'It gives Tony back the love, his dignity, and respect': Atlanta child murder victim gets a headstone

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Victim in Atlanta child murders gets headstone

For nearly four decades, Tony Carter has been buried without a headstone. The 9-year-old was one of the nearly 30 known victims of the Atlanta child murders.

A victim of the Atlanta child murders who is buried in Hogansville is finally getting a headstone. 

Anthony "Tony" Bernard Carter was 9 years old when he went missing and was later found murdered. 

"Today, it still hurts. It still hurts," said Jimmy Edwards, Tony's cousin. 

VICTIM OF ATLANTA CHILD MURDERS TO RECEIVE HEADSTONE AT MEMORIAL

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DNA being tested in Atlanta child murders

Since the case was reopened in 2019, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms says investigators are testing DNA and other evidence collected as part of the Atlanta child murders investigation.

Edwards vividly remembers the last day he saw his younger cousin. 

On July 7, 1980, Jimmy, who was a teen at the time, and Tony were playing hide and week. 

"I was the last one to see my cousin go behind a building and never return again," Edwards said. 

Tony is one of nearly 30 victims in the child murders that happened between 1979 to 1981. 

He had recently moved to Atlanta from Hogansville.

His family said the 9-year-old never met a stranger and was undoubtedly on his way to big things. 

"Golden smile, very smart," said Nicholas Burston, a cousin. "He was nine years old, I was about 16. He was a ball of fire. He wasn't afraid of anything," said Thomas Martin, another cousin of Tony's. 

After his murder, Tony was brought back home to Hogansville and laid to rest in the Westview Cemetery.

Unfortunately, without a headstone, the family doesn't know exactly where he was buried. 

But more than 40 years later- Tony's name will finally have a spot among the others. 

Sunshine Lewis, who has advocated for the victims and the families of the missing and murdered children, William G. Murray and Son Funeral home, along with Megan VandeBogert, Jason Winter, and Amie Ray Davis, helped to make it happen. 

"It gives Tony back the love, his dignity, and respect to have a name actually placed on his grave," Lewis said. 

MAYOR: NEW DNA FROM ATLANTA CHILD MURDERS BEING TESTED, FIBERS BEING RETESTED

It's an act of kindness that helps Burston and Tony's other cousins take another step toward healing. 

Which is something they said has been difficult to do over the last four decades. 

"We walk this street every day on our three-mile walk. Now when we stop here and look, we'll see him," Burston said. "He came back to Hogansville. But closure? No, there's still pain and heartache. Soon, I hope there will be closure." 

Burston said he's glad the DNA evidence from the cases are being examined in a private lab in Utah. 

The official memorial service for Tony will be Sunday at 3 pm.. at the Springfield Baptist Church in Hogansville.

The public is invited to join the family as they remember the life of Tony. 

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