GA SHY'KEMMIA PATE: Missing from Unadilla, GA - 4 September 1998 - Age 8

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“I am not going to give up or stop believing that she will come back one day,” Veronica said.


The family's heartbreaking experience began on September 4, 1998, in their hometown of Unadilla, Georgia. That evening, around 5 p.m., the community was eagerly preparing for a Friday night high school football game. Crumpler Avenue, the very street where Shy Shy lived, buzzed with activity as neighbors congregated, engaging in conversations and partaking in card games and dominos.


LaSwanda, Shy Shy’s sister, was just 17 years old at the time. She had her own group of friends and was old enough to drive. On that fateful evening, she was supposed to take Shy Shy to the game.


“I drove by the house and saw her sitting on the porch,” LaSwanda said. “She waved to me. I went up the street to get gas for the car, and when I returned, Shy Shy was not on the front porch.”


LaSwanda thought her sister had gotten a ride with a friend – Unadilla was the kind of place where everyone knew each other, and kids often hung out with different families. But as night fell, panic started creeping in. Shy Shy was nowhere to be found, and worry grew with each passing moment.


“I got home from the game and when I didn’t see Shy Shy, I asked my mom where she was and she said she wasn’t home,” explained LaSwanda. “Around 10 o’clock we still hadn’t found her. Nobody’d heard from her.”


The Dooly County Sheriff’s Office was called and they began searching for the 8-year-old. Sheriff Craig Peavy remembers that day all too well.


“We started searching for the little girl, everybody was involved,” said Peavy. “State agencies, federal agencies...it was probably one of the most massive searches I've ever been a part of or ever even seen.”


The search for Shy Shy continued for months. Law enforcement went door to door, looking for any sign of the little girl.


“We were just out searching fields, dirt roads, anything...anything that might give us a lead,” said Peavy.


More than two decades later, there are still no answers as to what happened to the little girl.



 
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Missing in South Ga: 26 years later, Dooly Co. investigators still asking ‘Where’s Shy Shy?’​

Wednesday marked 26 years since 8-year-old Shy’Kemmia Pate disappeared from her own neighborhood in Unadilla. Many years have passed by with no answers, but the missing girl’s family and investigators are still holding onto hope.

On Sept. 4, 1998, Shy’Kemmia was supposed to go to a football game with her older sister but instead, she left her home to go down the street and play with a neighbor. No one thought that would be the last time the then 8-year-old would be seen.

“This is the last picture that I have of her,” said Shy’kemmia’s mom Veronica Pate as she glanced down at her daughter’s elementary school photo.

Veronica has seen the picture go from a school yearbook to the back of milk cartons. The last words the mother of four told to her youngest was, “I love you.”

“I have to overlive that same date from September 4, 1998, to now 2024. I feel in my heart that she is. That she’s still alive,” she said.

While Shy’Kemmia also fondly known as “Shy Shy” was reported missing on September 4, police didn’t start looking for her until 24 hours later—a mistake investigators wish they could take back.

“Would it have made a difference? I mean that would be hard to say but we wouldn’t be so far behind in what would be the 8 ball. We’d had a better chance,” said Major Randy Lamberth, a Dooly County Sheriff’s Office Investigator who has been on the case from the start.

What started as a 5-mile radius search for Shy Shy extended to a 10-mile search involving several local and state resources from cadaver dogs to even helicopter searches. Investigators said the most recent search for Shy Shy was done on foot a couple of weeks ago, but still nothing was found. To this day, investigators don’t have any evidence that points to what happened to Shy Shy.

“Beam me up, Scotty. That’s almost like what’s transpired here. I mean it’s like she just vanished in thin air,” Lamberth said.

Right now, with the help of the GBI, investigators are re-interviewing people regarding Shy Shy’s whereabouts. There are also persons of interest in the case. Investigators believe Shy Shy was taken by someone the family knows.

“We’re actively running leads and we haven’t given up,” Logan Holland, GBI Special Agent.
 

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