Showing posts with label famous cases. Show all posts
Showing posts with label famous cases. Show all posts

The Springfield Three: Was Graduation Night a Clue to Their Disappearance?

The Springfield Three: Was Graduation Night a Clue to Their Disappearance?


On Sunday, June 7th, 1992, three women—Sherrill Levitt, Suzanne "Suzie" Streeter, and Stacy McCall—vanished from a home in Springfield, Missouri, leaving behind one of America’s most enduring mysteries. Known as "The Springfield Three," their disappearance came just hours after Suzie and Stacy celebrated their high school graduation, a detail that has sparked speculation about whether the timing held deeper significance. The table below outlines their key details:

Name Age Gender Occupation/Status Last Seen Location Last Seen Date/Time
Sherrill Levitt

NamUS #MP345
47 Female Hairdresser Sherrill Levitt’s home at 1717 East Delmar Street, Springfield, MO Early hours of Sunday, June 7th, 1992
Suzanne "Suzie" Streeter (Sherrill’s daughter)

NamUS #MP3233
19 Female Recent high school graduate, worked at a cinema Sherrill Levitt’s home at 1717 East Delmar Street, Springfield, MO Early hours of Sunday, June 7th, 1992
Stacy McCall

NamUS #MP350
18 Female Recent high school graduate Sherrill Levitt’s home at 1717 East Delmar Street, Springfield, MO Early hours of Sunday, June 7th, 1992

This article delves into the case, exploring the events of that night and speculating on whether graduation night was more than a coincidence, a theory I propose that aligns with discussions in true crime communities.

A Night of Joy Cut Short

Graduation Festivities

Saturday, June 6th, 1992, marked a milestone for Suzie Streeter, 19, Sherrill Levitt’s daughter, and Stacy McCall, 18, who had both graduated from Kickapoo High School that day. The evening was filled with celebration as the two friends joined classmates at graduation parties. Sherrill, 47, a local hairdresser, stayed home, likely proud of her daughter Suzie’s achievement.

The Disappearance

By 2:00–3:00 a.m. on Sunday, June 7th, 1992, Suzie and Stacy arrived at Sherrill’s home at 1717 East Delmar Street after plans to stay elsewhere fell through. Sherrill’s last known contact was a phone call with a friend around 11:15 p.m. on Saturday, June 6th, 1992. By morning, all three women were gone, their purses, keys, and belongings left untouched in a house showing no signs of a struggle.

The Investigation: A Trail Gone Cold

An Eerie Crime Scene

When friends alerted police later on Sunday, June 7th, 1992, investigators found a clean scene. No forced entry, no blood, no fingerprints—just a broken porch light globe, later deemed unrelated. The family dog was agitated but unharmed, suggesting a swift, controlled abduction. Despite extensive searches and hundreds of tips, no physical evidence has ever conclusively pointed to a suspect.

Theories Without Answers

The case has spawned countless theories: a random predator, a local criminal element, or even a connection to Suzie’s past testimony in a vandalism case. A reported sighting of a green van near the house fueled speculation, but like other leads, it led nowhere. Decades later, the case remains unsolved, with no arrests or solid breakthroughs.

Could Graduation Night Hold the Key?

A Speculative Motive

One intriguing speculation, which I propose, is that the timing of the disappearance—on the night of Suzie and Stacy’s graduation on Saturday, June 6th, 1992—was not just a coincidence. Some true crime enthusiasts on forums like Reddit’s r/UnresolvedMysteries and Websleuths have similarly suggested that graduation, a symbol of triumph and transition, could have triggered a perpetrator with a personal grudge.

Along these lines, to disappear on graduation night might be poetic for someone looking to commit a crime at a perfect time. This theory posits that someone, perhaps feeling sidelined, saw the night as a chance to target the young women at a peak moment of joy. This idea, while unproven, resonates with those who believe the crime was emotionally driven.

The Symbolic Weight of the Night of June 6th-June 7th

High school graduations are laden with meaning. Sociologically, the night, in North American society, could be viewed as a rite of passage: closure of youth, celebration of accomplishment, and the start of adulthood. With a High School diploma in hand, someone can attempt to move on to bigger and better things.

In contrast, for someone harboring resentment, possibly from shared school years, this night could have represented everything they felt denied: acceptance, success, or belonging. For some people, the high school years are socially brutal. From this perspective, the disappearance of The Springfield Three, if it's correct to be understood as an act of some kind of revenge, might connect in some thematic ways to the high school shootings that plagued American society in the years that followed, starting with Columbine about seven years later. These crimes were often committed by high school students among the social outcasts in their schools.

Accordingly, Suzie and Stacy, as recent graduates, might have been symbolic targets for a vindictive person, their abduction a way to disrupt a time that would otherwise be happy for them. This speculation aligns with discussions in true crime podcasts like The Vanished, where listeners have raised ideas about the date’s significance, though no evidence confirms it.

Sherrill’s Role in the Theory

If Suzie and Stacy were the primary targets, Sherrill’s disappearance complicates the narrative. One possibility, discussed in online forums, is that she was an unintended victim—collateral damage as a witness in her own home. The undisturbed scene suggests the perpetrator acted quickly, possibly knowing the house’s layout, which could point to someone familiar with the victims. This idea remains speculative, as no suspect has been linked to such a motive.

Echoes in the True Crime Community

Shared Speculation

The notion that graduation night was significant is a topic in true crime circles, and I’m adding my own perspective to this discussion. On platforms like Reddit and Websleuths, enthusiasts often explore whether the crime felt personal, possibly tied to high school dynamics. I believe it’s important to clarify that the idea of graduation night as a deliberate choice is my own conjecture, though it echoes broader conversations about emotional motives in the case. While these discussions lack hard proof, they highlight a belief among some that the date wasn’t random.

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The Mysterious Disappearance of Lars Mittank: Unraveling the Varna Airport Enigma

The Mysterious Disappearance of Lars Mittank: Unraveling the Varna Airport Enigma

On July 8th, 2014 (Tuesday), Lars Joachim Mittank, a 28-year-old German tourist, vanished under bizarre circumstances near Varna Airport in Bulgaria. He left behind a mystery that continues to captivate and confound.

However, I think this is a case where some sense can be made. My explanation of what I think happened to Lars Mittank will involve an analysis of both known facts regarding the case and some assumptions that I will bring into the mix.

Lars Mittank: German on Vacation in Bulgaria

Lars Mittank was on vacation. I think that is very relevant to this missing persons case, a point that I will return to later.

But what began as a typical vacation with friends at the Golden Sands resort turned into one of the most perplexing missing persons cases of the modern era. This is thanks to enigmatic behavior that was caught on security footage that captured his final known moments. In a way, that makes this case similar to the Elisa Lam mystery from Los Angeles, another strange missing persons case from the 2nd decade of the current century.

Before Lars disappeared, he had been enjoying a week-long trip. This trip took a turn for the worse when he had one of those altercations at the bar involving a sports team debate. Reportedly, a football rivalry in a barroom setting led to a beating, and this beating was bad enough that it left him with a ruptured eardrum.

Personally, I had a major ear clog at one point in my life, one that lasted three weeks. I was advised not to swim and not to hike to a significantly high elevation until it cleared up. This was because diving underwater or going to high elevation causes changes in air pressure.

The ears are a major point in the body where changes in air pressure matter. If Lars had a ruptured eardrum, then flying was off the table for him, surely because the changes in pressure might have made his injury worse.

Advised against flying, he stayed behind as his friends returned to Germany. On Monday, July 7th, he checked into a hotel near the airport, where his behavior took a troubling turn.

He paced the halls, hid in an elevator, and made panic-driven phone calls to his mother. During these calls, he whispered that he felt threatened and unsafe.

His paranoia peaked on the morning of Tuesday, July 8th (the day he was set to fly home). At the airport, he visited a doctor for clearance but fled mid-appointment, abandoning his belongings. CCTV footage shows him sprinting across the grounds, scaling a fence, and disappearing into a field of sunflowers. To this day, he has never been seen again.

Below is the actual security footage capturing Lars Mittank’s final known moments as he flees Varna Airport:

The Infographics Show: Lars Mittank's Case Profiled

On April 9th, 2025, The Infographics Show published a list of haunting disappearances. They include the Lars Mittank disappearance. I embed the video below with starting points and stopping points that isolate only the Mittank disappearance (they covered multiple).

The footage of Lars was widely circulated online. This has made his case a focal point for amateur sleuths and true crime enthusiasts. The theories focus on mental health, medication side effects, foul play, and psychosis.

Despite extensive searches, no trace of him has surfaced. A reported sighting by a truck driver in Germany on an unspecified day in 2019 offered fleeting hope, but it led nowhere. That sighting would be about five years after the disappearance date, making it a really strange tip.

As of April 9th, 2025 (Wednesday), Lars remains missing, his fate a haunting enigma.

Detail Information
Full Name Lars Joachim Mittank
Date of Birth February 9th, 1986
Age at Disappearance 28
Nationality German
Last Seen July 8th, 2014 (Tuesday), Varna Airport, Bulgaria
Key Event Fled the airport on foot, captured on CCTV
Physical Description Approx. 5'11", slim build, short brown hair, male, caucasian, wearing yellow shirt and blue shorts.

Speculation on What Happened to Lars Mittank

I think the best explanation of what happened to Lars is simply that he suffered brain damage in the beating, which produced erratic behavior. It's known for sure he suffered a ruptured eardrum, so we aren't talking about a minor altercation. Furthermore, brain injuries are thought to cause paranoia, according to some medical experts. This refers to Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), damage from a blow to the head—like the beating Lars endured—which can disrupt brain function and trigger symptoms like paranoia or hallucinations, especially if areas near the ears, such as the temporal lobe, are affected.

Beatings between sports fans can be significant. There was a fan at a Major League Baseball game in 2011, Bryan Stow, who suffered brain damage over one of these affairs. His case has stayed in the news over the years, including an article for 2023. I think this ties in because simple sports-fan fights can still produce massive injuries.

Lars was not thought to be on drugs. Meanwhile, his medications, according to The Infographics Show, were not the kind that would commonly cause mental problems. I think that leaves the probabilities of what caused his behavior squarely having to do with the beating he suffered. The YouTube video does delve into this possibility a little bit.

Why Lars Mittank Has Not Been Found

The next question is one that I think most readers will remain perplexed by. Why has he not been found?

On that matter, I will return to the fact that he was a vacationer. Lars Mittank was not a Bulgarian but a German in Bulgaria.

In general, I think countries are less likely to spend public funds searching for missing tourists than their own nationals. I think this could happen in any country.

For example, I suspect something like this may have deflated the Elisa Lam case a little, as she was a Canadian who went missing in the USA. Furthermore, the case of Duncan MacPherson, a Canadian who went missing in Austria, is a striking example. The evidence basically showed that he was in a small area, but it would be over a decade before he would be found. With the MacPherson case, a cover-up, the exact opposite of an investigation, from the authorities has been suggested.

I don't think the police are overly motivated on most days. I think they will be less motivated looking for someone from a country that's not their own. Any excuse to deprioritize will look good to someone who has a budget to think of -- and all police forces have budgets to think of.

Furthermore, police searches fail quite a lot: plain and simple. I don't mean that they fail because the person isn't in the target area. Police searches fail quite a lot, even when they search the right area. If the search starts to get expensive, it gets called off -- it's that simple. Lots of missing people have been found after many years in an area that was supposedly scoured by searchers.

Most Likely Explanation: A Summary


Lars suffered a beating in the days before his disappearance. If he had some kind of hallucination or paranoia due to brain damage, then he probably had a desire to hide. Keeping in mind that he was fit and that mental problems don't limit you physically, he could, in fact, put himself in a really good hiding spot. He could also move quite a long distance on foot.

Quite frankly, he's likely in one of the wooded areas near where he was last seen, with the search complicated by police budgeting, animal scattering, and, presumably, the MP's own brain damage in the time frame leading up to his disappearance. This last point can't be ignored: someone who is suffering mentally but not physically could hide himself quite well.

The Corvette Predator: A Theory of Premeditation in the Disappearance of Robin Ann Graham (1970)

The Corvette Predator: Speculation on the Disappearance of Robin Ann Graham

On Sunday, November 15th, 1970, 18-year-old Robin Ann Graham vanished from the U.S. Highway 101 southbound lane near the Santa Monica Boulevard off-ramp in Los Angeles, California. She left behind a locked 1969 Chevrolet Nova and a mystery that lingers over five decades later. Below are her case details, followed by a theory on what might have happened to her that night. In this theory, I test whether it makes sense that a 'helpful' stranger might have actually been stalking her.

Case Details: Robin Ann Graham's Disappearance

Category Details
Missing PersonRobin Ann Graham
Biological SexFemale
Race / EthnicityWhite / Caucasian
Last Seen TimeNovember 15th, 1970, between 2 AM and 2:45am (Saturday-night/Sunday-morning)
Missing Age18 Years
Current Age72 Years
Height5'6" (66 Inches)
Weight125 lbs
Hair ColorBrown
Eye ColorBrown
Last Known LocationU.S. Highway 101 southbound near the Santa Monica Boulevard off-ramp in Los Angeles, California 90029 (Google Maps)
CircumstancesLast seen by a CHP officer on U.S. Highway 101 southbound near the Santa Monica Boulevard off-ramp at about 2:00 a.m. on November 15th, 1970.
ClothingRed blouse, blue jeans, dark blue corduroy jacket
FootwearRed clog shoes
AccessoriesLeather purse
TransportationBoyfriend’s car (1969 Chevrolet Nova); she drove it alone.
SourceNamUs Case #MP32285 (NamUs has the November 14th date wrong. She was last seen after midnight that night, in the wee hours of November 15th, 1970).

Recapping Previous Research on This Missing Person

I researched Robin Ann Graham's disappearance several years ago. The blog post was titled "Women With Car Troubles Go Missing." It reviewed several cases of women who went missing after experiencing car troubles. The table below includes some of the cases I covered.

Name Last Known Location Last Seen Age at Disappearance Car Trouble Details Case Details
Robin Graham U.S. Highway 101 near Santa Monica Boulevard offramp, Los Angeles, CA November 14, 1970, ~2:30 AM 18 Ran out of gas, stalled on highway Last seen with a man (white male, 25-26, dark or blond hair) near a 1958-1960 light blue Corvette. Car found locked and abandoned. Possible abduction after gas siphoning.
Kathleen Johns Highway 132 near Interstate 5, Modesto, CA March 22, 1970 Not specified Tire problem flagged by a man, tire fell off after "fix" Man offered help, drove her and her child; possible Zodiac Killer involvement. Escaped harm (implied).
Rose Tashman Hollywood Freeway at Highland Avenue offramp, Los Angeles, CA May 18, 1969 Not specified Flat tire Disappeared after car breakdown; body found in Hollywood Hills, Mulholland Drive. Unsolved murder.
Cindy Lee Mellin Buenaventura Shopping Center parking lot, Ventura, CA January 20, 1970 19 Flat tire being changed by an unidentified male Last seen with man fixing tire; car found on jack with flat tire still attached. Father found car.

There have not been any major developments with Robin's case since I published that previous article in February 2018. The timeline I've constructed below for her disappearance is based on my research for that article. As always seems to be the case, details will vary between some sources. However, the timeline for Robin's disappearance is pretty tight.

Robin Ann Graham's Approximate Timeline: The Night She Disappeared

On Saturday, November 14th, 1970, 18-year-old Robin Ann Graham’s night began with a typical young-adult blend of work and socializing. She was a Pierce College student and worked part-time at Pier 1 Imports, located at 5711 Hollywood Boulevard.



She likely finished her shift in the late afternoon or early evening. After work, Robin spent the evening with friends in Hollywood, a popular spot for young people in 1970. The exact location of their hangout isn’t documented, to my knowledge, but it was likely a casual venue appropriate for Saturday night upper teens.

Around midnight, a friend dropped Robin off at the Pier 1 Imports parking lot, where Donald Alford’s 1969 Chevrolet Nova was parked. Donald was Robin's boyfriend, and she had borrowed his car, apparently for most of the day. In charge of the Nova, she began her drive home to Lemoyne Street in Sherman Oaks, a 10-15 mile trip via the Hollywood Freeway (aka U.S. Highway 101).

AI's image of a 1969 Chevrolet Nova. I don’t know what color the car was that Robin drove.

At approximately 2:00 a.m. on Sunday, November 15th, the Nova ran out of gas on the southbound lane of Highway 101 near the Santa Monica Boulevard off-ramp. This ramp was one that she could have used to get to her home on Lemoyne Street. However, I think she could have driven further as well and used a different exit.

For those who want to visit this location online, the area only goes back to September 2008 on Google Maps. That's nearly 38 years after Robin disappeared in November 1970. It stands to reason that it would only give a general sense of the area after all that time.

Stranded, Robin used a freeway call box to phone home. She reached her 14-year-old sister, but their parents, who had gone out that evening, were still out.

Not an actual picture of Robin. Depicts what a highway call box is. These devices were somewhat common. You will still see them in public, but portable devices are so common now that they have become relics.

At about this time, a California Highway Patrol officer spotted Robin near the Nova she was driving. He advised her to wait there, and then the officer left. This is the point in the night when the most suspicious person of the evening entered the picture.

Mr. Corvette: The Suspicious Stranger

AI prompt for a late 1950s Corvette that's light blue with a hardtop with primer. Sometimes the suspect vehicle is described as green.

Sometime between 2:00 and 2:30 a.m., a dark-haired man in his mid-twenties approached Robin in a light blue 1958-1960 Chevrolet Corvette hardtop (the year of the car is debatable). I will call this person Mr. Corvette (a moniker), named after the car he drove. His true identity is unknown.

It seems that Robin was reasonably safe until Mr. Corvette entered the picture. She was without gas at a dangerous time of night in a city where nowhere is perfectly safe. But family had been alerted to her problem, and a patrolman was aware of her as well. Her chances of surviving her car problems seemed quite high.

The face is random and not meant to depict the man's likeness. AI generated based on his clothes, hair, height, and vehicle. He has been described as blonde but most sources say dark haired.

The time frame associated with Mr. Corvette's advance is the last time Robin Ann Graham has been seen. He has been described as a Caucasian male, dark-haired, 5’8”, aged in his mid-20s, and wearing both bell-bottoms and a white turtleneck. This description came from the patrolman on the highway.

When he, the patrolman, came near Robin again, he saw Mr. Corvette talking to Robin. She had previously told the patrolman that she had called for help, and he assumed Mr. Corvette was that help.

Importantly, Mr. Corvette’s car was parked behind Robin’s. This is something I will deem important later.

By 2:45 a.m., Marvin Graham (Robin's father) and a friend arrived. By modern maps, the drive between the Grahams' residence and the location of Robin’s car would have been just under 20 minutes. I think the drive time would have been about the same in 1970. When they arrived, they found the Chevy Nova locked and abandoned.

Robin vanished in the 45-minute window between 2 AM and 2:45 AM. For a narrower window, the time frame between 2:30 AM and 2:45 AM is close to 'ground zero.' Her disappearance, with Mr. Corvette as the last known contact, remains one of LA’s enduring missing person mysteries.

What Robin Might Have Been Thinking After Her Car Stalled

If we look at the disappearance from Robin’s point of view, what information does she have?

She can’t operate the Chevy Nova any longer. She would be looking at a two-hour walk at a dangerous time of night if she leaves on foot. Yes, she has reached home by phone, but she only contacted her 14-year-old sister, who cannot help her directly.

As the minutes pass, Robin has to wonder if her sister has fallen asleep without alerting her parents to the problem. She also has to wonder if the patrolman will be back or if he might have happened on any other event that will consume his time.

When faced with what was presumably a ride offer from Mr. Corvette, Robin likely had to balance the chance that he had criminal intentions against her alternative: sitting roadside for who knows how long. She wasn’t in a great position, but whether that was due to misjudging her gas or Mr. Corvette causing the whole situation is something I will turn to now.

Women With Car Troubles: A Pattern in 1970s California

Women with car troubles went missing or were murdered a lot in the 1970s and earlier in the USA. This is a point often made when looking back at murders and missing women during that time frame. Vehicle sabotage was a known modus operandi among men who targeted women.

A typical scene would go like this: (1) A man would tamper with a woman’s vehicle and disappear. (2) The same man would then arrive on the scene and offer to help. (3) But instead of helping, he would disappear the woman in what came to be known as the Good Samaritan’s Ruse.

With all the vehicle sabotage that happened in conjunction with missing women at that time, the point with Robin Ann Graham's disappearance is that we can ask one pointed question: "Did Mr. Corvette siphon Robin’s gas?" Brushing this question aside would be disregarding all the cases where vehicle sabotage was a known or suspected MO.

Regarding Mr. Corvette, we need to look at a related report. A man matching Mr. Corvette’s description approached another woman in Los Angeles a few weeks later. That woman did not go with him, but she said she was approached after her car ran out of gas.

After Robin Disappeared: Woman #2

Weeks after Robin disappeared, in late November or early December 1970, another woman ran out of gas on an LA freeway. A man driving a Corvette pulled up and offered to help.

The woman felt he was pushy and refused the ‘help.’ She didn’t realize her experience was relevant to another incident until she learned of Robin’s case. This report linked the same description of a man and his car to both incidents.

Not a whole lot is available about this second woman's experience. The cases could involve different people when it comes to the identity of the men involved. But two women, two freeway stalls, one distinctive Corvette, and similar descriptions of a man—it’s hard to call it chance in a fairly narrow time frame.

The theory I want to explore is that Mr. Corvette’s modus operandi was right out of the Good Samaritan’s Ruse. How plausible would it be to siphon the gas from Robin’s car, follow her route, and then arrive where she is out of gas?

It might sound easy, but when I put together this theory, I could see that this would actually be hard. At the end, I felt this was a possibility to be aware of, as opposed to something I had a ton of confidence in.

How the Gas Siphoning Ruse Could Have Worked

From what I gleaned from Robin’s case details, the Chevy Nova that belonged to her boyfriend may have been parked at her workplace for several hours. This creates a large time frame where someone could have siphoned her gas. If the tank were full, it would only take 12-13 minutes to do the job.

However, there’s a problem with gas siphoning as a modus operandi. If you leave the tank bone dry and plan to stalk the female driver, they won’t be leaving the original point because of the empty tank. This could leave the target in the company of her friends.

If you plan to leave them enough gas to drive a little ways, how do you know how much gas to remove? The gas siphoner would need some information on how full the tank was to begin with to leave just the right amount where they stall between Point A and Point B. This is a problem with the theory.

In dealing with this problem, I think a gas siphoner could do this: empty the tank bone dry and then refill half a gallon. That much gas would allow someone to drive 9-10 miles.

From my research, anti-siphoning mechanisms weren’t built into vehicles until the late 1970s models. A 1969 Chevrolet Nova’s 20-gallon tank was easy to siphon. There was no locking cap, so all it would take is a hose and suction. Draining it dry would have taken 12-13 minutes at 1.5 gallons per minute. Adding back in half a gallon means the entire job could be done in fewer than 15 minutes, and it seems the vehicle sat where it was for hours on November 14th, 1970.

If Mr. Corvette drained Robin’s tank to ensure it was empty. He could then add half a gallon back, and he would then know exactly how much gas she had. With this information, he could predict her stall point within a certain range.

He doesn’t actually have to tail her, which could draw attention to himself. However, he would need to know things about Robin, like where she lived and her likely route home. In short, he’d have to be more than a casual stalker—someone with at least a short-term interest in his target.

The act of siphoning gas wouldn’t be that risky. It looks like nothing more than petty theft. No one suspects murder from a gas can.

He could’ve hit the 1969 Chevrolet Nova at Pier 1’s lot that day, monitored the car, then, a short time after it left, he could have cruised the freeway later in pursuit along her route home. At 2:30 a.m., he finds Robin, offers help, and she accepts due to the uncertainties she feels, believing that accepting help from a stranger is a better choice than just sitting roadside at that late hour on a Saturday night. Once she enters his car, she is at his mercy.

Maybe he killed Robin and found it easy. Yet, in some ways, he almost got caught. Her father was minutes away, and the patrolman was watching. Whether he realized that at the time isn't clear.

The experience with the second woman might’ve scared him off. She saw through him, alerted cops, and maybe he then realized his ruse would crumble.

Unfortunately, Woman #2 is anonymous. That she didn’t identify the man suggests he was a stranger to her. If we mirror the two cases, that would mean he was a stranger to Robin as well.

Of course, this is all speculative theory. In cases like this, which are old and ice-cold, all you want is a theory that fits the known facts. I’ve discussed why this theory fits and how it could have played out.

For one finer point, Mr. Corvette’s car was seen parked behind Robin’s. That’s a bit different than parking after her. The former means he had made a decision to stop a little sooner. He didn’t drive past her, pull to the side after seeing her, and then make his offer to help.

That he was behind her suggests he knew he was going to stop as soon as he saw her. If you think about it, that seems to align with someone operating in a premeditated way. 

Countertheory: Mr. Corvette Drives Around Looking for Vulnerable Women

A countertheory that still focuses on Mr. Corvette would hold that he simply drove around looking for vulnerable women. Fuel efficiency in 1970 was nowhere near what it is today, and 24-hour gas stations weren’t too common.

Maybe it was more plausible to drive around back then and hope to happen on a stranded female motorist. However, I don’t believe this. I don’t think there’s anything about a stranded vehicle that says "Attractive 18-year-old female college student" more than "ugly old man."

I guess I’ve shown my cards.

I do think the two sightings of the man I’ve dubbed Mr. Corvette are related. I know that women’s vehicles were often targeted in California in that era. Mr. Corvette could have had a gas-siphoning variant of this MO that could have been done if he simply knew something about his target’s schedule on the target day/night.

But it's this latter point about timing that makes the theory of gas siphoning a bit difficult. If Mr. Corvette siphoned Robin's car, he would then be camping on it for quite a while as she socializes with her friends in Hollywood.

Furthermore, there is a timing to think about it at the point of abduction. If he followed her route after she started to drive, then why did he arrive at the point where she ran out of gas at about 2:30am? She is thought to have stalled at about 2AM. That would mean he trailed her from quite a distance.

Of course, the timing in this case is not exact. If Robin stalled at about 2am, then that could easily mean 2:10am. If the highway patrolman saw her with Mr. Corvette at about 2:30am, then that could mean 2:20am. That would tighten matters but it's presumptive to assume the different times tighten the time frame instead of loosening it.

I would say this is a theory to be aware of, but it's one that I have low confidence in. I do know that readers at my blog read a lot about true crime and unsolved mysteries. If you ever come across a case involving a known gas siphoner who siphoned gas as part of an MO to disappear women, then please share that with me. I didn't find such a case myself.

Maura Murray -- Newspaper Clippings from the Baffling Unsolved Missing Person's Case

Author: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing: Sunday, December 20th, 2020

All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.

Introduction to Maura Murray's Disappearance

Maura Murray is one of this century's most famous cases of missing people. She was last known to have been in New Hampshire, where she was involved in a single-vehicle car accident.

Murray then disappeared before the police arrived to find her vehicle locked. She has not been seen or heard from since.

Case Details

Missing Person: Maura Murray
Last Seen or Contact Date: Shortly after 7pm on Monday, February 9th, 2004
Where Last Seen: In the vicinity of Route 112 in Haverhill, New Hampshire, about a mile from Swift Water Village, about five miles from Wells River, Vermont (across the Connecticut River). She was taking a sharp turn on Wild Ammonoosuc Road between Old Peters Road and Bradley Hill Road (there’s a blue ribbon tied around a tree on Google Maps).

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Saturday, February 14th, 2004 – 18 · The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · Newspapers.com

Similar Cases

The case has some similarities to unrelated cases. Many times across America, someone has been involved in a car accident only to disappear in the immediate aftermath.

In 2020, Yvette Slim went missing after an accident. In 2018, Blair Minnifield (NamUs #MP52423) got in a single-vehicle accident, went to the hospital, and then disappeared. Stephan Chan (NamUs #MP50755) disappeared the same year after a single-vehicle accident. In 2016, Brandi Shontay Brown disappeared after hospitalization from an accident.

Psychological Context of Car Accidents

It is interesting to think about a car accident that is followed by the driver's disappearance. We can imagine that an individual who is near a breaking point might cross that point after a car accident, especially if the accident is his/her fault.

Life can be tough and car accidents are no small deal: even if you escape injury, dealing with the bureaucratic procedures after an accident can be very annoying. It follows that someone who is already mentally unwell might see this as the proverbial straw that breaks the camel’s back.

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Monday, February 10th, 2014 – 10 · The Daily Sentinel (Grand Junction, Colorado) · Newspapers.com

Maura’s Background and Possible Motives

But with Maura Murray, I’ve often wondered if the car accident wasn’t so much that straw but maybe she had already decided to disappear herself. The accident might have been the result of indifference to her life or maybe even a last-ditch call for help if she was in a suicidal state.

It was her second car crash in recent days and she was thought to be “distraught” at this time of her life. Months earlier, she faced legal problems for fraudulently using a credit card.

Witness Accounts and Investigation

The individual who spoke to Murray shortly after her accident (Butch Atwood, now deceased) suggested that she may have been intoxicated. Thus, Murray might have been facing a drunk-driving charge if she stuck around the accident scene. Other witnesses said that they saw her roadside and police dogs lost her scent about 100 yards from her car.

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Thursday, February 19th, 2004 – Page 20 · The Burlington Free Press (Burlington, Vermont) · Newspapers.com

Theories and Speculation

This is a baffling case, and, like most difficult missing person’s cases, there are a lot of ways your mind can go. The father was always adamant that she met with foul play—so adamant that it is hard to disregard his opinion.

That would make you think that an abductor arrived at the scene of the accident and picked her up as she walked away. However, that in itself would be one Johnny-on-the-spot abductor as he/she would have arrived on the scene in the minutes between the crash and the arrival of the authorities.

That Murray told lies to her school and work in the time frame before she disappeared is interesting. It suggests that her life was not in balance. That she was drinking and driving adds weight to this, in my opinion.

Of course, if she fled the scene for legal reasons and hitched a ride, then why hasn’t she been heard from since? She would not likely flee a drunk-driving charge for years as first-time offenders can expect leniency. If she voluntarily entered a passerby’s vehicle, then why didn’t this driver contact authorities later?

Possibility of an Unknown Witness

In my opinion, the best chance of finding her is simply that she did enter someone’s vehicle and that this person has never confronted the story of her disappearance and doesn’t know he or she has valuable information.

But sometimes people who have valuable information regarding a missing person are unlikely to share it—even when they realize it. For example, in the case of Emma Fillipoff, there was a man who picked her up as a hitchhiker near the time of her disappearance. When he realized that he had information on her whereabouts, he kept it to himself until several years after she disappeared.

His reasoning was that he simply did not want to be cast in a false light (i.e., someone who picked up a hitchhiker who was never seen again would be considered a suspect in the disappearance).

Final Acts of Generosity

One possibility is that Maura, planning to end her life, gave away her possessions in a final act of kindness. There are a lot of instances when someone gives away possessions late in life, knowing that they do not need them anymore.

On Monday, February 9th, 2004, Maura withdrew about $280 from her bank account, nearly all she had, and this money was not found in her car. While her money could have been in her pocket as she left, she also bought alcohol that day, some of which—possibly bottles of Baileys, Kahlúa, or vodka—was missing from her vehicle. That seemed like too much alcohol to drink without going unconscious.

She may have given these items to homeless people, reflecting a generous impulse before her disappearance. While no one reported receiving such gifts, her distraught state suggests she might have felt free to let go of what she no longer needed. Late-life generosity, which certainly is not unheard of, would explain where the missing alcohol went and it would align with a suicidal frame of mind, in my opinion.

Considering Suicide as a Possibility

Maura Murray’s case remains baffling and I gravitate toward suicide as the most likely explanation for her disappearance. It doesn’t matter to me that her father thought this unlikely, as there is often a divide between what parents notice of their children and their mental reality. That she met with foul play is the opinion of the family, even as recently as Friday, February 9th, 2024 when People.com did an update on this case (Nicole Briese).

However, I don’t feel strongly about my opinion. Suicide by facing-the-elements doesn’t sound like a great way to go. There’s no reason to believe that Murray had a gun and it was evening when she went missing in February—a cold time of year in the northern USA. Hiking through the night-time forest for a cliff to jump off doesn’t sound like a great way to go either.

Conclusion

At the end of this case, I feel like we’re left with the facts and details of her case—all of which point to nothing but difficult-to-weigh speculation. Years have passed and we’re still waiting for that moment when things finally make sense.

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Saturday, February 14th, 2004 – 18 · The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · Newspapers.com

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Sunday, February 15th, 2004 – 29 · The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · Newspapers.com

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Tuesday, February 17th, 2004 – 19 · The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · Newspapers.com

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Tuesday, March 2nd, 2004 – 17 · The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) · Newspapers.com

Maura Murray

Maura Murray Thursday, April 4th, 2019 – A9 · The Burlington Free Press (Burlington, Vermont) · Newspapers.com

Identifying Information

NamUs # and Link: #MP54
Ethnicity/Race: White
Sex: Female
Age at Time of Disappearance: 21 years old
Hair: Light brown or brown
Eye Color: Greenish/bluish
Height and Weight at the Time of Disappearance: 5’7” and 120 pounds
Other: Dimpled cheeks
Scars: Right calf
Clothing: Possibly wearing a dark-colored coat and jeans, carrying a backpack.

Women With Car Troubles Go Missing: The Cases of Robin Graham, Kelly Dae Wilson, Cindy Lee Mellin, and More

By: Shane Lambert

Robin Graham disappeared in the early hours of the morning on November 14th, 1970. She was driving home from her place of employment, Pier 1 at 5711 Hollywood Boulevard, when something went wrong with her vehicle (employment address as per a landing page for her at Ancestry.com). For those interested in tracing her route, I think she was traveling to 2227 Lemoyne Street in Los Angeles. 

Her disappearance is noteworthy for a couple of reasons.

Firstly, it caused the LAPD to enact a policy change. A police officer saw her in the minutes before she disappeared, but he left her alone. After her disappearance, police officers were required to stay with stranded female motorists.

Secondly, her disappearance and probable murder can be compared to other disappearances of women where some kind of vehicle mishap is part of the chain of events surrounding the disappearance.

Robin Graham
Robin Ann Graham's details:

Last seen: About 2:30am on November 14th, 1970
Born: June 22nd, 1952 (18 years old at the time of disappearance)
Physical: white female, 66" (5'6") and 125 pounds, brown eyes and hair
Clothing/accessories: red blouse, blue jeans, dark-blue corduroy jacket, red-clog shoes, and leather purse










NamUs' description of the event (paraphrased):


A California Highway Patrol officer was the last person to see Robin Graham on November 14th, 1970. She had been driving her boyfriend's vehicle when she apparently ran out of gas and stalled on U.S. Highway 101 southbound near the Santa Monica Boulevard offramp at about 2:00 am.

The officer stopped to see if she needed help, but Ms. Graham said that help was already coming. She had just called her parents to inform them of her situation.

Later, the officer noticed a white male, 25-26 years of age, 5'8" with dark hair, wearing bell-bottom trousers and a white turtle neck top talking to her. A 1958-1960 light blue Corvette hardtop was observed parked behind her vehicle at this time. The officer later assumed the man in the Corvette was the help she had called for. The next day, her parents searched for Robin and found her car, locked up and abandoned on the side of the freeway where she was last seen. She hasn't been heard from since. 

Inconsistency regarding man's description


The description of the man may or may not be entirely accurate with NamUS. The following (left margin below) is excerpted from the Nov. 19th, 1970 Valley News (Van Nuys, California) regarding the patrolman's description. It describes a "blond-haired man" instead of a dark-haired one. The range of dates for the Corvette is also a little off between the two sources (ie. NamUs is 1958 to 1960 while the article says '57 to '59). I found a 1960 light-blue Corvette convertible picture and posted it below. When it comes to contradictions between NamUs and media sources, there's no way to know who to show a preference for. Certainly, both the media and NamUs can be error-riddled.



1960 Chevrolet Corvette Fuelie
 (Creative Commons/Rex Gray on Flickr) - Not a car expert;
If you can suggest a better photo, then it's welcome.

NamUs wrong about the time of parents discovering vehicle


The penultimate statement in the NamUs description above may be incorrect or confusing. According to the newspaper articles I read from 1970 her parents did not discover her car "The next day" but rather they discovered it at 2:30am, a half-hour after she was last seen. See the snipping below from The Capital Journal (December 12th, 1970/page 11).


The same article discusses the change in police procedures when it came to stranded female motorists. 


The Robin Graham case may not simply be a case of a criminal taking advantage of an opportunity where he finds a young woman vulnerable. Women who meet an abductor after car trouble may actually have had their car tampered with by the actual abductor. Graham ran out of gas and it's possible that the gas may have been siphoned by the abductor himself as part of a modus operandi. Consider the following cases below where car trouble is central to the abduction of a woman. Note, in many of the cases below the car trouble was caused by the man that harmed the woman.

Kathleen Johns


Kathleen Johns was driving at night in a rural location when she was summoned to pull over in March of 1970 by a fellow driver, a male. He advised her that she had a problem with her tire. The man then 'helped' her by loosening the tire and when Johns drove away the tire fell off. The 'helpful' man then offered to drive Johns and her child to a service station.

Of course, this man may have been The Zodiac Killer. However, the point to be aware of is that the 'Good Samaritan' that shows up to help a distressed female motorist might be her mortal enemy. Whether by loosening a tire or some other sabotage, he may have caused the problem with the vehicle himself in hopes of putting the woman into a vulnerable situation.

Julia Ashe


Sedrick Cobb lurked in mall parking lots. According to writer David Krajicek, Cobb "used a valve stem remover to deflate a tire on the car of likely victims, then offered to change the flats when they returned from shopping" (Dec. 31 2013 article/Daily News). Cobb, employing this tactic, earned the trust of a woman before he raped and murdered her. That woman's name was Julia Ashe and the year was 1989. The blurb below from the September 13th, 1991 issue of The Hartford Courant accounts of some of the details:


The point to take away from the Ashe rape and murder, once again, is that the man that shows up to 'help' a woman with car trouble may have caused the car trouble himself.


Rose Tashman


Rose Tashman's unsolved murder
has been mentioned in conjunction with the Robin Graham disappearance for decades. William J. Drummond, a writer, made comparisons between Graham and Tashman in The Los Angeles Times on November 18th, 1970.


In this case, it's not clear that Tashman's flat tire was caused by someone that wanted to help her. But that car trouble can precede the disappearance or murder of a young woman can't be overlooked. The criminals may simply be opportunists as opposed to carrying out a modus operandi involving vehicle sabotage. However, more examples could still be looked at.


Cindy Lee Mellin


Cindy Lee Mellin, also often mentioned in conjunction with Graham, was last seen in a mall parking lot in 1970 in Ventura, California. According to NamUs (#6849) "She was last seen standing next to her car in the shopping center parking lot while an unidentified male changed her tire. When she failed to return home that night, her father went to the shopping center looking for her and found her car still up on a jack with the flat tire still attached." That description certainly leaves much to the imagination. But it's not a stretcher to assume that the man that pretended to want to help her actually had more sinister motives in mind.

Kelly Dae Wilson


Kelly Dae Wilson is yet another example of a missing woman who had car trouble at around the time of her disappearance. Wilson went missing in Upshur County, Texas in 1993 after completing a shift at a video store. She is NamUs MP #6816. On the night that she went missing one of the tires of her vehicle was slashed. The following timeline of events, in this case, was published as per the details below (click to enlargen):


Note that Michael Biby, who went to high school with Wilson, served jail time for slashing her tire. If he did not disappear Wilson then it's very possible that the slashed tire made her vulnerable to an opportunist.

Conclusion

It's certainly soul-destroying to learn that someone who seems like a Good Samaritan is actually in the midst of committing a heinous crime. But the lessons of the missing-person's cases or murders mentioned above can't be ignored.

For the women readers, if you are facing car trouble and a man arrives to help you then you have to be skeptical: Mr. Johnny-on-the-spot with the perfect tool handy to fix your car might be the reincarnation of Jack the Ripper. That statement might wreak of paranoia to some, but minimally I would argue that you shouldn't stop driving if your vehicle is operational, even if someone is trying to flag you down. Get to a well-viewed area with lots of people around. Additionally, I would recommend not going to a secondary site with a Good Samaritan, whether that be in his car or yours.

The Rahway Jane Doe from March 25, 1887 (New Jersey)

By: Shane Lambert
Original time of writing: February 6th, 2017
Updated: February 16th, 2021

The Rahway Jane Doe is an individual who was murdered in the town of Rahway, New Jersey, on March 25th, 1887. The mystery of the murder victim's identity stands out because, at the original time of writing back in 2017, it was the oldest unsolved mystery listed at DoeNetwork.org.

I researched this mystery using online newspaper databases for a good two hours on February 5th, 2017. At the time, I thought that there was very little chance of conclusively solving this mystery, even with modern technology that wasn't available in 1887 (online newspaper databases). The "clews" in this case (that's the 1887 spelling of "clues") are 99% red herrings if you ask me. Perhaps the best chance of identifying her is through DNA and the family-tree method.

Note: I think I generated a lead for investigation with a second look at this topic in 2021. Please visit my other article, suggesting that she might be a missing person named Annie Primroe, last seen in 1887.



Why Investigate the Rahway County Jane Doe Case?


If you are interested in this case, then it's not so much about justice or helping surviving relatives learn where a loved one went, is it? After all, the perpetrator can only be dead at this point and the same could be true of any kid sibling the victim may have had, right?

The matter is a curiosity for many and, for me, a matter of testing out online newspaper databases as a modern technology for finding "clews" in historical crimes. In this case, I wanted to see if anyone nationwide in the United States searched for a missing woman in the years that followed 1887 who was last known to be heading to New Jersey, something that might be revealed in archived newspapers, including in classified advertisements and/or in news pieces.

It may prove a viable way of looking into solving this murder or other murders, or at least generating a lead. In fact, I successfully used this method in the Saskatoon case of the Lady in the Well and managed to generate a tip for the police. But on the night that I devoted to the matter of the Rahway County Jane Doe, I certainly failed. Yet, that doesn't mean I didn't find out a lot of details involving this case.

Discovery by Four Brothers and a Dog’s Role


Four brothers named Frank, Irving, Thomas, and Alfred Worth found the mystery woman dead at 6:30am on Saturday, March 26th, 1887. She may have been a rail passenger the night before, as a woman like her got off the train at about 10pm on the 25th.

According to one J.H. Brunt, an individual who lived near where the deceased was found, his dog named Pete, was behaving strangely between 11pm and midnight on the 25th. Reportedly, his dog would bark to try and get the owner's attention and then run in the direction of where the body was eventually found the next morning. If we draw an inference from this behaviour, then the woman was murdered in the very late hours of the 25th, and perhaps the dog was aware of the commotion or heard her calls for help.



Incidentally, that description of how Pete acted reminded me of dog behavior associated with another unidentified person's case (NamUs UP 7582). I think dogs know when someone is in trouble, and they instinctively try to summon attention from nearby humanoids (see the relevant excerpt from the article immediately below).

Boston Daily GlobeThursday, March 31, 1887, Boston, Massachusetts

Loads of names are associated with this case, but whether they should be is a legitimate question. It stands to reason that only one of them could shed light on the woman's identity, unless she had some aliases.

The woman's throat was slashed, and she was probably robbed (one article I read said one of her pockets had been inspected by a bloody hand). She had no money when found, but the rings that were on her fingers weren't taken. That could be taken as evidence that robbery wasn't the motive. However, it could also be taken to mean it was just a bad and rushed plan.

Whoever killed her may have been a destitute opportunist who only happened upon her by chance. He may have made a haphazard decision to murder her and simply didn't do a complete robbery in panic. If Pete was barking in the distance, this could have scared the fellow into not doing a thorough job, especially if the woman was able to let out a scream.

But one "clew" in this case is that the woman's pocket was inspected with a bloody hand. Knife-wielding criminals often cut themselves when they stab or slash. That can be due to the momentum of the knife coming to a stop when it strikes someone, while the momentum of the hand that holds the knife continues to travel up the blade. Many knife-wielders have been identified or cast into suspicion because of wounds to their hands. The man who looked in the Jane Doe's pockets with bloody hands might have cut himself.

Handkerchief Clue in the Rahway Jane Doe Mystery


Blood was found smeared on a railing 600 yards from the victim after she was found. Near this point, a handkerchief was found with a name that resembled K.M. Noorz, writing that could not be made out clearly. A rubber stamp of some sort was also found with the name Timothy Byrne in the print.

Identifying blood, like the smear on the rail, in 1887 wasn't like it is in modern times. Something 600 yards away from ground zero (think 6 American football fields) cannot be tied to an event conclusively without a serologist. I found nothing on this matter that satisfactorily answered how the secondary scene could be tied to the first with certainty.

"Noorz," which was on the handkerchief, has been suggested to be a Danish name of "Noorse." Other victim names associated with this case are "Mary Cregan," "Mary Craney," "Mary Malthey" (or Maithey), "Kate Jennie Neary," "Mina Noorse," and "Kate M. Noony." None of the names were fruitful for me in terms of finding them in the newspaper databases I searched in hopes of finding missing people with those names. A 'eureka' moment would be if an article appeared anytime and anywhere in the world of newspapers after March 25th, 1887 about a mother, father, or brother looking for a "Kate M. Noony," for example, but no such moment happened in this case.

Did the Reward Lead to False Tips?


The authorities offered a $500 reward, part for finding the murderer and part for finding the woman's name, to anyone who provided a good lead. I actually wonder if the 'leads' and 'tips' in this case are run amok because of the reward. That is, were all the attempts to name her just attempts to make some money? That is a sad thought to think that people would falsely name a dead woman just to try to make money without due concern for justice and preventing the murderer from claiming more victims. However, that seemed to be the case based on how many people tried to name her.

For instance, one postal clerk claimed that he knew of a Timothy Byrne in the company of the so-called Kate M. Noony. The clerk claimed she received general delivery mail at the clerk's place of employment. Seems to me that would be a fantastic lead if true. Seems to me that her mail would keep coming from people far away that would not have known of her death. I wondered if the clerk just got the names from the newspapers, which covered this murder from coast to coast, and then just tried his luck at making a buck with his tip.

July 15th, 1887 - Lebanon Daily News (click to make bigger)

Rahway Jane Doe: Not a Prostitute


Something to note is that in my research I found a report that claimed that the Mayor of Rahway, one Mayor Daly, claimed that the "medical examination" of this Jane Doe "proved beyond all doubt" that she had "never been married." I'm taking that to mean that they inspected her vagina and figured she was a virgin.

The deceased was buried in a grave that called her "An Unknown Woman" according to the picture at DoeNetwork. I read one article that grotesquely misquoted what was actually written on her grave. Furthermore, her grave is actually wrong in reporting that she was found dead on March 25th, which was the day she was murdered according to Pete the dog (she was found the next day).

Apparently, she was buried far away from the deceased snooties of 1887 Rahway out of fear that she wasn't a decent enough woman to merit burial near them. As a late-night murder victim, she was believed to be a possible prostitute. Her virginity, however, attests to the fact that she wasn't one.


Lastly, I found an interesting article somewhere that said there was a picture of her post-mortem in the March 30th, 1887 edition of "New York World." If anyone has access to that I would be interested in the picture. Lastly, please make one comment just so I know someone is out there that also bothers with 130-year-old Jane-Doe mysteries.

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