
The hunt for the killer
of a 19-year-old Mississippi woman who was burned alive last year has resulted
in the arrests of 17 suspected gang members, authorities said this week, though
none have been directly linked to the woman's death.
FBI officials announced
the arrests Tuesday of suspected members of the Black Gangster Disciples, Vice
Lords, and Sipp Mob street gangs, according to The Clarion-Ledger newspaper.
Officials told the
paper the investigation, dubbed "Operation Bite Back", was focused on
Panola County, in the northwest of the state, and was a byproduct of the
investigation into the death of Jessica Chambers.
On the night of Dec. 6,
2014, Chambers was doused with gasoline and set on fire in her car on a road in
Courtland. She was found on the road with burns over most of her body and later
died at a hospital in Memphis.
Panola County Sheriff
Dennis Darby told The Clarion-Ledger authorities have interviewed more than 150
people and sorted through 20,000 phone records in an effort to catch Chambers'
killer. Darby said the information that led to Tuesday's arrests was gathered
as a result of those interviews.
The Clarion-Ledger
reported that authorities have had difficulty finding a suspect or suspects in
Chambers' murder due to a lack of street chatter about the crime.
The 17 suspects charged
are between 18 and 40 years of age. They are charged with crimes ranging from
child endangerment and selling narcotics to possession of stolen firearms and
possession of counterfeit currency.
"It's taken eight
or nine months, if not a little longer, to get to this point," Panola
County District Attorney John Champion said. "And this is not over by any
stretch of the imagination."
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