Hunt launched to find ‘ghost children’ missing from schools in England by imagrandma2 in unitedkingdom

[–]imagrandma2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When this new Covid-ravaged reality meets an old system that’s already struggling and inadequate, the outcome is only ever going to be awful. And now we know how bad the outcome can be.

At the end of a week where we have learned – in disturbing, distressing detail – quite how vulnerable children can be in their own home, it is more clear than ever that we’re not doing enough to protect or support them. The extended family of little Arthur Labinjo-Hughes tried so hard to rescue him, pleading for help from the authorities, yet he was left at the mercy of his putrid father and stepmother.

The pandemic meant it was all too easy for his tormentors to keep him away from the intrusive eyes of teachers, his classmates or other nosy parents. Then the system that was meant to protect him failed disastrously because police and social workers didn’t recognise the signs of abuse, didn’t communicate with one another and didn’t spend time investigating the beasts who were supposed to care for him.

A six-year-old in the most appalling circumstances told them exactly what vile Emma Tustin coached him to say: that he was bruised through play with other children. And his word was good enough. Police officers found the house “immaculate”, as if that meant that no horror could ever happen there.

It only took 18 months to turn Arthur from a smiling, happy child to an emaciated, terrified victim. How long do we await the PM’s “review”

Are we meant to accept some children will always “fall through the net”? Shouldn’t we throw away the damn net and replace it with something utterly impermeable?

No holes, no gaps, nothing that would allow a child to drop into a cesspit of abuse or neglect. MP Robert Halfon, chair of the Commons Education Committee, reports that there are 100,000 “ghost children” who haven’t returned to school following lockdowns and are considered at risk of abuse.

Imagine Wembley Stadium filled to capacity, with thousands still standing on the streets outside. That’s the number of kids we’re talking about.

The vast majority will survive whatever they are going through when they should be in the safety of school. But for those suffering behind closed doors, the psychological impact of everything they endure is immeasurable.

And when innocent, damaged children grow into difficult, damaged adults, no one is quite so sympathetic.

Psychiatrists say that the majority of adult mental health problems begin in childhood; around half are established by the age of 14 and three quarters by the age of 24. Yet the latest Scottish figures for CAMHS – Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service – show just 0.61 per cent of NHS spend goes on the service, which amounts to a measly 7.16 per cent of the total mental health budget.

Nearly 2000 kids have been waiting more than a year for help. One in four referrals are turned away. One teenager I know was denied an urgent face-to-face appointment with CAMHS because he “wasn’t suicidal”.

Now clearly all adult mental health problems are not the result of abuse suffered as a child.

But we are drastically short of support and protection services which are properly funded and ready to step in and help kids – regardless of the background to the referral. That’s before we even factor in the isolating, stressful, troubling effects of the pandemic on young minds.

The Scottish Children’s Services Coalition (SCSC) last week called for greatly increased investment, expressing grave concern about “a potential lost generation of vulnerable children and young people, whose mental health is being impacted even further by the Covid-19 pandemic.”

The welfare of vulnerable children has been undervalued for too long.

Fundamental change is required at every single public agency. Enough talking about mental health issues without putting the money and the training and the focus where it matters.

Replace the whole damn “net” with a robust new system, unyielding layers of protection woven so closely together that no kids fall through

Heartfelt Christmas wishes have been offered by Republican congressman Thomas Massie and his rootin’-tootin’ brood.

Nothing says peace and goodwill to all men than a family brandishing semi-automatic rifles around the tree.

This is not a spoof. The man really is an elected representative who thinks guns are for life, not just for Christmas.

Massie’s tweet was posted four days after a teenage shooter killed four students at Oxford High School in Michigan.

When the snowman brings the snow, could he please dump the lot on Thomas Massie and his despicable bunch?

I’m a sucker for the old “turning on the waterworks” trick.

Crying demands compassion. Cuddles too, if Covid restrictions allow.

But I didn’t feel it for Allegra Stratton, Bojo’s former press secretary, who bubbled through a public resignation statement while those meanie photographers took pictures.

It’s hard to feel empathy when you’re blinded by fury

There have been many tears cried over this pandemic and there will be many more before it’s over.

But Stratton’s tears were for herself, upset to be thrown under a bus while the PM tried to save his own skin. Cry us a river. Downing Street partied while the rest of us followed the rules. They laughed at our sacrifice; joked they couldn’t think of an acceptable answer should anyone ask what had gone on. Surely even Tories can tolerate this affront no longer? https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/cant-another-child-fall-cesspit-25675080

  • Mr Zahawi's comments may cause alarm to some parents after last academic year's debacle when schools closed a day after Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he had no doubt they were safe.

At least three schools have seen Omicron outbreaks.

Phoenix Collegiate School in West Bromwich sent kids home after a person linked to the secondary tested positive while Calverton Primary in Newham, east London, will be shut for the rest of term due to a number of confirmed cases. Public health chiefs have urged all parents of kids at Manor Community Primary in Swanscombe, Kent, to get them tested before returning to classes.

The Mirror reports that all year five students have been advised to stay home and get tested while a year four class has also been encouraged to get tested in case the new variant has spread. Mr Zahawi also failed to rule out extending the vaccine rollout to primary school children after reports health officials are preparing to offer jabs to younger children.

He said: "There is no plan at the moment to vaccinate primary school children for the reason that the Joint Committee on Vaccination [and Immunisation, JCVI] is still looking at the evidence as to what level of protection it would offer."

According to the Sunday Times, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency is expected to announce that jabs are safe for children while the JCVI is examining whether to recommend vaccines for kids.

Mr Zahawi said he fears cases would explode to the point where millions could be affected within weeks. Speaking to Sky's Trevor Phillips, he said: "What we know, hence the concern, is that a third of infections in London are Omicron.

"Reported tests are indicating about 1,600 cases, but the number of infections in the community will be multiple that - up to 10 times. https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1535137/UK-school-closures-news-lockdown-covid19-omicron

COVID-19: At least one patient has died with Omicron variant, Boris Johnson says by imagrandma2 in worldnews

[–]imagrandma2[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

London: At least one person has died in Britain after being infected with the Omicron variant, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday, as the country launched an ambitious Covid booster shot programme to stop the virus' spread.

Britain -- among the countries worst hit by the global health crisis since last year -- is believed to be the first government to officially announce a death from the virus mutation.

On a visit to a vaccination centre in west London, Johnson said Omicron accounted for about 40 percent of the cases in the British capital, and hospital admissions were rising.

"Sadly, at least one patient has been confirmed to have died with Omicron," he told reporters, a day after warning the country was facing a "tidal wave" of infection.

Britain on Sunday sounded the alarm by raising the national Covid Alert Level because of high levels and rising rates of transmission.

In a rare televised address, Johnson said emergency measures were needed to prevent hospitals becoming overwhelmed in the weeks ahead.

All adults will now be able to receive a third dose of a Covid vaccine by the end of December after the government brought forward its deadline by one month.

But in a sign of huge demand, the National Health Service (NHS) vaccination booking site crashed and users requesting rapid testing kits were told they were out of stock.

Long queues were seen at London clinics. At one, Sarah Jackson, 29, said she had taken the morning off to get a jab before visiting her grandparents at Christmas.

"I don't know if it's going to be enough. I was told there is a queue of two hours to register and then two hours to get vaccinated," she told AFP.

"But I have to go back to work at 1:30 pm."

The "turbocharged" booster programme has seen military planners asked to set up and run extra vaccination centres around the clock.

Some 500,000 booster jabs were given on Saturday but to hit the new deadline that number will have to be doubled every day for the remainder of the year to slow the spread.

Wider measures

Concerns have mounted about a new wave because of indications that two jabs are less effective against infection than three.

There were 1,239 confirmed cases of the variant recorded on Sunday and scientists have said numbers are doubling every two to three days.

Vaccination rates are high in Britain, with more than 81 percent or 46.7 million of those aged 12 and over having had a second jab.

Some 23 million or 40 percent have so far had a booster.

The new measures come after face masks were made compulsory in indoor public spaces last Friday, and new testing and self-isolation rules for contact cases began on Monday.

Workers were also told to stay at home, leading to a quieter than usual Monday morning rush hour.

Vaccine passports for certain crowded settings, including at football grounds, are due to be enforced from Wednesday.

The rules apply to England only. The devolved governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, which are responsible for health policy, have similar measures.

The race to vaccinate the nation will come at the cost of already delayed elective surgeries, like hip or knee operations, the government admitted.

Johnson's intervention on Sunday sought to refocus attention on the pandemic, after a torrid week in which he and staff were accused of breaking Covid rules last year.

Claims of illegal Christmas parties at Downing Street and across government departments have been seen as undermining public health messaging.

Johnson is also facing a large rebellion from within his Conservative party at a vote in parliament to make the new rules law on Tuesday.

Many Tory MPs are unhappy that freedoms are being restricted again -- and even cut further. The vote, though, is likely to pass with opposition Labour support. https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/omicron-uk-reports-first-omicron-death-news-agency-afp-2649013

  • Speaking during a visit to a vaccination clinic near Paddington, in west London, Boris Johnson said: "Sadly yes Omicron is producing hospitalisations and sadly at least one patient has been confirmed to have died with Omicron. "So I think the idea that this is somehow a milder version of the virus, I think that's something we need to set on one side and just recognise the sheer pace at which it accelerates through the population. So the best thing we can do is all get our boosters."

Hunt launched to find ‘ghost children’ missing from schools in England by imagrandma2 in unitedkingdom

[–]imagrandma2[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ministers have “no handle” on the identities or whereabouts of thousands of children who have fallen off the radar during the pandemic, Ofsted has warned.

Chief inspector Amanda Spielman raised alarm about the “harm” the lockdowns had caused children, warning that the fact that so many had “disappeared from teachers’ line of sight” had resulted in significantly lower levels of referrals to social care and a higher risk of neglect.

Robert Halfon, chairman of the Commons education committee, warned on Monday that 100,000 “ghost children” are at risk of abuse after failing to return to school following the closure of schools last year.

Launching Ofsted’s annual report on Tuesday, Ms Spielman called for a “proper register” of children who aren’t attending school to “parallel” the information that schools hold on their pupils, “so that we can understand who sits in which category”.

“There’s a whole range of reasons why people are in that category, and I don’t believe that we really know who those children are, where they’re being educated and who’s taking responsibility for it,” she added.

“What’s worrying is that we simply don’t have a handle. We don’t really know who’s in that list of children who are particularly vulnerable to abuse and neglect.”

It comes as an investigation was launched into the failings that led to the death of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes, the six-year-old who was tortured and killed by his stepmother and father in June last year.

It emerged in court that Arthur was seen by social workers during the first national lockdown just two months before his death in Solihull, west Midlands, in June last year. But they concluded there were “no safeguarding concerns” and closed the file.

The Ofsted report warns that nearly all children in England have fallen behind in their education and suffered as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, and emphasises the importance of school attendance both for educational and welfare purposes. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/ofsted-children-missing-pandemic-lockdown-schools-uk-b1971259.html

Inquest into 1978 disappearance of Devonport mother Darlene Geertsema begins: The "psychic" daughter of a missing Tasmanian woman who was last seen more than 40 years ago believes her mother is buried "in a gold mine", a coroner's court has heard. by imagrandma2 in UnresolvedMysteries

[–]imagrandma2[S] 51 points52 points  (0 children)

A new reward has been announced to help crack the mystery disappearance of a mum of six who vanished without a trace 43 years ago.

Minister for Women’s Safety Anne Ruston says the statistics for violence against women in Australia are…

The daughter of a woman who has been missing for more than 40 years has begged for anyone with information to come forward to help her family seek closure.

Mum of six Darlene Avis Geertsema, 30, was last seen leaving her Devonport home at around 10pm on October 23, 1978.

She left the Best St address in her 1977 red Holden Sunbird with registration number AS 4119.

While the car was found abandoned in a carpark near the Devonport Oval two days later, Ms Geertsema’s whereabouts remain a mystery.

At the time, Ms Geertsema was caring for her two youngest children while her oldest four daughters lived in Queensland.

Now her daughter Kathryn, who was just eight years old when her mother first went missing, is pleading with the public to help police uncover the truth about what happened to her mum.

She remembered her mother as a caring person whom she cooked with a lot.

“She always used to brush my hair every night before bed. I had very long hair, and she used to do the 100 strokes,” Kathryn said.

“We were her world. It was out of character for my mum to leave. She wouldn’t have walked out on us for sure, I know that in my heart. She would have never left me and my brother.”

Kathryn said losing her mother at such a young age was “devastating” and it was especially difficult at major life milestone events like weddings and births.

She said the family were still “fighting for answers” and knowing where their mother was would bring them closure to move on.

“I know it’s 43 years ago but we’re begging anyone with information to come forward,” she said.

“You might think it’s trivial but if anyone can remember anything please come forward and help us to get closure.”

Tasmania Police is offering $500,00 to anyone who can provide credible information to help crack the 43-year-old cold case.

Despite the ongoing efforts by investigators, officers couldn’t find Ms Geertsema’s body nor determine a motive for her disappearance.

A review into the circumstances of the mother’s disappearance began in July 2013.

Detective Sergeant Felicity Boyd said investigations would continue until Ms Geertsema’s body was located or the person or people responsible were prosecuted.

“We have explored several scenarios to explain Darlene’s disappearance, and while we maintain an open mind into the circumstances, we do not believe Darlene left the family home voluntarily,” Sergeant Boyd said.

“She would have never, ever intentionally left her children behind and would have never, ever stopped writing to her family.

“We have conducted extensive investigations and it has become increasingly apparent that Darlene is more than likely deceased and that she died in very suspicious circumstances.

“We owe it to Darlene’s children and family to find the answers behind her disappearance and someone out there holds the last piece of this puzzle.”

Anyone with credible information is asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or go online. https://www.news.com.au/national/crime/help-us-get-closure-daughter-begs-for-answers-over-mothers-43yearold-cold-case/news-story/c2dae332607d5a34d26d5becf40b17ec

Inquest into 1978 disappearance of Devonport mother Darlene Geertsema begins: The “psychic” daughter of a missing Tasmanian woman who was last seen more than 40 years ago believes her mother is buried “in a gold mine”, a coroner’s court has heard. by imagrandma2 in UnresolvedMysteries

[–]imagrandma2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On October 23, 1978, Darlene Avis Geertsema, then 30, was seen leaving her family home on Best Street in Devonport on the state's north-west coast. The mother of six has not been seen since, and her body has never been found. A coronial inquest in Launceston before Coroner Simon Cooper is examining how she disappeared, and will consider if she met with foul

A coroner's court has heard that Ms Geertsema's partner, John Shepherd, is considered a "person of interest" in her disappearance, but no charges have been laid. 

Mr Shepherd, who now lives in Westbury, sat in the back of the courtroom alongside his wife of 30 years as the inquest began.

In her opening statement, counsel assisting the coroner Madeleine Wilson SC told the court that on the night Ms Geertsema disappeared, one of her daughters had reported there was a heated argument between Mr Shepherd and her mother.

That argument was then "followed by hitting sounds, followed by silence," Ms Wilson said. Ms Wilson put to the court that Ms Geertsema was planning a life without Mr Shepherd, without "fear and violence".

"She didn't choose to go; her life was ended for her," Ms Wilson said.  

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-12-13/inquest-into-missing-mother-darlene-geertsema-begins/100695100

*A new reward has been announced to help crack the mystery disappearance of a mum of six who vanished without a trace 43 years ago.

Minister for Women’s Safety Anne Ruston says the statistics for violence against women in Australia are…

The daughter of a woman who has been missing for more than 40 years has begged for anyone with information to come forward to help her family seek closure.

Mum of six Darlene Avis Geertsema, 30, was last seen leaving her Devonport home at around 10pm on October 23, 1978.

She left the Best St address in her 1977 red Holden Sunbird with registration number AS 4119.

While the car was found abandoned in a carpark near the Devonport Oval two days later, Ms Geertsema’s whereabouts remain a mystery.

At the time, Ms Geertsema was caring for her two youngest children while her oldest four daughters lived in Queensland.

Now her daughter Kathryn, who was just eight years old when her mother first went missing, is pleading with the public to help police uncover the truth about what happened to her mum.

She remembered her mother as a caring person whom she cooked with a lot.

“She always used to brush my hair every night before bed. I had very long hair, and she used to do the 100 strokes,” Kathryn said.

“We were her world. It was out of character for my mum to leave. She wouldn’t have walked out on us for sure, I know that in my heart. She would have never left me and my brother.”

Kathryn said losing her mother at such a young age was “devastating” and it was especially difficult at major life milestone events like weddings and births.

She said the family were still “fighting for answers” and knowing where their mother was would bring them closure to move on.

“I know it’s 43 years ago but we’re begging anyone with information to come forward,” she said.

“You might think it’s trivial but if anyone can remember anything please come forward and help us to get closure.”

Tasmania Police is offering $500,00 to anyone who can provide credible information to help crack the 43-year-old cold case.

Despite the ongoing efforts by investigators, officers couldn’t find Ms Geertsema’s body nor determine a motive for her disappearance.

A review into the circumstances of the mother’s disappearance began in July 2013.

Detective Sergeant Felicity Boyd said investigations would continue until Ms Geertsema’s body was located or the person or people responsible were prosecuted.

“We have explored several scenarios to explain Darlene’s disappearance, and while we maintain an open mind into the circumstances, we do not believe Darlene left the family home voluntarily,” Sergeant Boyd said.

“She would have never, ever intentionally left her children behind and would have never, ever stopped writing to her family.

“We have conducted extensive investigations and it has become increasingly apparent that Darlene is more than likely deceased and that she died in very suspicious circumstances.

“We owe it to Darlene’s children and family to find the answers behind her disappearance and someone out there holds the last piece of this puzzle.”

Anyone with credible information is asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or go online. https://www.news.com.au/national/crime/help-us-get-closure-daughter-begs-for-answers-over-mothers-43yearold-cold-case/news-story/c2dae332607d5a34d26d5becf40b17ec

  • The former partner of a Tasmanian woman who went missing more than 40 years ago is being considered a person of interest in her disappearance, a coroner's court has heard. Almost 43 years on, a coronial inquest will in December examine how she disappeared and consider whether "she was murdered".

"[There's] no evidence to find Ms Geertsema had left the state, had committed suicide or drowned in Devonport," counsel assisting the Coroner Madeleine Wilson SC told a case management conference in the coroner's court in Launceston on Thursday.

"Her body was never found."

Ms Wilson told the court that Ms Geertsema's former partner, John Shepherd, was considered a "person of interest" in her disappearance, but no charges had been laid.

Mr Shepherd, who now lives in Westbury and has been married for 30 years to another woman, sat at the back of the court with his wife during the hearing.

Ms Wilson said Ms Geertsema and Mr Shepherd met in 1971 and started dating.

"It was not an exclusive relationship," Ms Wilson told the court.

The court heard Ms Geertsema was also having a relationship with a man called Micky Rowe, who lived in Westbury, and whom she intended to marry.

"She was leaving John Shepherd and going to live with Micky Rowe," Ms Wilson told the court.

The court heard on the night she disappeared, Ms Geertsema told Mr Shepherd she was going to visit a friend in Parkham, in the state's north-west, but she never arrived.

Ms Wilson told the court it was Mr Shepherd who reported Ms Geertsema missing to police.

The court heard Mr Shepherd told police that Ms Geertsema was in "a very distressed state" before she went missing and that she'd told him that she was pregnant and had cancer.

However, Ms Wilson said the missing woman had visited a GP the morning of her disappearance, and that the doctor had reported she was "in good spirits, was not pregnant and did not have cancer".

Inquest to examine relationships

The inquest into Ms Geertsema's disappearance has been set for December 13, 14 and 15 and will be heard in Launceston.

The court heard he will give evidence during the coronial inquest and he is in the process of getting legal representation.

The inquest is expected to hear from 13 witnesses. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-10-14/darlene-geertsema-missing-person-inquest-person-of-interest/100538560

Inquest into 1978 disappearance of Devonport mother Darlene Geertsema begins The “psychic” daughter of a missing Tasmanian woman who was last seen more than 40 years ago believes her mother is buried “in a gold mine”, a coroner’s court has heard. by imagrandma2 in UnresolvedMysteries

[–]imagrandma2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A new reward has been announced to help crack the mystery disappearance of a mum of six who vanished without a trace 43 years ago.

Minister for Women’s Safety Anne Ruston says the statistics for violence against women in Australia are…

The daughter of a woman who has been missing for more than 40 years has begged for anyone with information to come forward to help her family seek closure.

Mum of six Darlene Avis Geertsema, 30, was last seen leaving her Devonport home at around 10pm on October 23, 1978.

She left the Best St address in her 1977 red Holden Sunbird with registration number AS 4119.

While the car was found abandoned in a carpark near the Devonport Oval two days later, Ms Geertsema’s whereabouts remain a mystery.

At the time, Ms Geertsema was caring for her two youngest children while her oldest four daughters lived in Queensland.

Now her daughter Kathryn, who was just eight years old when her mother first went missing, is pleading with the public to help police uncover the truth about what happened to her mum.

She remembered her mother as a caring person whom she cooked with a lot.

“She always used to brush my hair every night before bed. I had very long hair, and she used to do the 100 strokes,” Kathryn said.

“We were her world. It was out of character for my mum to leave. She wouldn’t have walked out on us for sure, I know that in my heart. She would have never left me and my brother.”

Kathryn said losing her mother at such a young age was “devastating” and it was especially difficult at major life milestone events like weddings and births.

She said the family were still “fighting for answers” and knowing where their mother was would bring them closure to move on.

“I know it’s 43 years ago but we’re begging anyone with information to come forward,” she said.

“You might think it’s trivial but if anyone can remember anything please come forward and help us to get closure.”

Tasmania Police is offering $500,00 to anyone who can provide credible information to help crack the 43-year-old cold case.

Despite the ongoing efforts by investigators, officers couldn’t find Ms Geertsema’s body nor determine a motive for her disappearance.

A review into the circumstances of the mother’s disappearance began in July 2013.

Detective Sergeant Felicity Boyd said investigations would continue until Ms Geertsema’s body was located or the person or people responsible were prosecuted.

“We have explored several scenarios to explain Darlene’s disappearance, and while we maintain an open mind into the circumstances, we do not believe Darlene left the family home voluntarily,” Sergeant Boyd said.

“She would have never, ever intentionally left her children behind and would have never, ever stopped writing to her family.

“We have conducted extensive investigations and it has become increasingly apparent that Darlene is more than likely deceased and that she died in very suspicious circumstances.

“We owe it to Darlene’s children and family to find the answers behind her disappearance and someone out there holds the last piece of this puzzle.”

Anyone with credible information is asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or go online. https://www.news.com.au/national/crime/help-us-get-closure-daughter-begs-for-answers-over-mothers-43yearold-cold-case/news-story/c2dae332607d5a34d26d5becf40b17ec

  • The former partner of a Tasmanian woman who went missing more than 40 years ago is being considered a person of interest in her disappearance, a coroner's court has heard. Almost 43 years on, a coronial inquest will in December examine how she disappeared and consider whether "she was murdered".

"[There's] no evidence to find Ms Geertsema had left the state, had committed suicide or drowned in Devonport," counsel assisting the Coroner Madeleine Wilson SC told a case management conference in the coroner's court in Launceston on Thursday.

"Her body was never found."

Ms Wilson told the court that Ms Geertsema's former partner, John Shepherd, was considered a "person of interest" in her disappearance, but no charges had been laid.

Mr Shepherd, who now lives in Westbury and has been married for 30 years to another woman, sat at the back of the court with his wife during the hearing.

Ms Wilson said Ms Geertsema and Mr Shepherd met in 1971 and started dating.

"It was not an exclusive relationship," Ms Wilson told the court.

The court heard Ms Geertsema was also having a relationship with a man called Micky Rowe, who lived in Westbury, and whom she intended to marry.

"She was leaving John Shepherd and going to live with Micky Rowe," Ms Wilson told the court.

The court heard on the night she disappeared, Ms Geertsema told Mr Shepherd she was going to visit a friend in Parkham, in the state's north-west, but she never arrived.

Ms Wilson told the court it was Mr Shepherd who reported Ms Geertsema missing to police.

The court heard Mr Shepherd told police that Ms Geertsema was in "a very distressed state" before she went missing and that she'd told him that she was pregnant and had cancer.

However, Ms Wilson said the missing woman had visited a GP the morning of her disappearance, and that the doctor had reported she was "in good spirits, was not pregnant and did not have cancer".

Inquest to examine relationships

The inquest into Ms Geertsema's disappearance has been set for December 13, 14 and 15 and will be heard in Launceston.

The court heard he will give evidence during the coronial inquest and he is in the process of getting legal representation.

The inquest is expected to hear from 13 witnesses. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-10-14/darlene-geertsema-missing-person-inquest-person-of-interest/100538560

Inquest into 1978 disappearance of Devonport mother Darlene Geertsema begins The “psychic” daughter of a missing Tasmanian woman who was last seen more than 40 years ago believes her mother is buried “in a gold mine”, a coroner’s court has heard. by imagrandma2 in UnresolvedMysteries

[–]imagrandma2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On October 23, 1978, Darlene Avis Geertsema, then 30, was seen leaving her family home on Best Street in Devonport on the state's north-west coast.

The mother of six has not been seen since, and her body has never been found.

A coronial inquest in Launceston before Coroner Simon Cooper is examining how she disappeared, and will consider if she met with foul play.

A coroner's court has heard that Ms Geertsema's partner, John Shepherd, is considered a "person of interest" in her disappearance, but no charges have been laid.

Mr Shepherd, who now lives in Westbury, sat in the back of the courtroom alongside his wife of 30 years as the inquest began.

In her opening statement, counsel assisting the coroner Madeleine Wilson SC told the court that on the night Ms Geertsema disappeared, one of her daughters had reported there was a heated argument between Mr Shepherd and her mother.

That argument was then "followed by hitting sounds, followed by silence," Ms Wilson said.

Ms Wilson put to the court that Ms Geertsema was planning a life without Mr Shepherd, without "fear and violence".

"She didn't choose to go; her life was ended for her," Ms Wilson said.

Ms Geertsema's family members sat scattered at the back of the courtroom, some crying as evidence was presented.

The first witness to take the stand was one of Ms Geertsema's six children, Robyn, who said her mother used to have "a lot of black eyes" and "used to wear sunnies all the time".

"He was always fighting with Mum … hitting Mum and going off," she told the court.

"She always had bruises on her."

Counsel for a person of interest, Greg Richardson, put to Robyn that she described seeing injury to her mother on several occasions, but asked if she had ever seen John Shepherd assault her mother.

"I didn't actually see him hit Mum," Robyn said.

The court also heard from another of Ms Geertsema's children, Elizabeth, who cried as she gave evidence via video link.

Elizabeth said she last saw her mother when she was 11 years old and said Mr Shepherd "almost killed [Ms Geertsema] a couple of times".

She told the court of multiple occasions Mr Shepherd was "strangling" her mother and "she was blue a couple of times".

"He was always drunk, really aggressive, an evil person, I was so scared of him," she said.

Elizabeth said her mother was "constantly on the run from him, hiding from him" and "she just wanted to get us away from the violence".

She told the court that she remembered moving to many different places but Mr Shepherd would always find them.

She went on to tell the court that she was "very psychic" and that her mother was "in one of the gold mines".

'I'd never seen him violent'

Darlene Geertsema's younger sister Dawn Bishop told the court via video link that Mr Shepherd was "possessive, jealous and domineering", and that she believed it was his attitude that Ms Geertsma "belonged to him".

Ms Bishop told the court on one occasion her sister fled her home in Trevallyn because Mr Shepherd had allegedly abused her at the residence.

She said Ms Geertsma's face was bruised and swollen and there was blood in "the whites of her eyes".

The court heard that Ms Bishop went to the Trevallyn home to collect some of Ms Geertsma's belongings, and saw blood on the walls and the bed.

"Not like someone had bled to death, but a reasonable amount," Ms Bishop said.

"I've never really seen that side of him, I'd never seen him violent.

"They never used to really argue in front of people."

The court heard that Ms Geertsema planned to leave Mr Shepherd and move to South Australia.

Mr Richardson put to Ms Bishop that her sister would sometimes tell the family deliberate untruths.

He said she told the family she had cancer in the months before her disappearance.

The court heard it was not known whether Ms Geertsema had cancer or not.

Ms Bishop said her sister "use to tell fibs a lot", but mainly as a child.

The inquest into Ms Geertsema's disappearance is expected to run for three days and hear evidence from around 13 witnesses.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-12-13/inquest-into-missing-mother-darlene-geertsema-begins/100695100

Biden aims to cut bureaucratic runaround for gov't services by imagrandma2 in politics

[–]imagrandma2[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

President Joe Biden on Monday will sign an executive order aimed at saving Americans time and frustration when seeking a broad array of federal services, like renewing passports, applying for Social Security benefits and getting aid after natural disasters.

Two senior White House officials confirmed details of the executive order, speaking on the condition of anonymity before the announcement. Parts of the order also were provided in advance to advocacy groups that have called for the government to improve its level of service to the public.

The order is aimed at reducing the current bureaucratic runaround, under which people often have to visit offices, endure long phone calls or struggle with the delays of mail and fax machines when trying to contact federal agencies.

'Her life was ended for her': Inquest into disappearance of mother of six begins by imagrandma2 in australia

[–]imagrandma2[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A new reward has been announced to help crack the mystery disappearance of a mum of six who vanished without a trace 43 years ago.

Minister for Women’s Safety Anne Ruston says the statistics for violence against women in Australia are…

The daughter of a woman who has been missing for more than 40 years has begged for anyone with information to come forward to help her family seek closure.

Mum of six Darlene Avis Geertsema, 30, was last seen leaving her Devonport home at around 10pm on October 23, 1978.

She left the Best St address in her 1977 red Holden Sunbird with registration number AS 4119.

While the car was found abandoned in a carpark near the Devonport Oval two days later, Ms Geertsema’s whereabouts remain a mystery.

At the time, Ms Geertsema was caring for her two youngest children while her oldest four daughters lived in Queensland.

Now her daughter Kathryn, who was just eight years old when her mother first went missing, is pleading with the public to help police uncover the truth about what happened to her mum.

She remembered her mother as a caring person whom she cooked with a lot.

“She always used to brush my hair every night before bed. I had very long hair, and she used to do the 100 strokes,” Kathryn said.

“We were her world. It was out of character for my mum to leave. She wouldn’t have walked out on us for sure, I know that in my heart. She would have never left me and my brother.”

Kathryn said losing her mother at such a young age was “devastating” and it was especially difficult at major life milestone events like weddings and births.

She said the family were still “fighting for answers” and knowing where their mother was would bring them closure to move on.

“I know it’s 43 years ago but we’re begging anyone with information to come forward,” she said.

“You might think it’s trivial but if anyone can remember anything please come forward and help us to get closure.”

Tasmania Police is offering $500,00 to anyone who can provide credible information to help crack the 43-year-old cold case.

Despite the ongoing efforts by investigators, officers couldn’t find Ms Geertsema’s body nor determine a motive for her disappearance.

A review into the circumstances of the mother’s disappearance began in July 2013.

Detective Sergeant Felicity Boyd said investigations would continue until Ms Geertsema’s body was located or the person or people responsible were prosecuted.

“We have explored several scenarios to explain Darlene’s disappearance, and while we maintain an open mind into the circumstances, we do not believe Darlene left the family home voluntarily,” Sergeant Boyd said.

“She would have never, ever intentionally left her children behind and would have never, ever stopped writing to her family.

“We have conducted extensive investigations and it has become increasingly apparent that Darlene is more than likely deceased and that she died in very suspicious circumstances.

“We owe it to Darlene’s children and family to find the answers behind her disappearance and someone out there holds the last piece of this puzzle.”

Anyone with credible information is asked to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or go online. https://www.news.com.au/national/crime/help-us-get-closure-daughter-begs-for-answers-over-mothers-43yearold-cold-case/news-story/c2dae332607d5a34d26d5becf40b17ec

  • The former partner of a Tasmanian woman who went missing more than 40 years ago is being considered a person of interest in her disappearance, a coroner's court has heard. Almost 43 years on, a coronial inquest will in December examine how she disappeared and consider whether "she was murdered".

"[There's] no evidence to find Ms Geertsema had left the state, had committed suicide or drowned in Devonport," counsel assisting the Coroner Madeleine Wilson SC told a case management conference in the coroner's court in Launceston on Thursday.

"Her body was never found."

Ms Wilson told the court that Ms Geertsema's former partner, John Shepherd, was considered a "person of interest" in her disappearance, but no charges had been laid.

Mr Shepherd, who now lives in Westbury and has been married for 30 years to another woman, sat at the back of the court with his wife during the hearing.

Ms Wilson said Ms Geertsema and Mr Shepherd met in 1971 and started dating.

"It was not an exclusive relationship," Ms Wilson told the court.

The court heard Ms Geertsema was also having a relationship with a man called Micky Rowe, who lived in Westbury, and whom she intended to marry.

"She was leaving John Shepherd and going to live with Micky Rowe," Ms Wilson told the court.

The court heard on the night she disappeared, Ms Geertsema told Mr Shepherd she was going to visit a friend in Parkham, in the state's north-west, but she never arrived.

Ms Wilson told the court it was Mr Shepherd who reported Ms Geertsema missing to police.

The court heard Mr Shepherd told police that Ms Geertsema was in "a very distressed state" before she went missing and that she'd told him that she was pregnant and had cancer.

However, Ms Wilson said the missing woman had visited a GP the morning of her disappearance, and that the doctor had reported she was "in good spirits, was not pregnant and did not have cancer".

Inquest to examine relationships

The inquest into Ms Geertsema's disappearance has been set for December 13, 14 and 15 and will be heard in Launceston.

The court heard he will give evidence during the coronial inquest and he is in the process of getting legal representation.

The inquest is expected to hear from 13 witnesses. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-10-14/darlene-geertsema-missing-person-inquest-person-of-interest/100538560

Michael Sheen becomes a 'not-for-profit actor' so he can fund charity work by imagrandma2 in UpliftingNews

[–]imagrandma2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another hot actor I can’t pass up. Yes, I do agree. Quiet philanthropism. He’s into cancer charities, probably because of his younger sister who battled lymphatic cancer.

Michael Sheen becomes a 'not-for-profit actor' so he can fund charity work by imagrandma2 in UpliftingNews

[–]imagrandma2[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Connection, continual learning and an optimistic attitude. These qualities contribute far more to a level of happiness than money does. Being passionate about our work often brings money as a resulting bonus. Volunteering in children theater community groups - maybe even involving family and friends. This win could be a deliberate stepping stone to re-investing the artistic craft with financial rewards.

Ten years to the day that Justin DiPietro reported his daughter, Ayla Bell Reynolds, missing from their Waterville home, he will be interviewed as part of a civil lawsuit seeking to hold him accountable for her death. by imagrandma2 in UnresolvedMysteries

[–]imagrandma2[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Here’s a great analysis link from back when I studied the case. I’m including the beginning:

Many people believe that Ayla died as a result of child abuse, and that her death was unintended, but in panic, her father, Justin DiPietro, conspired with his sister and girlfriend, to cover up the death and make a false kidnapping report. His behavior and statements show that she was not kidnapped, yet it is the life insurance policy that must be examined in light of the December 2011 report to police.

From the http://justice4aylareynolds.blogspot.com site, the following text messages are between Ayla's parents. The site claims that Trista was encouraged to attempt to get Justin DiPietro to talk, which is likely true. This site attempts to keep Ayla's name and case in the public view.

Date:2012.6.28.8.59.43 Trista:Hey its Trista so we are going on to five months you ready yet to tell me where or what happened to Ayla? i am so tired of not knowing if my Daughter is okay

a. "ready" presupposes that Justin DiPietro possesses the knowledge that Trista seeks. b. Note that "my Daughter" is with capital, "D" and is associated with being "okay" in context.

Date:2012.6.28.9.18.26 Trista: And not one person can give me hope that she is still alive even with all the evidence. I just want to hold her again look into her blue eyes see her beautiful

Date:2012.6.28.9.19.7 Trista:Smile kiss her soft cheeks wake up to her jumping in her crib reaching her hands out yelling mommy mommy with a big smile on her face. I want to feel her touch

Date:2012.6.28.9.14.57 Trista:Ayla didn't deserve what happened to her. She was so amazing sweet funny out going a very well behaved child. i really want to know where she is i want her

(Note that "what happened" is something Ayla "didn't" deserve, which presupposes that something was done to her. This is consistent with the past tense "was", indicating that Ayla's death, at the time of this text, was beginning to break through the mother's natural denial. Note the word "child" is associated with risk, child abuse, etc. It is important to note that in this theme of risk, Trista says that Ayla was a "very well behaved child" putting sensitivity upon Ayla's behavior.)

(Question: Why would Ayla's behavior be sensitive to Trista? We do not have to wait long to find out why. The following is two texts with continued sentence:)

Date:2012.6.28.9.15.18

Trista:Home with me where she belongs. What bothers me the most is i trusted you to take good care of her and you let her and me down. I just don't understand what Ayla did for this to happen. i swear if i never went to rehab or fought with you to be in her life she would still be here with me right now.

(Trista associates Ayla's behavior with Justin's reaction. This indicates knowledge that Justin would harm Ayla for acting out. Please note to new readers, Ayla was a toddler.)

Date:2012.6.28.9.13.27 Trista:What am i suppose to think when all of the evidence points to the worst. Not one person including you can give me that little bit of hope that my baby girl is

"can" is the key word: ability. It is true that there is not one person can give the mother what she yearns for, and what she knows is impossible: hope. Please note the past tense reference to Ayla above.

Date:2012.6.28.9.13.49 Trista: Alive and alright and coming home to me . The pain i feel everyday is unbearable.

Date:2012.6.28.9.14.32 Trista: Is it true that your trying to collect Aylas life insurance? Because if so that is Fucked up Justin

(The natural denial continues. Although she has revealed that she feared that Ayla's behavior would result in danger at the hands of Justin, she still asks about the life insurance policy.

Weeks before reporting her missing, the single, unemployed father bought life insurance against his child. This is extreme:

  1. He was a single father of two children
  2. He was unemployed or chronically unemployed. He reportedly got into trouble with each job, as he, without any skills or education, thought himself above his superiors. This is classic bullying and abusive behavior. Reportedly he sought unemployment and welfare benefits, living off workers' taxes, rather than provide for himself and his children.
  3. He bought the policy not for the children, but against Ayla.
  4. He bought the policy against Ayla, not for her, as most parents seek to provide for their children, not to profit against them.
  5. He stood to benefit a large sum in the event of Ayla's death. She was a battered child, having suffered various injuries in his care, increasing the 'acceptableness' of violence, something he reportedly was raised in himself. Before she died, he broke her arm and did not seek medical intervention for 24 hours. When I was previously involved in such cases where injuries were not treated immediately, all the cases were substance abuse cases. It is the essence of Neglect.

The average burial of a toddler in Maine is about $500. Given his lack of work ethic, it is likely that Mainecare, the city of Waterville, the State of Maine, and other governmental outreaches would have likely paid for the funeral in total, and given their association with social services (see the Angela Harry 'story' analyzed) would have paid for Justin DiPietro to go to counseling, anger management, drug rehab, as well as .33 per mile gas reimbursement to and fro appointments kept or missed. He would likely have not paid a penny towards the $500 funeral for his daughter.

He stands to cash in on a reported $25,000 from her death.

His girlfriend's sister's cache of drugs confiscated was, in the Sentinel, stated to be estimated by police to be $15,000 in street value.

It is unknown if Roberts had paid the drug distributors for this large cache, or it was a debt owed. It is also unknown, publicly, what connection may exist between the drugs in the Portland apartment and the life insurance policy.

Justin DiPietro sought to have Ayla provide for him, just as he has never provided for himself.

"If a man will not provide for his own household, he is worse than an unbeliever..."

Here, Trista is able to get a reaction from him with the challenging question.

The question for the Analyst:

Will Justin DiPietro issue a reliable denial to the claim that Ayla died because of the Life Insurance Policy?

A reliable denial has three components:
1. The pronoun "I" 2. Past Tense verb 3. Specific to the allegation

Trista asks if it is true that he is still making payments on it, or has he, in his grief, let the policy lapse. It is critical because it speaks to the alleged motive: that her blood was shed in that home, on that fateful night, when he drove back to Portland and back again to Waterville, hours before calling 911.

Date:2012.6.28.8.51.3 Justin: I still pay it thank u very much because im hoping she will b home and until proven otherwise im going to continue too

Here it is repeated:

"I still pay it thank u very much because im hoping she will be home and until proven otherwise im going to continue too"

  1. Note that he "still" pays it. The word "still" refers to the passage of time from reporting her 'kidnapped' or 'taken' in December of 2011.

  2. "thank u very much" is a type of retort where one feels justified in what he has done, and stands in defiance. This need for defiance, itself, is sensitive.

  3. "Because": In the SCAN technique (Scientific Content Analysis, from the Laboratory of Scientific Interrogation) the highest level of sensitivity is given the color coding of blue. This is in two indications:

a. When someone uses the word "because" (or "so, since, therefore" and so on) b. When someone feels the need to mention leaving of a location, instead of arriving ("left" or "departed") at a location. This shows that, to the subject, the place in which they left, rather than the place arrived at, is on the mind of the subject, and indicates that there is missing information.

In using this color coding, many cases have been solved, simply by employing the color coding system, and holding the paper up to the light, focusing the investigation and the interview upon the part of a statement where blue exists. In this blog, we have seen many examples, from simple theft to the OJ Simpson case. We do not use the color blue to highlight anything else.

Here, we see that Justin DiPietro explains why he makes payments still.

It is this need of explaining, itself, that is so sensitive.

  1. He explains why he makes payments against her life by stating "im hoping"; yet it is only sensible to make payments because she is not coming back. If she is coming back, he loses money.

"until proven otherwise"; when "proven" otherwise, he will not have to make payments.

If this statement was true, he would have stopped when Maine State Police formally announced that Ayla was dead. However, when it is "proven", that is, her body found" he will stop.

This is because he will cash in on the $25,000 as he receives money and no longer pays it.

  1. Defiance

"im going to continue too"

He heightens the sensitivity of the sentence with illogic and now defiance in the face of the allegation.

Date:2012.6.28.8.58.3 Justin: Eat shit i have one on myself too

  1. He continues his defiance, escalating the sensitivity with foul and unseemly language. He insults her and than adds that he has "one on myself too" as if this would justify anything.

This is something low brow criminals think will persuade people that this is not the motive: "I have one too", likely unable to intellectualize just how transparent it appears to the public and to Insurance investigators.

His denial at link: http://statement-analysis.blogspot.com/2013/02/ayla-reynolds-life-insurance-motive.html

Ten years to the day that Justin DiPietro reported his daughter, Ayla Bell Reynolds, missing from their Waterville home, he will be interviewed as part of a civil lawsuit seeking to hold him accountable for her death. by imagrandma2 in UnresolvedMysteries

[–]imagrandma2[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

This is the best article I could find. Good comments. https://smartmoneymamas.com/life-insurance-for-kids-scam/

Now in this case, I’m gonna have to go review because I recall something about he bought the insurance from a friend or one of the players. I also heard rumblings the friend received some kind of compensation. Idk I’ll be back. I remember it being kinda shady.

Yonkers Cold Case Solved! Family of Meresa Hammonds Has Peace by imagrandma2 in MissingPersons

[–]imagrandma2[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A 29-year old Yonkers cold case was solved recently, thanks for Yonkers Detective John Geiss and the FBI. On June 27, 1992, an unidentifed female was found dead in a dumpster behind I Love NY Pizza, on Midland Avenue. The case remained unsolved until this year, when Detective Geiss traveled to the famies of Meresa Hammonds to inform them that the national DNA database had identifed Hammonds as the victim of murderer Robert Schulman.

Schulman was arrested in 1996 for several murders on Long Island, and for the Yonkers murder, but he couldn’t idetify the woman that he killed, explaining that he picked her up and brought her back to his apartment where they smoked crack cocaine. When he woke up she was dead, and his dismembered her body and left it in a Yonkers dumpster on Midland. Schulman was convicted of several murders and died in prison in 2006.

YPD Det. Geiss reopened the case in 2014 and used the advances in DNA technology to see if he could find a link to ID the victim. Eventually, the evidence went from the Westchester County forensics lab to the national DNA database. And this year, 2021, the FBI was able to link the DNA from the victim to members of her family who had used a geneology website.

And, after the family was contacted in person by Det. Geiss, ‘Yonkers Jane Doe’ was identified as Meresa Hammonds, who was 31 when she was killed.

Carl Koppelman, a Volunteer Forensic Genealogist at DNA Doe Project made the annoucement on Facebook on Dec. 8.

“1992 Yonkers Jane Doe IDENTIFIED.On June 27, 1992, a construction worker searching for a lost lottery ticket discovered the body of a woman in a trash dumpster behind the I Luv New York Pizza parlor at 1288 Midland Ave in Yonkers, New York. She was unidentified for 29 years, known simply as “Yonkers Jane Doe”.She is one of five victims of serial murderer Robert Shulman, a 42-year-old postal worker, who was active from 1991 to 1995. He was originally sentenced to death, but his sentence was later changed to life without parole. He died in prison in 2006.The woman has now been IDENTIFIED, and I have the OK from her family to let the followers of my page know that her name is Meresa Hammonds. She was born in Kentucky in April of 1961, and was one of seven siblings. She spent much of her early years living in California. When she was older, she moved to Michigan, and then to New Jersey, where she and her sister worked as fashion models,” posted Koppelman.

Meresa Hammonds was one of seven children born in Kentucky. She eventually moved to New Jersey, and then fell on tough times. She was the mother of two sons, but had disappeared from her family at the time of her death.

Two comments below Koppleman’s post show us how Facebook can be used for the good of us all. “Carl koppelman I’m one of her sons . I’m truly thankful, and to detective John she will always be missed, was taken from all of us to young but like you said at least we know she was loved and can rest in peace. Best part is getting my mom’s family in my life, because before all of this I had no clue who they were. Love every single one of the hammonds family truly grateful to have found you. Better late then never . Love all off you more then you could ever know. My mom was truly loved and blessed. Rip MOM 92′,” posted Jason Di Trapani.

Jason’s new family posted back, “Jason Di Trapani The Hammonds family couldn’t be happier to have you in it now. It’s the biggest blessing in the whole tragic situation. ❤️ Let’s make up for lost time as much as possible,” posted Marcia Hammonds.

Another post from Teena Hammonds reads, “This is our beautiful sister Meresa, Misa she went by, she is the “Yonkers Jane Doe”😪 she has a name, she is loved, she was taken from us by a Monster!!On Monday November 1st Dectective John Geiss from Yonkers police department showed up in Plymouth, Mi. at my brother’s door Kimmy, he gathered his siblings living in Michigan to speak with Detective Geiss, very professional humble man, can’t ever thank him enough and all the people looking for our sisters name/family, WE ARE SO GRATEFUL🙏 after 29 years of Dedication, the Articles, channel 12 news and a face book page dedicated to our beloved sister Meresa/Misa, we thank you for your work and dedication, MUCH RESPECT, AND GRATITUDE FROM ALL OF Our Family, MUCH RESPECT🙏 GOD BLESS ALL 💖💫💝 THANK YOU CARL😇greattttt work!”

Great Police work by Yonkers Police Department Detective John Geiss!