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Mitrice Richardson's Remains Exhumed

Mitrice Richardson's Remains Exhumed

Following accusations of ineptitude by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, the remains of 24-year-old Mitrice Richardson were exhumed from an Inglewood, Calif. cemetery on Wednesday morning. Richardson, a former beauty pageant contestant and a lesbian who graduated from California State University, Fullerton with a 4.0 GPA went missing in September 2009 after being released from the L.A. County Sheriff's Malibu station in the middle of the night without her car, cell phone, or purse.

Following accusations of ineptitude by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, the remains of 24-year-old Mitrice Richardson were exhumed from an Inglewood, Calif. cemetery on Wednesday morning. Her family is hoping that more tests on her remains will help explain how she died, according to the LA Times.

Richardson, a former beauty pageant contestant and a lesbian who graduated from California State University, Fullerton with a 4.0 GPA went missing in September 2009 after being released from the L.A. County Sheriff's Malibu station in the middle of the night without her car, cell phone, or purse. Richardson was taken in to the station when she couldn't pay her bill at a tony Malibu restaurant, and for possessing a small amount of marijuana, while also acting erratically.

The Sheriff's Department is being sued by Richardson's family members for not only her controversial release, but also the way police handled her remains after they were discovered in a Malibu Canyon ravine in August 2010. An official from the coroner's office says police removed the bones of Richardson's skull, pelvis, and leg without his permission (no clothes were found at the scene). Cops said they had to remove the remains immediately or wild animals could have gotten to them.

Making matters worse for the Sheriff's Department is the fact that eight more bones were found near the ravine in February 2011, six months after Richardson's initial remains were found. "That discovery came just a few months after Richardson’s mother said she found a finger bone while at the site memorializing her daughter," the Los Angeles Times reports.

Richardson's father, who told The Advocate of his appreciation for the L.A. gay community's support, hopes the found bones, along with the exhumed remains, will help solve the mystery of what happened to Richardson on that September night.

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