Found Deceased GA - Quinton Simon - Discovered Missing From Home By Non-Custodial Mom - Savannah #2

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I was looking around their neighborhood for possible dumpster locations. As was said, a lot, even around here, most commercial dumpsters have locks, but there is a mobile home park just 5 minutes away from the home on Buckhalter, and doing a street walk through the area, they have five dumpsters, side by side, for residents of the park. It is off the main roads, and looks like a relatively secluded area. It is called Azalea Mobile Home Park, at 4711 Ogeechee Rd. I have no idea if LS was familiar with this trailer park, but those dumpsters just scream out to me. JMO

ETA...may also be a good location to get drugs.

1666110692386.png
Screenshot courtesy of Google Maps.
 
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I was looking around their neighborhood for possible dumpster locations. As was said, a lot, even around here, most commercial dumpsters have locks, but there is a mobile home park just 5 minutes away from the home on Buckhalter, and doing a street walk through the area, they have five dumpsters, side by side, for residents of the park. It is off the main roads, and looks like a relatively secluded area. It is called Azalea Mobile Home Park, at 4711 Ogeechee Rd. Those dumpsters just scream out to me. JMO


View attachment 373982
Screenshot courtesy of Google Maps.
I was just coming to post this Apartments and mobile homes don't lock their dumpsters. Once I had so much xmas trash due to having a ton of people over and used the dumpster at a nearby apartment building. JMO
 
I was looking around their neighborhood for possible dumpster locations. As was said, a lot, even around here, most commercial dumpsters have locks, but there is a mobile home park just 5 minutes away from the home on Buckhalter, and doing a street walk through the area, they have five dumpsters, side by side, for residents of the park. It is off the main roads, and looks like a relatively secluded area. It is called Azalea Mobile Home Park, at 4711 Ogeechee Rd. Those dumpsters just scream out to me. JMO


View attachment 373982
Screenshot courtesy of Google Maps.
Oh no, what a terrible place to leave a child!
 
There has been a real lack of any info on the grandfather. I know he's not biologically related, but I do believe he was also included in the custody documents. It seems that he should also be included in the judge's admonishments.
Have we seen information that the grandfather was included in the custody documents? When custody is awarded by the court, there is a home visit and assessment, and he would have been included in the assessment by child protective services, but not necessarily awarded joint custody. JMO.
 
Press Conference

18th Oct.

Chief - A short time ago, we began what will be an extensive search of the Waste Management Landfill located here in Chatham County. As with every step we have taken in this case the need for this search was based on where the evidence led us. We have spent the last several days preparing and deploying extensive resources to support the search team and the investigators and I would like to thank, for a moment, Chatham County Sheriff's Office, Sheriff John Wilcher, Chatham County Emergency Management Agency, Savannah Police Department, Savannah Fire Department, Chatham Emergency Services and many other agencies that have assisted in getting us prepared to begin our search of the landfill.

We know that this is going to be a physically, mentally and emotionally gruelling task for our investigators and team. Yesterday, our team posted this picture of Quinton, here on the wall of this operation centre as a reminder of who we are searching for and why we continue to work so terribly hard.

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We want justice for Quinton, just like everybody else, and we want to find his remains so we can give him a proper resting place. Once again, we are indebted to the FBI for their unmatched expertise that they have provided to us since they arrived on scene less than three hours after Quinton was reported missing. Now I'll turn it over to Senior Supervisory Resident Agent, Mr Clarke, who also has a few remarks.

FBI - Good morning, everyone. My name is Will Clarke, as the Chief said I'm the Senior Supervisory Resident Agent of the Savannah and Brunswick offices of the FBI. Throughout our process here, our goal has been to bring Quinton home and to hold anyone responsible for his disappearance accountable. We, along with our law enforcement partners, go into this process with heavy hearts. We did not want to end up at this point, but the evidence has taken us here. We're not just randomly searching this landfill. We have evidence, specific evidence, that leads us to this large property. To help in this search, the FBI has brought in specialists from Quantico, Atlanta, as well as all of our personnel here in the greater Savannah area. The FBI's Evidence Response team, which has experience in landfill searches, like this, is heading up part of this operation. At this moment, we have dozens of FBI personnel on scene in support of the Chatham County Police Department. We will have Chatham County and FBI personnel in the landfill, each day, conducting a systematic search of the debris. This will be a complex and strenuous effort. Searchers will move through the debris placed on the search deck looking for evidence. Once that debris is cleared it will be placed on the search deck and then removed and then replaced with another section of material. This will not be quick. It will not be easy and the outcome is uncertain. As the chief said, we want justice for Quinton and we want to find him a proper resting place. Again, we share the sorrow felt by millions and promise all of our available resources and expertise to assist Chatham County in finding little Quinton.

Chief - Thank you Will. Now we'll take a few questions if you'd like.

Reporter - What makes you think that Quinton is in this landfill?

Chief - The evidence has led us to this place at this date and time.

Reporter - Is there anything specific you can tell us?

Chief - Nothing I can tell you specifically.

Reporter - Chief, what date did you think you would come to this landfill? Is this something you knew last Thursday, last Wednesday, last Tuesday or yesterday or this morning?

FBI - We've been reviewing the evidence throughout the duration of this investigation. We've been following the evidence where it has taken us. And the evidence has taken us to this landfill. The efforts to undertake this landfill search have been several days in the planning. We've brought in experts in landfill searches to guide us to this specific area where we'll be searching. Like I said, in my comments before, this is not... we're not searching the whole landfill, we have a specific area where we are looking.

Reporter - I know the recovery and the evidence team has done this before. Is this the area that now you've gridded off, with no more trash coming there? It is away from anything new that would be coming in?

FBI - Yes.

Reporter - And is this because of where this trash specifically came from?

FBI - Yes.

Reporter - We talked to you 2:30 the Wednesday that he went missing - You were so hopeful in this and your tone has changed. You almost sound like you're about to choke up there. You must be emotionally drained. As investigators, as agents can you talk about how hard this case has been?

Chief - Yeah. You're trying to get me to cry, I think, but, it has. You know, we had a meeting yesterday and to look across the the multitude of people that are here and to feel and see their emotions... but that's coupled with determination and dedication, so we can find little Quinton and provide him a proper resting place. It does take its toll. There is a lot of time, energy and effort that goes into, not only the investigation but the logistics in terms of getting everything we need to be able to provide the proper resources for the search teams and the investigators, so we can reach a conclusion at some point. There's a large order of magnitude that has been brought to bear here for this and I'll say it again, I can't thank the FBI enough for all that they have done. They have been tremendous and phenomenal.

Reporter - And you know this is obviously a criminal investigation now. It was a missing person's... and there's no way that it's not, right? No-one's been charged?

Chief - No-one has been charged.

Reporter - Why has no-one been charged?

Chief - Because we're not ready to charge anyone yet. We still have work to do. We still have an investigation to do and we are not going to do anything, pre-emptively, that would that would harm future prosecution, that would, where I'm standing before you six months from now, talking about a flawed investigation or talking about why we did this and why we didn't do that. I believe in our investigators. I believe in the expertise that we brought to bear here. We are tracking in the right direction, but we're only going to do that when we're ready to do that.

Reporter - Chief, is that because you're holding out to make this a capital punishment case?

Chief - No.

Reporter - Chief, is this landfill the only place that y'all are going to be searching?

Chief - Yes.

Reporter - You mentioned of course that this is going to be a large scale and really strenuous operation. Do you guys have any kind of vague idea how long you think it would take, or is that kind of up to what happens out there?

Chief - It's kind of up to what happens but, as Agent Clark said, this is not going to be quick. This is not going to happen within a day or so. We are here for the long haul, until we determine that we don't need to be here anymore.

Reporter - Chief, let's back up a little bit in this investigation. One thing that never happened - was, there was never an Amber Alert sent out. There was never a Levi's call sent out. Why was that?

Chief - It didn't meet the criteria of an Amber Alert, at that time.

Reporter - Why so?

Chief - I'd have to go back and look at the exact criteria, but we didn't have any specific information about an abduction. We didn't have a suspect for an abduction. We didn't have a vehicle description or anything like that. And Amber Alerts are very prescriptive in terms of when you can issue them, and we didn't have that information at that time.

Reporter - Chief, how tough is it to stand here right now (inaudible) somebody threw that little baby in the trash?

Chief - It's.. it's, it's tough. But, you know, we understand that, you know, it's necessary. This is the work that we do. You know, all be it emotionally draining, all be it tough, aIl be it difficult. But this is what the community asks of our law enforcement officers.

Reporter - I want to clarify something chief. It was asked in the question earlier. Do y'all believe that Quinton was brought here and thrown in the landfill or thrown in the trash and then ended up at the landfill?

Chief - We believe that he was placed in a specific dumpster at a specific location and it was brought here by regular means of disposal.

Reporter - Got it. (inaudible) dumpster I-95?

Chief - I can't answer that.

Reporter - Is Leilani Simon still the only suspect?

Chief - She is.

Reporter - You mentioned the other day that you didn't believe she was a flight risk - Has that changed?

Chief - That has not changed.

Reporter - How hopeful are you that you'll find Quinton's body?

Chief - I have every belief that we will find his remains here at the landfill.

Reporter - Do y'all know where Leilani is today? I don't mean right at this actual moment but do ya'll know where she is?

Chief - I believe she's still here in Chatham County. We do not believe she's a flight risk.

Reporter - And again, I'll ask one more time - What makes you believe that she's not a flight risk.

Chief - I can't get into that.
Okay, thank you, y'all have a great day.
That's a lot of work, thank you.
 
Assuming the grandmother raised the mother, she's failed spectacularly, twice. I'm not saying she should never see the children again, but when she's exhibited negligence to the level that she has, I don't think she should be given the opportunity to raise those children.

I don't disagree at all with what you're saying, but the fact remains that we have no say in what happens, anything and everything will be decided by a judge based on a great many facts and factors to which we aren't privy.
 
I know Chief Hadley stated that he expects the search at the landfill to take an extensive amount of time but I'm going to hope and pray that it doesn't. For everyone's sake I hope, since they know the specific area to search, that they discover Q's remains quickly.
 
I know Chief Hadley stated that he expects the search at the landfill to take an extensive amount of time but I'm going to hope and pray that it doesn't. For everyone's sake I hope, since they know the specific area to search, that they discover Q's remains quickly.
I wonder when they stopped dumping in that specific location. Hopefully they did it very early in the search.
 
I know Chief Hadley stated that he expects the search at the landfill to take an extensive amount of time but I'm going to hope and pray that it doesn't. For everyone's sake I hope, since they know the specific area to search, that they discover Q's remains quickly.
Grisly as it may sound, it may be that it takes so much time because they have to get everything possibly related to the baby before finishing the search.
 
None of us really knows, but past history of both is good enough indicators of what may be expected in the future, that I do not believe either should ever again be given the opportunity to harm another child in their custody. JMO
Agree completely. Hopefully LS will never see the light of day outside of her prison cell as she is held accountable for murdering her own child and disposing of him in a dumpster like trash.

Child protective services will never give the grandmother custody again of the two children who are still alive. Quinton died on her watch. I hope they charge her with neglect.
 
Neither Gma nor Mom will ever be terrific parents. There's no room for error at this point. jmo
Exactly. Two children's lives hang in the balance NOW, not in some hypothetical future transformation of LS's and the grandmother's lives.

Justice for Quinton and for the two children who are still alive needs to be the priority of the justice system.
 
I think you're right, I tend to think that he was already gone (literally gone from the house) by 5:29. But the question remains, why would no one in the house hear her leave and return? Was her room that far from where the sound of the car would come from? Big house, could she have left by the back with his body.....was a handy car parked out on the road? There must have been a handful of cars there, given 5 adults living in the house. So maybe she got back, arranged something stuffed to look like a baby, sleepily woke up with her boyfriend, asked him sweetly to call the sitter as she would lovingly care for her 3 kids that day, wonderful mother that she is. I feel strongly that she acted alone.

IMO

Another possible scenario -- The boyfriend told LE that he saw Quinton at 6 a.m. before he left for work. I think Quinton was already deceased by the time the babysitter was called earlier, but that the boyfriend thought that Quinton was asleep when he saw him at 6 a.m. I think LS left immediately after the boyfriend left the house for work, and went to a dumpster that she was familiar with. She had three hours to dispose of the body before calling her boyfriend to come home and help her search and calling LE to report Quinton as missing.
 
If LE had camera evidence that a pick up that LS is known to drive pulled up along side a dumpster and a person got out and put something in the dumpster, would LE still need a body to make a strong case? MOO MOO MOO
They would certainly need more evidence than video showing her putting "something" in a dumpster. They would need possession of that specific "something", and if it was something like a piece of luggage or such, I think it would have to show evidence of a deceased toddler Quinton in it, at the very least. The one good thing about your scenario, assuming it was/is correct, is that it would give searching LE a very specific item to be looking for, JMO
 
Didn't the suspect work at All American Liquor?

A lot of commercial dumpsters have locks, but employees have access to keys.

Just a thought. MOO.
That's what MomLS lists on her FB profile as a place of employment, though it has not been verified if this info is up-to-date; she may not be a current employee there.

@wnk I heard a reporter ask if the dumpster was the "one located at the gas station on I-95". I'm horrible with directions do you have an idea of one there?
There are a bunch of gas stations at Hwy 204 and I-95 -- I see Exxon, Sunoco, Marathon, Shell, QuickStop, and BP -- all with visible dumpsters (see links to Google Street views). Obviously the reporter must have had some reason for asking about that specific location. It's 9.4 miles from the residence, though -- a good 16 minute drive -- and there are many other gas stations much closer and in less-busy areas, so it's certainly not the first place I'd look.
 
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