Whisper
#byefelicia
http://www.wtoc.com/global/story.asp?s=12790016Funeral arrangements made for 2-year-old Rodricus Williams
CHARLESTON, SC (WCSC) - Funeral services for 2-year-old Rodricus Fred Williams will be held at noon Tuesday in Ebenezer A.M.E. Church.
[...]
The boy was never in the water and his father, 28-year-old Roger Williams, and the father's live-in girlfriend, 24-year-old Grace Nichole Trotman, are in jail after being charged with homicide by child abuse last week.
[...]
According to Roger Williams' affidavit, he acknowledged the boy had an ongoing health condition that needed to be monitored. However, when Rodricus Williams fell ill, he instructed Trotman not to contact health care providers. He admitted to investigators he did not call for medical help either.
After the boy allegedly died, authorities were directed to an abandoned mobile home near Bowman in Orangeburg County where they found the body of a small African-American boy encased in 450 pounds of concrete inside a plastic 30-gallon trash can.
http://www.live5news.com/global/Story.asp?s=12775711Friend of Trotman says she feared Williams
CHARLESTON, SC (WCSC) - A longtime friend of the woman charged in the apparent death of a two year old boy says the suspect feared her co defendant in the case.
Grace Trotman, 24, and Roger Williams, 29, are charged with homicide by child abuse.
Berkeley County sheriff's deputies say a body found encased in cement in a trash can in Orangeburg County may be that Williams' son.
Rodricus Williams, 2, was reported missing by Trotman Thursday night.
A woman who asked her to hide her identity said Williams had control over Trotman.
"I don't know what she was thinking," said the woman who asked us to call her "Cindy." I mean, I know he had mind control over her. If he says stand up she would stand up. if he says sit down, she will sit down."
Cindy said Trotman feared Williams and that she was afraid to leave the father of her two children.
"Think she should have been a long ago got out of this situation. It wouldn't have even come to this."
She believes Williams told Trotman to lie to police that the boy fell into waters on Charleston's Battery.
And she thinks it was Williams who came up with the idea of encasing the body of a young African American boy in cement in a trash can and leaving it in woods in Orangeburg County.
"That's his child. You gonna put your child in a trash can, in cement? 'Cindy' said."That's what you're really gonna do? That's just basically saying that he was nothing, that he meant nothing, and you're not showing any remorse."
She said when things are sorted out, the chips will fall on both Trotman and Williams.
[...]
http://www.live5news.com/Global/story.asp?S=12783947Missing boy's babysitter speaks out
MOUNT PLEASANT, SC (WCSC) - There are reminders of little Rodricus Williams scattered all over Connie Huger's living room. From his favorite toys down to the spot where he carved a number two on the coffee table. Williams' memory lives on.
"We loved him dearly we loved him so much. He was a loving child, he was smart and he was happy when he was here," Huger said.
Connie and her daughter Sade babysat Williams off and on over the past two years. The Hugers met him through a family friend when the child was five months old. According to them, the boy's mother knew how much they cared for him.
"She knows whenever she called on us...if she wanted us for anything, whatever he needed. If she wasn't able to provide she could call, and we were there," Huger said.
Huger worries what might have happened if she hadn't contacted Rodricus' mother to check up on him.
"Had I not been aggravating her and bugging her 'let's go look for him' or what not- his body would still be where it was, nobody was going to be looking for him," Huger said.
The last time the Hugers saw Rodricus was in May. That's when they said his mother sent him to live with his father Roger.
ince the announcement of his mysterious disappearance Connie and Sade have a hard time coping.
"At night, it's hard for me to close my eyes and imagine what was going on, but I have to keep praying. I can't imagine things like that because it would kill me," Sade said.
Her mother Connie said she's equally hurt by the boy's disappearance, but said it's also scary.
"Even though the little boy they're describing is him they haven't really confirmed it's him and I'm just worried if it's not him then where is he? If it is him, then I thank God he's in a better place now and that no one can ever harm him again," Huger said.
In response to Rodricus' alleged health problems, Huger said the child did not have a medical condition while she took care of him.
[...]
Connie & Sade Huger





