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DarkReign
01-29-2009, 09:26 AM
http://detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090129/METRO08/901290400

http://detnews.com/graphics/2009/0129frozen.jpg
Inside the abandoned Roosevelt Warehouse in Detroit, a body lies frozen in a block of ice. (Photo by Max Ortiz / The Detroit News)



Frozen in indifference: Life goes on around body found in vacant Detroit warehouse
Charlie LeDuff / The Detroit News
DETROIT -- This city has not always been a gentle place, but a series of events over the past few, frigid days causes one to wonder how cold the collective heart has grown.

It starts with a phone call made by a man who said his friend found a dead body in the elevator shaft of an abandoned building on the city's west side.

"He's encased in ice, except his legs, which are sticking out like Popsicle sticks," the caller phoned to tell this reporter.

"Why didn't your friend call the police?"

"He was trespassing and didn't want to get in trouble," the caller replied. As it happens, the caller's friend is an urban explorer who gets thrills rummaging through and photographing the ruins of Detroit. It turns out that this explorer last week was playing hockey with a group of other explorers on the frozen waters that had collected in the basement of the building. None of the men called the police, the explorer said. They, in fact, continued their hockey game.

Before calling the police, this reporter went to check on the tip, skeptical of a hoax. Sure enough, in the well of the cargo elevator, two feet jutted out above the ice. Closer inspection revealed that the rest of the body was encased in 2-3 feet of ice, the body prostrate, suspended into the ice like a porpoising walrus.

The hem of a beige jacket could be made out, as could the cuffs of blue jeans. The socks were relatively clean and white. The left shoe was worn at the heel but carried fresh laces. Adding to the macabre and incongruous scene was a pillow that gently propped up the left foot of the corpse. It looked almost peaceful.

What happened to this person, one wonders? Murder in Motown is a definite possibility. Perhaps it was death by alcoholic stupor. Perhaps the person was crawling around in the elevator shaft trying to retrieve some metal that he could sell at a scrap yard. In any event, there the person was. Stone-cold dead.

A symbol of decay
The building is known as the Roosevelt Warehouse, once belonging to the Detroit Public Schools as a book repository. Located near 14th Street and Michigan Avenue, the warehouse burned in 1987 and caused something of a scandal as thousands of books, scissors, footballs and crayons were left to rot while Detroit schoolchildren -- some of the poorest children in the country -- went without supplies.

The building was eventually sold to Matty Moroun, the trucking and real estate mogul who is worth billions of dollars and is the largest private property owner in the state of Michigan. Among other properties, Moroun owns the decrepit Michigan Central Rail Depot that squats directly next to the warehouse. The train station has become the symbol of Detroit's decay. Like much of his property in southwestern Detroit, Moroun's warehouse and the train station are gaping sores.

The warehouse is so easily accessible, a person in a wheelchair could get in with little effort. There are holes in the fence and in the side entrance. The elevator shaft is wide open. It appears no one has ever tried to close the bay doors.

A colony of homeless men live in the warehouse. Wednesday morning a few fires were burning inside oil drums. Scott Ruben, 38, huddled under filthy blankets not 20 paces from the elevator shaft.

"Yeah, I seen him," Ruben said. The snow outside howled. The heat from the can warped the landscape of rotting buildings and razor wire.

Did he know who the dead person was?

"I don't recognize him from his shoes."

Did he call the police?

"No, I figured someone else did," he said.

"There's lots of people coming through here with cameras and cell phones. I don't got no phone. I don't got no quarter. Things is tight around here."

His shack mate, Kenneth Williams, 47, returned at that point with an armload of wood.

"Yeah, he's been down there since last month at least."

He was asked if he called the police.

"No, I thought it was a dummy myself," he said unconvincingly. Besides, Williams said, there were more pressing issues like keeping warm and finding something to eat.

"You got a couple bucks?" he asked.

Waiting for a response
There are at least 19,000 homeless people in Detroit, by some estimates. Put another way, more than 1 in 50 people here are homeless.

The human problem is so bad, and the beds so few, that some shelters in the city provide only a chair. The chair is yours as long as you sit in it. Once you leave, the chair is reassigned.

Thousands of down-on-their-luck adults do nothing more with their day than clutch onto a chair. This passes for normal in some quarters of the city.

"I hate that musical chair game," Ruben said. He said he'd rather live next to a corpse.

Convinced that it was indeed a body, this reporter made a discreet call to a police officer.

"Aw, just give 911 a call," the cop said. "We'll be called eventually."

A call was placed to 911. A woman answered. She was told it was a reporter calling. The operator tried to follow, but seemed confused. "Where is this building?"

She promised to contact the appropriate authorities.

Twenty minutes or so went by when 911 called the newsroom. This time it was a man.

"Where's this building?"

It was explained to him, as was the elevator shaft and the tomb of ice.

"Bring a jack-hammer," this reporter suggested.

"That's what we do," he said.

Nearly 24 hours went by. The elevator shaft was still a gaping wound. There was no crime scene tape. The homeless continued to burn their fires. City schoolchildren still do not have the necessary books to learn. The train station continues to crumble. Too many homicides still go unsolved.

After another two calls to 911 on Wednesday afternoon (one of which was disconnected), the Detroit Fire Department called and agreed to meet nearby.

Capt. Emma McDonald was on the scene.

"Every time I think I've seen it all, I see this," she said.

And with that they went about the work of recovering a person who might otherwise be waiting for the warm winds of spring.

http://detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090129/METRO08/901290400

Thats just plain fucked up.

to21
01-29-2009, 09:29 AM
That's stone cold.

Blake
01-29-2009, 11:19 AM
Detroit Rot City

MannyIsGod
01-29-2009, 11:26 AM
[ ] is sad over not going into Detroit while in MI

I Love Me Some Me
01-29-2009, 11:29 AM
Someone straight iced that guy in cold blood.

Jekka
01-29-2009, 12:43 PM
Detroit was really depressing when I drove through - I couldn't believe the number of decrepit and abandoned buildings in the immediate downtown area where in most cities there is at least a healthy amount of commerce that occurs around those left behind. Although I'm somehow not desensitized to this sort of thing by now, I'm also not surprised something like this happened.

DarkReign
01-29-2009, 01:09 PM
Detroit was really depressing when I drove through - I couldn't believe the number of decrepit and abandoned buildings in the immediate downtown area where in most cities there is at least a healthy amount of commerce that occurs around those left behind. Although I'm somehow not desensitized to this sort of thing by now, I'm also not surprised something like this happened.

Live here longer. You start to care less and less. Detroit was abandoned in the 70s (as I am sure youre aware). The surrounding areas are nice (even beautiful), but we in SouthEast Michigan either forgot (my parents) or never knew (me) what it is like to actually have a desirable destination downtown.

Some residents like to try and lighten the reality that is Detroit by rationalizing their way through a better-than-perceived argument. Reality says otherwise....its a shithole, from its politics and politicians to the general apathy of the surrounding suburbs.

I have had numerous conversations with the generation before mine about how nice and neighborly it "used" to be. It is an idea beyond my conception with my experiences in the downtown area (rather limited, in truth, but far beyond most).

Its surprising when I travel to see vibrant downtown areas that never seem to sleep. Detroit is a ghost-town anywhere but around the casinos or sporting arenas (if there is a game that night).

It is my opinion that the suburbs should annex Detroit and everyone in the Metro should pay the 3% city tax. The entire city would be turned around in 5 years...we'd have mass transportation to the suburbs in 10-15 and the current problems and decrepit nature of Detroit would appear only in history books.

Ahhh, to dream.