEGO (AP) — The stepfather of a 2-year-old boy who disappeared in San Diego 14 years ago has been arrested in North Carolina and faces a murder charge, officials say.
Tieray D. Jones was arrested Monday by U.S. Marshals and Raleigh Police Department officers in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, a small town about 50 miles east of Raleigh. California officials plan to request the 37-year-old man be extradited to the state to face charges of murder and felony child abuse causing death, District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis said at a news conference in San Diego.
“I wasn’t sure this day was ever going to come,” said Dumanis, who described it as one of the “highest-profile unsolved cases in San Diego County.”
“This case has weighed heavily on all of us and our hearts go out to the family,” Dumanis said.
The disappearance of Jahi Turner on April 25, 2002, shook the city, coming only months after the kidnapping and murder of 7-year-old Danielle van Dam from her home.
Police searched for the boy for weeks, combing parks and a landfill.
His body has never been found.
Authorities at the time questioned Jones, who was caring for the boy while his 18-year-old wife, a sailor, served aboard a San Diego-based Navy ship. The boy had been in San Diego for only five days before his disappearance. Before that he had been living with his grandmother in Frederick, Maryland.
Jones told police the boy went missing from a playground after he left the toddler for 15 minutes to buy a soda. Officials discounted Jones’ story because of inconsistencies but said in 2002 that they lacked evidence to charge him.
New evidence led to the arrest but San Diego officials Monday declined to give specifics on what that was or where it was found.
San Diego Police Chief Shelley Zimmerman said homicide detectives and prosecutors began to piece together new evidence and additional leads two years ago.
The San Diego detective who broke the case had remained in contact with the family, officials said.
Zimmerman recalled when the call came in about the missing boy. Dozens of police and sheriff’s deputies searched the neighborhood and a nearby canyon for the toddler, aided by a helicopter and police dogs. Police said they hope the new development will help lead to the discovery of the boy’s body.
The couple moved back to Maryland in 2003, and in 2006 Jones pleaded guilty to an unrelated assault charge for a barrage of gunfire in Frederick in 2004 that missed the targeted man. He was sentenced to five years in prison.
In an earlier case, Jones had been scheduled to stand trial for second-degree murder stemming from the fatal shooting of a 27-year-old man in Frederick on Aug. 30, 2000. Instead, the state dropped the charges, citing the disappearance or changed statements of nearly a dozen prosecution witnesses.
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