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NewsSunday, October 14, 2007 11:21 PM CDT
Homicide investigators track ID of homeless girl found dead
'We didn't just throw her away'
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HOUSTON -- The girl was small, about 5-foot-3 and weighing just about 100 pounds. Her hair was long and lustrous. Her eyes were dark and almond-shaped.

She wore blue shorts, a pink-hooded T-shirt adorned with pictures of monkeys, and clear plastic sandals. Black-and-green plastic bracelets were coiled around her thin wrists.

But aside from these things, there was little to identify the girl on the steel examining table of the Harris County morgue.

She had been found in the courtyard of an apartment complex, bullets in her head, torso and leg. No ID was found on her body. Her sparse belongings revealed mainly that she had likely been living on the streets: A blue gym bag containing toiletries and clothes, but also a black-and-silver Samsung cell phone, which detectives would search for clues.

Yet there was one clue, described by the medical examiner's office in cool, clinical language that could not strip the phrase of its underlying pathos:

"The decedent has braces."

She still sported the badges of adolescence, and in the days following the slaying, people she had never met in life would work to discover her identity, unlock the riddle of her death and remind the world that she had been here.

The girl with no name mattered to someone. Of that much, they were sure.

---


Sgt. C.E. Elliott was running a few minutes late for work that Saturday morning, July 14, when his cell phone rang. A shooting at 9700 Court Glen Place Apartments.

There, amid a gated sprawl in a southwest Houston neighborhood where apartment buildings veer from well-kept to well-worn, Elliott found the victim's body crumpled on the sidewalk outside Unit 401.

A dapper, silver-haired homicide investigator with 30 years on the Houston police force, a third-generation police officer, Elliott tries not to get personally involved in cases.

But sometimes, Elliott feels a special duty. This victim might have been his daughter; certainly, she was someone's daughter. ``I try to put myself in the family's shoes. These are the most important people in their lives. She was a human being, and I want to do this for her.''

But the answers in this case wouldn't come easily.

No one recognized the dead girl, who appeared to be Hispanic.

In homicide investigations, detectives go by the 24-24 rule. The key to solving a murder often lies in what the victim was doing 24 hours before the slaying, and what investigators uncover in the 24 hours after.

Without a name, Elliott had no way of reconstructing the 24 hours leading up to the shooting.

One resident told Elliott she had talked with the girl just before 6:30 a.m. The teenager had borrowed the woman's cell phone, and made a few hurried calls. Within moments, a car pulled up. Two men jumped out and led the girl away. Seconds later, just as the sun was rising, there were gunshots.

The men vanished, leaving their victim behind.

---


At the Joseph A. Jachimczyk Forensic Center Laboratory, Dr. Jennifer Love studied the girl's corpse with the trained eye of a forensic anthropologist.

The victim was likely between 14 and 20 years old. Her clothes were clean and stylish. Her teeth - behind the braces - were healthy. There were no signs of malnutrition. No scars or tattoos. If she had been living on the streets, Love surmised, she had not been out there long. Someone had been taking care of this girl.

Why had no one claimed her?

Love and the medical examiner's ID unit sent fingerprint records to the National Crime Information and the Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Nothing.

Flyers sent to the media also drew no response.

The medical examiner's odontologist stepped in next. He would create a dental chart that investigators could compare to the records of missing girls who matched their victim. Aside from fingerprints, the dental post mortem most often helps identify the unidentified dead.

But that would require waiting - for local police departments to recognize the description of the body as one of their cases; for someone to call in with a possible name; for reports of missing girls that might turn up a lead.

On July 23, a runaway report from neighboring Fort Bend County ended the wait.

The dental records matched. Finally, the victim had a name.

She was Melissa Flores, a high school student who had just turned 17.

It had been nine days since Melissa was murdered.

---


She was, those who knew her recalled, a girl with pretty eyes and a coquettish smile. She delighted in hitting the local mall and shopping for fashionable gear. She relished any chance to eat Mexican food.

And she longed to be loved, for the family that had been splintered before she reached first grade.

Melissa had a brother and two sisters, one of them severely disabled. Their mother, a drug addict now living on the streets, abused and neglected Melissa and her siblings, the Child Protective Services agency said. Their father is in prison.

For a few years, the four children were placed with their maternal grandmother. But she became ill and they were separated, scattered among several foster homes. That grandmother has since died.

Their paternal grandparents wouldn't take them in.

``Their lives are so tragic,'' said Estella Olguin, a spokeswoman for Child Protective Services. ``She was so young, so naive and vulnerable.''

For years, the siblings stayed in close contact, visiting each other in foster homes or at school. Then Melissa's brother ran away, and disappeared into the street life. Her older sister was placed in an adult facility for the disabled.

As a teen, Melissa grew troubled, her need for some connection mutating into rebellion and adolescent outbursts. Weekend visits to her younger sister's foster home - once a refuge for Melissa - often ended with fights. One foster family, then another, asked Child Protective Services to remove her from the home.

A break-up with her high school boyfriend left her sobbing. ``I just want to be loved,'' she told a friend.

Last year, Melissa began asking about her biological family. She wanted to find her mother, to make contact with her living grandparents, to visit her sister more often.

But her mother was on the streets, and her grandparents never called, a family friend said. Despite their closeness, her sister was reluctant to plan visits that would only end in squabbles.

On June 12, two weeks before her 17th birthday, Melissa ran away from her group home.

Even on the streets, Melissa clung to a connection with the only family she knew. She called her caseworker periodically, once from a Houston mall.

I'm not coming back, Melissa told her, but I just wanted to let you know I'm OK.

---


Melissa's murder drew little attention in the media - a brief story deep inside the newspaper, a quick mention of an unidentified body on the local TV news.

Elliott was angered by the lack of interest. ``She was just a little Hispanic child from the ghetto. If it's in the wrong area of town, no one cares,'' he said.

Elliott and his partner, Officer J.C. Bonaby, logged 16- and 17-hour days. following up leads in the middle of the night, sacrificing days off to interview witnesses.

Their determination paid off.

The same day Melissa was identified, Elliott made an arrest. On July 24, Justin McTier, a 45-year-old man with a string of drug arrests, was charged with Melissa's murder.

Three days later, a second man - 25-year-old Brandon Butler - was picked up on a weapons charge. Police say he admitted being at the scene when Melissa was killed. He was also charged with murder.

Elliott pieced together a reconstruction of Melissa's last days and hours:

After she ran away, she floated from friend to friend, from place to place. The night before she was killed, she had been with McTier and Butler. At one point, the men accused Melissa of stealing their drugs. They beat her, but she managed to get away.

Just after dawn the next morning, Melissa turned up at the Houston apartment complex where - for some reason - she made the phone call that led her killers to her. Police would not go into detail about this because the investigation remains open.

For Elliott, the arrests felt like a promise fulfilled. ``We didn't throw her away at the police department,'' he said. ``Her death didn't go unnoticed. At least by us.''

---


Melissa Flores was buried on July 31.

A few people attended the simple graveside service at Paradise South Cemetery: Her younger sister, who was sent reeling by the loss and cherishes a photo album with images of the two young girls together at birthday parties, Halloween outings and weekend visits. Her caseworker and other staff members from Child Protective Services. Her last foster parents and even the paternal grandparents Melissa never met.

The state of Texas - Melissa's legal guardian - paid for the funeral, but had no money for a marker.

Melissa now lies under a mound of dirt, a few yards from a row of Royal Palm trees and close to Babyland, the cemetery's section for infant graves.

No headstone bears her name.

Take a look
Melissa Flores poses in this undated family photo. Flores, 17, was found shot to death on a Houston street in July 2007. (AP Photo/Flores Family, FILE)
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Reader comments on this story - 27 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

kcj wrote on Oct 23, 2007 1:25 PM:

" i personally knew melissa although she was hated at our school...she was a very sweet girl..who really just kept to herself....i find it so crazy for to be gone because i seen her not too long before her death....she will truly be missed and i as a teen i have better understanding of life when little stuff doesnt go right i tend to go crazy but living through trials and burden everyday is something i could never think of doing..i'v got it good...but i always think if we would have been closer to her would she have went down that path...she had wisdom!belive that but just stuck in a cold,lonely world....but HEY i knew you are doing better and when i'm on my way home i know i'll see you there....i care for you so much,melissa and i thank the people that put up effort to lay you the rest...yall truly are a blessing..... "

May Melissa rest in peace... wrote on Oct 15, 2007 4:19 PM:

" To 'Why'.... Sure it reads like a 'novel' as you put it, but some times people need to get a clear picture. We are talking about human beings and not just another statistic. This is a way of reminding society that these situations exists. In this case, a young woman with potential to, perhaps, be a better mother than her own just couldn't see the possibilities. This is truly sad and this is reality whether we want to believe it or not. Some times it pays to know more about a person before we pass judgement on them. I've read too many blogs where young kids like this are called losers by people that didn't even know them personally. Obviously she came from a troubled family and didn't know how to cope with that. Has nothing to do with race, color, religion or status. Let's pray that her siblings don't end up like Melissa did. "

Maybe wrote on Oct 15, 2007 12:05 PM:

" Maybe there was more to it, maybe she was crazy from being abused. Maybe she had a split personality or mental illness. Sure, State agencies act so caring when they are in the spot light, but in reality, they are not.- "

Once again~~ wrote on Oct 15, 2007 11:07 AM:

" the hateful and disgruntled show the other side of themselves. Race is of no importance in this story, a young life is gone and we've yet to understand why people are so mean and hateful. God did not take her life and if he did it was to save her from so much hate and lack of love. My heart goes out to this little girl and I hope she is finally at peace. As for her mother I have no sympathy because she should have cleaned her act up for herself if not only for her children. We live in a society that only cares for themselves and it shows on these blogs. "

Why wrote on Oct 15, 2007 11:02 AM:

" Why does this story read like a novel? "

Learn from this wrote on Oct 15, 2007 9:58 AM:

" Kids runaway daily and this can be the result. There are runaway programs in most community's. You can find out who they are through law enforcment agencies. "

To Wow wrote on Oct 15, 2007 9:20 AM:

" I also would like to donate to help this girl have a proper grave marker if anyone finds out how to do this please respond here "

consider adoption wrote on Oct 15, 2007 9:12 AM:

" For those of us that have so much, you have the ability to make sure something like this doesn't happen. Open your doors to a child in need. With proper training, provided by the state, you can help these children go on to productive lives and keep your existing family intact. The rewards are tremendous. "

Mommy of 3 wrote on Oct 15, 2007 9:12 AM:

" This is a terrible tragedy! My the men that killed her be severly punished. Little angel, you are now with God. "

this... wrote on Oct 15, 2007 8:45 AM:

" is a VERY sad story!! Poor girl. I wish she would have had it better. May she rest in peace! "

ok wrote on Oct 15, 2007 8:25 AM:

" let them all in!! "

re: o wrote on Oct 15, 2007 7:20 AM:

" you are too angry. this poor girl is gone. God had nothing to do with taking her life........Satan did "

What I don't understand is: wrote on Oct 15, 2007 7:17 AM:

" How could you say no to taking in your grandchildren. I can't believe how selfish people are! "

Woodford Pundit wrote on Oct 15, 2007 7:05 AM:

" Slow news day? Scrounging the AP for stuff from Texas? I haven't seen the physical newspaper today. Is this a prominent story in print? "

To: Inappropriate comments wrote on Oct 15, 2007 6:44 AM:

" It is you, sir or lady, who is innappropriate here. There is absolutely no need to thrown race into this issue. Are you racist or something??? "

Illinois Family Rights wrote on Oct 15, 2007 1:35 AM:

" Very sad story but it is typical for kids that are in state custody. My question to Texas CPS is did you report her missing? Why did this child linger in foster care why was she not rerurned to her family? Texas CPS has been under investigation for a long time please do not let this case go unnoticed and investigate cps! people don't blame the parents because there are to many kids remived for little or no real reasin and it is going on here in Illinois too! A nation wide investigation of Child Protection Services needs to be demanded! Not even a grave marker for this child................... "

How sad wrote on Oct 14, 2007 11:42 PM:

" that this beautiful young woman had nothing. Rest in Peace sweet Melissa. "

to :0 wrote on Oct 14, 2007 9:57 PM:

" God might not exist for you but schools that teacher spelling and grammar do. Perhaps it would be worth your while to invest in something other than ignorance. "

Inappropriate comments wrote on Oct 14, 2007 9:53 PM:

" Would you allow such comments about God doing this if this was a little white girl found? CLEAN IT UP! "

:-0 wrote on Oct 14, 2007 8:52 PM:

" Yea may god bless here, what a tiresome statement. She is dead; if anyone did it, god did. So lets be real, he does not exsist... "

I agree... wrote on Oct 14, 2007 7:41 PM:

" Is there a website or address we can send donations to? By the way, the lady who wrote this article did a really good job! "

where can we? wrote on Oct 14, 2007 7:26 PM:

" Is there an address to send a donation for a headstone for this young lady? May God be with her and those that loved her in this time of sadness. "

Sympathy wrote on Oct 14, 2007 6:01 PM:

" for all "

So Sad wrote on Oct 14, 2007 5:26 PM:

" Makes u think and realize how good most kids have it having parents who care about them... "

sad wrote on Oct 14, 2007 5:20 PM:

" A life wasted. Kudos to the 2 police officers who did not give up on finding out who did this to her. "

Wow wrote on Oct 14, 2007 5:04 PM:

" That is such a sad story. I would like to give money to give her a proper grave marker.. no one should have to lay anonymous like that. I feel so sad for her, that her life ended that way. "

Tragic. wrote on Oct 14, 2007 4:25 PM:

" May she now sing and fly with the angels. "

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