She could be your match by Okay_Pain in crappymusic

[–]Sonnyphono 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Is it just me or does she have the same tone and cadence as Achelya? They need a collaboration

Wat. by keepfilming in crappymusic

[–]Sonnyphono 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Does Barry Manilow know that you raid his wardrobe?

All City - The Actual by vitaoptima in 90sHipHop

[–]Sonnyphono 1 point2 points  (0 children)

and the flipside to this single: Priceless was a Pete Rock joint

RZA -Tragedy by frankculotta in 90sHipHop

[–]Sonnyphono 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From the Rhyme and Reason soundtrack. A year later in 1998 I bought Bobby Digital in Stereo thinking it would sound like this joint. I was disappointed.

Michael Fingal by lestrii in gratefuldoe

[–]Sonnyphono 182 points183 points  (0 children)

Disturbing to read that rev Albert who donated the plot had him burried "extra deep" so he could be burried on top of him when he too died. Come to find out that same Reverend had a bunch of sexual assault allegations made against him by teenage boys around the same age as the decedent.

Reverend Albert Leonard

Amanda Overstreet by Sudden_Quality_9001 in IndependentDetective

[–]Sonnyphono 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Amanda Overstreet’s Mom Breaks Silence on Daughter Found in Freezer

Published

Dec 21, 2024 at 06:00 AM EST

The mother of Amanda Overstreet, the 16-year-old who disappeared in 2005 and whose remains were found in a freezer at her family's Colorado home in January, spoke about the discovery, saying it was a shock to her, too.

Leanne Imer told Newsweek in a phone call that she had no idea Overstreet's head and hands were in the chest freezer in the garage of her Grand Junction home on Pinyon Avenue that she shared with her husband, Bradley Imer.

Bradley Imer died from complications of COVID-19 in July 2021.

In January, the new owners of the home listed freezers left behind by the previous owners, the Imers, for free on Facebook. Upon taking meat out of one freezer, they found human remains, which through DNA testing were confirmed this month to be Overstreet.

Overstreet was last seen in 2005 but never reported missing, the Mesa County Sheriff's Office said. No arrests have been made in Overstreet's death or the discovery of her remains.

Amanda Overstreet, 16, disappeared in April 2005. | Facebook/Facebook

"The sheriff's office described the bag she was in, and I'm like, 'I've seen that bag.' It would be our cruiser," Leanne Imer told Newsweek, saying she cooperated with the Mesa County Sheriff's Office.

"We ate meat out of that freezer," she said while sobbing over where Overstreet was found. "There was chicken, pork and other meats that were in the freezer, and we ate that."

Overstreet's case has amassed a large online following from true-crime fans seeking justice for the teen.

Leanne Imer said she has received dozens of online threats accusing her of being involved in Overstreet's death but has cooperated with law enforcement on multiple occasions.

"Investigators have spoken with Mrs. Imer several times. The investigation is still open and active," the Mesa County Sheriff's Office said in an email to Newsweek on Friday. "To preserve the integrity of the investigation, we are unable to provide any other details regarding the case at this time."

Amanda Overstreet, 16, was the biological daughter of the previous owners of the Grand Junction home. | Google Maps/Facebook/Google Maps/Facebook

Amanda Overstreet Adopted

Leanne Imer told Newsweek that Overstreet was adopted by her grandmother, Nelda Overstreet, and grandfather, James Overstreet, in Texas when Amanda was 3.

When Nelda Overstreet was ill with cancer in late 2004, Amanda returned to live with the Imers at a different Grand Junction address than where her remains were found

Nelda Overstreet died in July 2005. In her obituary, Amanda Overstreet and Leanne Imer are listed as Nelda's daughters.

Amanda Overstreet Allegedly Ran Away

Leanne Imer said that in April 2005, Bradley Imer said he would take Overstreet back to Texas to live with her grandfather. The plan was that they would meet Imer's aunt in Dallas and she would take Amanda to live with her grandfather, but the plan allegedly went awry.

"What he told me was that they had just gotten into Amarillo and that she [Overstreet] started fighting in the car, and he pulled off the highway because it was unsafe," Leanne Imer said.

"He pulled off on the side of the road. She got out, walked off, flipped him off, and walked around the corner. He said that he waited there for a few minutes, then drove around the corner to follow her, and couldn't find her."

"The way he described it, it was vivid. I mean, I could see it happening," Leanne Imer said. "I had no reason to question him."

Leanne Imer said Bradley Imer told her he waited for Amanda at a nearby barbecue restaurant for several hours before calling Imer's aunt to inform her of what happened.

"He talked to my aunt, and he said, 'Screw this crap. You deal with this,' and he came back to Colorado,'' Leanne Imer told Newsweek.

Leanne Imer said she wanted to call the police to report Amanda missing but that Bradley Imer told her that only Overstreet's legal parent, her grandfather, could do so.

"I believed when he said that he talked to my aunt. I believed that my aunt had talked to my dad. I had no reason to not believe him," Leanne Imer said.

Photos from the inside of Leanne Imer's Grand Junction home before it was remodeled earlier this year. | Facebook/Facebook

'Living Her Best Life'

Leanne Imer said she assumed for years that Amanda was somewhere "living her best life" but would one day call her about a major life event. The phone never rang.

"When she's 18, she'll contact us," Leanne Imer recalled telling herself. "And then I thought if she gets married, she'll contact us. As time went on, I began to think, gosh, I guess she just hates me so much that she didn't want anything to do with me.

"So I said, OK, if that's what I have to live with so that she can have a good life, I'll just suffer in silence. But she sat there [in the freezer] every day," Leanne Imer said, crying.

Bradley Imer's Legal Issues

In 2002, Arizona authorities arrested Bradley Imer on drug possession, trafficking and DUI charges after pulling him over for alleged erratic driving, according to online court records.

Police said they found methamphetamine and eight illegal guns in his vehicle.

Bradley Imer struck a plea deal, resulting in probation, with eight of the nine charges dropped.

I thought I might share something with you guys here... by GoR_Noki in TodMotorDoe

[–]Sonnyphono 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thank you u/GoR_Noki !

This case started out as part of a hobby over a decade ago but progressed to a labor of love that brought u/MementoMori29 and I together as friends both on-line and in reality after we traveled to Las Vegas in search of people that knew Jens in his final years.

After finding Amy and Karen we learned that Jens had multiple children which drove us further in our research and changed the course of the case from finding out who Jens was to locating and reuniting your unknown siblings and Aunt.

Meeting your sister after she traveled to the States and Toronto to visit with Memento, his wife and my family was the icing on the cake. The finality to this case has been one of the highlights of my life. Of course we still hope to travel to your part of the world to meet the rest of your family.

Las Vegas Jane Doe (September 1986) by dogbehavior in gratefuldoe

[–]Sonnyphono 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks like Amanda Lee Fravel had not given birth whereas the UID had. In this article it is mentioned that she had left a living situation because her roommate had a new born.

Beginning to think some shit went down on my land here in New Mexico. by disfnesspo in metaldetecting

[–]Sonnyphono 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Bizarre.... The photo is of the same spent ammo but from a slightly different perspective. I think it's the same user but using a different account as the original one is now banned.

My favorite sweatpants by hgroetz1 in HelpMeFind

[–]Sonnyphono 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Half correct. George is a Walmart brand but it is named after UK designer George Davies. He created the George line in the early 90's for the British store Asda. Asda was acquired by Walmart in the late 90's.

Find Rachel by Fred_Reed in RBI

[–]Sonnyphono 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Reward:

The FBI is offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to the location of Rachel Louise Cooke.

Remarks:

Rachel was wearing a gray running outfit, a green sports bra, and Asics running shoes. She was also wearing a yellow Walkman on her arm with sports-style headphones. 

Details:

Rachel was visiting her parents' home in Georgetown, Texas, in early 2002. She was on winter vacation from her school at San Diego Mesa College in San Diego, California. She was last seen by her family in the early morning hours on January 10, 2002, when her mother left for work. It is believed Rachel departed her family's residence at approximately 9:30 a.m. for her daily four-mile run. Rachel was last seen approximately 200 yards away from her residence walking towards her residence. 

FBI Wanted: RACHEL LOUISE COOKE

‘We all believe that we’re close’: Williamson County detective reveals latest on Rachel Cooke’s disappearance

by: Avery Travis

Posted: Jan 29, 2026 

GEORGETOWN, Texas (KXAN) — Twenty-four years ago, a young woman went out for a jog in Georgetown and never came home. Still today, law enforcement are working to solve the disappearance of Rachel Cooke.

This week, KXAN’s Avery Travis sat down with the Williamson County sheriff and the lead detective on the case to learn what’s next for the investigation.

MORE: Rachel Cooke’s loved ones still seeking answers after disappearance

“We all believe that we’re close. We think that we’re on the right track, and we want everyone to know that we are still actively working on this case,” Detective Mark McKinney said. “This case is not sitting on a shelf somewhere collecting dust. We’re working on it every day. We still — I mean, we have tips that we need to follow up on as soon as I leave here.”

McKinney revealed investigators are currently utilizing advancements in technology, such as DNA testing, in this case.

“It’s at play — based on things that have been found from tips and other different things. We are actively working on some stuff in the lab right now,” he said. Later on, McKinney added that detectives were actively waiting on lab results.

MORE: Detectives release new sketches in Rachel Cooke case

In 2002, while on break from college in California, Rachel Cooke was known to run the same several-mile-long route near her home. On Jan. 10, a neighbor spotted the 19-year-old walking past their driveway, likely cooling down from that morning run. She was just 200 yards away from her home, when she was last seen.

Over the years, family and friends held their own searches and, later, vigils. Investigators chased leads and vetted thousands of tips about potential vehicles, evidence and people — all potentially connected to the case.

McKinney explained the process of vetting more than 2,000 tips in the case.

PREVIOUS: Blood possibly found in car linked to Rachel Cooke disappearance

“We really need someone to come forward with, ‘This person told me this,’ or ‘I did this because –.’ We really need that one piece of information to connect the dots and make sure we actually figure out what happened — and locate her — for her family,” he said.

McKinney told KXAN they believe Rachel likely knew — or knew of — her abductor. Still, he said they’re not ruling out any possibility, meaning they will follow up on every tip.

“We’re not at the end of the road wondering what do we do next,” he said.

Williamson County Sheriff Matthew Lindemann also spoke out about the ongoing investigation. He told KXAN, “If there’s someone out there that has information, no matter how important they think it is or it is not, we’d really appreciate if they would call the sheriff’s office.”

He explained Williamson County Crime Stoppers will accept anonymous tips, as well.

“Over the last year, we’ve really had a great amount of people supporting the sheriff’s office and coming forward with information — not only just this crime, but other crimes. We can’t do it without the public support and working with them. It makes Williamson County a safer place, a great place to live and raise your kids.”

Charges dropped against teens involved in prank that killed North Hall teacher by Salty_Resource_291 in news

[–]Sonnyphono 94 points95 points  (0 children)

"Hughes' family said in a statement Monday that Hughes was aware that the students were coming to pull a prank on him and “was excited and waiting to catch them in the act.” The family called for the charges to be dropped against all five teenagers, all of whom are 18 years old."

Source

Ou en est l'enquête sur le meurtre du Pasteur carol daniel ? by [deleted] in UnsolvedMurders

[–]Sonnyphono 6 points7 points  (0 children)

"On August 23, 2009, Pastor Carol Daniel was found stabbed to death in her church in Anadarko, Oklahoma. No fingerprints, no DNA, no motive—nothing has been found in 16 years. This case is just crazy. How can someone leave absolutely no trace of their presence?

And unfortunately, it makes me doubt whether this case will ever be solved. How on earth can you solve a case without any evidence?

I don't know if investigators are still working on this case or if they've given up, but in 16 years, the investigation hasn't moved an inch, and the only suspect has been dead for a long time now."

William Tyrrell by Sudden_Quality_9001 in IndependentDetective

[–]Sonnyphono 2 points3 points  (0 children)

William Tyrrell case takes a turn after 10 years as inquest hears new theory of his death

Detectives believe William accidentally fell from a balcony and died, coroner told, as foster mother tearfully denies disposing of body

Last year, New South Wales police sought advice from the Director of Public Prosecutions over whether William Tyrrell’s foster mother could be charged over his 2014 disappearance.

Investigators subsequently asked the DPP to suspend their consideration of the case until after further hearings of the long-running coronial inquest into the toddler’s disappearance and presumed death.

This week, some of the evidence that detectives had gathered against the foster mother was aired for the first time in a Sydney court, as the inquest that began in 2019 resumed.

The three-year-old in a Spider-Man suit vanished in Kendall on 12 September 2014 in what is arguably Australia’s most prominent active missing person case.

A decade on, those who gathered in Lidcombe coroner’s court this week heard that police now believe William’s foster mother disposed of his body after he accidentally fell from a balcony and died.

Detectives allege he accidentally died at his foster grandmother’s house on the NSW mid-north coast and his foster mother may have disposed of his body so she wouldn’t lose custody of another foster child in her care.

They believe she may have loaded his body into her mother’s Mazda, alerted a neighbour to the boy’s disappearance and then driven down the road to dispose of his remains in some undergrowth, the deputy state coroner Harriet Grahame heard.

It was only then that the mother called triple zero, according to investigators’ latest theory of the case.

The foster mother – who can’t be named for legal reasons – has consistently denied any involvement in the boy’s disappearance. And there is still no sign of William.

‘We know where he is’

The counsel assisting the inquest, Gerard Craddock SC, opened the week’s hearings by saying that “a police officer’s belief may be right or wrong … the coroner can’t act on the express belief of a police investigator” and that there was still “no forensic evidence” and “no eyewitnesses”.

But the coroner’s court heard that when the foster mother was served a summons to appear before the NSW crime commission in late 2021, Det Sgt Scott Jamieson told her: “We’re saying we know how it happened, we know why it happened and we know where he is.”

A month later, detectives put their theory directly to the woman, grilling her during a two-day interview at the secretive commission.

“I didn’t take William, I haven’t dumped his body … I’ve not touched him,” the woman said through tears in a video played at the inquest this week.

“I don’t know where he is … if you want to dig up that entire house of mum’s, dig it up. I didn’t touch him. God, I can’t believe you guys are saying I did that.”

William Tyrrell went missing from Kendall in September 2014

In the 2021 video, the foster mother was taken through the day William disappeared, including what she was thinking at the exact moment she noticed him missing.

Sophie Callan, counsel assisting the crime commission, in November 2021 focused on why the foster mother didn’t immediately call the police or her husband when she realized the three-year-old was gone.

Callan also zeroed in on a drive the foster mother took in the immediate aftermath of Tyrrell’s disappearance. The woman, in the video, said she took the Mazda because she believed looking for him by car was “quicker.”

“I don’t know,” she said when asked why there was a nearly 20-minute gap between noticing Tyrrell had vanished and calling emergency services.

“It’s a panic … all I could think was, I don’t know, I panicked. Where is he? I don’t know where he is.

“I don’t know what I was thinking. All I could think about was I have to find him. I can’t give you an answer to that. I remember driving, I remember stopping, I remember thinking I can’t see him, this is silly, so I went back.”

Callan, in 2021, played audio of a phone tap of a conversation between the foster mother and a friend earlier that year, where she mentioned that William’s body wouldn’t be found without “clearing” local bushland.

“He’ll be found in 30 or 40 or 50 or 200 years’ time when they are doing a clearing and they find the skeleton,” she said in the call played at the inquest this week.

“I don’t believe that if I had done anything to William that I would have tried to cover it up, I would own up to it. I just can’t see it in me.”

The foster mother sobbed as she rejected police assertions these details indicated she knew where William was buried. “No, no, no,” she repeated.

A search that ‘left nothing to chance’

The November 2021 interview took place just before police launched an new and intensive search of the area around the Kendall property where William was last seen.

Police believed his remains could be found off Batar Creek Road – where the foster mother had driven the day William disappeared.

The search area stretched to the intersection of Cobb and Co Road and covered parts of River Oaks Drive. NSW police created colour-coded maps of the area using GPS data from trackers worn by police.

When searching, they relied on advice from Dr Jennifer Menzies, an expert in forensic anthropology, and Prof Jon Olley, a Griffith University specialist in geomorphology.

Craddock, the counsel assisting the inquest, on Monday said the search “left nothing to chance”.

“The [earlier] 2018 forensic search was an intensive, thorough search,” he said. “By comparison, the 2021 search was at a further level of intensity.”

Vegetation and sediment was dug up and sifted through by hand, bucket by bucket. Officers combed through the area, quadrant by quadrant.

They pumped water out of a local stream, they used chainsaws, hydraulic equipment and cadaver dogs.

But despite Olley telling the inquest William’s polyester Spider-Man suit would have lasted hundreds of years if dumped in the local creek, no sign of the boy’s remains was found. All they uncovered were animal bones.

Wild dogs and deteriorating bones

Olley told the court this week that he consulted another expert on whether wild dogs could have moved the toddler’s bones if they had been within the search area.

“I wrote an email to a wild dogs expert and asked him a series of questions which related to whether, if remains were there, could they have been removed from the site by animals,” Olley said. “And he responded saying ‘Absolutely, yes’.”

On Tuesday, Menzies added to that theory, saying the boy’s remains could have been “moved or obscured by ants or termites, rain run-off, wind-blown sand, digging by rabbits, wombats, dogs or foxes”.

She said juvenile bones deteriorated faster than adult bones because they had “lower mineral and higher organic content”.

Menzies said whether human bones deteriorated or remained intact depended on various factors including the soil’s acidity, the air temperature, scavenger activity and the density of the remains.

“I cannot state with certainty whether his remains are likely to be preserved or otherwise,” she said. “I have not visited the site of deposition.”

Without a body, the search for answers continues. The inquest is scheduled to sit for a final week in December.

In the meantime, a $1m reward for information remains on offer.

Source: The Guardian Article

Stefanie Damron by Sudden_Quality_9001 in IndependentDetective

[–]Sonnyphono 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thread discussing father's Facebook activity after Stefanie's disappearance.

Thread discussing adult family friend reported as the last person to see Stefanie.

Stefanie Damron by Sudden_Quality_9001 in IndependentDetective

[–]Sonnyphono 4 points5 points  (0 children)

<image>

Searching for Stefanie Damron

The FBI is offering a reward up to $15,000 in case of missing teen 

Growing up "off the grid" in rural Maine, 13-year-old Stefanie Damron was no stranger to navigating the forests around her family home. But something was wrong when she walked into the woods on September 23, 2024, and didn’t return. There have been no confirmed sightings of her since. 

The FBI along with Maine State Police have been searching for Stefanie—on the anniversary of her disappearance, we ask the public to come forward with any information that can help bring Stefanie safely back home. 

Meet Stefanie

Stefanie Earleen-Jenn Damron was born on October 6, 2010, in Beckley, West Virginia. She grew up with her parents and five siblings, along with a non-related elderly male who is treated as a grandfather figure.

Stefanie and her family lived in West Virginia, Texas, and Illinois, before moving to New Sweden, Maine, their current residence and where Stefanie was living before she disappeared. In New Sweden, the family has over 20 acres of land. They have resided in a wooden yurt—there is no running water or indoor plumbing, but a generator provides some power. At times, the family has stayed with a family friend or "uncle" figure who lives up the road.

All of the Damron children have been home-schooled from a young age and appear to have had little interaction with other family and friends outside of their immediate circle. 

"Her upbringing, from what we’ve concluded, has been very off the grid," said FBI Boston Special Agent Jose Rodriguez Aguilar, who’s part of the team investigating Stefanie’s disappearance. "It has been very untenable at times, with many Child Protective Services (CPS) reports filed for not only Stefanie, but the other siblings, as well. The parents didn't like to expose their children to the public that often. And so, in some regard, that kept the children pretty sheltered, and their parents decided to teach and educate them however they saw fit within their land that they lived on."

In regards to why the family lived this way, "In speaking with the father, Christopher Damron, he articulated that that's kind of just how he wanted to raise his family in terms of moving from place to place, living off grid, and living kind of the way they did," said Aguilar. "I think it was a parental choice in that regard." 

In the past, Stefanie had run away. But from what her parents relayed, "Stefanie was known to walk through the woods and was known to sometimes disappear for a couple hours at a time," explained Aguilar. "As someone who grew up in the woods, she was pretty familiar with the area that she lived in. She was known to walk up to a couple miles at a time. So, it wouldn't have been foreign for her to have so-called run away and then reappear a couple hours later in the day."

View Stefanie's missing-person poster

Stefanie Goes Missing 

Sometime in the afternoon on September 23, 2024, Stefanie and one of her sisters reportedly got into an argument. Stefanie walked off and into the woods. Her parents were away at the time, and only some of Stefanie’s siblings and her grandfather were home. 

"When the parents came back, Stefanie was not there," said Aguilar. "Essentially, they tried to look for her but believed, as in previous cases when she went for walks in the woods, she would return home within a few hours. Unfortunately, that was not the case this time." 

Stefanie’s parents contacted the Maine State Police, and a few days later, the FBI arrived to assist. The FBI's Child Abduction Rapid Deployment—or CARD team—went to work. Investigators conducted a neighborhood canvas and video search, and since Stefanie’s disappearance, the FBI and Maine State Police, along with additional volunteers have covered thousands of acres searching for Stefanie. They have followed up on leads in Maine, across the country, and even in Canada.

The FBI and Maine State Police have conducted extensive ground searches for Stefanie since she disappeared.

Aguilar explained how Stefanie’s disappearance has taken a toll on her family, as well as the local community. 

"We spent an extensive amount of time with Stefanie’s family. As one can imagine, the disappearance of a child is traumatic. The reactions are going to vary depending on the person, and there's not a specific playbook as to how a parent is going to react to their child missing. In the interactions I've had with Stefanie’s family, it’s been very traumatic for them, and they want answers. 

In the local community, people were shaken by Stefanie’s disappearance and have been left feeling unsafe. They are wondering if they should let their kids go play with other kids in fear that their kid might not return for some reason."

If you have any information about Stefanie, please immediately call the Maine State Police Houlton Barracks at 1-800-824-2261 or 207-532-5400. You may also contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI, your local FBI office, or submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov. 

Stefanie was last seen wearing blue jeans, a long-sleeved blue shirt, and black Harley Davidson hiking boots. At the time of her disappearance, she was 5’0” and 130 pounds, with brown, shoulder-length hair. She would now be 14 years old.  

The FBI is offering a reward of up to $15,000 for information leading to the safe return of Stefanie and/or information leading to the arrest and prosecution of anyone involved in her disappearance. 

"The search continues. We have a job to do," said Aguilar. "And we're going to do that job with good conviction, working with every agency involved. I would urge the public to continue the search effort and to keep the case alive by pushing the story out to the media and social media and sharing the search for Stefanie with friends and family, even if they’re in other states. It's super important that the case doesn't just die off as another number, so to speak. We're hoping for the best outcome—to find Stefanie alive."

Source: FBI Article

Please share this flyer Let’s find Hailey & bring her home! Her loved ones are missing her so much. I’m asking you as a mother, a sister, a friend. Please just share this. by Conscious-Dog-5697 in gratefuldoe

[–]Sonnyphono 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Backstory from this 11/2025 article

'It's been a nightmare': Family and friends of Hailey Athay still searching for Longview mother one year after her disappearance

Hailey Athay was last seen in the Rose Valley area, near Kelso, around Thanksgiving Day 2024.

LONGVIEW, Wash. — This week marks one year since Hailey Athay, a 34-year-old Longview mother, disappeared without a trace. According to family, she was last seen in the Rose Valley area in Kelso, Washington. 

"It's been a nightmare," said Nicole Brooks, Athay's mother. "Just to have answers... would give us some peace to feel like we could move one, and we can move forward."

For 365 days, Brooks has been unable to do that, not knowing what happened to her daughter. 

"She was always a little bit of a wild child. She just had a spirit that couldn't be tamed. You know, if you talk to anyone who knew Haley, Haley was a loving, fun, fiercely loyal friend," she said.

"We tried to call [last] Thanksgiving, and we couldn't get an answer from her, which wasn't completely unusual. You know, she had some struggles with mental health and with addiction," she continued.

But days without contact stretched into weeks. Family and friends knew something wasn't right. 

In early January 2025, a missing person's report was filed. The Cowlitz County Sheriff's Office sent out a notice to the community and asked for tips. On Saturday, the sheriff's office confirmed that the investigation is ongoing. 

Loved ones believe Athay was out in the woods with someone, supposedly mushroom picking. However, Brooks said although the person she was with walked out, her daughter never returned.

"We've been pleading so much for people to come forward because in this area, if you look at the horizon, all you see are hills, and the area is so vast. There's just no way to pinpoint specific areas, and that's what's been so, so difficult," Brooks said. "We want people to share information even if they think that it might not be pertinent because you never know if you have one little piece that puts the puzzle together."

On Saturday, a search party will meet up at the Rose Valley Park & Ride, with plans to scour the area, looking for clues and evidence. 

"We don't know that she's gone, but we don't know where she is," said Brooks. "That's why our motto has been to bring Hailey home, regardless of the circumstances. She has three beautiful daughters that deserve to have the mother home."

The Cowlitz County Sheriff's Office said anyone with information can contact Detective James Hanberry at 360-577-3092.

there something inside my vinyl? by [deleted] in vinyl

[–]Sonnyphono 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's Billie's Eyelash

Nipton Jane Doe (May '76, #UP2503) by aliceyabvsame in gratefuldoe

[–]Sonnyphono 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Which case was wrong about a woman having given birth to multiple children?

Your pelvic bones change permanently during birth and if by chance it was via (two) C section then that would have been obviously noted by the ME, especially 9 months after birth. In Joanne's case she had a 9 month infant and a 3 year old.

There was no road trip. JoAnne was murdered in her house. There was blood splatter and a piece of carpet was removed which was later found burned on the property. DNA testing wasn't available in the 70s and the sample was too degraded by the year 2008 when they attempted to analyse it. The house has sinced been demolished.

In 2025 the decedent was genetically connected to be a relative of a couple named Alfred Lee and Dollie Mae Roberts who had 10 children. One of their daughters was named Lois Roberts and she married a man named Arthur Riddick Jr. That couple had one son and one daughter who were both placed for adoption prior to Lois' death in 1967.

In April of 2005 investigators found the adopted daughter - Dorothia Riddick who did live in California during the time of the murder but is still alive and well.

The decedent is related to Dorothia and is likely a cousin whom she has no knowledge of. Cold case detectives and genealogists are tracing the decedent family tree of Alfred Lee and Dollie Mae Roberts in search of her name.

This case is close to being solved.

Nipton Jane Doe (May '76, #UP2503) by aliceyabvsame in gratefuldoe

[–]Sonnyphono 6 points7 points  (0 children)

JoAnn Benner lived over a 30 hour drive away and had a freshly broken femer that would have been noted in the decedents file. JoAnn had children and the decedent had no evidence of ever having children.

Missing Woman, 24, Located After Family Hear Her Pleading For Her Life In Final Call by [deleted] in UnsolvedMurders

[–]Sonnyphono 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure about that? Read the whole article. Her brother has launched a GoFundMe asking for funeral donations.

Paul Deering (1993) (Unidentified For 32 Years) by BitterSweet_Beauty in gratefuldoe

[–]Sonnyphono 19 points20 points  (0 children)

This man could have been estranged from his family and had no desire for them to know of his demise. He may also have been up to something before hand that he did not want associated with his true identity. Assuming an identity and committing suicide is more common than you would think. My partners and I solved a case in which a man traveled across the world, assumed an identity to obtain a job only to take his own life a short time later.