But their former neighbor, Dee Blalock, was serving a 187-year prison sentence at the facility, and the Biggses were determined to speak to him, believing he had the key to what happened to their eldest daughter, Mikelle.
Mikelle disappeared Jan. 2, 1999, at age 11 while waiting for an ice cream truck on a corner of her Mesa, Ariz., neighborhood. Her bicycle was found with the wheels still spinning and two quarters for ice cream discarded on the ground. There were no witnesses, no body found and little evidence.
If you have information that might help solve the mystery of what happened to Mikelle Biggs, please contact the Arizona Police Department on their website, http://mesaaz.gov/police/, or by phone (480) 644-2211.
When Mikelle vanished, police immediately ran a check on all the registered sex offenders in the area. They were surprised to discover that dozens of sex offenders were living within a mile radius of the Biggs house in the child-filled neighborhood.
As police searched for any trace of Mikelle, local families launched block-watch meetings to keep an eye on strangers ... and on each other.
"If you're my neighbor, and I see that you're living next to me, and I see something suspicious going on, I guarantee you I'll be calling 911," Blalock told a local newscast at the time.
Blalock appeared to be an outspoken advocate for law and order. He lived about two blocks from the Biggses and was described by neighbors as "friendly" and "personable."
But nearly two years after Mikelle Biggs vanished, the neighborhood got another shock when Blalock was convicted of raping and brutally attacking his neighbor, Susan Quinnett.
"He tried to snap my neck three times," said Quinnett. " He did successfully break it in one place. He put me in a chokehold. ... He choked me until I gave over and fainted."
Quinnett said she had complained to police about Blalock's unwanted advances.
"He was coming up on me. He was drunk. He reeked of beer," she said. "He was putting his hands on me ... in my yard. I called the police. I said, 'The guy is just creeping me out. He's stalking me. ... I've tried to tell his wife.'"
Quinnett did not know that Blalock was more than a local nuisance, but was, in fact, a registered sex offender. He had convictions in three states, but the law at the time did not require the community be notified.
Quinnett said police never followed up on her complaint, and on the night of the attack, he was waiting for her inside her home.
"He was hiding behind the refrigerator and ... had his pants unzipped, and he was exposing himself to me."
Quinnett said she was shocked and asked him what he was doing there.
"I tried to take a few steps, and he already ... had come forward and grabbed me ... and twisted my arm, and started ... forcing me to the ground."
Mesa police described Blalock's attack on Quinnett as brutal.
"One of the worst beatings I've ever seen," said Det. Jerry Gissel.
Quinnett survived the attack. She said she immediately suspected Blalock might also be responsible for Mikelle's disappearance and contacted the Biggses to tell them about her suspicions.
"I had talked to Tracy," she said. "I told her I felt very strongly. He was their closure. He was the answer."
Quinnett was so certain that Blalock was responsible that she offered to drop all charges against him if he would confess to taking Mikelle.
"I can't imagine not ever knowing what happened to your daughter," she said.
"I said, 'If he could bring some comfort or closure to them, I will walk away from this,'" she added. "[Authorities] said, 'We can't do that because ... it's the state versus Dee Blalock.'"
The Biggses had never heard of Blalock, but they soon learned that police had visited him in the early morning after Mikelle disappeared. Police said Blalock's wife provided an alibi for Blalock, claiming he had been in the garage the entire night.
Police also learned Blalock had seen Mikelle before. He told detectives he had seen her going to her piano teacher near his house.
The Biggses decided the only way to find more answers was to deal with Blalock directly. After Blalock was sentenced for his attack on Quinnett, the Biggses sent him a letter in prison, asking him directly if he had taken their daughter.
"I told him, 'If I'm wrong ... I won't be able to do enough to apologize to you,'" said Darien Biggs, "because that's a terrible thing to be accused of. ... But I don't care ... if I have to accuse a million different people until I find the right one."
Blalock answered in writing that "I need to make things right with you and your family."
He agreed to meet with the grieving parents.
"I was nervous," remembered Tracy Biggs. "I was kind of shaky."
Darien Biggs described the visit as one with an enormous mission.
"Tracy wanted to look in his eyes," he said. "She just wanted to look in his eyes and know whether or not he was guilty."
The Biggses spoke to Blalock in the prison for an hour and a half.
"He just denied, denied, denied, denied," said Darien Biggs. "He got mad a couple times ... but he never walked away." The Biggses said they reached a consensus about him immediately.
"As we were walking away, I remember telling Darien, 'I think he did it,'" recalled Tracy Biggs. "His movements ... his jitteriness ... he couldn't look you straight in the eye -- just things ... that would indicate that he was lying."
For Darien Biggs, the full impact of the encounter did not hit home until the next day.
"I was sitting three feet from this guy," he said. "You know, the only thing protecting him was that, you know, glass between us."
Although the Biggses said they believe Blalock was responsible for their daughter's disappearance, they do have doubts -- "just enough to keep me from going down there and getting myself thrown in jail," Darien said.
Mesa police detectives Gissel and Domenick Kaufman said they are investigating Blalock and described him as a promising lead in the case.But they emphasized that the case is still open and that Blalock has not been named as an official suspect.
Blalock repeatedly has denied involvement in Mikelle's disappearance.
2 comments:
That Susan Quinnette woman that was raped by Blalock went on to kill her boyfriend Ralph Rockafellow in 2010 for "pushing her emotional buttons all day". Crazy how evil seems to create evil like an infection sometimes.
Doesnt anyone see the obvious? Where was Quinette when Mikelle disappear? Women can kill children too. Remember the woman who kidnapped, drugged, and killed the little girl in her trailer park several yrs ago? In the ambulance Quinette was repeating Mikelles name and blaming HER attacker what if she were seizing an opportunity to shift blame? And later saying she wouldnt press charges if he CONFESSED to Mikelles murder. That would sure keep the police from ever suspecting her since most people think he did it. And she was the first person to try to connect them. And then, coincidentally(?) , she kills her biyfriend for "pushing her buttons". She is the only known kller in the whole story. I would sure feel better if the police took a hard look at her. Where's Lt. Joe Kenda? He woulda figured this out by now and either elimnated or arrested her. But she wouldn't escape scrutiny.
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