Murder of Emani Moss

Murder of Emani Moss
Victim Emani Moss
LocationLawrenceville, Georgia, U.S.
DateOctober 28, 2013 (2013-10-28)
Attack type
Child murder by starvation, torture murder, filicide
VictimEmani Gabrielle Moss
PerpetratorsTiffany Nicole Moss
Eman Giovanni Moss
MotiveResentment, Cinderella effect
VerdictTiffany:
Guilty on all counts
Eman:
Pleaded guilty
ConvictionsTiffany:

Eman:

  • Felony murder
  • Concealing the death of another
SentenceTiffany:
Death plus 20 years
Eman:
Life imprisonment without the possibility of parole plus 10 years

Emani Gabrielle Moss (April 23, 2003 – October 28, 2013) was a ten-year-old American girl who was starved to death by her stepmother in Lawrenceville, Georgia, in 2013, in what became a prominent case leading to reforms in Georgia's child welfare system. Tiffany Nicole Moss (born July 20, 1983) was convicted of murdering Emani in 2019 and was subsequently sentenced to death. The murder received national as well as international attention. The attention was largely due to the crime's severe nature; Moss physically abused Emani for several years before her death. In 2013, Moss began starving Emani. Emani's father, Eman, who was rarely home, failed to stop the abuse. Emani died of starvation on October 28, 2013. At the time of her death, she weighed 32 pounds (15 kilograms), the weight of an average toddler. The murder led to several systemic changes in the Georgia Division of Family and Child Services (GDFCS). Eman pled guilty in 2015 for his role in the crime. The case against Moss went to trial, and in April 2019, Moss, who represented herself, was convicted of all counts. She was sentenced to death on May 1, 2019. She is currently incarcerated at the Arrendale State Prison and is Georgia's only female death row inmate.