From Coalition of Immokalee Workers <[email protected]>
Subject Unsolved mystery: CNN, NPR investigations into disappearance of two local men in Collier County Sheriff Deputy’s custody bring new life to maddening cold case
Date May 8, 2023 4:02 PM
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Doug Molloy, former US Assistant Attorney: “It is my belief that they were killed because of their color.”
“Lucas Benitez, a founder of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, likened police officers in Immokalee to the US Army occupying Iraq.”
Around twenty years ago, two beloved sons and fathers — Felipe Santos and Terrance Williams — went missing in Southwest Florida. One, Felipe Santos, was part of the CIW family, brother-in-law to former CIW staff member Francisca Cortez. Both were last seen alive in the back of former Collier County Sheriff’s Deputy Steve Calkins’ police vehicle.
The story of Felipe Santos and Terrance Williams’ disappearances is one of tragedy and unresolved loss, but it is also a story about powerlessness – the powerlessness of two poor communities, Black and Latino, in wealthy Collier County; the powerlessness of disenfranchised residents in relation to a county Sheriff’s department with a long record of misconduct; [[link removed]] and most of all, the powerlessness of two grieving and bewildered families seeking answers but left only with more questions, and still without their loved ones, two decades later.
But now, twenty years since the disappearance of Felipe Santos and Terrance Williams — one after the other, three months apart — CNN has published an in-depth investigative report detailing Williams’ and Santos’ lives and their last known minutes with Officer Calkins, whom many suspect to be behind their disappearances. NPR has also conducted a thorough investigation into their disappearances in a serialized podcast called The Last Ride [[link removed]] , which is helping to focus national attention on this ongoing tragedy. Both are can’t-miss reporting.
CNN’s investigators interviewed nearly 70 people, including CIW staff member Julia Perkins and CIW co-founder Lucas Benitez, who both knew Felipe Santos and his family. In their account of Santos’ disappearance, Perkins and Benitez offer a vivid and unflinching look into the struggle for Immokalee’s working community to gain the kind of power needed to be treated as full human beings, and of the community’s historically fraught relationship to Collier County law enforcement.
The families of Terrance Williams and Felipe Santos deserve justice and closure to this 20-year crime, and while we may be still tragically far from the day that justice may be done, these stories are an important step in that direction.
The CNN investigation is long, but well worth the read [[link removed]] .
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The deputy and the disappeared
A Latino man and a Black man went missing three months apart in Florida. Both vanished after getting in a patrol car driven by the same White deputy sheriff
By Thomas Lake, April 21, 2023
In addition to CNN’s story, NPR’s podcast The Last Ride features audio recordings of countless people who either knew Felipe Santos or Terrance Williams, or were involved in the subsequent investigations. Conducted by a joint-team of reporters with WGCU, Naples Daily News, and Fort Myers News Press, the podcast explores the immediate circumstances of their disappearances, as well as the racial biases that likely contributed to both their untimely deaths and the disappointing lack of national concern after they disappeared. You can listen to the podcast on every major audio platform, or by clicking here. [[link removed]]
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Coalition of Immokalee Workers
110 S 2nd St
Immokalee, FL 34142
United States
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