CHICAGO (Sun-Times Media Wire) - The Will County Sheriff’s office is now describing Semaj Crosby’s death as “an ongoing criminal investigation,” records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times show.
Previously, authorities had characterized the toddler’s death at her unkempt Joliet Township house as “suspicious,” but not criminal.
In response to a Freedom of Information Act request submitted by the Sun-Times, the sheriff’s office withheld some records, citing “an ongoing criminal investigation.”
But the sheriff’s office did disclose that officers came to Semaj Crosby’s home 59 times between February 2016 and April 2017. Forty of those calls were for probation checks.
Two were for welfare checks, one in October 2016 and one on March 4, 2017, records show. In the October call, officers were not able to make contact with the family.
It was unclear if contact with the family was made during the March visit, and officers wrote that a follow-up report would be filed, though one was not disclosed to the Sun-Times.
Among the other reasons for sheriff’s department visits at home, four were for disturbances, some domestic in nature; four were for “public service;” two were for “crisis intervention;” two were to deliver subpoenas; two were for building checks; one for assistance to the fire department; one for arson; and one for the death of Semaj, who was found under a couch.
Semaj and her family moved into the home in the 300 block of Louis about one year ago, according to the sheriff’s office, though since her biological parents did not live together, it was not known exactly how much time the toddler spent in the home.
The sheriff’s office previously said the child was discovered dead in the home on April 26. However, 911 logs show the sheriff’s office was called to the home at 6:30 p.m. the day before for a “suspicious” death.
Authorities with the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services had been at the home less than three hours before she vanished to investigate a previous neglect allegation. The investigators saw “no obvious hazards or safety concerns” for the little girl or her two brothers before they left, officials have said.
An autopsy did not rule on the girl’s cause of death, pending the results of lab and toxicology tests. There were no obvious signs of trauma or injury, the sheriff’s office said last week, adding they were still “interviewing cooperating witnesses and some family members” on Friday.
No arrests have been made.
Photos released earlier this week by the Will County Department of Land Use appeared to support the characterization that the home was in “deplorable” condition when the child was found dead inside.
“The entire structure appeared unsanitary because of the heavily soiled carpets, walls, garbage and [it] contains a serious degree of filth,” an inspector noted in her report.
The inspector went on to describe the back door and electrical panel blocked by “strollers, black garbage bags, toys, clothing and containers.”
The home was deemed “unfit for human occupancy.”
But in testimony to the state Senate on Wednesday, DCFS director George Sheldon said the agency doesn’t take kids “because of a dirty house.”
He told senator, “I think if we walk into a lot of homes, they might be untidy. The child may be loved, and cared for, but they may be poor.”
He suggested someone was trying to cover up the death in the Semaj case.
“The child was found, as I understand it, under a couch,” he said. “No legs on the couch—the child doesn’t crawl under the couch. So obviously something is going on and apparently there was an individual or individuals who attempted to hide that fact.”