STERLING — A sky-blue cross adorned with a shiny blue garland and yellow flowers peeks out from the side of Interstate 190 here, tucked away into a small gulley surrounded by trees.
A Spiderman toy and a small string of brightly colored bulbs hang from the upper part of the cross, with more toys on the ground below next to little daffodils that have just begun to bloom. “JEREMIAH,” the cross reads in all capital letters, with a light affixed to the top and more staked into the ground to illuminate it in the dark.
The roadside memorial, still lovingly maintained by area residents, marks where Jeremiah Oliver was found exactly seven years ago Sunday.
The 5-year-old Fitchburg boy was last seen alive by relatives in September 2013, but he was not reported missing until that December. It would be a full four months before his little body would be found in a suitcase on the side of that highway.
Jeremiah’s mother, Elsa Oliver, and her then-boyfriend, Alberto Sierra, were convicted in Worcester Superior Court in 2017 on charges related to abuse and endangerment of Oliver’s other two children, but no one has been convicted in Jeremiah’s death. Both Oliver and Sierra had been charged in connection with Jeremiah — kidnapping, assault and battery and permitting injury to a child — but those counts were dropped to avoid double jeopardy while the homicide investigation continues.
Worcester District Attorney spokesman Paul Jarvey said the case remains under investigation, and declined to comment further.
“Seven years later, we’re all still screaming, ‘Justice for Jeremiah,'” said Judy Reardon.
Reardon, along with Tami Arguelles, Mike Alvarado and Dina Hammad, were among many Fitchburg residents who came together to conduct searches and vigils for Jeremiah, and later raised funds for his headstone and a memorial bench.
Jeremiah touched them all in their own way, many as parents who could not fathom allowing something like this to happen to their own children. For Alvarado, it was also the hope that he could help Jeremiah’s relatives find the closure that evaded his own family for so long after his sister went missing years earlier.
“We were searching at night, 12 o’clock midnight, we went early morning,” Alvarado said. “We went deep down, knee-deep in the snow, we went in the Nashua River. We went all over Fitchburg.”
They prayed Jeremiah was somewhere safe — that he was at his grandmother’s home in Florida, as Oliver had told the state Department of Children and Families.
“We just wanted to have a little bit of hope that somebody had him hidden somewhere,” Hammad said, but a gut feeling told them otherwise.
Learning that he had been dumped on the side of a highway “like a piece of trash” was devastating, Arguelles said.
The Oliver family had an open case with DCF for more than two years at the time, following a 2011 report alleging neglect of the three children. According to a report from the state Office of the Child Advocate, the family’s initial social worker had kept up with monthly visits and service referrals. But after the family moved to Fitchburg and their case was transferred in January 2013 to the North Central Area Office — which had some of the highest caseload per worker ratios in the state — their new social worker failed to make regular visits and properly investigate subsequent reports of abuse and neglect that spring.
Three employees were fired and another was disciplined for mishandling the case, and then-DCF Commissioner Olga Roche resigned in light of the deaths of Jeremiah and two other children. The agency underwent an overhaul in an attempt to correct the untenable caseloads and other issues that led to Jeremiah slipping through the cracks — but has come under scrutiny again following the 2015 death of Bella Bond, and most recently David Almond.
Fitchburg Police Chief Ernest Martineau is still haunted by Jeremiah’s case. He ran the department’s detective bureau at the time, and had a front-row seat to the investigation and how the case deeply affected the entire community. In his 34 years in law enforcement, it’s one of the cases that hit him the hardest, and “will never be erased from my memory,” he said.
“Every detective, every person that’s worked on that case, has not given up on it,” Martineau said.
On the charges related to Oliver’s other children, Sierra was sentenced to six to seven years in prison and three years probation. Oliver was sentenced to seven and a half years in jail.
According to the Western Massachusetts Regional Women’s Correctional Center in Chicopee, Oliver was released on Jan. 10, 2020. Sierra was released from the North Central Correctional Institute in Gardner on March 25, 2020, according to the state Department of Correction.
Reached on Facebook, Oliver declined to speak with a reporter, saying she’d “had enough trauma,” and then blocked the reporter. Sierra could not be reached directly or though the attorney that represented him in the matter.
Rosa Oliver, Jeremiah’s aunt, said the family still hopes to find justice for him, and asked those who have information to come forward.
“How are you going to hold all this information and not tell nobody?” she said. “It’s going to haunt you in the long run that you did not say anything and let him have justice.”
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Jeremiah Oliver advocates keep alive hope for justice seven years later - Boston Herald
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