Mystery Deepens in Case of Burned Mississippi Teen Jessica Chambers as Police Call for Witnesses
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Officials say that they are struggling to find the person responsible
for attacking 19-year-old Jessica Chambers, who was burned to death in
rural Mississippi, because there is not a lot of “street talk” about the
case.
"We're at the point where we are talking to people right now and there
are a lot of people we are talking to," Panola County District Attorney
John Champion said at a news conference this afternoon.
"There’s just not a lot of street talk out there about who may or may not have done this," he said.
Chambers was found barely alive with 98 percent of her body covered in
burns Saturday night around 9 p.m. and police say they are are trying to
piece together her final hours. Shortly after being airlifted to a
nearby hospital, she died.
County Sheriff Dennis Darby said today that many of the details are
still being worked out by the crime lab, including the question of
whether an accelerant was used to start the fire.
“We're definitely treating this as an arson. We're trying to determine through lab results what kind of arson,” Champion said.
They added that they have been able to determine that the attacker
likely got in the car with her, although they still do not have an
official suspect or person of interest.
“My heart goes out to the family,” Sheriff Darby said at today’s news
conference. “It’s personal because I know them personally and I have two
daughters of my own.”
Police are still digging through her phone records and witness
statements, Panola County Assistant District Attorney Jay Hale told
WAPT.
"We're still looking into certain individuals," Hale told the station.
"We've talked to numerous individuals who could potentially become
suspects."
The footage from the gas station-convenience store in Courtland,
Mississippi, shows Chambers stopping for gas at around 6:30 p.m., about
90 minutes before she was found severely burned.
The video shows her going toward the gas pump but then turning, waving to say hello to someone and walking out of the frame.
Gas station attendant Ali Fadhel told The Associated Press he knew
Chambers because she stopped in regularly for $5 worth of gas. When she
filled up Saturday, however, she purchased $14 of fuel, he said.
"I asked her, 'Why are you putting so much gas?' She said, 'I'm going
somewhere,'" Fadhel told the AP, adding that that he thought she seemed
fine.
"If she knew she had a problem with somebody, she would have told me," Fadhel added.
ABC affiliate WAPT-TV
in Jackson reported that investigators believe she may have been headed
to a party, but no further details about the party have been released.
Her father, Ben Chambers, described the scene that unfolded when she was found by first responders.
"When the fire department got there, she was walking down the road on fire," her father, Ben Chambers, told station WTOC-TV in Savannah, Georgia. "Only part of her body that wasn't burned was the bottom of her feet."
Her father also told the station that she told emergency responders the
identity of her attacker, but the district attorney investigating the
case has not said anything about suspects.
"She was able to communicate but it was difficult," county ADA Hale told The Associated Press.
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