‘I’ve Been Looking for Her for Five Years’: A Father’s Agony as Cleveland Suitcase Mystery Might End His Search
The Chilling Discovery that Rocked a Neighborhood
On a biting March afternoon, a dog walker’s routine stroll through a field in Cleveland’s South Collinwood neighborhood became a nightmare. The dog, unusually intent, led its owner to a partially buried object near a playground. It was a suitcase.
Upon closer inspection, the man made a horrifying discovery and immediately called the police. Arriving officers secured the area. Within hours, a second shallow grave containing another suitcase was located just 25 feet away. Inside each lay the remains of a child.
As the news spread, a profound shock settled over the community. The Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office began the arduous task of identification, revealing early on that the preliminary DNA relationship testing confirmed the two girls were half-sisters. One appeared to be between 8 and 13 years old, the other between 10 and 14. Their bodies had been there “for some time.”
A Father’s Worst Fear Takes Shape

As the headlines dominated local news, they caught the attention of a man who had spent five years living in a state of suspended agony. DeShaun Chatman saw the details—the ages, the location—and felt a sickening sense of familiarity.
He contacted the authorities, his voice trembling with a mix of dread and a desperate need for answers. “I’ve been looking for my daughter for five years,” he told them. “I need to know if it’s her.”
Chatman’s search began in 2020, when his then 3-year-old daughter, Mila, was taken by her mother, Aliyah Henderson. Though he and Henderson were not married, they had lived together for about a year after Mila was born. Chatman, a restaurant cook, describes Mila as a radiant child.
“Mila was happy-go-lucky, always smiling,” he said, holding up a treasured photograph from 2020. “Her favorite color was pink—she swore that she was a princess. She was always happy. She was a kid’s kid.”
A Five-Year Fight Against the System
The story of DeShaun Chatman is not just one of a missing child; it is a story of a parent’s desperate battle against a system he feels failed his daughter at every turn.
For five years, Chatman says he tirelessly petitioned Child Protective Services (CPS), the police, and the courts. He knew something was wrong. His primary goal was to secure custody or, at the very least, to ensure Mila’s safety.
His requests for emergency custody were denied repeatedly—five times, according to his count. He recalls being told by officials that without proof of immediate, tangible danger, they could not interfere with the mother’s custody. The police, he said, categorized it as a civil dispute rather than a criminal missing person case, as the child was with a legal guardian, however concerning.
“I tried to locate Mila through a child welfare agency,” Chatman explained, his voice thick with emotion. But his efforts were thwarted by an insurmountable obstacle: “Those efforts were unsuccessful because I did not know where they were living.” Henderson had effectively gone off the grid, cutting ties, changing phone numbers, and moving frequently. The system, designed to protect, felt to Chatman like a maze of red tape that shielded the mother while his daughter remained in limbo.
Cruel Irony in a Field
The discovery of the bodies in the suitcase brought a brutal realization. When Chatman finally learned where Henderson had been staying with Mila and her half-sister, Amor Wilson, it was “within view” of the field where their remains were found. He had been looking across the state, and she was, essentially, in his backyard.
The cruelty of the distance—so close yet so unreachable—was devastating. “It’s very much horrible,” Chatman said. He described feeling consumed by a sense of helplessness. “I felt useless—I couldn’t save my baby.”
His fears intensified on Wednesday evening when police confirmed that they had detained Aliyah Henderson after completing initial interviews and examining evidence.
The Charges and the Final Confirmation
The suspense ended late Wednesday night, though not in the way anyone had hoped. Investigators told Chatman that his daughter was dead.
On Thursday, the case moved with rapid, grim finality. The Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office formally identified the two victims as 8-year-old Mila Chatman and 10-year-old Amor Wilson. DNA relationship testing had confirmed the identities.
Simultaneously, Cleveland Police announced that 28-year-old Aliyah Henderson, the mother of both girls, had been charged with two counts of aggravated murder. Her bond was set at $2 million.
Cleveland Police Chief Dorothy Todd called it a “terrible, tragic situation.” Mayor Justin Bibb expressed the community’s grief, saying, “This has shocked our community. We love and protect our young people, and the loss of these two children is unimaginable.”
A System Under Scrutiny
As the community grieves, the focus is shifting toward accountability. News 5 Investigators revealed that both DeShaun Chatman and a neighbor who shared a duplex with Henderson had called Cuyahoga County’s Division of Child and Family Services with grave concerns about the children’s welfare long before the bodies were found.
This revelation has ignited public anger. How could a mother with previous reports of concern, who was living within view of a popular field, evade the very system designed to protect children for five years? The case is raising uncomfortable questions about the efficacy of child welfare agencies, the cooperation between courts and police in custody disputes, and the barriers facing a parent who is actively trying to save their child.

A Cuyahoga County spokesperson released a statement expressing profound sadness but cited “the active criminal investigation” and “confidentiality obligation of Ohio law” as reasons they could not disclose further information about any prior contact with the family. This statement did little to mollify the demand for transparency.
Waiting for Justice, Mourning a Princess
For DeShaun Chatman, the long wait is over, but a different kind of agony has begun. The search for his daughter has been replaced by a quest for justice and a need to understand the final, unthinkable moments of her life.
He stands now at the edge of the field in South Collinwood, where a makeshift memorial of flowers and stuffed animals—many of them pink—is growing by the day. He holds the 2020 photograph, a frozen image of a smiling 3-year-old princess. He is waiting for answers that may never truly satisfy.
“We are hoping to find answers,” he said, echoing the police chief, but with the added weight of a father’s shattered heart. “I couldn’t save my baby.”
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