Shining a light on the crisis of missing or murdered black women and girls in the US
By Linda
A. Seabrook, US Department of Justice, published November 22, 2024 two months before Ms. Seabrook left DOJ
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The United States faces a deeply troubling crisis that has
not received the attention it deserves—the alarming number of missing or
murdered Black women and girls. Despite the devastating impacts on families and
communities throughout the country, the epidemic of missing or murdered Black
women and girls has largely remained a silent one. It is time to confront this
issue with the urgency and coordinated response it warrants.
On November 12, 2024, the Department of Justice’s Office of
Justice Programs held a national convening in Washington, D.C., focused on
addressing the crisis of missing or murdered Black women and girls. The event
brought together family members, survivors, law enforcement, advocates,
journalists, and state leaders, along with federal agency colleagues, to raise
awareness of the issue, inform potential future programming and resources,
learn from state efforts, and encourage a more robust response to missing and
murdered Black women and girls.
The Scale of the Crisis
Black women and girls are disproportionately affected by
violence, trafficking, and systemic neglect, leading to high rates of their
disappearance, and placing them at greater risk for homicide. Although they
make up a significant portion of missing person cases in the U.S., their
stories often go underreported and unnoticed by national media and law
enforcement.
According to the National Crime Information Center, in 2022,
of the 271,493 girls and women reported missing, 97,924, or over 36 percent,
were Black, despite the fact that Black women and girls comprised only 14
percent of the U.S. female population at the time.
In addition, according to a recent study published in the
peer-reviewed general medical journal The Lancet, Black women are six times
more likely to be murdered than their white peers. These stark and tragic
statistics reveal and underscore systemic issues of bias, neglect, and a lack
of resources that hinder effective responses to this crisis.