For almost five years, Akia Eggleston’s family has anxiously waited for authorities to figure out what happened to the pregnant 22-year-old Baltimore mother who vanished just days before her baby shower.
On Thursday, that day finally arrived with the arrest of Michael Robertson, the 41-year-old father of Eggleston’s unborn child. The Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s office said Robertson has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in connection with Eggleston’s May 2017 disappearance.
Her remains have never been recovered. Robertson was arrested in Michigan on Tuesday and is awaiting extradition. It was unclear if he had an attorney.
“Thank you to everyone for their thoughts and their prayers and hope for our family that we would find her alive,” Eggleston's aunt, Sanobia Wilson, said during a Thursday press conference. “Even though the evidence says something different, that she’s not, we just want to say thank you and to please continue to keep us in your prayers.”
The arrest signals the end of a case that garnered national attention after Eggleston, who was eight months pregnant with her second child, went missing on May 3, 2017, after stopping at a bank near the Inner Harbor in downtown Baltimore. Authorities at the time said that Eggleston’s friend dropped her off at her Cherry Hill home soon after. She was reported missing four days later when she did not show up for her baby shower.
During a press conference announcing the charges, Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby detailed Eggleston’s last steps before she vanished—noting that cellphone data and photographs helped build a case against Robertson.
“This has been a long and painful journey for the family of Akia Eggleston,” FBI-Baltimore supervisory special agent Shayne Buchwald said on Thursday. “For nearly five years, the people of Baltimore have searched, hoped, and mourned with Akia’s family and friends, but they never gave up and neither did we.”
Authorities have arrested Michael Robertson and charged him with murder in the 2017 disappearance of Akia Eggleston, a woman with whom he was having a child who went missing just days before her baby shower, Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby said Thursday.
He is charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the killing of Eggleston and her unborn child. He faces a maximum penalty of two life sentences in prison if found guilty.
Eggleston, 22, was excited to move in with the father of her child, Robertson, who was in a relationship with another 22-year-old woman. That woman had recently given birth to the couple’s second child, Mosby said.
Investigators allege the 41-year-old sent Eggleston pictures of an apartment interior on May 2, 2017.
About 1:24 p.m., Eggleston purchased two money orders totaling $450 after making several ATM withdrawals from her savings account, Mosby said.
Moments later, Eggleston messaged Robertson on Facebook, “I called you, I got the money order.”
That afternoon, Eggleston unsuccessfully attempted to withdraw cash twice from an ATM at a Wells Fargo location downtown.
Authorities allege Eggleston and Robertson were texting back and forth on May 3, the day law enforcement officials now believe she was killed.
That day, Eggleston was seen on surveillance video depositing the two money orders and a paycheck from her employer at a BB&T location in the central business district. She then withdrew $450 dollars.
About 4 p.m., Robertson allegedly took a Lyft ordered by Eggleston to the Cherry Hill neighborhood. Phone records indicate Robertson was in the area near Eggleston’s residence from 5:35 p.m. to 6:18 p.m., Mosby said.
At about 5:22 p.m., Eggleston sent a friend an invite to her baby shower on the following Sunday, Mosby said. It was her last known communication.
According to Mosby, phone records show a telemarketer tried to call Eggleston at 6:57 p.m. At that time, both her phone and Robertson’s were located downtown, she said. Eggleston’s phone activity ends there, indicating the device was either turned off or disabled, Mosby said.
Using a reverse image search, investigators determined the apartment picture Robertson had sent the day before was a completely different residence from the one he had named.
Mosby indicated investigators learned of a “volatile argument” between Robertson and the mother of his children the night before Eggleston disappeared. That evening, Eggleston had shared a sonogram picture on Facebook.
On the day of Eggleston’s shower, family members said they found her apartment nearly cleaned out. Police first thought this was a clue that she walked off on her own.
But in July 2017, a police spokesman said investigators had come to believe that foul play may have been involved.
In November 2017, the FBI Baltimore Field Office offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to her whereabouts.
Her father, Shawn Wilkinson, told WJZ in 2019 “[t]here were no signs that any of us saw that she would just want to pack up and leave.”
Wilkinson said he feels the pain every day.
“I am missing a daughter and you know where your loved ones are,” he said. “You know where your daughter, your sister, your mom, whomever you care about are. I don’t know where my child is and I don’t know where my grandson is.”
In May 2021, the Baltimore Police Department again asked for help locating Eggleston.
41-Year-Old Man Arrested And Charged With Murder In Disappearance Of Akia Eggleston, Pregnant Woman Missing Since 2017
Authorities have arrested Michael Robertson and charged him with murder in the 2017 disappearance of Akia Eggleston, a woman with whom he was having a child who went missing just days before her baby shower, Baltimore City State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby said Thursday.
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