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12-year-old Georgia Leah Moses was last seen alive in August 1997. A friend walked with Georgia to a gas station near her home in Santa Rosa, California, where she left with an unidentified man. Nine days later, a worker found human remains on the side of the highway that were later identified as Georgia’s.
Join Mike and Gibby as they discuss the murder of Georgia Moses. Georgia was described by all who knew her as an exceptional young person. But her home life was far from ideal. At a very young age, she had to take care of the family because her mother was unable to. Four years before Georgia was murdered, Polly Klaas vanished and was later found murdered. Many people have pointed out that Polly's case received far more media coverage than Georgia's because Polly is white and Georgia is black. Unfortunately, studies have shown that this coverage inequity is real. Georgia Moses deserves justice, and the key most likely lies with the identity of the man she was last seen with.
You can help support the show at patreon.com/truecrimeallthetime
Visit the show's website at truecrimeallthetime.com for contact, merchandise, and donation information
An Emash Digital production
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
By PodcastOne4.7
54605,460 ratings
12-year-old Georgia Leah Moses was last seen alive in August 1997. A friend walked with Georgia to a gas station near her home in Santa Rosa, California, where she left with an unidentified man. Nine days later, a worker found human remains on the side of the highway that were later identified as Georgia’s.
Join Mike and Gibby as they discuss the murder of Georgia Moses. Georgia was described by all who knew her as an exceptional young person. But her home life was far from ideal. At a very young age, she had to take care of the family because her mother was unable to. Four years before Georgia was murdered, Polly Klaas vanished and was later found murdered. Many people have pointed out that Polly's case received far more media coverage than Georgia's because Polly is white and Georgia is black. Unfortunately, studies have shown that this coverage inequity is real. Georgia Moses deserves justice, and the key most likely lies with the identity of the man she was last seen with.
You can help support the show at patreon.com/truecrimeallthetime
Visit the show's website at truecrimeallthetime.com for contact, merchandise, and donation information
An Emash Digital production
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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