NY JALIEK RAINWALKER: Missing from Greenwich, NY - 1 Nov 2007 - Age 12

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Jaliek was last seen at a home belonging to his adoptive father's parents in the 10 block of Hill Street in Greenwich, New York on November 1, 2007. His adoptive father, Stephen Burrell Kerr, spent the night alone in the house with him.

Jaliek disappeared during the night and has never been heard from again. Kerr says he woke up the next morning and, at 7:30 a.m., found a note Jaliek left behind. It read: "Dear everybody, I'm sorry for everything. I won't be a bother anymore. Goodbye, Jaliek." Kerr reported his son missing at 8:57 a.m. He is not believed to have been carrying any cash or credit cards when he went missing.

Jaliek had been living with his adoptive parents, Kerr and his wife Jocelyn A. McDonald, for five years by 2007. He was born addicted to crack cocaine and spent his early childhood in six different foster homes. His parents stated Jaliek had violent temper tantrums and his four siblings were afraid of him.

Jaliek's former foster parents, Jodi and Larry Schoen, who cared for him for four years, confirmed this, stating his outbursts could last up to an hour. They described Jaliek as a very intelligent but very troubled child. The Schoens had originally planned to adopt him, but after he attacked their daughter when he was seven, they decided he could no longer stay in their home. He then went to live with Kerr and McDonald, who have three biological sons and one adopted daughter. The couple's children ranged in age from eight to fourteen at the time of Jaliek's disappearance.

Jaliek's adoptive family led a non-traditional lifestyle at the time of his disappearance: their home in rural Washington County, New York had no running water, the toilets are outhouses, its only electricity comes from a generator that runs for several hours during the day, and everyone slept in one room. The family stated they lived this way because it was better for the environment.

A photo of the Washington County house is posted with this case summary. Jaliek's family still owns the home, but in 2008 they moved to West Rupert, Vermont.

Kerr and McDonald stated Jaliek was both suicidal and homicidal at the time of his disappearance, but he wasn't taking any psychiatric drugs or receiving any therapy for his mental conditions. On October 23, a little over a week prior to Jaliek's disappearance, Kerr called a crisis hotline and said his son was unmanageable.

Kerr stated Jaliek had threatened a small child in his homeschool group and McDonald was afraid of him and no longer wanted him at home. Kerr said he and his wife wanted to reverse the adoption. The crisis worker said it was not possible to reverse the adoption and suggested respite care instead.

Jaliek was sent to the home of Elaine and Tom Person, licensed foster parents who had provided respite care for him in the past. They kept him until November 1, then gave him back to Kerr, who planned to send him to another respite home the next day. That was the day Jaliek was reported missing.

An extensive search of the area turned up no indication of Jaliek's whereabouts. Within a few days police announced they thought he could have met with foul play, since it is unlikely that a child of that age could survive on his own. The possibilities that Jaliek ran away or committed suicide have not been ruled out, however.

McDonald took a polygraph in his case, but Kerr refused to take one. Both parents maintain their innocence in his case and stated they believed their son simply ran away. They suggested he might be living with an African-American family or gang, as Jaliek had always considered himself black rather than biracial and had wanted to live with other African-Americans.

The Persons said the farewell note Jaliek supposedly left on the night he vanished was not a goodbye note, but rather a letter he was assigned to write by his father for homework. Kerr allegedly told his son to write a note apologizing to the people he had harmed, and Tom saw him writing it, although he didn't actually read it. Elaine and Tom believe this was the note found after Jaliek vanished.

Elaine, several of Jaliek's former foster parents, and his adoptive maternal grandparents have started a website publicizing Jaliek's disappearance. Elaine wrote she believed Kerr harmed Jaliek on the day he went missing, and caused his disappearance.

In January 2008, police named Kerr as a person of interest in Jaliek's disappearance. They stated they had video surveillance camera footage of Kerr driving his van around Greenwich after midnight on the night of Jaliek's disappearance, at a time Kerr says he was asleep. Cellular phone records also indicate Kerr took a different route to the house than he had said.

Investigators appealed for information on Kerr's whereabouts on November 1 and November 2. In February 2008, police conducted a search warrant on Kerr's father's home, where Jaliek was staying when he disappeared. They seized a computer to try to determine if the machine was used to write the the alleged goodbye letter, but couldn't prove or disprove the theory. Days after the search, Kerr and McDonald filed a lawsuit against the police department, alleging they'd been illegally detained and the search was improper.

Jaliek's adoptive maternal grandmother, Barbara Reeley, has been active in the search for him and filed for custody of him after his disappearance, but was denied. In July 2008, she was charged with burglarizing Kerr and McDonald's home. Reeley has pleaded not guilty.

Shortly after the burglary, police went to the home and removed a piece of clothing for testing. They stated Reeley had seen the clothing while she was inside; in a media interview, Reeley said it was the yellow fleece shirt Jaliek was said to have been wearing when he disappeared. Photographs of Reeley, Kerr and McDonald are posted with this case summary.

In a media interview, Reeley stated Kerr had anger management issues and had been going to counseling for them, and that McDonald had made him move out of the family home for brief periods twice in 2007 because of his aggressive behavior towards the children. Reeley said she witnessed one incident where Kerr became angry with Jaliek, dragged him outside and repeatedly dunked him in a nearby creek. She said McDonald made Kerr write a letter of apology to Jaliek for this and made him do the child's chores for a month.

Jaliek may be in the New York cities of Albany or Altamont. Authorities stated they have little evidence as to his fate and no one has been charged in connection with his case, but foul play is suspected in his disappearance.

Charley Project - Jaliek L. Rainwalker – The Charley Project


Jaliek last seen on November 1, 2007. He is Biracial. Jaliek is Black and White. He was last seen wearing blue jeans, a yellow fleece pull-over and black tennis shoes. He has a slight speech impediment. Jaliek pronounces the letter "r" like a "w."

NCMEC - Have you seen this child? Jaliek Rainwalker

Jaliek L. Rainwalker was last seen on November 1, 2007, at his residence in Greenwich, New York. He was last seen wearing blue jeans, a yellow fleece pull-over, a gray t-shirt with a dragon on the front, and black canvas high-top sneakers. He may use the nickname "Jay".

FBI - JALIEK L. RAINWALKER | Federal Bureau of Investigation

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MEDIA - JALIEK RAINWALKER: Missing from Greenwich, NY since 1 Nov 2007 - Age 12
 
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FACEBOOK - Justice for Jaliek Rainwalker


Hello friends
🙂
Today marks 5,000 days since Jaliek Rainwalker was last seen. Much has been done to try to locate him, so far without any success. Where could he have been over all this time? If he is no longer alive, then still his remains must be somewhere. People don't just vanish into nonexistence. Surely someone must know what happened to him.
If anyone has even a small clue that might help to find Jaliek or uncover what happened to him, please reach out and contact investigators. Any information can be reported to the Cambridge Greenwich Police Department, New York State Police, or to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Currently Jaliek's case is also being reviewed by the Cold Case Analysis Center at the College of Saint Rose, and they have also asked for anyone with information about Jaliek to contact them.
We will never give up on Jaliek. Today, please light a candle for Jaliek & let's keep him in our hearts. Let's all hope and pray for him to be found and for the truth to come to light.

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November 1st marks 14 years since the disappearance of 12-year-old Jaliek Rainwalker. The Washington County child’s case is considered cold, but Jaliek is one of many other missing people in the Capital Region.


Then there’s Jaliek Rainwalker. Jaliek was just 12 when he disappeared on November 1, 2007. New York State Police have said they suspect foul play.

His adoptive father Stephen Kerr remains a person of interest, but the case has yet to be prosecuted and there’s never been any arrest. Anya Tucker spoke with Jaliek’s grandmother and asked her what she thought of Ryan’s work.

“Oh, it’s beautiful,” she said. “The more feelers, thoughts, photos that are out there, there’s hope.”


jaliek-portrait.jpg
 
14 years since Jaliek Rainwalker's disappearance, hope remains
12-year-old Jaliek Rainwalker was last seen in November 2007 in Greenwich.

Despite all that time, his adoptive grandmother remains hopeful that this painful mystery will one day be solved.

There has been no sign of Jaliek in those 14 years. Several years ago, the case itself was reclassified as a probable homicide.

Back in 2017, Cambridge-Greenwich Police told CBS 6 News they had continued to look for possible leads, and that year a partial skull was found in Coxsackie, but it turned out not to be Jaliek's remains.

Also that year, police told us Jaliek's adoptive father was still a person of interest, but his attorney said then that was unfortunate because Jaliek's parents believed he would still come home someday.
 
State Police searching wooded area in Troy in connection to Jaliek Rainwalker cold case
After years of inactivity, the search was on Wednesday in the Jaliek Rainwalker missing person case.

Rainwalker's adoptive grandmother got the call early Wednesday morning saying State Police were putting together a search team after receiving what seemed like a good tip.

Barbara Reeley said from their vague description of where they were searching, she thought it was a place she herself had searched years ago.

The tip led Troopers to the area around the South Troy Dodgers baseball fields on Thompson Road.

BCI Captain Robert Appleton would not reveal any details about what the tip was or what, if anything, they found, just saying it is an active investigation into the disappearance nearly 15 years ago of the 12-year-old boy from Greenwich.

Investigators spent about five or six hours at the scene before winding up.

But for Barbara Reeley, the call--and the search--were a bolt from the blue in a case that had gone cold without any searches for the past five or six years.

Police: Tip into Jaliek Rainwalker disappearance prompts Troy search​

The disappearance of 12-year-old Jaliek Rainwalker from Washington County nearly 15 years ago has remained unsolved.

But State Police say a tip prompted officers to search a wooded area near the South Troy Dodgers baseball fields on Wednesday.

Barbara Reeley, his adoptive grandmother, said she received a phone call on Wednesday from State Police alerting her to the search of the heavily wooded area off Springwood Manor near the fields after they said they received a lead.

“They got a tip and they said it was a good tip,” Reeley said. “I don’t know any other details.”

The new lead, she said, gives her hope.

“This morning, I was a total wreck. It’s so sad to think if they find Jaliek, it’ll be skeletal remains,” Reeley said. “But it’s better to find remains than nothing and to know where he is. And then we can have closure and we can at least be able to rest.”
 
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Jaliek was last seen at a home belonging to his adoptive father's parents in the 10 block of Hill Street in Greenwich, New York on November 1, 2007. His adoptive father, Stephen Burrell Kerr, spent the night alone in the house with him.

Jaliek disappeared during the night and has never been heard from again. Kerr says he woke up the next morning and, at 7:30 a.m., found a note Jaliek left behind. It read: "Dear everybody, I'm sorry for everything. I won't be a bother anymore. Goodbye, Jaliek." Kerr reported his son missing at 8:57 a.m. He is not believed to have been carrying any cash or credit cards when he went missing.

Jaliek had been living with his adoptive parents, Kerr and his wife Jocelyn A. McDonald, for five years by 2007. He was born addicted to crack cocaine and spent his early childhood in six different foster homes. His parents stated Jaliek had violent temper tantrums and his four siblings were afraid of him.

Jaliek's former foster parents, Jodi and Larry Schoen, who cared for him for four years, confirmed this, stating his outbursts could last up to an hour. They described Jaliek as a very intelligent but very troubled child. The Schoens had originally planned to adopt him, but after he attacked their daughter when he was seven, they decided he could no longer stay in their home. He then went to live with Kerr and McDonald, who have three biological sons and one adopted daughter. The couple's children ranged in age from eight to fourteen at the time of Jaliek's disappearance.

Jaliek's adoptive family led a non-traditional lifestyle at the time of his disappearance: their home in rural Washington County, New York had no running water, the toilets are outhouses, its only electricity comes from a generator that runs for several hours during the day, and everyone slept in one room. The family stated they lived this way because it was better for the environment.

A photo of the Washington County house is posted with this case summary. Jaliek's family still owns the home, but in 2008 they moved to West Rupert, Vermont.

Kerr and McDonald stated Jaliek was both suicidal and homicidal at the time of his disappearance, but he wasn't taking any psychiatric drugs or receiving any therapy for his mental conditions. On October 23, a little over a week prior to Jaliek's disappearance, Kerr called a crisis hotline and said his son was unmanageable.

Kerr stated Jaliek had threatened a small child in his homeschool group and McDonald was afraid of him and no longer wanted him at home. Kerr said he and his wife wanted to reverse the adoption. The crisis worker said it was not possible to reverse the adoption and suggested respite care instead.

Jaliek was sent to the home of Elaine and Tom Person, licensed foster parents who had provided respite care for him in the past. They kept him until November 1, then gave him back to Kerr, who planned to send him to another respite home the next day. That was the day Jaliek was reported missing.

An extensive search of the area turned up no indication of Jaliek's whereabouts. Within a few days police announced they thought he could have met with foul play, since it is unlikely that a child of that age could survive on his own. The possibilities that Jaliek ran away or committed suicide have not been ruled out, however.

McDonald took a polygraph in his case, but Kerr refused to take one. Both parents maintain their innocence in his case and stated they believed their son simply ran away. They suggested he might be living with an African-American family or gang, as Jaliek had always considered himself black rather than biracial and had wanted to live with other African-Americans.

The Persons said the farewell note Jaliek supposedly left on the night he vanished was not a goodbye note, but rather a letter he was assigned to write by his father for homework. Kerr allegedly told his son to write a note apologizing to the people he had harmed, and Tom saw him writing it, although he didn't actually read it. Elaine and Tom believe this was the note found after Jaliek vanished.

Elaine, several of Jaliek's former foster parents, and his adoptive maternal grandparents have started a website publicizing Jaliek's disappearance. Elaine wrote she believed Kerr harmed Jaliek on the day he went missing, and caused his disappearance.

In January 2008, police named Kerr as a person of interest in Jaliek's disappearance. They stated they had video surveillance camera footage of Kerr driving his van around Greenwich after midnight on the night of Jaliek's disappearance, at a time Kerr says he was asleep. Cellular phone records also indicate Kerr took a different route to the house than he had said.

Investigators appealed for information on Kerr's whereabouts on November 1 and November 2. In February 2008, police conducted a search warrant on Kerr's father's home, where Jaliek was staying when he disappeared. They seized a computer to try to determine if the machine was used to write the the alleged goodbye letter, but couldn't prove or disprove the theory. Days after the search, Kerr and McDonald filed a lawsuit against the police department, alleging they'd been illegally detained and the search was improper.

Jaliek's adoptive maternal grandmother, Barbara Reeley, has been active in the search for him and filed for custody of him after his disappearance, but was denied. In July 2008, she was charged with burglarizing Kerr and McDonald's home. Reeley has pleaded not guilty.

Shortly after the burglary, police went to the home and removed a piece of clothing for testing. They stated Reeley had seen the clothing while she was inside; in a media interview, Reeley said it was the yellow fleece shirt Jaliek was said to have been wearing when he disappeared. Photographs of Reeley, Kerr and McDonald are posted with this case summary.

In a media interview, Reeley stated Kerr had anger management issues and had been going to counseling for them, and that McDonald had made him move out of the family home for brief periods twice in 2007 because of his aggressive behavior towards the children. Reeley said she witnessed one incident where Kerr became angry with Jaliek, dragged him outside and repeatedly dunked him in a nearby creek. She said McDonald made Kerr write a letter of apology to Jaliek for this and made him do the child's chores for a month.

Jaliek may be in the New York cities of Albany or Altamont. Authorities stated they have little evidence as to his fate and no one has been charged in connection with his case, but foul play is suspected in his disappearance.

Charley Project - Jaliek L. Rainwalker – The Charley Project


Jaliek last seen on November 1, 2007. He is Biracial. Jaliek is Black and White. He was last seen wearing blue jeans, a yellow fleece pull-over and black tennis shoes. He has a slight speech impediment. Jaliek pronounces the letter "r" like a "w."

NCMEC - Have you seen this child? Jaliek Rainwalker

Jaliek L. Rainwalker was last seen on November 1, 2007, at his residence in Greenwich, New York. He was last seen wearing blue jeans, a yellow fleece pull-over, a gray t-shirt with a dragon on the front, and black canvas high-top sneakers. He may use the nickname "Jay".

FBI - JALIEK L. RAINWALKER | Federal Bureau of Investigation

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MEDIA - JALIEK RAINWALKER: Missing from Greenwich, NY since 1 Nov 2007 - Age 12
Poor kid. Born addicted and thanks to his mother had the long term hallmarks. A life obviously in turmoil and then missing since 2007. I could see running away, As I am sure he knew how to live on the streets, But didn't take credit cards or cash.
 

15 years later: No sign of Jaliek Rainwalker​

It’s been almost 15 years since Jaliek Rainwalker disappeared – and the desire for justice in his case is as strong as it was in 2007.

He was 12 years old when he was reported missing from Greenwich by his adoptive father.

Police have tracked thousands of leads and done dozens of searches, including one in Troy earlier this summer.

Still, no one has been prosecuted for what has been labeled by police as a likely homicide.

Rainwalker’s adoptive father, Stephen Kerr, has been the only person of interest since early in the investigation.
 
15 years since Jaliek Rainwalker disappeared, with no new leads
There has been no sign of Jaliek in the last 15 years. Several years ago, the case itself was reclassified as a probable homicide.

Nov. 1 marks 15 years since Jaliek Rainwalker’s disappearance​

November 1 marked 15 years since Jaliek Rainwalker, 12, of Washington County was last seen alive.

Jaliek was reported missing by his adoptive father, Stephen Kerr, back on November 1, 2007. Police searched on land, in water and by air. They continue to follow leads and just this summer, their search took them to fields in Troy, but found nothing that led them to Jaliek.
 
Was the ground underneath the toilet holes in the outhouses ever excavated? Are there any lakes or rivers along tbe unusual route that was driven ?
 
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‘Rainwalker: The Lost Boy’ explores the life, disappearance and ongoing search for Jaliek Rainwalker​

Jaliek Rainwalker was reported missing from a rural village in upstate New York on Nov. 2, 2007, and hasn’t been seen since. It remains a high-profile cold case and the mystery has attracted national attention. Despite that public interest and the ongoing efforts of law enforcement, Jaliek’s fate remains unknown.

Listen to the trailer.

Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or where you listen to podcasts. Episodes will be released on Tuesdays.
 

Wendy Liberatore
July 4, 2023
Updated: July 4, 2023 8:48 a.m.

GREENWICH — More than 15 years ago, 12-year-old Jaliek Rainwalker vanished without a clue as to what happened to him.

His adoptive parents said he ran away, but police deemed his disappearance a probable homicide and launched one of the largest searches ever seen in New York.

Still, the mystery has never been solved and those responsible never brought to justice. That makes it especially painful for family and friends who knew and loved Jaliek — a boy described as a light despite struggling after being taken from his mother at birth and living in foster homes before being adopted.

That’s why the Justice for Jaliek Rainwalker Facebook group, an assembly of more than 5,000 people around the globe, decided to raise about $2,000 to purchase a memorial bench for the boy in the rural Washington County community where he lived. Installed in Gannon Park, a playground across the street from the Greenwich elementary school, the bench provides a joyful and peaceful setting for those who want to remember the child whose whereabouts are not known.

“It means a lot,” said Jessica VonGuinness, one of the group’s founders. “For a child, not to have a place of remembrance, a grave site, a memorial, a ceremony, that just doesn’t sit right for me. … Having a place was really important. That was somebody’s child, somebody’s sibling.”

The black metal bench features a brass plate that reads “In Memory of/Jaliek Boyd Rainwalker/ Never Forgotten Always Loved.” It includes his birth name, Boyd, as a nod to his birth mother, Pamela Boyd, along with the last name his adoptive parents gave him.

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So I went back and read post 1 of this thread. Wow. Foster, then adoptive parents. And they were approved??

Sounds pretty similar to the West case which got a successful conviction, what's stopping LE with going for this one??!!! Of course ages and various things are different but it's the same dam*ed old story!
 
'Never forgotten. Always loved:' Jaliek Rainwalker remembered on his birthday
We've hit an emotional date for those connected to a Capital Region cold case. August 2nd is Jaliek Rainwalker's birthday. He was last seen November 1st 2007 in Greenwich. At the time of his disappearance, he was just 12 years old. He would be turning 28 this year.

The investigation started as a missing persons case and has since been reclassified to a probable homicide. No confirmed remains have ever been found and no one has ever faced charges in connection to Jaliek's disappearance.

Community members impacted by this case recently came together to raise funding to set up a bench to honor Jaliek in Greenwich's Gannon Park. The plaque on it reads, "In memory of Jaliek Boyd Rainwalker. Never Forgotten. Always Loved."
 
Where is Jaliek Rainwalker?
Jaliek Rainwalker was 12 years-old when he disappeared on Nov. 1, 2007.

He was last seen with his adoptive father Stephen Kerr, who initially claimed the pre-teen ran away from the Kerr family’s vacant Greenwich home.

Despite countless leads, Jaliek has never been found, something that haunts his adoptive grandmother Barbara Reeley everyday.

Reeley has since moved to Florida, but lived 40 miles away from her daughter Jocelyn but saw her grandchildren several times a week and held ‘granny camp’ for two weeks in the summer at her house.

Kerr was named a person of interest by police in 2017, but no arrests in the boy’s disappearance have ever been made.

It was July 2002, when Jaliek came to Stephen Kerr and Jocelyn MacDonald joining their three biological sons and an adoptive daughter. The couple, Jaliek’s 7th set of foster parents, moved to adopt him just two years later.

Things were good in the Kerr/MacDonald house, until they weren’t anymore- according to Barbara Reeley- MacDonald’s mother.

Barbara recalls a time she pulled up to the home and heard yelling from outside. She says she walked in to see Jaliek flailing his arms around, but he ran to her and just hugged her. She explained that Jaliek would become extremely frustrated if he couldn’t do something such as button a shirt or complete a homework assignment.

A little over a month before Jaliek’s disappearance the family attempted to revoke or reverse the adoption, Barbara citing Jaliek’s size as he approached adolescence and his existing emotional conditions- including Reactive attachment disorder or RAD.

The courts explained that the complicated process should be a last resort, instead suggesting the family seek out respite care for Jaliek.

That’s where he was, with his former foster mother, Elaine Persons, when Stephen picked him up Nov. 2. They were last seen at the Latham Red Robin location.

Dr. Tina Lane, who runs the Criminal Investigation Resource Center at Russell Sage, is from Washington County and knows a whole community still searching for the young boy.

Though suspicions have surrounded the boy’s adoptive father for years, police are hesitant to try the case without a body, according to retired State Police Investigator, Tom Aiken.

Investigator Aiken says a special prosecutor with experience in cases with no body needs to be brought in in order to “do it right.”

Both Barbara and investigator Aiken shared the findings from the National Center for Missing and Exploited children in Washington D.C.

Aiken says after 16 and a half years, time is now their enemy. Saying there is nothing to lose by taking a shot at it now.

Jaliek’s grandmother says former Post-Star reporter Don Lehman is the expert on the case.

Lehman remembers the intense searches in the weeks following Jaliek’s disappearance and an early encounter with the person of interest himself- Stephen Kerr.

Barbara Reeley has never given up searching for Jaliek, to no end, even at the cost of losing contact with her daughter and her biological grandchildren.

She urges ANYONE with information to reach out to State Police or Greenwich Police.

 

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