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Terrified landlord reveals the chilling moment he realized his 'spiritual healer' tenant was a 'murderer' on the run after her five-year-old son was found dead in a suitcase - as neighbors detail her bizarre behavior

4 months ago 14

A mother whose five-year-old son's body was found stuffed in a suitcase hid for a year in an apartment, unnerving her neighbors.

Dejaune Anderson, 38, spent two years on the run until her arrest at a train station in Arcadia, California, on March 14 and now faces murder charges in Salem, Indiana.

Her son Cairo Jordan was found dead inside a Welcome to Las Vegas suitcase in woods in rural Washington County on April 16, 2022, sparking a search.

For some of her time on the run, Anderson was holed up in a 440sqft North Hollywood apartment claiming to be a 19-year-old girl.

Dejaune Anderson, 38, spent two years on the run until her arrest at a train station in Arcadia, California , on March 14 and now faces murder charges in Salem, Indiana 

Her son Cairo Jordan (pictured) was found dead inside a suitcase in woods in rural Washington County, sparking a search for Anderson

After a year of freaking out her neighbors and building manager with weird noises,  conspiracy theories, and stories of poisoned food, the owner got a call from police.

'We think this woman is wanted for murder in Indiana,' the LAPD officer said, the owner told the LA Times. Later that day they finally caught her.

The officer had asked him about a phone number they were monitoring, and he told them it belonged to his tenant, and man named Eric Porter.

'But I don't talk to him anymore. I talk to Olla, his daughter,' he said.

'Olla' was actually Anderson and despite being 38 was posing as the teenager daughter of the unknown 'Porter' who took out the lease.

Despite saying she would only be there sometimes, no one ever saw Porter again and only heard from Anderson - and what they heard unnerved them.

Hours before the police called, he told Anderson he needed to speak to her 'father' and she was making too much noise inside her apartment.

'You don't know who I am. I'm Donald Trump's first cousin. I saved him from an assassination attempt. You can call the White House,' she replied.

This was just the last of many bizarre claims she made while living there, some of the most deranged being two days earlier.

The building's manager was increasingly concerned about her mental well-being, starting with her putting black tint on her windows so no one could see in.

Anderson is accused of packing her son's body into this suitcase before dumping it in a wooded area in Indiana

Her erratic behavior escalated into an argument about the smell of her smoking marijuana in her bathroom where she threatened to kill him,

But the situation got really out of control on March 9 when he got an alarming text.

'I got the neighbors upstairs... trying to kill me because i reported them to the cartel that they killed this leader son girl and daughter and ate the baby. but i can’t reach them,' it read.

He replied asking what he could do, but got no reply until Anderson started incoherently shrieking like she was trying to summon a demon, with a neighbor also hearing banging coming form the walls and ceiling.

The manager called Anderson to tell her to cut it out, but she hysterically told him her upstairs neighbor was poisoning her food and leaving it all over her bathroom and ceiling, he told the LA Times.

Someone had eaten a baby outside her door, and a spirit was hiding in her closet, she claimed, urging him to come see for himself.

But when the manager said he would call the police, she calmed down and said not to worry. Just a few days later she was arrested.

Anderson's unhinged outbursts did not quiet down after she was extradited to Indiana to face murder charges.

She made several wild claims during a court appearance last Tuesday including that she was a sovereign citizen, is part of several other investigations, and is, in fact, a princess.

The claims - which include that she's being tracked by the US Space Force -  raise doubts whether she can stand trial.

But she insisted on representing herself.

'You're known as Dejaune Anderson,' said Washington County Judge Larry Medlock, before warning the woman that representing herself could 

'I'm representing the entity of Dejaune Anderson,' she replied, wide-eyed and smiling.

'My name is Princess Khalfia Atonte Pape the second representing the entity Dejuan Anderson.' 

The jurist went on to ask her if her decision was because she couldn't afford a lawyer, to which she responded she could

'It's not that I can't afford a lawyer,' she said during what amounted to a 15-minute hearing. 'I understand the nature of my case, and I understand this is my life on the line.' 

Asked for her date of birth, Anderson claimed to be over 60, telling the jurist: 'My date of birth is February 2nd 1961.'

'That would make you how old?' Medlock asked.

'That would make me 63 years old,' Anderson replied, providing the accurate figure.  

When asked for the the last four digits of her social security number, Anderson said she didn't have one - another erroneous claim.

The claims - which include that she's being tracked by the US Space Force - raise doubts whether she can stand trial

Washington County Judge Larry Medlock ultimately decided to hold Anderson in a Washington County jail without bond - a decision that upheld prosecutors' previous demands

As he delivered that decision, he appeared to offer a slight dig at the accused, telling her, 'If Space Force comes forward and tells me they're willing to monitor you, we'll take up the issue of bond at a later time'

Instead, she she recited a United Nations declaration - before again asking to represent herself in upcoming proceedings.

'I do not have a social security number,' she said. 'I have a declaration of nationality.'

She then claimed a Space Force military detail has been following her every move - an assertion offered in the form of a formal objection.

'The basis of my objection is the fact that I am not a fugitive,' she said, explaining why she had just interrupted the proceedings.

'I've been under NSA surveillance for the past eight months. How can that qualify me as a fugitive on the run, when I've also had a detail from Space Force that was following my every move?'

Before she could finish, a visibly fed-up  Medlock cut her off - before explaining how her argument isn't a valid legal objection.

'If you want to represent yourself, you're gonna have to learn the rules of evidence, the rules of procedure,' he said. 

Anderson was arrested Thursday in Arcadia, California - outside Los Angeles - on the two-year-old murder warrant

An autopsy revealed that the young boy died from an electrolyte imbalance caused by dehydration from vomiting and diarrhea, a week before his body was found crammed in a suitcase

'Because if you conduct yourself like this and make these types of objections, you have no chance in the world, lady.' 

By the end of the 15 minutes, Medlock appeared to have had enough. 

He ultimately decided to hold Anderson in a Washington County jail without bond - upholding prosecutors' previous demands. 

As he delivered that decision, he appeared to offer a slight dig at the accused, telling her, 'If Space Force comes forward and tells me they're willing to monitor you, we'll take up the issue of bond at a later time,'

Before she could be taken out of the courtroom, though, he stopped her and ordered a public defender be assigned to her case - insisting it was just in case she fails to demonstrate the cognizance to be her own counsel.

'If she files a written request that demonstrates that she has the ability to understand, comprehend, and represent herself, I may ask them to withdrawal or no longer require their services,' he said. 

'[B]ut I think it's appropriate that someone from the public defender's office be assigned at this time.'

Before her son's death, Anderson contacted a priest, claiming that her son was '100 years old' and had launched 'death attacks' against her

Cairo's body was found inside trash bags, stuffed inside a suitcase, and dumped in woods, eventually leading cops to Anderson's accomplice Dawn Coleman, 41, who in November received a sentence of 30 years, with five years of suspended probation.

She was charged with aiding, inducing or causing murder, neglect of a dependent resulting in death, and obstruction of justice. 

 Both women posted extensively to social media referencing demons and exorcism, with Anderson even reaching out to Fr. Vincent Lampert, priest for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, to tell him that her son was possessed. 

'I have survived the death attacks from my 5-year-old throughout the 5 years he has been alive,' she wrote in a tweet.

'I have been able to weaken his powers through our blood. I have his real name and he is 100 years old. Need assistance.'

As part of a plea deal, Coleman - who billed herself as a spiritual healer on social media by the name of 'Mama Gawd'  - admitted to walking into a bedroom of Anderson's home where she witnessed the mom lying on top of her son, who was face down on the bed with his face into the mattress, cops said.

Coleman told police 'it was already done,' when she walked in, and that Anderson had only asked her to help put Cairo in a trash bag and then into the suitcase.

Cops have already cuffed and charged accomplice Dawn Coleman, 40, who helped pack up the child's corpse. She billed herself as a spiritual healer on social media by the name of 'Mama Gawd'

'You packaged Cairo like trash,' Judge Larry Medlock said. 'He was an innocent little boy who wanted to be loved'

THE SOVEREIGN CITIZEN MOVEMENT? CONSPIRACY THEORISTS WHO DO NOT BELIEVE IN RULE OF LAW  

'Sovereign citizens' do not believe they are bound by federal or state law, or have to comply with any type of law enforcement. 

Many often do not believe that they are required to pay taxes either. The FBI considers the group to be an extremist organization. 

Well-known members include Terry Nichols, the Oklahoma City bomber. 

In 2010, two sovereign citizens shot and killed two police officers after being pulled over in Arkansas. 

'Sovereign citizens do not represent an anarchist group, nor are they a militia, although they sometimes use or buy illegal weapons. Rather, they operate as individuals without established leadership and only come together in loosely affiliated groups to train, help each other with paperwork, or socialize and talk about their ideology,' a 2011 FBI paper on the group reads. 

Many do not think they are bound by taxes, so often do not pay those.  

'They often will not pay taxes; that is pretty standard across the board, many will not pay their car registration, they won't get car insurance, they don't get licenses of any kind,' Rachel Goldwasser of the Southern Poverty Law Center told FOX News. 

The movement is based on a decades old conspiracy theory that the government was replaced secretly, and that the real government follows admiralty law. 

Prosecutors said the two women then drove to an area outside of Pekin, and dumped the suitcase roughly a week before it was found by a local mushroom hunter. 

An autopsy found that Cairo died from vomiting and diarrhea that led to his dehydration, ISP said, confirming the boy had died about a week or less before the hunter discovered his body.

Appearing in the same Washington Circuit Court in Salem, Indiana Anderson was extradited, Coleman pleaded guilty as part of a bargaining agreement.

'You packaged Cairo like trash,' Judge Larry Medlock said. 'He was an innocent little boy who wanted to be loved.'

'Sovereign citizens' - the defense Anderson on Tuesday turned to - do not believe they are bound by federal or state law, or have to comply with any type of law enforcement. 

Many often do not believe that they are required to pay taxes either. The FBI considers the group to be an extremist organization. 

Well-known members include Terry Nichols, the Oklahoma City bomber, while unproven proponents include the grandfather who fought Pittsburgh police over his impending house eviction with a six-hour gun battle this past August,

A police source named the man as William Bill Hardison, 63, who he said was both a veteran and 'Sovereign Citizen'.

The man died, and relatives said the house on Broad Street in Garfield had been owned by his recently deceased brother

He was said to have been well stocked with firearms and ammunition, which led to up to 100 rounds being exchanged between him and law enforcement. 

His son, who is also named William Hardison, was at the scene and pleaded with his father to end the standoff.

'Dad, please surrender. Please give up,' he said. 'You have children and grandchildren that love you dearly. Please stand down.'

A woman identifying herself as the man's sister added: 'He's a good man, he's just lost his brother and he was in the service.'

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