Sue Quackenbush
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Everybody wants to talk to the mother.
And it was really a defining moment for him, and he stepped back from talking to the press and, in fact, did not do another interview until about five years ago.
Hulu has a documentary on Morgan's case called Still Missing Morgan, and that was the first time he came back out and talked because that reporter pushed him aside in that way.
I know we're all talking about just this weight on our families and how if we don't keep pushing, law enforcement doesn't do their job.
But that is our responsibility.
It really does fall to us not to quit because if we quit, everybody quits.
Everybody gives up.
And so families and friends who stay out there and keep the case in the media and keep talking and keep highlighting, that's what makes the difference.
Raven, that is heartbreaking to hear you say that in your community, this is a familiar, that having someone go missing is a familiar thing that happens because most of the time,
When your child is missing, you don't know who to talk to in your community.
You can't go to your neighbor and say, what did you do when your child was missing or when your loved one was missing?
And that is heartbreaking to me that the families you work with, that this is familiar to them.
Well, and Josh, it's not just that we lose someone that we love, but the world loses the potential of who that person is and what they bring and what they offer.
Morgan's dream at six years old was to grow up to be a doctor and a circus performer.
And the world got cheated of what she had to offer.
And I think that as we stand here, families and advocates, we're saying to the world that we can't afford to lose our future.
We can't afford to lose what our children have to offer.