The Deck - LaQuandra “Shavonne” Slater (4 of Clubs, Michigan)
Episode Date: January 22, 2025Our card this week is LaQuandra “Shavonne” Slater, the 4 of Clubs from Michigan.Thirty-eight-year-old, LaQuandra “Shavonne” Slater was known for being independent. Everyone who knew her said s...he was outspoken, knew how to take care of herself, and wasn’t one to be pushed around. So, it was all the more shocking when, in December of 2016, she disappeared without a trace.If you know anything about the disappearance of LaQuandra “Shavonne” Slater in Flint, Michigan in December of 2016, we urge you to call Flint Township Police Detective Lacey Lopez directly at 810-600-3266 or you can leave an anonymous tip with the Crime Stoppers of Flint & Genesee County by calling 1-800-422-5245.View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/laquandra-shavonne-slater Let us deal you in… follow The Deck on social media.Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuckFacebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllcTo support Season of Justice and learn more, please visit seasonofjustice.org.The Deck is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowersTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieTwitter: @Ash_FlowersFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AFText Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
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Our card this week is Laquandra Slater, the four of clubs from Michigan.
Laquandra, or Siobhan as most people called her, was known for being tough and independent.
Everyone who knew the 38-year-old said she was outspoken, knew how to take care of herself,
and wasn't one to be pushed around.
Which made it all the more shocking when in December of 2016,
she disappeared without a trace.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is The Deck. It was around December 8, 2016, when Shimonja Wooten went to message her cousin, Siobhan,
on Facebook.
Siobhan hadn't posted anything for a while, not since like Thanksgiving two weeks prior.
So Siobhan wanted to see if everything was okay.
So she first fired off a message, waited to hear back, but it was five minutes,
ten minutes, an hour later, still no response.
And that was very unlike Siobhan not to reply.
But what was even stranger was after Shimonja sent a bunch more messages,
it appeared as though Siobhan had blocked her.
Now, Siobhan was known to be pretty headstrong and
likely to hold a grudge if you had wronged her. Now, Siobhan was known to be pretty headstrong and likely to hold a grudge if you had
wronged her, but Shimonja couldn't see any reason why she would just block her out of nowhere.
So she decided to switch tactics and call Siobhan's phone. Except it went straight to voicemail.
Shimonja called again. Voicemail. Several attempts later and all of a sudden, the calls stopped
going to voicemail, and
instead she got an automated message saying that the number had been disconnected and
was no longer accepting calls.
None of this was making sense.
So Shimonja took the next step.
She started reaching out to the people in Siobhan's circles.
And as it turned out, nobody, including Chauvin's maintenance man,
had seen her since Thanksgiving.
So at this point, Schimonja started to get seriously worried.
So she put out a post on Facebook to see if anyone had any information.
But no one seemed to know a thing.
So it was time to kick things up a notch.
That same day, Schimonja drove over to Chavon's apartment in Flint, Michigan.
She didn't appear to be home, and her black Chevy wasn't anywhere in the building's parking lot.
But Shimonja did run into her maintenance man, and he said that he usually saw Chavon leave
her house every morning at around 10 a.m., but he hadn't seen or heard from her in several days.
And she was now late on her rent payment.
Here is Flint Township Police Department Detective
Lacey Lopez, who was put on this case around 2020.
He said it was really unusual for her
because she typically always paid at end time.
So he was also concerned.
Now her maintenance man said that he'd called
the emergency contact on Siobhan's lease multiple times
and left multiple
messages.
But no one ever answered or called him back.
We tried to look into who this emergency contact was, but the detectives never got that information.
So with Shimonja there now, and all signs pointing to something being wrong, the maintenance
man agreed to let her do a welfare check.
They did go inside, everything appeared to be normal
in her apartment.
There was nothing that was alarming
or suspicious in the apartment.
McQuenter, a very neat person.
The refrigerator still had food items that were fresh.
Everything appeared to be pretty undisturbed.
But there was one sign that something wasn't quite right.
Siobhan's pets.
She had two snakes, which she kept in a glass enclosure, and they appeared to have not been
fed for several days by that point.
The snakes not being looked after, it was extremely unlike Laquandra.
Those were her babies, and she took care of them. All of this was enough for Shimonja to know
that something was definitely wrong.
So that evening at around 6.30 PM,
she went down to the police station
to file a missing persons report.
Police immediately did a search of local hospitals
and jails, but they didn't find Siobhan in any of them.
They did, however, find her Chevy in Impound.
When they ran the plates on her car,
they realized that it had been towed just days earlier
after it was found abandoned in the parking lot
of an apartment complex in Flint,
six miles from Siobhan's home.
Now, unfortunately, detectives couldn't find any link
between Siobhan and anyone in that complex, so the car being there just
added to the mystery of her disappearance.
Latoya Brown, another one of Siobhan's cousins, said that she would never have
just abandoned her Chevy like that. And here's Latoya recalling this.
So I knew something was wrong when they found her truck and not her.
And after that, I instantly knew something was wrong when they found her truck and not her.
And after that, I instantly knew something was right.
I know her. She cherished her thing.
That same night, Flint detectives went to search Siobhan's apartment themselves.
They hoped that they could find something that Siobhania and the maintenance van hadn't.
Something that could help them figure out where in the world Chavon disappeared to.
Here is a voice actor reading what the previous detective's
notes said about that search.
We went into the residence and noticed that everything
was very well kept, neat and orderly.
The cupboards still had food in them.
The refrigerator still had food and other items in it.
However, the toilets appeared to have been sitting for a while with cleaner in them. The residence appeared to have been undisturbed,
and it did not look as though there had been any form of altercation, and there was no forced entry
to the residence. We did observe that inside the residence, in the master bedroom, there were four
dressers, all of which were empty of clothing. The closets still had clothing, shoes,
and other apparel inside of them.
We were unable to determine if the residents
had been cleared by Slater moving items out.
Unfortunately, there wasn't much else of note
at Siobhan's apartment, aside from the two reptiles.
But detectives did photograph everything
and later collect various items laying around
for possible DNA sampling, just in case.
Then, as they were heading out, they ran into someone who was trying to head in,
one of Siobhan's friends, who we'll call Martin.
Martin told detectives that he was one of Siobhan's good friends and that he'd been
looking for her for several days, and he'd actually come there to check on her just as
everyone else had.
Like many people, he'd had contact with Siobhan on Thanksgiving.
His contact had been in person, though.
The two had gotten dinner together at the Golden Corral, but he'd also had additional contact with her after that,
over the phone on December 2nd,
which was more recently than anyone else police had spoken to so far.
When he had spoken to her, she kept talking about her mother
and was crying, saying she was tired of being by herself
and doing the same thing every day.
So from a couple different people,
we've kind of heard that Laquandra was kind of like
a caretaker for her mom."
Unfortunately, Siobhan's mom had passed away in the year before she went missing.
And from what Detective Lopez heard, she was having a really hard time with it.
But he thought it was suspicious that she got emotional because she didn't normally
do that.
But that was like really the only thing that he could say was odd.
Martin told detectives that he started getting really worried about Siobhan by December 5th, and he'd been driving around every day since looking for her.
They asked him, do you know of anybody else that she would talk to that we could go talk to and
see like when they last talked to her? He said no. He knew that she was dating a black male on and
off for several years. However, he didn't remember his name.
Martin said that the male had gone to prison
for crashing a vehicle that belonged to Laquandra
into Laquandra, and that he had gotten out of prison
approximately one month prior.
This seemed like a pretty good lead to detectives,
but without a name, it was gonna be difficult
to track this man down.
It was the next day when Latoya Brown, the cousin we heard from earlier and another cousin
went down to the station to file their own missing person report for Siobhan.
They didn't know that Shimonja had already been there the day before, but still detectives
took the opportunity to learn more from these cousins about who Siobhan was.
And Latoya told detectives that the last time she saw Siobhan in person
was on Halloween. Here is our reporter Madison speaking with her about this last encounter.
Like what energy did you get from her that day?
I mean she was Siobhan but she was just telling me stories, things she was going through with
this particular guy. But I mean she she was being herself, normal joking.
Do you remember the guy's first name
that she was kind of having trouble with?
No, that I don't know.
Like I said, during that time, I hadn't seen her,
so I didn't know who she was dealing with,
and I can't recall, even if she called me his name,
I wouldn't remember now anyway.
So detectives still had no name to run with. But Latoya did provide some
interesting background on Siobhan that was helpful to them. For one, she
assured them that Siobhan was not the kind of person to just lose contact
with her friends and family. And two, she implied that Siobhan had built a
reputation for herself.
She's known for being tough. She's known for being tough.
She's known for carrying herself in a manner
like she ain't to be messed with.
So people knew like they would have to take her
with some force.
This wasn't no, oh, she went willingly.
This, it was a fight, I'm sure, because I know her.
Detectives also learned that Siobhan had a gun license and normally was carrying.
I keep getting the description of a very strong woman.
Like, we call it gangster, but she could take care of herself, obviously.
Detectives found out that while Siobhan worked in home health care,
she had a second source of income as a large-scale cocaine dealer,
and she had a second apartment that she dealt out of.
So detectives paid a visit to this second apartment on December 19th.
They didn't actually have a warrant at that time,
so going in was kind of out of the question,
but they figured they'd just go poke around,
see if anyone was in the area,
see if they could find out anything else about her.
Here is more from the previous detective's notes at the time. go poke around, see if anyone was in the area, see if they could find out anything else about her.
Here is more from the previous detective's notes
at the time.
When we entered the building, we were met by a male
walking down from the second floor.
The male would not provide his name
and stated he tries to stay out of people's business
because of the location where he lives.
He was shown the photo of Slater,
and he stated that he has seen her around the complex
and walked us to her apartment door.
The mail stated that he has not seen her in a few weeks and that was out of the normal.
I asked the mail where the mailbox bank was located.
He stated it was on the second floor.
It was at that mailbox bank on the second floor where things started to get really strange. Detectives found a note taped to the front of Siobhan's mailbox door,
and handwritten on it was one word, deceased.
Now, detectives had zero evidence at that point that Siobhan was deceased,
so there was no reason anyone would have posted such a sign on her mailbox
unless they knew something detectives
didn't.
So the next day, detectives got a warrant to search inside Siobhan's second apartment,
thinking maybe from the handwritten note that this was likely a crime scene.
But when they got inside, they found it was almost completely empty, except for a couple
of folding chairs and some bottled water.
They sprayed the place with luminol,
but even that didn't turn up anything interesting or useful.
Detectives also sent the deceased note
to the state crime lab for testing.
But because this is an ongoing investigation,
they wouldn't tell us anything more
about what the note looked like or what tests were conducted.
So the same day they searched her second apartment,
detectives also executed a search warrant for Siobhan's car.
Inside they found some spare shopping bags, clothes,
and a purse full of toiletries,
but nothing really out of the ordinary.
There was no blood or fingerprints
legible enough to put into APHIS.
The only thing that stood out to detectives
was a styrofoam container of raw chicken breast
from a local liquor store that had gone rancid.
And actually, it ended up being more helpful than you might think because it had an expiration
date on it.
December 5th.
Here's our reporter Madison and Detective Lopez again.
Does that change your opinion about the timeline?
Just my experience with liquor stores, they only have meats like that for a couple days
prior to the expiration date.
They don't keep meat long at these party stores.
The next morning, detectives went to the liquor store where the chicken had been bought to
see if they could find any video of Siobhan or anyone else making the purchase.
When they got there, they were surprised to see a missing person
poster for Siobhan posted at the counter. As it turns out, the owner knew her because she was a
regular customer, and he'd been concerned because he hadn't seen her around recently.
When asked about the chicken, the owner said that he didn't remember Siobhan buying it specifically.
She was in and out of the store a lot, and he didn't always make note of her.
But he said he last remembered seeing her
maybe the end of November or beginning of December.
Basically says like, the latest we would put that out
for sale is December 1st.
So they figured sometime between the 1st and the 5th
was when she was in the store.
He allowed them to look at the video.
However, the video only stayed for nine days.
So they missed it by four days.
That told detectives that Siobhan was still alive
and in the area in early December.
Also, the fact that the chicken was still in the car
made it seem like Siobhan's drive home from the liquor store
might've been interrupted before she got a chance
to take the chicken inside.
But without video evidence of Siobhan making the purchase, the chicken didn't provide
any hard point on the timeline.
So it's not a great timeline.
I mean, we're used to working with like a day or two in good situations, but to have
it be this wide was a downfall from the beginning.
Detectives did look into Siobhan's phone records,
but it wasn't as simple as they might've thought.
Siobhan was known to have multiple phones at the same time,
and they ended up getting search warrants
for two of the numbers.
One search came back with no records,
meaning that Siobhan either wasn't using that phone at all
or it had been disconnected.
And then the second search came back with normal activity,
but detectives didn't want to release any information
about what that normal activity
might've showed at this time.
With no one new coming forward
and all evidence-based leads exhausted,
Siobhan's case went quiet for about a month.
And then in January,
detectives connected with Siobhan's credit union
to search her bank accounts.
They found that she had automatic deposits
of $733 on the first of every month.
So we figured that on December 1st,
she would have gotten paid that $733
and her normal actions would be to remove that money
immediately that same day, but she did not.
That told detectives that by December 1st,
something must have already happened to Siobhan
that made her unable to withdraw her money as she usually did.
Now, I should note that around this time,
several other women went missing in downtown Flint,
many along Fenton Road,
which is about a 10-minute drive
from where Siobhan's car was found abandoned.
Many of these women were suspected sex workers
and unfortunately, most of them have never been found
nor has anyone ever claimed responsibility
for their disappearances.
So it was certainly possible that the unknown individual
or individuals responsible for the other women's
disappearances could have been responsible
for Siobhan's as well.
But police have no reason to suspect that Siobhan was a sex worker.
Plus, they had more viable leads to run down first,
like exploring connections that she had in the drug world
and finding that boyfriend that she was having trouble with.
And, as it turns out, he wasn't the only man in her life
that they had to be concerned
about.
LaCondra has a couple different male friends that are very sketchy and in contact with
her at the time she went missing.
It turns out, Siobhan had actually taken out
restraining orders against two of these men.
One of the restraining orders was against a man
who we'll call John, and it was granted in August of 2016,
just a few months before Siobhan vanished.
That's when she came into the police department
to report a threat to her life.
Detective Lopez was actually the one
to take down that report.
She said she was in fear for life because she had gotten
voicemails from the ex-boyfriend John,
and she played the voicemails for me,
and I listened to them.
One was, quote, unquote, bitch, I will kill you,
and I will slash those tires, and I will go in your crib.
Laquadra told me that John was about 19 years old,
but she had been dating him.
A direct threat on her life just four months before Siobhan went missing
was obviously suspicious to detectives.
But when they looked into it, they found out that John was in Ohio
when Siobhan went missing.
Plus, he submitted to and passed a polygraph test.
Detectives told us they still haven't officially cleared John,
but it's safe to say that they were more concerned with running down other leads. And another one of these
men, who we'll call Adam, stood out for his violent criminal history, including murder,
stalking and felony firearm charges.
Apparently Adam and Siobhan had been together kind kinda on and off since at least 2012, and
their relationship was rocky from the start.
Adam had been released from prison about 10 months prior to Siobhan's disappearance.
And putting the pieces together, Adam was actually the boyfriend that Martin brought
up in the first days of the investigation, the one who'd hit Siobhan with her own car.
This crash happened on October 14, 2012.
That day, Siobhan and Adam were hanging out at her apartment
when she mentioned that she wanted to go check in
on her mother, who she typically took care of.
According to Siobhan, this made Adam upset.
And when she left the apartment in her car,
he decided to leave too, following her
in his Dodge Ram truck.
Upon reaching the area of 13th and Saginaw Street,
Adam rammed the back of Laquandra's vehicle
as she was pulling into a parking lot.
And then she got out of the vehicle and ran.
As she was getting out of the vehicle
and trying to run away, he struck the vehicle again.
So they ended up charging him with,
I start with intent to do great bodily harm.
So with that charge, you don't necessarily need a conviction to
go back to prison in Michigan. If you violate parole, they'll send you back.
So Adam was sent to prison. During that time, Siobhan allegedly told her cousin
Shimonja that she was thinking of getting back together with Adam when he
was released. Unfortunately, we weren't able to confirm
the pair's relationship status
at the time of Siobhan's disappearance.
A number of people in Siobhan's circle remember hearing
or seeing her with a man around that time,
but for one reason or another,
nobody could remember his name.
Martin said that he'd often hear Siobhan
and a boyfriend arguing in the background
of their phone calls.
And Latoya said that she knew Siobhan was having a situation with some guy, but she
never learned that guy's name.
Another friend of hers that we have sent to make contact with, she had the same thing.
She said that she was having an issue with this guy and that he wouldn't make her alone.
It sounded bad.
So she didn't know who.
She never said his name.
And that's about when detectives hit a dead end, with no one else willing to speak
and barely more than a rancid container of chicken
as evidence.
It actually took three years
until there was another break in the case.
And it came across their desks
in the form of a domestic assault report in May, 2020,
an incident with an eerily familiar scenario.
We were able to get our hands on a copy
of the incident report through a FOIA request.
And the complainant whose name we are going to withhold
told detectives that she and her boyfriend were hanging out
when she told him that she was gonna head home.
Shortly thereafter, he started verbally assaulting her and threatening her life.
After some back and forth, the complainant was able to drive away, but
her boyfriend followed her in a truck.
And after catching up with her, he began repeatedly hitting her car
until it crashed into a residence.
Now this entire altercation sounded a lot like the crash
that sent Siobhan's ex-boyfriend to prison in 2012.
And when police asked the complainant
about the credibility of the threats
that her boyfriend made,
she said she believed them,
quote,
due to him killing her friend, Shay V.
Now Shay V was another of Siobhan's nicknames.
So detectives were putting the pieces together in no time.
And sure enough, when they dug deeper, they confirmed that in fact,
the complainant's boyfriend was Siobhan's ex-boyfriend, Adam.
So it seemed at this point that all fingers were pointing toward Adam.
But because detectives are still actively investigating
Chauvin's case, that is all they would tell us for now.
At the time of this recording,
Chauvin still has not been found.
Detective Lopez seems to think that there are people
out there who might have answers,
but they might be reluctant to talk
because they're maybe wrapped up in the drug world.
This might be a good time to remind people
that through Crimestoppers,
you can submit tips completely anonymously.
I used to do a lot of volunteering from my local branch
and when a tip comes in,
they actually remove any and all identifying information
from the tip before passing it on to police.
But with that in mind,
remember to be as detailed as possible
if you use the service.
The hope is that in due time, detectives can bring justice for Siobhan.
And all those who continue to think about her, like her cousin Latoya, who still shares
her pictures on Facebook and hashtags her name every year.
She just wants to make sure that Siobhan is not forgotten.
No one deserves this. And her family don't deserve this.
We being punished as well, because we're having to go through life
and not know whatever happened to her, just feel wonder every day.
What happened? Is she alive? Is she not?
Just not knowing is the worst part.
I want her to know that she loved and that she missed
and that she's not forgotten.
Like maybe after all these years,
she's still not forgotten.
If you know anything about the disappearance
of Laquandra Siobhan Slater in Flint, Michigan
in December of 2016,
we urge you to call Flint Township Police Detective
Lacey Lopez directly at 810-600-3266.
Or again, you can leave an anonymous tip with Crimestoppers of Flint and Genesee County
by calling 1-800-422-5245. The Deck is an AudioChuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about The Deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com.
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