NJ JASHYAH MOORE: Missing from East Orange, NJ - 14 Oct 2021 - Age 14 *Found Safe*

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Missing: Teen Girl Vanishes Before Testifying Against Cop Stepdad in Domestic Violence Case [Report]​

A 14-year-old is still missing two weeks after she was last seen at a New Jersey deli, according to reports.

WPIX reported that JaShyah Moore went to two markets in East Orange on October 14 — Poppie’s and U.S. Food Market. Her mother said her daughter first went to U.S. Market that morning to purchase paper towels and juice, but she came back home because she lost the card to purchase the items.

Moore’s mother said she instructed her daughter to go back and retrace her steps. She became concerned when the teen did not return within the hour, as the deli was located a block from their home.

Moore’s mother searched for her daughter and reported her missing before dark. The teen does not own a cell phone, WPIX reported.

According to the news outlet, Moore’s family was originally unaware she had gone to Poppie’s on October 14. Police said they obtained surveillance footage showing her at that market the day she vanished.

A local salon owner reportedly told Moore’s mother that the teen appeared sad the morning of her disappearance. Further, workers at U.S. Market revealed to WPIX that a male was with Moore and had paid for her items — with one of the employees noting the male was wearing a mask.

Moore’s aunt said the teen’s estranged stepfather is an East Orange police officer who is facing an assault charge for an incident last year in Irvington. The aunt suggested the victim in this case was her niece, but it is unclear whether that was Moore.

“I saw him punch my niece twice in the face,” the aunt told WPIX. “And this guy’s in his 30s. And he’s really tall and he’s really big.”

Moore’s mother said she received a letter that the case was going to a grand jury.

The aunt told WPIX, “I find it extremely convenient and coincidental that my niece goes missing a couple weeks later.”

However, Essex County prosecutors told WPIX that they do not believe Moore’s disappearance is connected to the criminal case.

“The missing person’s case is being handled by municipal authorities in East Orange,” wrote Katherine Carter, the prosecutor’s office’s public information officer. “At this point, the domestic violence assault and the status of the missing person do not appear to be related; however, it is being monitored by law enforcement."





MEDIA - JASHYAH MOORE: Missing from East Orange, NJ since 14 Oct 2021 - Age 14
 
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‘Can’t imagine what she’s going through’: JaShyah Moore’s mom cries; $10K reward posted for missing NJ teen​

The mother of missing 14-year-old, JaShyah Moore, was wracked with emotion at an East Orange press conference, when city officials announced a $10,000 reward has been posted for information leading to the girl’s whereabouts.

JaShyah Moore disappeared three weeks ago Thursday, after leaving her home for a trip to the deli on nearby Central Avenue.

“I cannot imagine what she’s going through,” Moore’s mother, Jamie, sobbed, as she was surrounded by East Orange Police Chief Phyllis Bindi, along with the New Jersey FBI Director and a representative from the State Police.

PIX11 News was first to tell the story of the 14-year-old from a close-knit family, a girl who loved to play video games, especially “PlayStation.”


A clerk at U.S. Food Market on Central Avenue told PIX11 News a man had paid for the girl’s purchases there, a person wearing a baseball cap and face mask who was about 30 years old.

The store provided surveillance video to police.

On Thursday, Police Chief Phyllis Bindi told reporters, “The male on the video seen with JaShyah that day has been fully cooperative–given full cooperation in this investigation.”
 

Search For 14-Year-Old Jashyah Moore Leads Investigators To Pond Inside New Jersey Park: ‘No Stone Unturned’​

Authorities in the search for 14-year-old Jashyah Moore said Saturday crews turned their attention to a body of water at a park in Orange, New Jersey.

Teams from multiple municipalities spent part of Saturday utilizing sonar technology at a pond inside Monte Irvin Park.

The Essex County prosecutor and sheriff told CBS2’s Lisa Rozner they’re leaving no stone unturned in the search for Jashyah, who was last seen on Oct. 14 at Poppie’s Deli on Central Avenue in East Orange.

“We don’t even know if she actually entered the park or not. We know she used to come here once in a while, and the deli that she went to was only about three blocks away from here,” Essex County Sheriff Armando Fontoura said.

The sheriff says another reason they searched the body of water is because people have been found there in the past.

Saturday’s search yielded no sign of Jashyah or any of her belongings.


JaShyah Moore case: NJ investigators search pond for missing teen; reward raised to $15,000 after donation​

Investigators used sonar to search a pond as they looked for possible leads in the disappearance of a 14-year-old New Jersey girl.

JaShyah Moore vanished on Oct. 14 after she went out to buy juice and paper towels at a nearby deli. The reward for information in her case was raised to $15,000 Saturday after a local businessman donated $5,000.

“We don’t want to leave any stone unturned,” Essex County undersheriff Amir Jones said. “We know she’s been in the park before; Poppy’s Deli is about five blocks from here, so we want to check this park thoroughly.”

Jones said they have been getting leads and people have called in tips.

“We’re confident that we’re going to bring her home safely to her family,” he said.

At this point, investigators have they do not believe there is any foul play connected to the teen’s disappearance, but they need the public’s help.

“Keeping this in the public forefront is very important. This reminds us that the lives of a little Black and brown girls are just as important as everybody else’s lives,” acting Essex County Prosecutor Theodore Stevens said.

Jamie Moore, the teen’s mother, issued an emotional plea for help on Friday.

“If anybody knows anything, please, please come forward,” Moore’s mother begged. “My baby’s going to high school. She’s a good girl.”
 

FBI asks JaShyah Moore’s mom for polygraph, takes DNA swab​

The mother of 14-year-old JaShyah Moore, the East Orange, New Jersey girl who vanished nearly four weeks ago, was asked to take a polygraph test by the FBI, according to the mom herself.

Jamie Moore told PIX11 News Monday night she was questioned for two hours by FBI agents at the East Orange Police Department, who then asked her to take a polygraph Tuesday morning at Newark’s FBI headquarters.

“They swabbed my mouth and took my DNA,” she said.

The mother was upset about what happened during the time she was at the police station, when East Orange cops returned to the apartment where she was staying on Amherst Street.

“While I was talking to the FBI, they went to my house and took my iPhone, which was deactivated,” the mother told PIX11 News Monday.

Jamie Moore said the phone contained important photos and videos related to a domestic violence case against her estranged husband, an East Orange police officer.

The family’s toothbrushes were also retrieved.

Jamie Moore, her daughter, JaShyah, and her 3-year-old son, Jaiden, had been staying with a close friend after last year’s domestic violence incident in Irvington.

Jamie Moore said her daughter had gone to the local deli early on the morning of Oct. 14 to buy juice and paper towels.

When the teen returned home, the mother said JaShyah had lost the family’s debit card, so she asked her daughter to retrace her steps.

JaShyah Moore never came home after that.

Jamie Moore said she was upset to see an East Orange officer walking out of the house with her iPhone Monday afternoon.

“I didn’t sign a consent,” Moore said. “I feel my rights were violated. These people, they treat me mean.”

PIX11 News photographer Bill Muller was at the Moore apartment Tuesday morning when four FBI agents and two police officers showed up to question the man who was letting the family stay there in recent months.
 

‘Jashyah Is One Of Our Own:’ East Orange Mayor Pleads For Community’s Help To Find Missing Teen Jashyah Moore​

He also said Moore’s family will hold a search party at 5 p.m. on the corner of Amherst Street and Central Avenue, and there will be an interfaith prayer vigil at 5:30 p.m. Friday in front of City Hall, CBS2’s Christina Fan reported.

“Jashyah is one of our own. She is only 14 years old, and we know she needs our help,” Green said. “We’re asking this community, as we have been asking from day one, to help us in locating this young lady.”

“We are pleading with anyone within earshot: If you see Jashyah, if you hear or overhear someone talking about Jashyah, please contact us on all the tip numbers provided on our missing persons posters,” said East Orange Police Chief Phyllis Bindi.

“When you talking about a kid, I have daughters, I have a granddaughter, I have nieces and nephews. If you take this kid, you taking my kid. That’s community,” crisis interventionist Hassans Kirby said.

Authorities said video showed an older man pay for Moore at the deli, but he was identified and spoke to investigators. Police have also spoken to the teenager’s stepfather, a former East Orange cop, who is involved in a domestic violence case against her mother.

Police said there is no foul play suspected and both individuals are cooperating.

Anyone with information about her is asked to call police at 877-847-7432 or 973-266-5041. Tips can be made anonymously.
 

Investigators increase reward in search for Jashyah Moore, New Jersey girl missing for almost a month: "We know she needs our help"​

Investigators are offering an increased reward in the search for missing 14-year-old Jashyah Moore in East Orange, New Jersey. Mayor Ted Green said Tuesday a local business owner made a donation to bring the reward to $15,000, CBS New York reported.

"Jashyah is one of our own. She is only 14 years old, and we know she needs our help," Green said. "We're asking this community, as we have been asking from day one, to help us in locating this young lady."
 

'Something happened to my daughter.' East Orange mother pleads for info on missing 14-year-old Jashyah Moore​

The mother of a 14-year-old girl who went missing in East Orange last month is contradicting what authorities are saying about her daughter.

“My baby is not dead,” says Jamie Moore. “I’m not going to accept that.”

Jashyah Moore went missing on Oct. 14. The East Orange Police Department continues to say that no foul play is suspected. But her mother Jaime Moore rejects this notion, and weeks of sadness have now turned into anger.

“It’s been 26 days, my baby should be home,” she says.


"Everything is still under investigation and that is really all we can speak about right now," says Chief Phyllis Bindi.

No officials were seen Tuesday night while the community hit the streets to look for Jashyah Moore .

The Moore family says Jashyah Moore was set to speak to authorities about a domestic violence case against her stepfather, who was an East Orange police officer. The East Orange police chief mostly dodged a question about that situation, only saying that the stepfather is cooperating. News 12 New Jersey has learned he was fired last month.
 

Essex County prosecutor takes lead in Jashyah Moore investigation, announces social media blitz​

The Essex County Prosecutor's Office has taken the lead in the investigation into the disappearance of 14-year-old Jashyah Moore.

Acting Essex County Prosecutor Theodore N. Stephens II said Wednesday that his office had superseded the investigation and would now be the lead agency.

Stephens said more than 50 members of law enforcement were in Orange and East Orange Wednesday retracing Moore's steps and following up on old and new leads.
 

Where's Jashyah? Reward Increases as Missing Girl's Mom Vows to Find Her or Die Trying​

Prosecutors in New Jersey's Essex County who newly took over the investigation into the disappearance of 14-year-old Jashyah Moore declined Wednesday to answer certain questions about her case but said, "Everything is on the table."

Acting Essex County Prosecutor Theodore Stephens III made the comment when asked whether investigators believed if the East Orange girl had been kidnapped or run away. Moore, a high school freshman, vanished Oct. 14 after heading out to pick up some groceries from a local deli, officials have said.

Fifty investigators have fanned out across the neighborhood retracing the missing girl's steps, going through the family's cellphone records, talking to potential witnesses and looking for video evidence that may explain what happened. Yet demonstrators who gathered near that deli this week say they need to do more.

Moore's mother, Jamie Moore, held steadfast to her commitment to find her daughter during a Tuesday night search party where, armed with flashlights and flyers, the desperate mother said aloud to her missing child, "I love you. I love you. If you see this, I'm looking for you, if I gotta die myself to find you."

Moore says she hasn't been able to sleep or eat well in weeks -- and though investigators have said she reported her daughter as a possible runaway late the night she disappeared, the mother now insists that likely wasn't the case.

"Jashyah is a smart girl, she would not stay out, she would not go out or go off with anyone. I feel like somebody has her against her will. That's why she hasn't called me," she said -- and to that potential individual, added, "You don't gotta tell us who you are, just don't hurt my baby. Drop her off, drop her off at the police station."


The reward for information that helps lead investigators to find Jashyah increased to $20,000 on Wednesday, as anonymous concerned business owners contributed to the amount, officials said.
 

Missing NJ teen’s ‘father figure’ says he helped her search for lost debit card before mom told her to look again​

A New Jersey man who claims he’s the father of missing 14-year-old JaShyah Moore posted on Facebook Thursday that he tried to help her find a missing debit card before the girl’s mother sent her out again to search for it.

“I appreciate the media reporting my daughter missing but they got it twisted,” Omar Muze wrote on Facebook. “I am not a family friend and I am not the older man, I am her father.”

When PIX11 News reached JaShyah’s mother, Jamie, she denied Muze is the biological dad but said he’s been a “father figure” to the teen.

“He is not her biological father, but he has been there for the role,” she said.

The dispute over the girl’s paternity added a new twist to a mystery that’s grown more puzzling since the girl vanished on Oct. 14 in East Orange.

Jamie Moore had initially described Muze as a close family friend during her first interview with PIX11 News about the missing girl on Oct. 27. She later said she had dated him a long time ago.

Jamie Moore said Muze let her, JaShyah, and her small son stay at the house on Amherst Street after a domestic violence incident in Irvington last year involving the little boy’s biological father, who’s an East Orange cop.

After PIX11 News secured surveillance footage that showed the 14-year-old in a deli on the morning of Oct. 14, the day she disappeared, Muze apparently felt compelled to clear up the events that happened before the girl vanished. Muze made reference to the man in the deli that paid for the teen’s juice drinks, shortly after 8 a.m. on Oct. 14.

“The guy that paid for my daughter’s groceries was not the last person that saw her,” Muze said. “I ran into her on Central Avenue looking for the card and walked her back home, told her mother we could not find the card, her mother sent her back out there to look again and that’s the last time we saw her.”
 
Something isn't making sense here. And is it the daughter's groceries or the mother's? Was it the mother's card? And is he her father or not? And so the last guy paying for her groceries was not the last to see her. And why did he pay for her groceries and who was he? Did she take the groceries home and then go back and look for the card if mom was upset?

No theory at all here, there just aren't solid facts to go by and the ones there are are confusing at best.
 
Thank God she is safe because she has been gone for some time.

If an adult did help or take her, and has no custodial right, the mother is right in that at her age, the person could be charged. She has been gone some time as well and someone I imagine was helping her hide, she is only 14...
 
Investigators now say the New Jersey teen ran away, raising new questions about why she left home.

During a press conference Friday, the prosecutor’s office said Moore did not want to be found and even went as far as cutting her hair to go undetected.

Authorities said a Good Samaritan recognized her Thursday and called 911. She was located around 7 p.m. near the corner of West 111th Street and Lenox Avenue in Harlem.

A source told CBS2 when the NYPD first approached Moore, she denied her identity but later confirmed who she was. So far, no charges have been filed in the case.

“It appears that Jashyah was a runaway,” acting Essex County Prosecutor Ted Stephens told reporters Friday.

Investigators believe she was in several locations over the past few weeks but ended up staying in a shelter in Brooklyn.

Moore has not yet been reunited with her mother, who first has to meet with police.
 
Investigators now say the New Jersey teen ran away, raising new questions about why she left home.

During a press conference Friday, the prosecutor’s office said Moore did not want to be found and even went as far as cutting her hair to go undetected.

Authorities said a Good Samaritan recognized her Thursday and called 911. She was located around 7 p.m. near the corner of West 111th Street and Lenox Avenue in Harlem.

A source told CBS2 when the NYPD first approached Moore, she denied her identity but later confirmed who she was. So far, no charges have been filed in the case.

“It appears that Jashyah was a runaway,” acting Essex County Prosecutor Ted Stephens told reporters Friday.

Investigators believe she was in several locations over the past few weeks but ended up staying in a shelter in Brooklyn.

Moore has not yet been reunited with her mother, who first has to meet with police.
was she that upset about the missing card? or does she actually still have it and used "losing" it as a cover?...so many questions
 
I get the sense that the mother was not a happy camper over the loss of the card and probably got after her big time about it and to go find it. The man perhaps felt the girl did not deserve to be in quite the amount of heck or trouble and felt it harsh and sympathized and went to help her look for the card...? Not unusual in "families" and it creates a dynamic where the mom then perhaps was not happy with the guy either then and felt undermined which explains the kind of odd different stories of what one said versus the other...?

I don't know but then the girl thinks I'll show her or doesn't want to go home because she is in trouble and takes off and teenagers at that age, NOT uncommon and when the two adults don't back each other up, they also play that...

Or.... It could be far more than that and there is abuse in the home OR this girl could have the card, be telling a story, has taken off before, has a boyfriend or group of friends she runs to, or runs the streets, or who knows, etc... Just speculating and throwing out possibilities that could be in any similar situation, not specific to them even.

GLAD to hear another is located and safe though and I am sure the rest will be looked into whether she goes home or not, LE is not going to be letting her live at 14 on her own.

Question though: Can a 14 year old check into a shelter easily without ID etc. when not at least 18 typically?
 
I sure hope that this is true and not a teen making up a story to cover their azz, not that I hope she actually did this to her daughter. I just know how teens can be. I had an overly dramatic one that would lie her head off to get out of trouble and blame everybody she could for her own actions.

 
I sure hope that this is true and not a teen making up a story to cover their azz, not that I hope she actually did this to her daughter. I just know how teens can be. I had an overly dramatic one that would lie her head off to get out of trouble and blame everybody she could for her own actions.

That's why I alluded also to the fact she may have intended to worry, pay back or play one "parent" against another as well, they use that at that age quite often, in fact teens use any chink they see between parents, guilt trips, threats, temper tantrums, etc. quite often. She may have intentionally caused the mother trouble or hoped to get her in trouble...

I hope LE is making sure what is true. If the mother is abusive and neglectful, then I hope she gets what is deserved but I agree, the teen may well be acting out and playing games as well and none of it true.

She certainly managed to stay away along time and manage well apparently for her age... And someone did pay for her groceries that day and it was not a parent or so it seems...
 

The criminal complaint against 40-year-old Jamie Moore, filed Friday in Essex County Court, describes several instances of alleged abuse against the young girl, including "stabbing the victim to her shoulder causing a laceration that is still visible, spraying bleach in her eyes, pulling her braids out" and striking her with several objects, including a frying pan.

According to the complaint, Moore also allegedly struck her daughter with her hands and put her knees on her neck and back, "causing her to struggle to breathe."

Moore is also accused of "educational neglect." Officials stated in the criminal complaint that she forced the 14-year-old to not attend virtual learning classes during the 2020/2021 school year and did not enroll her in the 2021/2022 school session.
 

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