/ Dec 24, 2024
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The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors re-established a $25,000 reward offer Wednesday for information leading to a conviction in the death of Mitrice Richardson, a woman who went missing after being released from the Malibu/Lost Hills Sheriff’s Station in 2009.
The 24-year-old Cal State Fullerton graduate had been arrested Sept. 16, 2009, when she was unable to pay her $89 bill at Geoffrey’s, a Malibu restaurant. Deputies also found some marijuana in her car and impounded it.
Richardson was released from the station in Calabasas a little after midnight the following morning without transportation, a cell phone or her purse and disappeared soon after her release.
Neighbors reported seeing a woman who may have been Richardson sleeping on a porch later that morning, but she was gone by the time deputies from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department arrived. Deputies and volunteers mounted extensive air and ground searches, fruitlessly.
She remained missing until August 2010, when skeletal remains were found by state rangers searching an abandoned marijuana farm in the unincorporated Monte Nido area, about 30 miles from the sheriff’s station. Using dental records, the remains were identified as Richardson.
The Board of Supervisors initially offered a $10,000 reward for information into Richardson’s disappearance in 2009, before her remains were found. That reward was re-established in 2010 and again in 2021. The board extended the reward in 2022, updating it to $20,000.
On Wednesday, the reward was extended again, with the board increasing it to $25,000 for any information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or people responsible for her disappearance and death.
Malibu and Calabasas still have active reward offers totaling $20,000 in the case.
The exact cause of Richardson’s death was never determined, but authorities at the time insisted there was no sign of foul play — a contention challenged by her family.
Richardson’s disappearance led to an outcry by her relatives and others about the actions of sheriff’s deputies in their handling of her arrest and release. Investigators have said they found evidence in Richardson’s diaries and text messages that she was suffering from bipolar disorder and may have been awake for as many as five nights when she had what appeared to be a mental breakdown on Sept. 16, 2009.
Her mother, Latice Sutton, contended that authorities should have recognized her daughter’s erratic behavior as abnormal and given her a mental health evaluation. Her father said she should have been placed on a 72-hour psychiatric hold rather than being released.
The county’s Office of Independent Review concluded in a report that deputies at the station acted properly the night Richardson was released.
“Although station personnel offered Ms. Richardson the choice to remain voluntarily at the station jail until the arrival of daylight hours or her transportation, she chose to leave the station jail,” according to the report, copies of which were released by the sheriff’s department.
“… OIR has closely monitored the department’s actions regarding Ms. Richardson’s arrest and subsequent release from custody and each phase of the department’s efforts to learn what occurred at Geoffrey’s restaurant and at the station and to search for her,” the report states.
“As a result of the monitoring process, OIR has concluded that the station personnel acted legally and reasonably in taking Ms. Richardson into custody and then releasing her from custody.”
Richardson’s family sued the county, and a settlement of roughly $900,000 was reached in 2011.
Anyone with information on the case was urged to call the Los Angeles Police Department at 213-486-6900 or the sheriff’s department at 323-890-5500.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors re-established a $25,000 reward offer Wednesday for information leading to a conviction in the death of Mitrice Richardson, a woman who went missing after being released from the Malibu/Lost Hills Sheriff’s Station in 2009.
The 24-year-old Cal State Fullerton graduate had been arrested Sept. 16, 2009, when she was unable to pay her $89 bill at Geoffrey’s, a Malibu restaurant. Deputies also found some marijuana in her car and impounded it.
Richardson was released from the station in Calabasas a little after midnight the following morning without transportation, a cell phone or her purse and disappeared soon after her release.
Neighbors reported seeing a woman who may have been Richardson sleeping on a porch later that morning, but she was gone by the time deputies from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department arrived. Deputies and volunteers mounted extensive air and ground searches, fruitlessly.
She remained missing until August 2010, when skeletal remains were found by state rangers searching an abandoned marijuana farm in the unincorporated Monte Nido area, about 30 miles from the sheriff’s station. Using dental records, the remains were identified as Richardson.
The Board of Supervisors initially offered a $10,000 reward for information into Richardson’s disappearance in 2009, before her remains were found. That reward was re-established in 2010 and again in 2021. The board extended the reward in 2022, updating it to $20,000.
On Wednesday, the reward was extended again, with the board increasing it to $25,000 for any information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or people responsible for her disappearance and death.
Malibu and Calabasas still have active reward offers totaling $20,000 in the case.
The exact cause of Richardson’s death was never determined, but authorities at the time insisted there was no sign of foul play — a contention challenged by her family.
Richardson’s disappearance led to an outcry by her relatives and others about the actions of sheriff’s deputies in their handling of her arrest and release. Investigators have said they found evidence in Richardson’s diaries and text messages that she was suffering from bipolar disorder and may have been awake for as many as five nights when she had what appeared to be a mental breakdown on Sept. 16, 2009.
Her mother, Latice Sutton, contended that authorities should have recognized her daughter’s erratic behavior as abnormal and given her a mental health evaluation. Her father said she should have been placed on a 72-hour psychiatric hold rather than being released.
The county’s Office of Independent Review concluded in a report that deputies at the station acted properly the night Richardson was released.
“Although station personnel offered Ms. Richardson the choice to remain voluntarily at the station jail until the arrival of daylight hours or her transportation, she chose to leave the station jail,” according to the report, copies of which were released by the sheriff’s department.
“… OIR has closely monitored the department’s actions regarding Ms. Richardson’s arrest and subsequent release from custody and each phase of the department’s efforts to learn what occurred at Geoffrey’s restaurant and at the station and to search for her,” the report states.
“As a result of the monitoring process, OIR has concluded that the station personnel acted legally and reasonably in taking Ms. Richardson into custody and then releasing her from custody.”
Richardson’s family sued the county, and a settlement of roughly $900,000 was reached in 2011.
Anyone with information on the case was urged to call the Los Angeles Police Department at 213-486-6900 or the sheriff’s department at 323-890-5500.
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It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.
The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making
The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.
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