Mother of Somer Thompson: ‘I feel like I failed’
Her message to the killer of her daughter: ‘We’re going to get you’
![]() Jake Roth / AP Neighbors continue to pay their respects to Somer Thompson's family by leaving stuffed animals, books, and signing large cards across the street from her home in Orange Park, Fla., Thursday. |
|
Special feature |
Tales of survival A gator victim who got a new high-tech hand; a mom who woke from a coma; a police officer who flatlined twice. Learn how all these people and others came through life-threatening situations. |
Slideshow |
The Week in Pictures Fiery soccer celebration, Ground Zero, big yellow taxis, meteor shower, the Taj Mahal reflected and more news and feature photos from around the globe. more photos |
Prisoner walks out of jail Nov. 25: Security is being reviewed at a Louisiana jail after an officer failed to close two steel doors on Tuesday. An inmate noticed and walked out of jail. TODAY’s Ann Curry reports. |
The mother of the Florida girl who was abducted, murdered and dumped in the trash broke down as she talked about how she tried to teach her 7-year-old to beware of strangers. But, she said Friday, “I feel like I failed.”
Diena Thompson broke down as she said that to TODAY’s Natalie Morales about the importance of telling your children you love them, a message she said she wants to impress on all parents.
“It takes just a couple seconds to tell them you love them,” Thompson said. “Tell them you love them because you don’t know what’s going to happen. And just make them aware of stranger danger. I tried with Somer. I feel like I failed — obviously.”
Asked what people should know about Somer, Thompson said, “Just how beautiful she was; how sweet and innocent and just wanted to be friends with everybody.”
‘We’re coming for you’
Morales then asked Thompson what she had to say to the person or persons who abducted and killed her daughter. The grieving mother’s eyes hardened as she stared into the camera with cold resolve.
“We’re coming for you,” she said. “We’re going to get you.”
Morales asked if Thompson is confident those responsible will be found.
“I want to be confident, but I was confident that she was going to come home,” Thompson said, breaking down in tears. “And she didn’t, but I know they’re working and I have faith in them,” she added of the efforts of local, state and federal law-enforcement agencies involved in the investigation.
Somer was walking home from school in Orange Park, Fla., Monday afternoon when she ran ahead of her sister and twin brother after getting into a spat with another student. She was last seen passing a vacant house some 500 yards from the home she never saw again.
Killer on the loose
After a massive hunt, Somer’s body was discovered Wednesday 48 miles away in a landfill in Georgia. Clay County Sheriff Rick Beseler credited a deputy with thinking to search the landfill, which receives trash from the Jacksonville suburb.
|
“Had we not done this tactic, I believe that that body would have been buried under hundreds of tons of debris. It probably would have gone undiscovered forever,” Beseler said.
A group called Justice Coalition has put up a $30,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Somer’s killer. Some of that reward money came from Crime Stoppers, which urged anyone with information to call 866-845-TIPS. Callers can remain anonymous.
Clay County police asked tipsters to call 877-227-6911.
While expressing confidence that the crime would be solved, Beseler said he was concerned for the safety of area residents.
“There is a child killer on the loose. I fear for our community,” he said.
![]() |
TODAY Somer, here with her twin brother, walked about a mile home from school every day. |
“All I know at this point is that they’re searching that house,” she told Morales. “I haven’t gotten any autopsy results. I don’t know for sure know which day she passed away. I don’t know anything yet.”
‘You Are My Sunshine’
Friends and neighbors of the Thompsons have rallied around the family. Hundreds attended a candlelight vigil at which the mother joined in a tearful singing of “You Are My Sunshine.”
Morales asked Thompson why she’s speaking out publicly despite her obvious grief.
![]() |
AP file Somer Thompson, 7, vanished on her mile-long walk home from school Monday in Orange Park, Fla. |
She said the girl’s twin brother and older sister are coping with the loss as best as they can.
“They go up and down,” Thompson said. “You know, they’re kids. I don’t think they have quite the same knowledge that we have, but we’re all just a wreck.”
Most of all, she wants her daughter’s killer or killers to be captured.
“I want to get justice for Somer and find this animal,” Thompson said. “And maybe if I get on here and talk, maybe one parent would say something that would just click with their baby and nothing like this would happen to anybody else.”
The Associated Press contributed reporting to this story.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM PEOPLE |
| Add People headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide







