Makayla begged her mother to come get her.
Hours later, the truth began to spill out.
Now the 18-year-old is dead, her accused rapist father is free on bail, and prosecutors are wavering.
Her family says the system is “failing her twice” – once in life, and again in dea
Makayla’s story is now carried by those who loved her, standing outside a California courthouse in shirts with her face,
refusing to let her become just another forgotten case file.
They describe a bright, hopeful teenager who crossed
the country for a fresh start with the father she thought she could finally trust.
Instead, they say, she met the man who destroyed
her sense of safety, her body, and ultimately her will to live.
Justice for them is not abstract. It means a real trial,
every piece of evidence heard, and a jury allowed to decide,
even without Makayla’s voice. It means a system that treats her rape kit, her DNA, her terror, as testimony that still matters. Above all, it means acknowledging that her life had weight – and that what allegedly happened to her cannot be quietly negotiated away behind closed doors.