
Death in the Dorms Season 2: Episode 6: Latasha Norman
20/20- 327 views
- 28 Jan 2025
Jackson State University junior Latasha Norman's promising future comes to a tragic end when she goes missing following an afternoon class, then she is found murdered in a wooded area in Jackson, Mississippi.
Originally Aired: 02/22/24
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Hi, 20 20 listeners. This week, we're bringing you the sixth and final installment of Death in the Dorms season 2. Today, we'll hear the story of Latasha Norman, a promising young accounting student from Jackson State University who mysteriously disappeared after class 1 afternoon. Let's take a listen.
Latasha, her dream was to go to Jackson State.
To be able to go to HBCU, it's empowering.
20 year old Latasha Norman was last seen leaving a class at Jackson State University.
Sometimes I feel like if I had answered my phone, I possibly could have prevented something. You just disappeared.
You're supposed to feel safe when you're off to college. And for that to happen, you know, everyone was in fear.
Because it had happened on a black college campus, it draw even more attention. That's the first time we knew that an incident had happened. And it looks so lifelike.
All the memories just
All these are her trophies.
And this right here is when she was 10 years old. She was a girl scout, and I kept
Latasha Norman is my stepdaughter, but I consider her as my daughter because I raised her from a child.
She was the only daughter I had, and I was very proud of her. Every could she have, she always have that smile on her face. You never seen her angry. That's the type of person Latasha Norman was.
Latasha was born April 21, 1987 here in Greenville, Mississippi. We have a huge family, a very close knit family. I am 10 years older than her, so she was more like my little sister.
When we're younger, she started out wanting to be a teacher because we played teachers a lot. But as Tasha got older, she switched to accounting. And I think that had a lot to do with, following behind Keisha's footsteps.
I taught her, whatever you do, don't never give up. Do your best in everything you do because you can always go up higher. And as she grew up, she did. She did her best. She didn't settle for less.
In high school, at first, she was kinda shy.
Latasha always followed in my footsteps. I played the flute, Tasha played the flute. I was a majorette, Tasha was a majorette. I was on dance line, Tasha was on dance line.
After she became a major, she really came out of her ship.
She was that beacon of light that when she smiled, you smiled. She had that caring heart. There was nothing you couldn't ask Latasha to do for you that she wouldn't do.
Latasha, her dream was to go to Jack State, and their name was known as Jackson State the Normans.
My father played football at Jackson State. My uncles played football at Jackson State. 1 of my uncles even went pro playing professional football. I knew that she wouldn't break the family tradition.
I would tease her. I would call her miss Jackson State. She had no problem being admitted there.
Jackson State is an HBCU, which is a historically black college or university founded in 1877, so very long time ago, about a hundred and 50 years. I'm Olivia Welch. I was the managing editor for the Blue and White Flash, the student led publication for the university. It's very, humbling to be able to go to HBCU considering that many, many years ago, the people who fought for us to have an HBCU weren't allowed to go to college. This being something that was made for us, it's exciting.
It's it's empowering. I think that's 1 of the reasons that, a lot of students come here generation after generation.
A big part of Jay's setting is stepping Mhmm. On the culture here at JSU.
Jackson State. It's a place where you can feel home. You're like family there. We call each other the Tiger family and we're alumni. We're just proud of our dear old college home.
A lot of prominent people in the community went to Jackson State and graduated.
Jackson is approximately an hour and a half from Greenville.
Greenville, Mississippi is in what's called Mississippi Delta, and it's a very impoverished region in the country. It may be the most impoverished region of the country. There's not a lot of economic opportunities there. A lot of people from the Delta come to Jackson to build their careers, because you have to get out of the Delta to really rise up and do something.
On orientation day, after we had moved her in, I know she was ready for us to go, but my wife wasn't ready to go. She wanted to mop. She wanted to wipe everything down. She wanted to make the bed. That was an excuse to linger around.
You know? My wife had had a child before she graduated from high school. She had to work. Latasha was living her dream. And it was almost like my wife was living her dream through Latasha.
Latasha was getting the opportunity to do a lot of things that my wife never had an opportunity to do. So we encouraged Latasha to excel.
In her senior year in high school, she dated, a guy older than Latasha. Stanley was finished with high school, and he wasn't, you know, in college or anything.
He bought a a life size teddy bear and gave it to her, and I think he stole it hard that way.
When Latasha decided to go to Jackson State, she encouraged Stanley to go. I
think she wanted to make something out of here. And so she helped him get into school down there, and she was taking up accounting, and he was taking up criminal justice.
I think Tasha just really pushed him to, like, his full potential in a lot of areas, including family, including school, just different things in his life.
Don't misconstrue a skirt for a flight because I still hit and wear it hurts, dress like a nurse. All white, I almost died twice. Latasha was extremely excited to be in college. She was excited to be on Jackson State campus. She was enjoying the campus life.
She didn't go out much as far as she would tell me, you know.
Latasha had plans for her and Keisha to open up an accounting firm back home, once she finished college.
She kept her grades up. She kept on being on the Dean list at Jackson State University. She kept on working. She kept on, you know, doing her.
She was thriving like a peacock.
In the February,, her and Stanley had went their separate ways. Stanley had moved on, and he was dating someone else. Latasha started dating another guy. His name was Marquise. They seem to be getting along pretty well.
He looked out for her. There was times when she was having problems with her car, and he was there.
At this point in life, I would say that she was happy.
She wanted us to meet Marquise, and so he brought her home to watch her baby brother play in the ballgame, the 10th of November,. We seem to be alright. But they went back that night, and that was the last time we saw her alive.
The day after we had gotten a chance to meet Marquise, Latasha called me. I can tell by the tone of her voice that something wasn't right. But when she called, I was busy at the time. And so I told her I would give her a callback once I leave my meeting. I called her the next day, and I didn't get an answer.
Every night, my wife would talk Latasha back to her dorm room. This particular night, she couldn't get Latasha. When we woke up Nov. 14, 2007, the phone rang. There was a new boyfriend on the phone.
Because my wife had called him, asked him, had he seen Tasha. And he said he hadn't seen her since the night before. And, she handed me the phone, and I talked to him. And, he told me that her car was on campus and, she was missing. He didn't know where she was.
Immediately, I told my wife, get dressed. Let's go. Something ain't right.
On the 13th of November, 2007.
Year old Latasha Norman was last seen
Latasha Norman was a junior business major at Jackson State University.
But campus and city police say they have no suspects in her disappearance.
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My mom called, and she was like, have you talked to Tasha? She told me that my aunt and uncle were headed to Jackson because Natasha hadn't reported to class, and they were worried. At that point, my heart dropped because I knew, you know, something was going on with her because of the tone of her voice a couple of days before that.
I get to grandma's house, and Nikisha was saying Tasha's missing.
Take me back to, November 2007. Tell me what happened. Mm-mm.
We can skip that. I don't wanna talk about it.
By the time we got to Yazoo, Mississippi, I get another call from Marquis, and he says that he's with the campus police, and he's filed a missing person report. They did search the school at that time, the dorms and stuff. When we got there, nobody knew. Nobody seen anything. She just disappeared.
Auto burglaries, house burglaries, armed robberies, and several murders are in that neighborhood. Jackson State is a pretty accessible campus. You can drive in and out of the out of the campus pretty easily.
Latasha's vehicle was still on campus, and so we knew that she didn't leave in her vehicle. They didn't have a whole lot of evidence as to the whereabouts of where Latasha was. Some campus police departments have very limited resources, and the Jackson State police chief decided to reach out to the Jackson Police Department for assistance.
Thank you, uncle.
Investigators with the Jackson Police Department spoke to Latasha's boyfriend. They spoke to, her roommate. A month or so prior to her coming up missing, Latasha's tires have been slashed on campus.
I told her to go to the campus police and report and have it documented.
The timing was awfully strange because particular crimes such as tire slashing, breaking out windows, those are usually more intimate type crimes. It's somebody that you know. Usually, if it's a stranger, they may break into your car and try to take something. But, most of the time, they're not gonna slash your tires or break your windows out or anything like that.
We had been there all that day on the and we hadn't gotten no answers.
20 year old Latasha Norman was last seen leaving a class at Jackson State University.
I thought I was in a nightmare because you see things like this on TV all the time, but never in a million years would I have thought that, hey, this is actually happening to someone in my family, like, missing. The next day, the cousins and the rest of the family decided, hey, we're gonna go to Jackson on our own, and we're gonna look for Tasha. We started formulating search teams. We put up flyers. We walked door to door mainly in the area of where Jackson State was.
It was a big, big ordeal in the city of Jackson to find her, and everybody locally knew about the case.
When I first appeared for help on the Jackson State campus, they set up where I could speak. The the sheriff there did, and it was media there from everywhere. Sasha, if you can hear us, wanna let you know that we love you and that we are not gonna stop until we know something. Because it had happened on a black college campus. So it draw even more attention.
But I'm not shy of the mic. Even before that happened, I had took a media class. It was almost like God had prepared me for this. I went on every talk show, radio show, TV show, news show, anybody that would listen to me.
Tasha had a class at 01:00, and she got out of class at 02:20. And she just disappeared in thin air. She never made it back to a dorm. She never made it to a car.
I was willing to be a man and stand up and fight for them, protect them. It's my job. I raised Latasha.
And I told them when I first came here that I was not gonna leave Jackson until I found my child. I miss Tasha. My wife miss Tasha. And, we hope that they'll hear something from her real soon.
We hadn't got no answers. The police, well, they really wanna accomplish much.
Investigators decide to reach out to the FBI.
The FBI is joining the search for a missing Mississippi college student. Latasha Norman disappeared last Tuesday.
I was the case agent for the Latasha Norman case. When I first got assigned the case, the Jackson State Police Department and Jackson PD gave me the rundown of what they had already attained and just where they were at that particular point, which was basically they didn't have a whole lot of evidence as to the whereabouts of where Latasha was. And so we have to go back over the case because we may have missed something. We decided to pull Natasha Norman's cell phone information. Initial cell phone data that I got from her phone showed that it was at Marquise's location where he lived, and then it was traveling towards the direction of Jackson State University.
And somewhere within that time frame, all activity ceased. She could've cut the phone off. It could have died. It could have been on purpose. But as far as I'm concerned, a college student her age would not leave her phone dead for over 30 minutes, you know, so let alone 3 days.
In looking at Latasha's life, there was nothing that would lead us to believe she would end up walking away from everything.
They interviewed me, the investigators, and they wanted to know who we thought might have had some involvement in it. I told them check out her new boyfriend. After she became missing, I became very suspicious of him. I didn't trust him. He jumped the gun and filed a missing person report for we can even get to town.
I had told him I was on the way, and I was like, why you didn't give us the opportunity to get there and do this? It seemed like he was hiding something. He seemed like he was nervous. When he brought her home, my baby son had a game that night. And so did she come home to watch her baby brother play in the ballgame, then introduce her to her little boyfriend.
And it was a little disagreement between him and, Latasha cousin after the game. He wanted to go back. So I thought maybe him and her got to Oregon or something on the way back home, and he might have tried to retaliate against her or whatever.
We didn't know much about him. Of course, our minds wondered, had he done something to her?
When Tasha went missing, it was a very dark spot for everyone. I've had a few friends and classmates who attended Jackson State during that time. You're supposed to feel safe when you're off to college. And for that to happen, you know, everyone was in fear. I can recall 1 of my friends calling and texting me every day.
She would always say like, Nikki, this can't be real. We're all on this college campus that could have been 1 of us.
We decided to interview Natasha's current boyfriend, Marquise Smith. Because usually when you're dealing with a missing person, oftentimes, it's that person in an intimate relationship with that individual that has something to do with the whereabouts of that individual. Marquise was a little older. He had a job. He had a car.
He had his own place. We also wanted to check his cell phone ping information. Back then, it was fairly new. Most people didn't know that that we could use that to help corroborate certain stories they told us. Time, dates, and things of that nature that he gave us, they seem to match up just fine.
He mentioned that the night prior to her missing, Latasha spent the night at his house, and he probably was 1 of the last people to see her.
Marquis was telling me that the FBI was questioning him, and I told him I knew. And me and him had some choice words. And I told him if I found out that he has something to do with it, I won't it won't gonna be that nice. Our relationship really kinda ended right then.
Stanley Cole came across my radar from Marquis Smith.
So the first 2 and a half years of Tasha being at Jackson State, she dated Stanley. They dated on and off.
By the time Latasha Norman went missing, Stanley and her were not dating that time. Latasha was dating Marquis Smith.
We went to Jackson State. We checked out his records, and we found out that he withdrew from school a week or 2 before us checking in to him, which I thought was strange. In talking to Latasha's friends, we we learned that Latasha's friend kinda suspected him of slashing her tires. We also found out that their relationship had gotten physical at times.
They started learning evidence about the incident that happened in Pearl, Mississippi, which is just a suburb of Jackson. On Oct. 9, which is about a month before Latasha went missing, she takes Stanley Cole to get his paycheck. Latasha sometimes helps Stanley out with stuff, like giving him a ride. She was on the phone with Marquis Smith, who was her boyfriend at the time.
Stanley got mad and lunged at her and actually broke her phone.
She also reported that to the campus police as well.
That's the first time we knew that an incident had happened. This year, filed this report against mister Cole, so she never did tell us. I mean, I cried. I was hurt. I couldn't believe.
When Latasha was, you know, dating Stanley, she told me that he had slapped her. I had went through domestic violence. So I told Latasha, I said, because what happened with me, I'm just gonna let you know, if he did it once, he would do it again. It's time for you to let him go. You know, you move on, let him move on.
And I just kept it between us. After she went missing, that was the first time that my family knew that he had placed his hands on her before because I had never said anything to anyone about the first incident.
The women that are the victims of these crimes generally do not like to tell anybody because they're embarrassed about it.
At that time, we thought she had broken a relationship off of him because she had found out that he had another young lady pregnant.
I was shocked that Stanley had put his hands on Latasha again. I just couldn't believe that Latasha didn't come to me and tell me. But I kinda understood at the same time the reason why she didn't tell me. After they had called it quits, I told Stella, if I found out that he put his hands on her again, he was gonna see me and Jackson. He promised that he wouldn't bother her.
He would cut all ties and communications. He was out of her life to our knowledge. I just hate that I reacted the way I did, that I made Latasha afraid to come to me the next time, but I was proud of her at the same time. I was proud of Latasha that she did step up and take other actions when Stanley placed his hands on her again.
We learned that this was not a normal ex boyfriend, ex girlfriend relationship. They are having some physical altercations that are occurring, and that could lead to deadly altercations.
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We had hope. We had faith. We had belief. We was determined to stay in Jackson till we find her.
As time start to dwindle down and we continue to hear bits and pieces that Latasha had been physically abused by Stanley, you go from being hopeful to like, well, it's not looking good.
Latasha was last seen leaving class last Tuesday afternoon around 02:00.
My aunt took it really hard to see her, like, not being able to eat and not being able to sleep. It was heartbreaking. When 1 family member hurts, all of us hurt.
It was Thanksgiving. We received a call from a car dealer.
The car salesman in Jackson calls the police and says that this car, this 1998 Neon is really suspicious. The carpet in the trunk was cut out, which is not something normally somebody does when you trade in a car. The fact that a car salesman would call the police about something being strange in a car was pretty odd.
We checked the tag in the VIN and found that it belonged to a young lady that we found to be Stanley Cole's girlfriend, Simone. We found out that Simone was pregnant, and Stanley was the father, and that they lived in an apartment building in North Jackson. If you were to do a mental checklist, you have a young lady missing. She was possibly in a volatile relationship with her ex boyfriend who just dropped out of the same school that she was going to, and his current girlfriend was selling her car. The timing was awfully strange.
Some things that we can't act on as far as getting arrest warrants, but we were definitely able to get search warrants for the vehicle. The FBI evidence recovery unit discovered quite a bit of blood splatter in the trunk.
Just the thought of them finding blood in the trunk of the car, my heart dropped. It was like I was reliving that nightmare from the very first day she went missing on February,.
They positively identified the blood in the trunk of the car to the DNA of Latasha Norman. So they realized that she was in the trunk of that car. Jackson Police Department, as well as the FBI and Jackson State decided to subpoena Stanley Cole's cell phone records. After the investigators recovered Stanley's cell phone records and realized that he was at Jackson State that day and they found him at a wooded area off of Brown Street, They decided to go up to Greenevolt, see if they could speak to Simone Harris.
Simone came, and to my surprise, Stanley came. I kinda ignored Stanley, acted like I didn't really know who he was, shook his hand, and I took Simone back. We asked her about the phone records. She was very forthwith. She told us that there's 1 particular time that Stanley was supposed to go out and empty the trash.
He did, but he took 40 minutes to do it. The interview lasted 20, 30 minutes, and we decided that we wanted to talk to Stanley next. His demeanor was very, very nonchalant, a little too nonchalant. He kind of slid back in his chair and put his arm back up on the chair. And he said all the girls from Jackson love all the guys from Greenville.
And it was the way he said it. It was almost adversarial. Right? And you would think that if I'm trying to find out where your ex girlfriend is, that you wouldn't be my adversary. Basically, the test question for me is, what do you think should happen to the person that did something to Latasha?
And Stanley answered, I don't really know. Most people minimize their punishment. So I knew then he had done something. We knew that Stanley most likely knew where Latasha was. I have daughters, and I wouldn't want my daughter to be laid in some field or somewhere, you know, whether dead or alive, by themselves.
So I kinda I I told Stanley that we need to find Natasha. Can you help us find Latasha? He hesitated. His eyes started watering, and he just kinda stared off for a little while. He's he shook his head, and he said, if I tell you where she is, will you let me see my mom?
Stanley's mother was in the lobby. He said, let me see her before I tell you where Latasha is. My partner said, okay. She went in the room and spoke about 2 minutes. She opened the door, and she said, is my son under arrest?
And I said, no, ma'am. And she said, well, we'll be leaving. The fact that Stanley's mother, rather than her helping and assisting, she started looking out for her son. That stung. It became more personal at that point.
We set out to go ahead and get an arrest warrant for mister Stanley Cole.
Stanley Cole was arrested on February,.
Throughout that time that Tasha was missing, Stanley was looking or acting as if he was looking for her. People thought that he was genuinely concerned. I know I did.
There's media everywhere. They're all outside police headquarters. There's detectives and the chief in this interview room looking through the 2 way glass. It is literally a show. Then as soon I opened the door, I started in on Stanley.
Just technique, playing chess.
If you do that, you can try to act like a chef. You know, I might want to be right at
I was gonna make him angry at me, so angry that he would just forget to lawyer up, so to speak. It wasn't hard to get angry. I said a few curse words and threw my notepad. He was upset. I was upset.
I stormed out. Hey, He had liked 1 of the female investigators that had interviewed him before I had from Jackson Police Department. I ran upstairs and got the investigator. I said, hey. You're on.
I want him to maybe find solace in this young lady, and maybe she would be the 1 to get him to tell her where Latasha was. I I wasn't sure if that would work. It was a gamble. She started out far away. She moved in close.
He starts to tell us they got an argument in Simone's car.
This is not the odd and the fight over stuff that we've been through in the last couple of years and stuff we're going through now.
And he was sitting in the driver's seat, and he struck her with a back fist to her nose area.
And I realized I hit it too hard, he wasn't breathing it. Just panic. I was just put in the trunk. I was just rolling around trying to figure out what I was gonna do at this point.
He went and met up with a friend of his, then his girlfriend, and then they picked up Simone Harris. And they ended up eating at Garfield's restaurant in Jackson. And all the while during this time where they're going back and forth between people's houses, where they're picking friends up from classes, and they're eating dinner, Latasha Norman is in the trunk of that Dodge Neon.
For him to drive around with her in that trunk, that stood out. For me, it stood out. He starts to tell us where she is.
I just cloned her up and just dropped off, and he just ran. I never said no to anybody.
How he's explaining it, he's got to show us. So we decided to take him to the scene. We did had this long caravan of police cars and news cars behind us. Stanley led us to the area. Within 10 minutes, we were able to recover Latasha Norman's body.
She was partially closed. The upper torso of her body, including her face, was covered with a piece of cardboard. Unfortunately, her body had been pretty badly decomposed. In order to identify Latasha, we needed to, have her dental records checked, and they were able to, give us a positive match.
All we could do then was just come home because there's nothing else in Jackson that we could do.
I would have never in a million years thought that Stanley would take her life. Like, that was the last thought on my mind.
Yes. I'm sorry. Sometimes I feel like if I had answered my phone, to see what was going on with Tasha, I possibly could have prevented something or just said something to her to avoid what Stanley had done. I just hate that I reacted the way I did the first time that I had learned that he hit her. I felt like she didn't wanna put me in any danger.
I hate to this day that she got tangled up with this young man. My wife is so broken. I was just barely just disappointed. And to be honest with you, I wasn't pleasant. It didn't take much to make me go off.
And that wasn't nice. I thought that was ugly. I had to ask god to take this bitterness, anger from me.
Because Stanley never told us how he killed her. I mean, his explanation was that he hit her.
I hit her too hard and knocked out. After a couple of hours, I checked on it, and it was no cause.
And if you see Stanley Cole, he's a hundred and 40 pound man. I don't know that his blow would have caused death to miss Norman. It just didn't seem likely to any of us.
Not to mention that if she was bleeding so much out of her nose as as he said, we should have found some blood in the front seat. Once Natasha Norman's body is at the medical examiner, we discover a slight jagged nick to the inside of her rib cage. The portion of that rib was missing. Due to the jaggedness of it, it looked like it could have been a metal device or or even a knife. But, unfortunately, we weren't able to tell if she received any damage internally from her organs because she was so badly decomposed.
So we did send that bone to a forensics expert as well, and they were able to tell us that it appeared to be, possibly a stab wound.
The body of a missing college student from Mississippi has been found, and her ex boyfriend is charged with murder.
Mister Cole was still trying to say it was an accident.
I kinda felt, you know, he was a bit strange or whatever, but I didn't actually expect anything like that to happen. So we hear about things like that everywhere else, but no 1 ever actually expects, you know, trouble to be at their doorstep.
We had a community that was really aching from this crime because it happened at Jackson State, which is just a beloved university in the city. And then her family. And if you meet her dad or stepfather, Danny Bolden, you can see how much this man loved his daughter. And they were there every day rooting us on. That made us really, really wanna go in there and win this case.
Did you know that defendant Cole had been violent towards Latasha?
No. Because I warned mister Cole from the beginning That I was the type of gentleman that I did not tolerate that type of stuff.
Natasha, she never exposed that, she kept it here. I think she was ashamed of it.
It was hard to keep your composure, so there were times that, you know, I had to step out.
And then even listening to his his attorney, right, try to clear him of that, it's really surreal.
Putting her in the trunk doesn't make it work. The evidence only shows this is manslaughter. We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of murder. You have caused her parents, other family members, and friends enormous grief. As punishment for this murder, you're hereby automatically sentenced to life in prison.
That's the only time I've seen him show emotion. And them big crocodile tears come down. He apologized to us, but the damage had been done.
Stanley would be held accountable for it. It was just a sense of relief.
In 02/12, the court of appeals overturned the case. It was a 1 punch homicide.
Cole's attorney claims extensive media attention prevented him from receiving a fair trial. Now he suggests a lesser charge to be considered.
Well, we went before the state supreme court. God has granted us this victory 2 years ago, And we have faith and we believe that he won't reverse it. And they rule in his favor saying that it was a mistrial because the judge didn't put consideration for a manslaughter on the table for the jury to to choose from. It was not manslaughter. Murder.
It was murder. Stanley Cole was offered a retrial. So me and my wife had to go back to Jackson and meet the DA. Well, we just wanted justice, but we didn't wanna go back through the trial. She didn't wanna go back through it, and I didn't either.
And on the way down there, we had this conversation. We're gonna offer him a 40 year plea. No parole. No probation. And he accepted it because it was better than the deal he had at first.
And I realized I had to forgive him. I had to release him in order to release myself.
You forgive and you move on. You don't forget it, but you move on.
The only day passed that I don't think about Tasha, but I know god through him. He give me grace.
It ain't all been bad. A lot of
good has come out of this man, but you gotta take the building with the sweet.
I wouldn't want another parent to have to live and go through what we went through. Nobody.
God wanna use Latasha Light to shine a light on team domestic violence. Domestic violence is nothing new. See, for so long, this is like a taboo in our community. People don't like to talk about it, but we have to talk about it.
Don't stay silent. Just speak out and tell someone because it it is hip out there at Jackson State. The unallowed daughter, Latasha Norman. They have this domestic violence in the honor of her.
For Jackson State University to step up and name the Latasha Norman Counseling Center, That was amazing.
Her picture's on the wall there and her story is written there too. So students actually get a chance to learn who she was, why she's so important, and why domestic violence is not okay and it never will be okay. It lets people know the signs to look for and giving them the proper materials and tools to actually have someone to talk to that is, professional.
Well, after her death, they wanted to do a walk in her name. We've done it for the last 15 years. All the proceeds goes back into the Latasha Norman Center.
It keeps her name alive on campus.
I talk to my kids about her. My daughter, I tell her, you have a open line of community. There's nothing you can't come to me or be afraid to say to me.
After losing her, I went back to school to get my master's in counseling just to bring, like, awareness and be that safe person for people to talk to. She just inspired me to wanna be that voice and help others so we can save some people.
Life has a great impact. Her legacy live on, man. She was the angel of God. She's 1 of his angels.
This is Deborah Roberts. That does it for season 2 of death in the dorms. Death in the dorms was produced by ABC News Studios with the Intellectual Property Corporation and Yes Like a River for Hulu originals. You can find the whole series streaming on Hulu. Next week, we begin season 4 of wild crime.
11 Skulls follows the FBI's investigation of Israel Keyes, an elusive survivalist and serial killer whose hunting ground ranged from Alaska to Vermont. And be sure to tune in to ABC Friday nights at 9 for all new broadcast episodes of 20 20. As always, thanks for listening.