The search for 15-year-old Ja’Derrius Minnieweather ended tragically after police confirmed his death and arrested Maurice Parms, 50—but a message reportedly exchanged before his final bike ride is now drawing renewed attention

THE DIGITAL TRAIL IN GHOST TOWN: TEXT MESSAGES SHIFT FOCUS IN THE JA’DERRIUS MINNIEWEATHER MURDER INVESTIGATION

The heart-wrenching search for fifteen-year-old Ja’Derrius Minnieweather has reached a tragic and horrifying conclusion that has left the city of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, shrouded in profound grief and overwhelming outrage. For more than two weeks, the community held onto a flickering hope that the Istrouma High School student would be found alive after disappearing during a late-night bicycle ride on June 5, 2026. However, that hope was permanently shattered when the Baton Rouge Police Department officially announced the re-arrest of fifty-one-year-old Maurice Robbia Parms, formally booking him on a charge of first-degree murder in connection with the teenager’s death. Chief TJ Morse delivered the devastating update to a stunned public, confirming that a high-stakes search warrant executed across multiple locations uncovered a wealth of grim physical evidence that completely dismantled the suspect’s original alibi. Yet, as the legal machinery begins to turn, a newly revealed investigative detail regarding a series of text messages exchanged just before that final bike ride is drawing intense renewed attention.

We are beckoning your spirit”: Search for missing Baton Rouge teen continues

According to official court records and the newly unsealed arrest affidavit obtained from the East Baton Rouge Parish investigation, the digital trail provides a chilling roadmap of the events leading up to the fatal encounter. On the night of his disappearance, Ja’Derrius had ridden his distinct red-and-black bicycle to visit a sixteen-year-old girl who was a longtime close friend. While waiting for her at her residence, digital forensics teams discovered that text messages were actively being exchanged regarding her whereabouts. The data revealed she was out retrieving food with Parms, an older man who had been secretly grooming the minor for months. When Ja’Derrius learned of this, a very tense and volatile disagreement erupted over the phone and later spilled out onto the street, centered entirely on the protective teenager confronting the fifty-one-year-old man about the highly inappropriate way he was acting toward the underage girl.

The shattering of a fabricated neighborhood alibi

What has shocked the Baton Rouge community just as deeply as the raw violence of the murder is the meticulous, cold-blooded cover-up that Parms executed immediately following the fatal encounter to hide his tracks. When initially questioned by missing persons detectives during the first week of the investigation, Parms offered a baseline statement completely denying any physical interaction with the boy or his property, claiming he went straight home and stayed inside until morning. However, when digital forensics teams and homicide investigators secured high-definition surveillance footage from surrounding residential security systems, they captured a reality that explicitly exposed the suspect’s deception. The video evidence showed a tall male, positively identified by law enforcement as Parms, physically riding a small bicycle from the scene of the crime back to his residence in the dark early morning hours, dragging a municipal garbage can near the road, and frantically throwing the bicycle into dense neighborhood bushes to hide it from passing police patrol cars.

The tracking footage further revealed a highly calculated effort to destroy immediate physical evidence before an official search could even be organized by the victim’s family. Security clips caught the suspect removing a black face mask, heavy gloves, and a heavily stained t-shirt, tossing the bloodied garments into several neighborhood garbage cans. Traffic cameras and residential grids later recorded Parms returning to retrieve those hidden items, loading them into his personal truck, and using a cloth to frantically wipe down the interior and exterior areas of his vehicle. When the Baton Rouge Police Department deployed specialized crime scene technicians to execute a sweeping search warrant, they uncovered large, suspected bloodstains soaked into the ground where the street fight occurred, and subsequent chemical testing inside the cabin of Parms’s truck confirmed the presence of hidden blood spatters, proving the victim had been subjected to severe physical trauma within or immediately adjacent to the vehicle.

Blood on the scene and inside the truck

This overwhelming combination of forensic blood evidence and contradictory video tracking forced a dramatic shift in the interrogation room, leading to the formal filing of the first-degree murder warrant, which carries the potential for capital punishment due to the deliberate destruction of evidence and second-degree cruelty to a juvenile. Despite the definitive nature of the criminal charges, law enforcement officials face a remaining, agonizing hurdle that continues to weigh heavily on the Minnieweather family, as the teenager’s body has still not been recovered. Detectives firmly believe that after the fatal beating, Parms stashed the victim’s remains, came back to retrieve them, and utilized his truck to transport them to a remote, unconfirmed location. Currently, massive search operations covering nearly one thousand acres have shifted focus toward dense backwoods, local waterways, and deep rural terrains, with teams from the United Cajun Navy utilizing K-9 tracking units and sonar technology to locate the final resting place of the young student-athlete, determined to bring Ja’Derrius Minnieweather home to his grieving family so they can finally receive the justice and closure they deserve.


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