The tragic discovery of two young girls’ bodies buried in suitcases in a field near Ginn Academy in Cleveland’s South Collinwood neighborhood has shocked the community, with the case now centering on family heartbreak, a five-year search, and pending DNA confirmation. On Monday, March 2, 2026, a neighbor walking his dog alerted authorities after the animal detected a scent near East 163rd Street and Midland Avenue. Partial remains were found in two separate suitcases buried in shallow graves, leading to a homicide investigation by Cleveland police and the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office.

The victims were identified as 10-year-old Amor Wilson and 8-year-old Mila Chatman, half-sisters, through DNA relationship testing by the medical examiner’s office (announced Thursday, March 5, 2026). Their mother, 28-year-old Aliyah Henderson, was detained Wednesday evening near the scene and charged with two counts of aggravated murder (plus child endangering in some reports). She was booked into Cuyahoga County Jail, with police confirming her as the girls’ mother. The deaths are treated as homicides, though exact causes (beyond burial and concealment) await full autopsy results.

DeShaun Chatman, who claims to be Mila’s biological father, spoke publicly for the first time on Thursday, March 5, expressing overwhelming grief and anger. He last saw Mila in 2020 (when she was about 3), after he and her mother lived together briefly post-birth but never married. Chatman described Mila as a “happy-go-lucky” child who loved pink and was always smiling, calling her his “princess.” He alleged he spent five years searching for her—repeatedly contacting Child Protective Services (CPS), courts for emergency custody, and police for welfare checks—but was “denied all access” and told he couldn’t locate her due to unknown whereabouts. He visited the discovery site with reporters, leaving flowers at a growing memorial.

Chatman is now cooperating with detectives on DNA testing to formally confirm paternity and his relationship to Mila. He told outlets like Cleveland 19 News he’s in ongoing contact with investigators, expecting results “within the next couple of days” (as of March 5–6, 2026). Sensational headlines like “THE DNA TEST THAT COULD ANSWER EVERYTHING” suggest the results may confirm identity while shedding light on “what happened during the five years she was missing.” However, credible reports (Cleveland 19, WOIO, WKYC, AP, FOX8, and others) focus on paternity verification and family history—not on the DNA revealing specific events during her disappearance or cause-of-death details beyond the overall homicide context. No updates as of early March 9, 2026, indicate results have been released publicly or that they uncover new investigative breakthroughs into the years of absence.

The case highlights systemic frustrations: Chatman’s repeated but unsuccessful efforts to regain contact or custody, the girls’ apparent isolation from extended family, and questions about why no missing persons report or welfare checks escalated sooner. Henderson faces serious charges, with bond set high (e.g., $2 million in some accounts). The community mourns two innocent lives lost, with tributes emphasizing the girls’ youth and potential.

This heartbreaking story underscores the pain of prolonged uncertainty in missing child cases and the role of DNA in providing closure—even amid unimaginable loss. Prayers remain with DeShaun Chatman, the families, and all affected as the investigation continues.