An execution will occur for the Georgia lady who starved to deἀth her 10-year-old stepdaughter. After Tiffany Moss, 36, was found guilty of mμrder, child crμelty, and concealing a mμrder in the deἀth of Emani Moss, she was sentenced to deἀth by lethal ἰnjection.
Because she opted to represent herself at her trial, she appeared calm and lifeless as she was condemned, sitting alone while the sentence was read. Although her execution is scheduled for early June, it is unlikely to occur because of potential appeals.
According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, she is currently the lone woman in Georgia on execution row. The fall of 2013 saw the discovery of Emani Moss’ charred body inside a trash bag at her apartment complex. At the time of her deἀth, she weighed barely 32 pounds.
Eman Moss, the girl’s father, was found guilty in 2015 and is currently receiving a life sentence for trying to cover up her bμrning body. Moss didn’t present a defense during her trial, declining to make an opening or closing argument and opting not to cross-examine witnesses.
She never even addressed the jury. That most likely didn’t help her situation. The prosecution described how she kept Emani confined to her room and refused her food until she starved away, and the jury did see grisly aμtopsy images. The youngster died himself to deἀth.
However, Moss had no trouble caring for and feeding her children, who lived in the same house as the family, as reported by AJC. In a case she is bringing against the department, Emani’s grandmother Robin Moss believes there were also missed chances where the Department of Family and Children’s Services may have saved the child.
She reported caseworkers knew quite well that the youngster was being molested. The grandma claimed that just four months before Emani pἀssed away, an anonymous caller complained to the welfare office that Emani’s father and stepmother were neglecting her because she was too skinny.
According to the lawsuit, the agency failed to return the call. Emani’s school alerted DFCS to emotional and psychological maltreatment in 2012 after Tiffany Moss allegedly belted Emani for chewing food too slowly.
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Before that, Tiffany Moss admitted to belting Emani in 2010 and was sentenced to five years of probation for child abμse. She nevertheless ended up serving as Emani’s protector. Emani attempted to flee her house twice two years after the assaμlt and informed police that she had been strapped to a chair with belts and subjected to a cold shower.
The complaints were sent to DFCS, but her parents’ dad and stepmother were never charged. Eman Moss was accused of hitting Emani’s birth mother in front of the child in 2004 and was ultimately found guilty of abμse and child crμelty.
District Attorney Danny Porter said after the sentencing:
“There’s no joy when a jury imposes a death sentence. But this was one of the worst cases I’ve ever seen. The first time you look at it it made you sick. The last time you look at it it makes you sick.”
An intake case manager, a social services administrator, and a program assistant at DFCS were all fired following the girl’s pἀssing, while additional staff members were penalized.
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