LANSING (AP) — Plans to partner with the Detroit Crime Commission could help police in Lansing solve decades-old murder cases.
The two agencies are working to organize a cold case unit, WLNS-TV reported.
Investigators on the team would be able to use the latest advances in DNA technology, according to the Detroit Crime Commission.
Attention needs to be given to unsolved cases because — for families — there is an absence of justice, Lansing Police Chief Daryl Green said.
Sheri Pruitt, whose 17-year-old son was slain in 2014, said the initiative is exciting and hopes it will bring answers and closure to her family.
Her son, Richard, was struck after someone fired shots into the family’s home, Pruitt said.
“Something told me to stand up and go to the window,” she said. “And that’s when it happened. I thought Richard had fallen. I ran downstairs and ran past him and called 911.”
- Posted February 01, 2021
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Lansing police looking to form cold case unit
headlines Macomb
headlines National
- Millions of Americans continue to lack meaningful access to justice. What can be done about it?
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Federal judge hands down $110K penalty against 2 lawyers for AI errors in court documents
- Former adult film actress passes February bar exam in Texas
- Grad sues George Washington University, Ernst & Young after Gaza ‘genocide’ remarks in commencement speech
- Magicians Penn & Teller file Supreme Court brief questioning use of ‘investigative hypnosis’




