AP – The storage facility where Flint police found 9-year-old quadriplegic 
Shylea Myza Thomas' body is shown … 
By ED WHITE, Associated Press Writer Ed White, Associated Press Writer – 
5 mins ago

FLINT, Mich. – Prosecutors on Thursday were deciding whether to charge the 
adoptive mother of a 9-year-old quadriplegic girl whose body was found in a 
storage unit — a child the woman had allegedly insisted was out of state when 
authorities first questioned her.
Charges could range from felony murder to lesser charges such as misdemeanor 
moving a corpse. The woman was arrested Wednesday after police found Shylea 
Myza Thomas' body in a black trash bag, stuffed into a plastic bin with 
mothballs and locked in a storage unit near Flint.
Shylea had been taken out of school in January, and relatives told state 
officials they had not seen her in six weeks. At least one neighbor said she 
hadn't even been aware the little girl lived there.
"This is a very sad and tragic case that hurts all of us involved in the 
ongoing investigation," Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton said in a 
statement. "It appears that Shylea had a rough go in life."
A court document filed in the family division of the Genesee County Circuit 
Court to seize custody of seven other children who were living in the home 
identified the woman as 39-year-old Lorrie Thomas of Flint. Leyton said he did 
not know whether Thomas had a lawyer.
Officials said the woman was a blood relative of Shylea's who adopted her 
through the state. Authorities were reviewing evidence and results from an 
autopsy before deciding on charges, prosecutor John Potbury said.
"As we debate among ourselves the various legal issues at play, we've developed 
some questions that need to be answered before we make a decision. I'm hopeful 
some sort of decision will be made Friday," Potbury said.
The case unfolded this week when other relatives of the girl told the state 
Department of Human Services about possible neglect and said they hadn't seen 
the child in six weeks.
A case worker, Aaron Clum, visited the home Monday and was unable to confirm 
Shylea's whereabouts. Clum said in the court document that Thomas told him the 
family was moving to Virginia and the girl was on her way with a friend.
On Tuesday, the department asked Flint police to investigate. Thomas again 
insisted Shylea was bound for Virginia, Clum wrote, but that could not be 
confirmed.
Shylea's body was found early Wednesday morning hidden in a unit at Stor & Lock 
in Vienna Township, about 65 miles northwest of Detroit. The seven other 
children are now in foster care.
Shylea's family told authorities she had been paralyzed since nearly 
suffocating in her crib as an infant, Potbury said. She lived with several 
relatives in a Flint home that Leyton described as "absolutely filthy."
Shylea's home sits on a tough street with a number of abandoned and boarded-up 
houses. On Thursday, two children's bicycles sat on the front porch of the 
two-story home, where no one answered the door.
"For her to have to live like that, and then to die and be stuffed into a bag 
and plastic bin in a storage facility just breaks my heart," Leyton said.
The girl's family moved into the house around Thanksgiving, said Sabrina 
Williams, who lives across the street.
She had seen children playing outside, but not Shylea. She said she had seen 
deliveries of what she believed were medical supplies but added, "I thought she 
was taking care of an older person."
Williams, 43, said she has been losing sleep since learning about the girl's 
death and watching the arrest of the adoptive mother. She said the woman "could 
have gotten some help if she couldn't do it on her own."
The Department of Human Services said it could not comment on whether the girl 
and adoptive mother were involved with the child welfare system, citing 
confidentiality rules. But the state does the same background checks, home 
studies and house visits with would-be adoptive parents who are related to a 
child as it would for prospective parents who are not related to the child, 
said Stacie Bowens, director of the department's child welfare bureau in 
Genesee County. 
The state Office of Children's Ombudsman said Thursday it will open an 
investigation into the death. The agency investigates complaints involving 
children who are involved with Michigan's child welfare system for reasons of 
abuse or neglect, and checks to see if public or private agencies followed laws 
and policies. 
Thomas Svitkovich, superintendent of Genesee Intermediate School District, said 
the girl had been a student at a special education school in the county but was 
withdrawn by her family Jan. 22. He said he couldn't give any information on 
why she was taken out. 
"The educational community is shocked. We have not ever experienced anything 
like this," Svitkovich said. 
___ 
Associated Press writers Corey Williams in Detroit and David Eggert in Lansing 
contributed to this report.

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