Alexis Crawford’s Untimely Death Exposes the Systems That Failed Her

As the trial continues, there are still many unanswered questions

Clarissa Brooks
ZORA

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Illustration: Bimpe Alliu

The legacy of the Atlanta Police Department’s lack of care for missing young Black people has a long history that is best highlighted in the current HBO series Atlanta’s Missing and Murdered. While Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Police Chief Erika Shields are attempting to rectify these haunting mistakes 40 years later with new investigations, those failures are ever present.

One recent case that called attention to the systemic failures of multiple institutions — and their propensity for finger-pointing — is that of Alexis Crawford.

A senior at Clark Atlanta University, Alexis “Lex” Crawford, 21, was a criminal justice major living with her friend and roommate, Jordyn Jones, in 2019. Though many close friends knew the two women had issues within their friendship, they spent homecoming celebrating and socializing together as the fall semester came to a close. However, their seeming reconciliation was short-lived. On October 26, the two had a falling out that, it was later discovered, had deadly implications. Shortly after their altercation, Crawford went missing. Her body was found a week later, on November 8, in Exchange Park.

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