MO JAYDEN ROBKER: Missing from Kansas City, MO - 2 February 2023 - Age 13 *Found Deceased*

90



By: David Medina
Posted at 2:56 PM, Feb 24, 2023

and last updated 4:29 PM, Feb 24, 2023

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Community members will soon come together for a prayer and to canvas for a Kansas City, Missouri, child who's been missing since Feb. 2, 2023.

Jayden Robker, 13, was last seen on that day leaving his home on a skateboard near NW Plaza Drive and NW Plaza Avenue.

Robker's family believes he was riding east on NW Englewood Road at around 3:30 p.m.

Robker's parents released a statement on Feb. 10 pleading for information that could help bring their child home.

Jay, mom and dad love and miss you very much. We are very concerned for your safety and want you home. If you feel like you are in trouble, please try and let someone know. To Jay's friends and anyone who may know anything, we encourage you to contact the Kansas City Police Department or the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, with any information you may have. Jay, this is mom...I just want you home and I want to know that you are safe. I've always told you that I will move mountains for you and I always will. Your brother and sisters miss you so much, we love you.
Heather and Eric Robker

Robker's parents told KSHB 41 they're planning the canvas in conjunction with the AdHoc Group Against Crime.

Before the canvas, the family will host a 13-hour prayer next weekend on Saturday, March 4, 2023.


MEDIA - JAYDEN ROBKER: Missing from Kansas City, MO - 2 February 2023 - Age 13
 
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Every jail seems to have that issue. I would be more suspect of the ones that don't. This means it was caught that time.
Caught is good no doubt but the fact it gets through at all shows there are problems. He77 nowadays let them all visit virtually. Then if something gets through you know it is a guard, etc.
 

New documents shed light on 13-year-old Jayden Robker's disappearance, death earlier this year in Gladstone​

New documents obtained by KSHB 41 News from the Missouri Department of Social Services (DSS) shed light on events leading up to the disappearance and death of 13-year-old Jayden Robker earlier this year in Gladstone, Missouri.

The document details multiple instances of Jayden running away, him alleging abuse by his mother's partner and another child in Jayden's home reporting abuse by their father.

Jayden went missing on Feb. 2 and on March 10 was found dead in a pond near where he was last seen in Gladstone, Missouri.

The first incident — which is not dated — shows no case was opened after Jayden ran away from home and alleged his mother's partner was abusing him.

As a result, DSS placed Jayden on a safety plan under the care of his grandmother and sent a packet of counseling resources to Jayden's mother, Heather Robker. At the end of this incident, DSS says Jayden remained with his grandmother.

The second incident listed on the report — which is also not dated and is identified as an assessment — indicates Jayden again ran away from home and reported the same abuse.

Jayden was placed in the care of his uncle, Derek Robker. While staying with his uncle, Jayden refused to go home because of the abuse and out of fear of "being removed from school," according to the document.

"Jayden was crying and begging to not go back there," Jayden's aunt, Susan Deedon, told KSHB 41. "It killed my brother, and now he lives with the guilt of Jayden being gone."

While no case was opened based on this incident, DSS tried to have Heather Robker sign a power of attorney, allowing Jayden to stay with his uncle, but she refused. Both Heather Robker and her partner were unwilling to cooperate with DSS, with Heather Robker refusing services, according to the document.

Jayden remained with his uncle at the end of this incident.

The third and final incident on the report — which is not dated and is listed as an investigation — details alleged abuse of another child within Jayden's home.

The child made reports of emotional and physical abuse by their father. The child also made threats to harm themself.

According to the document, DSS tried to make face-to-face contact with all children — a total of five — living in the house. The father — whose relationship to Jayden and his mother is not clear, but is the biological father to three of the five children — would not allow DSS to make contact with the children, per the document.

KSHB 41 News is following up with DSS to confirm whether or not a case was opened in regard to this incident.

"I was astonished a parent can refuse services, refuse them to allow them to interview the children," Deedon said.

DSS later found that three of the five children in the home were living with the father's mother.

Of the two remaining children in the home, one of them — who is not directly identified in the report — was missing, per DSS. Heather Robker told officials the child had run away, but DSS was given varying stories about the status of the child, per the report.

The same child — believed to be Jayden — was later found deceased in a pond, about one mile away from where Jayden was last seen on Feb. 2 near Northwest Plaza Drive and Northwest Plaza Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri.

"Heather absolutely neglected him and let him down first, but I feel like the system let him down second," Deedon said. "It's there in place to protect kids, is it not?"

Jayden's body was found on March 10. Initial autopsy results did not indicate any signs of foul play, according to Gladstone police.

The DSS report indicates Jayden's cause of death remains undetermined.
 

New documents shed light on 13-year-old Jayden Robker's disappearance, death earlier this year in Gladstone​

New documents obtained by KSHB 41 News from the Missouri Department of Social Services (DSS) shed light on events leading up to the disappearance and death of 13-year-old Jayden Robker earlier this year in Gladstone, Missouri.

The document details multiple instances of Jayden running away, him alleging abuse by his mother's partner and another child in Jayden's home reporting abuse by their father.

Jayden went missing on Feb. 2 and on March 10 was found dead in a pond near where he was last seen in Gladstone, Missouri.

The first incident — which is not dated — shows no case was opened after Jayden ran away from home and alleged his mother's partner was abusing him.

As a result, DSS placed Jayden on a safety plan under the care of his grandmother and sent a packet of counseling resources to Jayden's mother, Heather Robker. At the end of this incident, DSS says Jayden remained with his grandmother.

The second incident listed on the report — which is also not dated and is identified as an assessment — indicates Jayden again ran away from home and reported the same abuse.

Jayden was placed in the care of his uncle, Derek Robker. While staying with his uncle, Jayden refused to go home because of the abuse and out of fear of "being removed from school," according to the document.

"Jayden was crying and begging to not go back there," Jayden's aunt, Susan Deedon, told KSHB 41. "It killed my brother, and now he lives with the guilt of Jayden being gone."

While no case was opened based on this incident, DSS tried to have Heather Robker sign a power of attorney, allowing Jayden to stay with his uncle, but she refused. Both Heather Robker and her partner were unwilling to cooperate with DSS, with Heather Robker refusing services, according to the document.

Jayden remained with his uncle at the end of this incident.

The third and final incident on the report — which is not dated and is listed as an investigation — details alleged abuse of another child within Jayden's home.

The child made reports of emotional and physical abuse by their father. The child also made threats to harm themself.

According to the document, DSS tried to make face-to-face contact with all children — a total of five — living in the house. The father — whose relationship to Jayden and his mother is not clear, but is the biological father to three of the five children — would not allow DSS to make contact with the children, per the document.

KSHB 41 News is following up with DSS to confirm whether or not a case was opened in regard to this incident.

"I was astonished a parent can refuse services, refuse them to allow them to interview the children," Deedon said.

DSS later found that three of the five children in the home were living with the father's mother.

Of the two remaining children in the home, one of them — who is not directly identified in the report — was missing, per DSS. Heather Robker told officials the child had run away, but DSS was given varying stories about the status of the child, per the report.

The same child — believed to be Jayden — was later found deceased in a pond, about one mile away from where Jayden was last seen on Feb. 2 near Northwest Plaza Drive and Northwest Plaza Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri.

"Heather absolutely neglected him and let him down first, but I feel like the system let him down second," Deedon said. "It's there in place to protect kids, is it not?"

Jayden's body was found on March 10. Initial autopsy results did not indicate any signs of foul play, according to Gladstone police.

The DSS report indicates Jayden's cause of death remains undetermined.
So much failure in this kid's life. So sad.

I knew something was off when it took a month for a notice to be given for help. Then, we get LE saying the problem was that they couldn't get a current pic. That made absolutely no sense for all the camera technology out there and why didn't the parents have any somewhat current pics of him? Now, it makes more sense on that part. Poor kid.
 
More details here.

‘Light the way for Jayden to come home’: KC mom searches for son, 13, missing for a month
Jayden Robker rushed off the school bus the afternoon of Feb. 2, the 13-year-old’s family said.

The middle schooler flipped through a stack of Pokémon cards and pulled out a few he hoped to sell to make some money to help start his own car wash business, his mother, Heather Robker, said.

Robker was at work when Jayden hurried into their Northland home, but her husband recalled urging Jayden to slow down and eat something before heading out. Jayden insisted the weather was too nice to stay inside. He wanted to seize the chance to ride his RazorX DLX electric skateboard after days of sub-freezing weather, Robker said.

Jayden put a sandwich in the microwave promising to be back soon, then dashed out the door, family said.

No one in her family has seen Jayden since, Robker said.

SEARCHING FOR JAYDEN

Jayden has three younger brothers and two younger sisters. He’s often there to greet his siblings as they get off the school bus, then play hide and seek and watch movies on their tablets at home, Heather Robker, 35, told The Star on Thursday.

Robker’s eldest loves to spend his time playing Pokémon and skateboarding, and lately, her husband has been teaching him to box.

Recently, Jayden conjured up the idea to start his own car washing business, in the hopes of making and saving his own money, said Robker, who describes her son as ambitious, energetic, bubbly and funny. He saw his valuable Pokémon cards as an opportunity to kick-start his savings account.

On Feb. 2, Robker came home to squeeze in a nap between her day job and her night job. Her husband told her that Jayden was off riding his black skateboard. When she woke up for her night shift, Robker was alarmed to see Jayden hadn’t returned to their home near the intersection of Northwest Plaza Drive and Northwest Plaza Avenue.

She called police.

A media release on Jayden’s disappearance wasn’t posted until Monday, four days after he went missing. Robker and a spokesperson with KCPD said the reason it wasn’t posted immediately, in part, was because they couldn’t find a current photo of him right away.

Capt. Corey Carlisle, a spokesman for the Kansas City Police Department, said despite the “delay in information exchange” in getting the press release out, detectives immediately began investigating the case that Thursday night when he was reported missing.

But a month later, he has yet to be found.

Robker said she wishes police would have put out a public release sooner because she doesn’t believe her son ran away.

“I’ve already contacted my family. I’ve talked to his friends,” she said. “No one has seen Jay.”

The only person she’s found who has seen him since he left the house that Thursday afternoon is someone at the QuickTrip across the highway from their home. Robker called them the day after Jayden went missing, and a worker told her there is surveillance footage of Jayden using the bathroom at about 3:30 p.m. Thursday before heading east past the Family Dollar.
I came in and could not recall this case at all until I refreshed my memory. I started on page 3 and went somewhat backwards. We learned a lot over time and so among others, when I reached hit post, I read it being refrreshed on what we learned since.

I have a LOT of thoughs bu am tired as all heck and they are jumbled. I don't believe some sh*t in here right off the bat with hindsight now. And I read through all posts. I don't have it in me to touch on all thoughts I had but for one, and many of us mentioned it many a time, we STILL don't know do we where the scooter/skateboard is? Didn't he leave to sell Pokemon cards? A post after this one I am esponding to said LE said no "obvious" signs of foul play. And I'm not saying there was any. I don't know. I do doubt step boyfriend or whoever he is was wanting him to eat or giving a sh*t if he did. Perhaps Maybe there are nice days amongst abusive days, allegedly abusive. Why the heck is mom working so much, did he ont contribute? We now know later from DCF and CPS stuff e NEVER wanted to go home and did not want to be there. Now I will be fair and say teens can play this stuff, it isn't unheard of BUT there is another child who claimed abuse AND an uncle who felt bad, etc. and who he had been with.

I get he was seen on camera which the parents are lucky for. Imo. This could still be something else, very unsure what, and in quickly reviewing posts I don't think we have wondered about suicide Did he go back home and then end up there... i also get he was seen close to there so not saying he did.

13 year olds can be naive and raised in what this household may have been, certainly possible, but looking to sell Pokemon cars to start a car wash in February in KC? Teens are about more instant gratification and what did a 13 year old need, some buckets, soap, sponges, towels and Windex? Plus it doesn't appear to be where he was going, what he did or what the plan was...Some of the last posts in this thread were about him not wanting to go home, worried he would be taken out of school, mom refusing to cooperate, and more. Now he could have been a troubled young teen who caused problems and claimed abuse it is hard to say. But another child did as well and there were five or six in the home BUT in one later thing it said HIS mom, meaning bf's mom was found or said to have a few of them/his I think. Jayden's mom seems to be working all of the time.

They have moved from the area, I'd like to know if they still have custody of any kids and how many they left with...

I guess I have went into some anyhow when I didn't think I could form a thought but it is far from all. I also saw in rereading all posts cause of death still believe is undetermined and they seem to intentionall NOT provide answers about the scooter. They certainly aren't NY LE who say Shannon Gilbert drowned with no such proof of any such thing, etc. Kudos to them for that.

This is said to be a pond and they appear to know the route. I'd think if the scooter was there, they'd have found it and have it...No?

And believe it or not I am not leaning towards foul play necessarily...At all because a fair bit seems to negate it... But I'd also say they don't know time of death I'd think, day of or any such... Dire sh*t at home that day and he took off desperate...? I think I read in one post mom saying to him you are not in trouble... Before he was found of course...

Anyhow I'll leave it there, I had other thoughts but these are a few and just can't do it right now. Even in the best of families, teens have emotions that run high and I don't forget being one in a good family and don't forget having teens either in a good family. And this one clearly had its problems and Jayden had run away before apparently and claimed abuse. This COULD be suicide. Not saying it is and not saying foul play. But all far from certain. Again where is the scooter. If they have NOT FOUND it that changes everything.

There's a lot more I'd like to know too but I've only hit this thread and reread it and thought about this and hours have passed after a ten hour day with another tomorrow. And a chaotic work schedule this week with Black Friday, prepping for it, closed T day but working so many hours day before and after and THEN a SIX day stretch. I hate those. And of couirse not simple short eight hour days.

Anyhow, I'd honestly forgotten about this case but there need to be answers. I am glad though as far as I could see they keep it undetermined. Because it isn't.

Also where was his bio dad in his life? Have we heard from him? Was he one of those nonexistent worthless ones that never do their part?

RIP child.
 

BY ANDREA KLICK
DECEMBER 18, 2023 2:42 PM

Nine months after 13-year-old Jayden Robker was found dead in a pond near his home in Kansas City, police have concluded a multi-agency investigation into his death and said foul play was not a factor. No other details, including Robker’s cause of death, were included in the news release Monday from the Gladstone Police Department.

<snip>

DSS records also summarized communication with the medical examiner’s office, who told DSS officials in March 2023 that Jayden’s autopsy showed no signs of trauma. Jayden had a small hematoma on the back of his head, which officials said may have been caused by a fall if he tried to walk or skateboard across ice in the area. X-Rays found no healing fractures or other internal damage.

Jayden was found wearing the same clothes he was reportedly wearing the day he went missing. The medical examiner’s office told DSS they didn’t know how long he had been in the water, but said it’s possible he had been in the pond since he first went missing.
 

BY ANDREA KLICK
DECEMBER 18, 2023 2:42 PM

Nine months after 13-year-old Jayden Robker was found dead in a pond near his home in Kansas City, police have concluded a multi-agency investigation into his death and said foul play was not a factor. No other details, including Robker’s cause of death, were included in the news release Monday from the Gladstone Police Department.

<snip>

DSS records also summarized communication with the medical examiner’s office, who told DSS officials in March 2023 that Jayden’s autopsy showed no signs of trauma. Jayden had a small hematoma on the back of his head, which officials said may have been caused by a fall if he tried to walk or skateboard across ice in the area. X-Rays found no healing fractures or other internal damage.

Jayden was found wearing the same clothes he was reportedly wearing the day he went missing. The medical examiner’s office told DSS they didn’t know how long he had been in the water, but said it’s possible he had been in the pond since he first went missing.
At the time he was last seen was the first nice day after a long stretch of nasty weather. There definitely would have been a layer of ice on that pond and let's face it, boys that age would definitely be playing on it. We rarely get ice thick enough here to hold somebody on it if the water is more than shallow. It would hold fine for a few feet but it gets thin very fast and will not support weight. If he went under and ended up under a shelf of ice, nobody would be the wiser for a while if nobody saw him going in. That little pond is tucked up where you might not even know it's there if you hadn't looked. It's below the level of the road and surrounded by brush and trees on the side by the road.
 
Jayden Robker was found dead in a KC pond. His autopsy, police file leave out key details
A year after police said there was no foul play in the death of 13-year-old Jayden Robker of Kansas City, an autopsy report finally released by medical examiners leaves unanswered questions as to how Jayden died, and police records reveal investigators did not interview family members after he was found dead.

Despite unusual circumstances surrounding his death and allegations of abuse in the home before and at the time of his disappearance, no one was ever charged in Jayden’s death. Investigators provided little explanation of how they determined no foul play was involved, and for more than a month the medical examiner refused to release the autopsy, saying the record was closed when it had been open for nearly a year.


The Star reached Susan Deedon, Jayden’s aunt, by phone in November.

She said having no answers about how he died all this time has been hard on his family. “I just feel like there’s been zero accountability,” Deedon said.

The Star received the Gladstone Police Department’s case file for Jayden’s death the day after the request was made. But the six-page file details little information about how police determined there to be no foul play.

The case file includes no interviews with family members, does not detail a search for witnesses or mention state-documented accusations of abuse in the home.

Capt. Karl Burris with the Gladstone Police Department said this was because KCPD and social services had already conducted an extensive missing person investigation prior to Jayden being located.

That investigation — conducted while it was still a missing person’s case — included interviews of multiple family members, attempts to locate witnesses and details of searches for Jayden. The departments shared relevant information, like interviews with family, Burris said. Gladstone detectives kept in close contact with Jayden’s mother after the teen’s body was found, but Burris said those contacts are not considered interviews.

“There is no definitive answer as to how Jayden passed,” Burris said. “The forensic examination could not determine a cause of death … no other evidence was discovered that would lead to the conclusion that foul play was involved.”

Three months after The Star requested KCPD’s missing person case file on Jayden, the department has not yet provided the file. Capt. Jake Becchina, a spokesperson with KCPD, said in an email Dec. 17 that the department had been working on redacting areas of the file that are not public record.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol Dive Team incident report listed “drowning” in the “injuries” section, though medical examiners never determined that to be the official cause of death.

In the report, an officer said he searched the pond for evidence related to the “drowning.” The search came up empty.

The official cause and manner of Jayden’s death are “undetermined,” according to the autopsy. Manner of death, in an autopsy report, is a determination of how a person died.

The autopsy said body decomposition was consistent with the location and timeline for which the body was found, and showed no evidence of internal or external trauma that would point to foul play.


Diane Peterson, chief medical examiner in Johnson County, Kansas, reviewed Jayden’s autopsy report at The Star’s request. She said that an “undetermined” cause of death is made by a medical examiner when there is no clear evidence of something that could become fatal in a person.

“There’s nothing in there that necessarily points to (Robker) drowning,” Peterson said. “Dr. Martinez … called it undetermined because he had nothing definitive to point one way or the other toward any cause of death.”

Peterson said that when she reviewed Jayden’s autopsy, she, too, saw nothing that pointed to a definitive cause of death. And when the manner of death is also undetermined, she said, there is no clear indication of how a person died.


Peterson said there is nothing in Jayden’s autopsy that could help medical examiners indicate if he died before or after coming in contact with the water. The autopsy did reveal a small hematoma on the back of Jayden’s head, but it was not associated with any skull fractures or internal head trauma, the report said. Hematomas are a collection of blood that forms inside the body, usually due to an injury.

“Due to decomposition … of the body, assessment of this apparent scalp trauma is difficult” the autopsy summary said, indicating that the hematoma could have happened after Jayden was already dead.


Forensic Medical of Kansas and Topeka initially refused to release the autopsy report, which is a public record under state law, in response to multiple requests from The Star in September and October. It had been completed since April 4, 2023.

The agency cited the provision for jeopardizing an investigation in its response, claiming investigations were ongoing in relation to Jayden’s death. But all police investigations were closed by December 2023 according to records from the Gladstone Police Department, Kansas City Police Department and Missouri Department of Social Services — Children’s Division.

The Gladstone Police Department claimed the autopsy was sealed by the medical examiner due to Jayden’s age. But there is nothing in state statutes that gives the examiner that power.

After The Star confirmed all investigations were closed, and sent records of the closed investigations to Forensic Medical, the medical examiner did finally release Jayden’s autopsy — more than a month after the initial request.

Capt. Karl Burris, a spokesman for the Gladstone Police Department, said Jayden’s case was tragic and difficult for everyone involved.

“Since it’s not a crime, since it’s involving a juvenile, I really … don’t have a whole lot of comment about it,” Burris said. “It was just a terrible, terrible thing.”

The six-page case file provided by Gladstone police included summaries of anonymous tips, but few other details of the investigative process. The case file did not include police interviews with family members apart from one encounter with Jayden’s stepfather, Eric Givens, and mother, Heather Robker, soon after the medical examiner determined there was no foul play involved in Jayden’s death.


“You know, the system let him down,” Deedon said. “His mother let him down, first and foremost — that’s her responsibility. But then, the system let him down by not making sure he was safe and that he would stay safe. And then the police department, FBI, whatever, let him down by not getting him justice.”

The medical examiner’s office told Social Services officials in March 2023 that Jayden’s autopsy showed no signs of trauma, according to state records.

The small hematoma on the back of Jayden’s head could have been caused by a fall if he tried to walk or skateboard across ice in the area, officials said at the time. But the autopsy noted the hematoma could have also happened after he died.

X-rays found no healing fractures or other internal damage. The medical examiner’s office told Social Services they didn’t know how long he had been in the water, but said it’s possible he had been in the pond since the time he first went missing.

“It’s just a train wreck and I feel like Jayden never got justice,” Deedon said.

MORE AT LINK
 
This is complete and utter bullsh*t!! I don't know if I've ever read anything so ridiculous. WHAT are they trying to pull?? They claim no foul play but have no cause of death. They refuse to provide the reports citing an investigation but the investigation is closed. And the scooter has NEVER been accounted for. This was a POND not a freaking huge OCEAN.

I don't usually think like this but I can't see where this could be anything but some kind of cover up.
 
Jayden Robker was found dead in a KC pond. His autopsy, police file leave out key details
A year after police said there was no foul play in the death of 13-year-old Jayden Robker of Kansas City, an autopsy report finally released by medical examiners leaves unanswered questions as to how Jayden died, and police records reveal investigators did not interview family members after he was found dead.

Despite unusual circumstances surrounding his death and allegations of abuse in the home before and at the time of his disappearance, no one was ever charged in Jayden’s death. Investigators provided little explanation of how they determined no foul play was involved, and for more than a month the medical examiner refused to release the autopsy, saying the record was closed when it had been open for nearly a year.


The Star reached Susan Deedon, Jayden’s aunt, by phone in November.

She said having no answers about how he died all this time has been hard on his family. “I just feel like there’s been zero accountability,” Deedon said.

The Star received the Gladstone Police Department’s case file for Jayden’s death the day after the request was made. But the six-page file details little information about how police determined there to be no foul play.

The case file includes no interviews with family members, does not detail a search for witnesses or mention state-documented accusations of abuse in the home.

Capt. Karl Burris with the Gladstone Police Department said this was because KCPD and social services had already conducted an extensive missing person investigation prior to Jayden being located.

That investigation — conducted while it was still a missing person’s case — included interviews of multiple family members, attempts to locate witnesses and details of searches for Jayden. The departments shared relevant information, like interviews with family, Burris said. Gladstone detectives kept in close contact with Jayden’s mother after the teen’s body was found, but Burris said those contacts are not considered interviews.

“There is no definitive answer as to how Jayden passed,” Burris said. “The forensic examination could not determine a cause of death … no other evidence was discovered that would lead to the conclusion that foul play was involved.”

Three months after The Star requested KCPD’s missing person case file on Jayden, the department has not yet provided the file. Capt. Jake Becchina, a spokesperson with KCPD, said in an email Dec. 17 that the department had been working on redacting areas of the file that are not public record.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol Dive Team incident report listed “drowning” in the “injuries” section, though medical examiners never determined that to be the official cause of death.

In the report, an officer said he searched the pond for evidence related to the “drowning.” The search came up empty.

The official cause and manner of Jayden’s death are “undetermined,” according to the autopsy. Manner of death, in an autopsy report, is a determination of how a person died.

The autopsy said body decomposition was consistent with the location and timeline for which the body was found, and showed no evidence of internal or external trauma that would point to foul play.


Diane Peterson, chief medical examiner in Johnson County, Kansas, reviewed Jayden’s autopsy report at The Star’s request. She said that an “undetermined” cause of death is made by a medical examiner when there is no clear evidence of something that could become fatal in a person.

“There’s nothing in there that necessarily points to (Robker) drowning,” Peterson said. “Dr. Martinez … called it undetermined because he had nothing definitive to point one way or the other toward any cause of death.”

Peterson said that when she reviewed Jayden’s autopsy, she, too, saw nothing that pointed to a definitive cause of death. And when the manner of death is also undetermined, she said, there is no clear indication of how a person died.


Peterson said there is nothing in Jayden’s autopsy that could help medical examiners indicate if he died before or after coming in contact with the water. The autopsy did reveal a small hematoma on the back of Jayden’s head, but it was not associated with any skull fractures or internal head trauma, the report said. Hematomas are a collection of blood that forms inside the body, usually due to an injury.

“Due to decomposition … of the body, assessment of this apparent scalp trauma is difficult” the autopsy summary said, indicating that the hematoma could have happened after Jayden was already dead.


Forensic Medical of Kansas and Topeka initially refused to release the autopsy report, which is a public record under state law, in response to multiple requests from The Star in September and October. It had been completed since April 4, 2023.

The agency cited the provision for jeopardizing an investigation in its response, claiming investigations were ongoing in relation to Jayden’s death. But all police investigations were closed by December 2023 according to records from the Gladstone Police Department, Kansas City Police Department and Missouri Department of Social Services — Children’s Division.

The Gladstone Police Department claimed the autopsy was sealed by the medical examiner due to Jayden’s age. But there is nothing in state statutes that gives the examiner that power.

After The Star confirmed all investigations were closed, and sent records of the closed investigations to Forensic Medical, the medical examiner did finally release Jayden’s autopsy — more than a month after the initial request.

Capt. Karl Burris, a spokesman for the Gladstone Police Department, said Jayden’s case was tragic and difficult for everyone involved.

“Since it’s not a crime, since it’s involving a juvenile, I really … don’t have a whole lot of comment about it,” Burris said. “It was just a terrible, terrible thing.”

The six-page case file provided by Gladstone police included summaries of anonymous tips, but few other details of the investigative process. The case file did not include police interviews with family members apart from one encounter with Jayden’s stepfather, Eric Givens, and mother, Heather Robker, soon after the medical examiner determined there was no foul play involved in Jayden’s death.


“You know, the system let him down,” Deedon said. “His mother let him down, first and foremost — that’s her responsibility. But then, the system let him down by not making sure he was safe and that he would stay safe. And then the police department, FBI, whatever, let him down by not getting him justice.”

The medical examiner’s office told Social Services officials in March 2023 that Jayden’s autopsy showed no signs of trauma, according to state records.

The small hematoma on the back of Jayden’s head could have been caused by a fall if he tried to walk or skateboard across ice in the area, officials said at the time. But the autopsy noted the hematoma could have also happened after he died.

X-rays found no healing fractures or other internal damage. The medical examiner’s office told Social Services they didn’t know how long he had been in the water, but said it’s possible he had been in the pond since the time he first went missing.

“It’s just a train wreck and I feel like Jayden never got justice,” Deedon said.

MORE AT LINK
Absolutely everybody failed this poor child.
Angry Inside Out GIF by Disney Pixar
 

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