DALLAS _ A 13-year-old Texas girl who was kidnapped because of a drug theft she had nothing to do with was found dead early Sunday, according to law enforcement.
The body of Shavon Le'Feye Randle, who was reported missing Wednesday, was discovered at a home in Dallas.
Also found dead inside the east Oak Cliff house was Michael Titus, a 19-year-old who had been named a person of interest in the teen's disappearance.
No one has been charged in Shavon's death.
Two men face aggravated kidnapping charges in the case, which is thought to have started after the boyfriend of one of Shavon's relatives stole drugs from two men, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.
"We didn't have the positive result we were looking for, but being able to let Shavon's family know that we've located her was our goal," said Eric Jackson, special agent in charge of the FBI's Dallas field office. "We're going to continue our investigation, and anyone we find that were involved in this heinous crime against Shavon, we will bring you to justice and we will hold you accountable."
Two days before Shavon was reported missing, Kendall Perkins stole a large quantity of drugs from Darius Fields and Devontae Owens at a Motel 6 in Lancaster, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.
Perkins, 22, was arrested Saturday and charged with aggravated robbery.
Perkins is the boyfriend of Ledoris Randle, a relative of Shavon's. Randle on Wednesday received a call from an unknown man who said Shavon was being held against her will and threatened to harm her if law enforcement was called, police said.
Randle said the caller told her to "give us our (expletive) back or we are going to kill her," police documents stated.
An informant told an FBI agent that a man later identified as Owens told her he planned to kidnap a child to get back the drugs that were stolen from him, the affidavit stated.
Cellphone analysis placed Owens near Shavon's home and had the two cellphones heading in the same direction until Shavon's phone was shut off.
An Amber Alert was issued in Shavon's disappearance, and Owens, Fields, Titus and Laporshya Polley were named persons of interest.
Fields, 26, and Polley, 25, were arrested Thursday at a Best Western hotel in Irving. Officials found Polley attempting to flush marijuana down the toilet, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.
Ammunition, marijuana, drug paraphernalia and other over-the-counter drugs were found in the hotel room. An AK-47 pistol could be seen inside the Honda parked outside the room, the affidavit stated.
Polley was charged with tampering with evidence and a drug possession charge. Her bail was set at $600,500.
Fields, who was convicted of theft in Tarrant County in 2012, was charged with drug possession and unlawful possession of a firearm. His bail was set at $100,500.
Both remained in the Irving jail Sunday night.
On Saturday, Lancaster police and FBI agents arrested Owens and Laquon Wilkerson.
Owens, 24, is charged with aggravated kidnapping. Wilkerson, 30, is facing an aggravated kidnapping for ransom/reward charge.
Both are being held in the Dallas County Jail with bail has been set at $500,000 for Owen.
Hours after Owens was booked into the jail Saturday evening, FBI and Lancaster officials discovered the bodies in the east Oak Cliff home.
Though officials have not confirmed a motive, Angel Titus said her son, who was found dead with Shavon, had nothing to do with the kidnapping and was being held hostage because of a drug deal that went wrong, KXAS-TV (NBC5) reported.
The area around the small one-story home was cordoned off Sunday morning as investigators placed evidence markers around the front yard and people in hazardous-materials suits moved in and out of the home.
After law enforcement cleared the scene, a memorial with balloons, flowers and stuffed animals started to form near the stairs of the boarded-up house. Strangers and a group from the nearby Christ Mission Baptist Church stopped by to pray and pay their respects.
Kent Patton, who lives down the road from the home, called the teen's death "senseless."
"You can only hide the truth for so long," he said. "God knows. What happens in the dark will eventually come to the light."
Dallas City Council member Dwaine Caraway stopped by the house, which lies in his district, on Sunday evening. He called those responsible for the death of the innocent teenager "hoodlums" and "thugs," NBC5 reported.
"They don't deserve to be on the streets of the city of Dallas," he said.
Didi Prince, a church member, didn't know Shavon, but that didn't matter.
"I just know that she's 13 years old, an innocent young girl who probably has nothing to do with anything and she was slaughtered for no reason," she told NBC5. "Slaughtered."