‘The public deserves to know.’ State agency withholds details in girl’s
death
[July 22, 2025]
By Beth Hundsdorfer
Mackenzi Felmlee fell through the safety net of doctors, judges,
lawyers, social workers, teachers, child welfare organizations and the
state agency charged with protecting abused and neglected children in
Illinois until she was found bruised and struggling to breathe at the
bottom of the basement stairs in a Fairview Heights foster home.
Eighteen-year-old Mackenzi died on May 11, 2024, from a blood clot that
hit her lungs, doctors said. Her neck, shoulders, legs and face were
bruised, and her dehydrated body weighed just 90 pounds.
But the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services has refused
to release a timeline or reports detailing their actions in the case —
despite a law that requires DCFS to make findings and recommendations
available when a child dies or is seriously injured in its care.
And it likely won’t release any information for years.
Last month, a St. Clair County grand jury indicted Mackenzi’s foster
mother, Shameka Williams, and Williams’ mother, Cornelia Reid, herself a
former foster parent, on charges of first-degree murder, involuntary
manslaughter, aggravated domestic battery, intimidation, unlawful
restraint and domestic battery in connection with Mackenzi’s death.
“We won’t have a timeline to share until after a trial takes place,”
DCFS spokesperson Heather Tarczan wrote June 26 in an email to Capitol
News Illinois.
Lutheran Child and Family Services, a DCFS contractor, employed the
caseworker who oversaw Mackenzi. It declined to comment citing
confidentiality, aside from calling the incident “tragic.”
During her time in Williams’ foster home, Mackenzi was the target of
beatings and tortuous behavior, including humiliation by mocking and
being forced to wear feces-stained masks and underwear on her face,
prosecutors said during a court hearing. Despite repeated complaints of
abuse and neglect from other foster children in the home, Mackenzi
remained in Williams’ home for four years.

While Mackenzi died more than a year ago, a DCFS spokesperson said the
state agency could not conduct a procedural review of what happened
inside the home until a criminal investigation is completed, citing a
portion of state law that says information should not be released if it
could undermine a criminal investigation or trial.
Under a 1997 Illinois law, DCFS is required to produce a report on every
child who is a ward of the state who dies or sustains serious injury.
The report should contain findings and recommendations for
administrative or policy changes.
Earlier this year, Illinois Answers Project reported that DCFS failed to
produce these reports that examined failures in more than 1,200 deaths
and 3,000 life-threatening injuries to children in the state’s care
since 2018.
Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart sponsored the law in 1997 when he served in
the state legislature. That law was amended in 2008 to make the reports
public after a series of news stories by the Belleville News-Democrat
about 53 children who died while in DCFS’ care. The law requires a
presumption that the best interest of the public will be served by
releasing information concerning the child’s death and any other
investigations concerning the child or other children living in the
household.
The law’s goal was transparency and accountability to restore public
trust in the child protection agency, Dart told Capitol News Illinois.
“The public who, by the way, is paying for this entire system. The
public deserves to know what happened here, what went wrong with this,”
Dart said.
The long fall of Mackenzi Felmlee
Mackenzi Rose Felmlee was born July 13, 2005, to Bonnie Rose Felmlee and
Rasul Sykes. She had three sisters.
In 2015, Bonnie Felmlee, facing a prison sentence for a theft charge in
Nevada, entrusted Dennis Pickens with the care of 10-year-old Mackenzi
and her sisters. The next year, Pickens asked a Fayette County judge to
formally appoint him guardian. The request was approved in January 2017.
At that time, Pickens wrote in his guardianship petition that Mackenzi
was a “normal 12-year-old girl” and was above average in school. In
junior high, she was on the track team and the honor roll.

Bonnie Felmlee moved into Pickens’ Vandalia home with Pickens and her
children after her release from prison.
In August 2018, Bonnie Felmlee called police and reported that she found
20 naked pictures of then-13-year-old Mackenzi on Pickens’ phone,
according to court documents.
Pickens, a retired federal prison guard, was charged with four counts of
producing child pornography. That was followed by another charge of
predatory criminal sexual assault with Mackenzi as the victim.
Though it declined to provide a detailed timeline of its involvement in
the case, DCFS responded to Capitol News Illinois’ questions regarding
when Mackenzi came into state care and certain aspects of her care.
In May 2019, DCFS took custody of Mackenzi and her siblings. The four
sisters were sent to separate homes — with only two remaining together.
DCFS confirmed that Mackenzi was placed in Williams’ foster home in
Fairview Heights in April 2020 under the supervision of Lutheran Child
and Family Services.
“We are deeply saddened by this tragic incident, and our hearts go out
to all those affected,” a spokesperson for Lutheran Child and Family
Services responded in an email.
The DCFS contractor declined further comment, citing confidentiality
rules.
Mackenzi enrolled in Belleville East High School. Her grades were
average in 2020 and 2021. A month after her placement with Williams,
Mackenzi posted a video to TikTok with Reid, doing a choreographed dance
with the caption: #coolgrandma.
But later in 2021 and 2022, things seemed to take a turn. Mackenzi was
failing and truant, missing 15 out of 55 school days, records showed.
She enrolled in night GED classes in January 2023 where she failed most
of her classes for not completing the work.
In response to written questions, DCFS said they are “looking into” who
permitted Mackenzi to leave regular school with Lutheran Child and
Family Services.

In 2022, another foster child came into Williams’ home — a girl
identified by prosecutors only as “D.E.” who later would tell police
“when you first move in with Shameka, it was fine, but the longer you
were there the worse it got.” She told police that Williams would
withhold food, not allow the girls to shower, and hit them with whatever
she could find: a belt, a hanger, or her hand.
Three years after DCFS took custody of the former honor roll student,
Mackenzi was diagnosed with multiple mental illnesses, including
post-traumatic stress disorder, bipolar disorder and depression. She
reportedly was under psychiatric care. She was also incontinent;
Williams made her wear diapers tied with plastic bags to her legs to
keep the waste from leaking, prosecutors said.
But according to a report from the DCFS Office of the Inspector General,
Mackenzi wanted her foster mother to adopt her, though it isn’t clear
where this information was obtained by the OIG. Mackenzi, who was by
then nearly 17 years old, had been in Williams’ home for two years.
The OIG report also documented the breakdown between Mackenzi and her
biological family, stating she refused visits with her sisters.
Despite losing her parental rights in April 2022, Bonnie Felmlee tried
to find out about the pending criminal case against the man accused of
molesting Mackenzi — a case that dragged on for more than seven years.
Pickens was found guilty in October 2024 — five months after Mackenzi’s
death.
Required reporting ignored
There are two public reports that mention Mackenzi’s death — the DCFS
Office of the Inspector General Annual Report to the Governor and the
General Assembly for 2024, and the Departmental Report on Death or
Serious Life-Threatening Injury.
Mackenzi’s case was one of 202 deaths or serious injuries to children in
Illinois from April 1 to June 30, 2024, listed in quarterly reports to
the legislature, although the names of those who died are not listed,
but the report dates and cities are listed. One case corresponded to
Mackenzi. The cause of death for Mackenzi was listed as death by
neglect.
The report listed both the DCFS investigation and the criminal
investigation as pending. There was no follow-up in subsequent quarterly
reports.
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Mackenzi Felmlee, pictured here in a 2019 Vandalia High School
yearbook just before she was taken into DCFS custody. She was placed
in the Fairview Heights foster home of Shameka Williams in 2020 and
died four years later. (Via Vandalia High School yearbook)

These anonymous quarterly reports include the date the incident was
reported to DCFS; whether the child was in DCFS custody; the status of
the allegation; what, if any, action DCFS took; whether criminal charges
were filed; and the legislative district, city and zip code where the
death or injury occurred.
Of those 202 cases, there are 45 deaths listed. Criminal charges were
issued in six of the cases.
Capitol News Illinois reached out to legislators with questions
regarding Mackenzi’s death to determine whether they received more
comprehensive reports. Sen. Erica Harriss, R- Glen Carbon, in whose
district Mackenzi lived, confirmed she had received no findings or
recommendations related to Mackenzi’s death.
Harriss contacted DCFS Director Heidi Mueller, who responded in a July 3
letter that “All at DCFS are heartbroken by what occurred.”
In the letter, Mueller cited the administrative rule that directs DCFS
to extend its investigatory timeline when prosecutors or police request
the department to delay making a determination due to a pending criminal
investigation.
“In short, in this case, DCFS will complete its investigation once law
enforcement has finished theirs,” Mueller stated.
Mueller further stated Fairview Heights Police continue to investigate
the case and “had not shared the information it had gathered with DCFS,
including electronic forensic evidence that appear necessary to
understand this case.”
Fairview Heights police declined to comment, citing an ongoing
investigation.
“I will continue to closely monitor this situation and strongly advocate
for the protection and well-being of our most vulnerable children, as
well as prosecution and accountability of those whose negligence has
contributed to this tragedy,” Harriss said in a statement to Capitol
News Illinois.
Cook County Public Guardian Charles Golbert, an outspoken critic of DCFS,
provides legal representation to thousands of abused and neglected
children who are wards of the court. Golbert said DCFS needs to be swift
and open in releasing information regarding their handling of Mackenzi’s
case.

“We call on DCFS for full transparency including prompt release of a
detailed timeline about its prior involvement with the family and what
its representatives observed when investigating and licensing the home
and visiting Mackenzi and others in the home, and the details of its
investigations of all other reports of child abuse in the home,” Golbert
said in a statement.
The OIG reported that “the youth’s placement worker made regular visits
and last saw the youth two days before her death.”
Police have said the Mackenzi’s injuries were in various stages of
healing, but it is not known whether the Lutheran Child and Family
Services’ placement worker reported any injuries, as required by law.
DCFS did not disclose whether there was a pending abuse investigation
regarding Mackenzi prior to her death.
Mackenzi was also the subject of a juvenile abuse case. That case was
filed in Fayette County, where she was taken into state custody when she
was living with her mother and Pickens in Vandalia.
In Illinois, the media have special standing to attend juvenile
hearings, but juvenile court files are closed to the public.
Fourth Judicial Circuit Chief Judge Martin W. Siemer declined a request
by Capitol News Illinois to review the file, finding that although the
law provided juvenile court cases may be obtained for good cause, the
law restricts who can see those records and found the press is not among
them.
Dart contended that a procedural review of Mackenzi’s death was long
overdue, given she died more than a year ago.
“The nature of this bill was to be just very straightforward. These
kids’ deaths were to be investigated, the facts of what happened were to
be divulged, and it was to be divulged so we can fix it and that it
doesn’t happen again. And anyone who’s not following that is somebody
who clearly, clearly does not have the best interest of these children
at heart,” Dart said.
Inside the foster home
Shameka Williams became a licensed foster parent in 2012 with special
training to house children with emotional, behavioral or other special
needs, according to DCFS. She was licensed by another DCFS contractor,
Caritas Family Solutions.
In a court hearing, prosecutors detailed abuse allegations involving
Williams that dated back a decade, including:

In 2015, a 14-year-old reported that Williams hit him with a belt and
threatened to take away his belongings if he left. He showed the
investigator scars, but Williams told them that the boy was dark
complected, making it difficult to determine whether the injuries were
old or new. The boy told the investigator that if he was returned to
Williams, he would attack her and run away, preferring to “die in the
cold than stay.” The boy was removed, but the allegation was unfounded.
A 17-year-old girl told DCFS in 2017 that Williams left town without
planning for the girl’s care. Williams allegedly told the girl to “sleep
outside” because no one would care for her because she wasn’t behaving.
Williams later left the girl in the care of a friend, who was supposed
to take her to school. The foster child missed four days of school. The
teen told the worker she cried herself to sleep. The allegation was
unfounded.
Another 16-year-old foster child in Williams’ care took a bus to her
former foster home. Williams went and dragged the child out and threw
her in the car. She told medical personnel that she didn’t feel safe at
Williams’ home and reported thoughts of suicide, as well as killing
Williams. The allegation was unfounded.
DCFS said because investigators found no evidence of abuse, the agency
continued to place children with Williams and left Mackenzi in the home.
In addition to physical abuse of Mackenzi, there were also documented
cases of mental abuse. At a court hearing, prosecutors showed video
footage that showed Mackenzi being beaten by Williams with a belt while
the teen is forced to say, “It’s not good to manipulate.”
In another video, Williams forced Mackenzi to repeat: “I am a doof. I
hate myself.”
Reid, Williams’ mother who had retired as a foster parent, also faced
allegations of abuse.
In 2019, an 11-year-old boy reported Reid beat him with a belt. She also
allegedly punched him and hit him with a brush. The boy was removed from
the home, but the investigator found no evidence of abuse.

Fairview Heights Police reported they received 31 calls involving
Williams, Reid or the foster home in the five years prior to Mackenzi’s
death. Police declined to release details of those calls.
Her foster sister, identified as D.E., later told police that Mackenzi
wasn’t happy and things got worse for her as her 18th birthday
approached. Without a legal tie to her parents and still a ward of the
state, Mackenzi waited for the adoption to proceed. It was not completed
by July 13, 2023, Mackenzi’s 18th birthday.
Ten months later, on the day before Mother’s Day, Mackenzi died.
“This child was in the custody of the state, so theoretically, in a
practical sense, we were their parents at the time,” Dart said. “Okay,
so we need to learn what went wrong here, because this was our system
that we put this child in. And so, we need to find out quickly what went
wrong so it doesn’t happen again.”
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