I decided to watch a crime show on TV this morning and my wife sat down to watch it also, which for her is not normal. After the show was over, my wife asked me if the show reminded me of anything. I knew what she was talking about. We had a woman that had just divorced and was going to move from Pennsylvania to Oregon. She was warned by several friends and relatives to be very careful traveling alone on the road. Her son wanted to take a week off from college to go along, but she was against him missing any school time.
She told her son that she would call him each evening. She only had a mid size U-Haul trailer attached to her car. She had sold everything else with the idea of buying all new furniture when she bought her home. She went to Oregon to be closer to her sister and her husband. They figured the drive should take no longer than 4 days with traveling at 10 hours a day.
On the third night there was no phone call. This was in 2005, so both people had cellphones. The son kept trying, but each time, the call would go straight to messaging. At about midnight, he called me for advice and I suggested he call the OSP. They took the info and because of the situation, they put the car out as a BOLO. The car was located about 4 in the morning at the entrance to a state park. Six Troopers immediately searched the area to no avail, including no evidence, other than footprints. By that, they could tell there was an encounter.
After searching for the next 2 days, the OSP thought sinister issues may be at play. After the 2 days, the search went to a recovery. After another 3 days with no luck, they marked it as a possible kidnapping. Two days later, a hunter found her beginning to decompose and lying in a pile of green vegetation. The cause of death was strangulation and the manner was labeled as a homicide. To this day, the case remains open.
The FBI reports about 600,000 people go missing each year with about 4400 being recovered. Unfortunately not all of them are identified. When I was on active duty, we would normally get about 2-5 of these per year. Some people just go missing. People are allowed to just up and leave for no reason. You want to tell everyone, if you are going to runaway, please leave a note, but even that doesn’t mean anything.
She told her son that she would call him each evening. She only had a mid size U-Haul trailer attached to her car. She had sold everything else with the idea of buying all new furniture when she bought her home. She went to Oregon to be closer to her sister and her husband. They figured the drive should take no longer than 4 days with traveling at 10 hours a day.
On the third night there was no phone call. This was in 2005, so both people had cellphones. The son kept trying, but each time, the call would go straight to messaging. At about midnight, he called me for advice and I suggested he call the OSP. They took the info and because of the situation, they put the car out as a BOLO. The car was located about 4 in the morning at the entrance to a state park. Six Troopers immediately searched the area to no avail, including no evidence, other than footprints. By that, they could tell there was an encounter.
After searching for the next 2 days, the OSP thought sinister issues may be at play. After the 2 days, the search went to a recovery. After another 3 days with no luck, they marked it as a possible kidnapping. Two days later, a hunter found her beginning to decompose and lying in a pile of green vegetation. The cause of death was strangulation and the manner was labeled as a homicide. To this day, the case remains open.
The FBI reports about 600,000 people go missing each year with about 4400 being recovered. Unfortunately not all of them are identified. When I was on active duty, we would normally get about 2-5 of these per year. Some people just go missing. People are allowed to just up and leave for no reason. You want to tell everyone, if you are going to runaway, please leave a note, but even that doesn’t mean anything.
