If you read this recent update in the disappearance of Jenise Wright, you'll find that her older sisters (who are 23 and 20) are defending the missing girl's mother. This is in direct response of the much-deserved public scrutiny against them for waiting to report the child missing for 24 hours. It seems that these adult women think it's okay that the little girl was allowed to wander freely in the trailer park neighborhood they called home.
There are close to 100 registered sex offenders living in the town of Bremerton, Washington -- where the little girl vanished. Many of these registered sex offenders have been convicted of crimes against children, and at least one of them is a "risk level 3" offender. That means if Jenise truly was left to wander on her own frequently, then she was made a prime target for these offenders (and the likely numerous offenders who have not yet been caught and made to register). If someone either familiar with the trailer park -- or residing in it -- had any opportunity to prey on a child, then that child would have definitely been Jenise Wright.
However, it just seems a little convenient that the older sisters are rushing to defend the mother's parenting instead of using their platform on the media to plea for the return of their six-year-old sister. Instead of asking for more help in searching for the little girl, or asking for any presumed predators to release her, the girls used the time to simply defend the mom's decision to let the girl wander.
I have a question to ask: Have the older sisters been given polygraph tests?
There are close to 100 registered sex offenders living in the town of Bremerton, Washington -- where the little girl vanished. Many of these registered sex offenders have been convicted of crimes against children, and at least one of them is a "risk level 3" offender. That means if Jenise truly was left to wander on her own frequently, then she was made a prime target for these offenders (and the likely numerous offenders who have not yet been caught and made to register). If someone either familiar with the trailer park -- or residing in it -- had any opportunity to prey on a child, then that child would have definitely been Jenise Wright.
However, it just seems a little convenient that the older sisters are rushing to defend the mother's parenting instead of using their platform on the media to plea for the return of their six-year-old sister. Instead of asking for more help in searching for the little girl, or asking for any presumed predators to release her, the girls used the time to simply defend the mom's decision to let the girl wander.
I have a question to ask: Have the older sisters been given polygraph tests?