Before her tiny body was found partly stuffed inside a black duffel bag along a horse trail in Hacienda Heights on Tuesday, the girl had a name.

Yet several days later, her identity still remains a mystery.

Inside the Boyle Heights facility of the Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner, the 4-foot-5-inch, 55-pound girl is known only as “Jane Doe #11.”

But for two local teachers who gathered to pray Thursday night in front of a candle-lit memorial near the trail, the girl has a name: “Justice.”

“That’s what we are calling her,” said Christina Garcia, 50, a teacher for the Rowland Unified School District.

“We’ve given her that name, until we know her real name,” said Margaret Caldera, 54, a teacher with the Hacienda La Puente Unified School District.

Both are Catholic, and in between recitations of the Hail Mary prayer at the memorial, Caldera and Garcia repeated the phrase, “Justice for Justice.”

Whether an accident, or an intentional act, “justice,” the two said, will be finding out who is responsible for the girl’s death and holding that person or persons accountable.

Near the site where a girl’s body was found in Hacienda Heights on Tuesday, Christina Garcia, 50, of West Covina leads a prayer, asking that there be “justice” in the case. The girl’s identity remains unknown. pic.twitter.com/DIZaxFcFHh — Jonah Valdez (@Jonahmv) March 8, 2019

Homicide detectives with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department have released a series of sketches, showing the girl’s face, calm and expressionless, her black hair in a tight bun, her eyes aware and alive. “Future Princess Hero,” is written on the pink long-sleeve shirt that she had on.

One drawing depicts the girl cross-legged, just like a student sitting on a classroom floor or assembly hall. Detectives said they sent a notice about the girl to local school districts.

“Somebody is missing a little girl out there,” Garcia said. “And nobody is saying anything.”

A few blocks away from where the girl was found, dozens of people gathered for a separate vigil Thursday night in the parking lot of a shuttered market at Hacienda Boulevard and Colima Road.

“You would hope that her family could be here to see the vigil, to see how many people are coming to support,” said Juan Martinez III of Hacienda Heights.

He described the city as a tight-knit community where many people know one another from high school. Despite the closeness, Martinez said it was tough to see that no one knows who the girl is and where she called home.

Erendira Marcelo, 19, a Hacienda Heights resident, said she was here to fill the void of the girl’s absent family.

“We don’t know who the girl belongs to, the family,” Marcelo said. “So I feel a lot of people gathered here, to do the part of a family.”