Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Doreen Pickard's Murder, Susan Laferte's Assault - What Happened After the "Unsolved Mysteries" Episode

By: Shane Lambert

On May 18th, 1988, "Unsolved Mysteries" aired an original episode. One of the mysteries ("Rhode Island Amnesia") included the murder of Doreen Picard and the assault of Susan Laferte. Laferte, as a surviving witness to the murder, unfortunately, went into a coma from her injuries and could not remember the attack when she came out of it.

03 Apr 1998, Fri The News Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) Newspapers.com

More modern versions of the "Unsolved Mysteries" episode indicate that one Raymond Tempest was convicted of the crimes, was sentenced to 85 years in prison, but has since been released. Naturally, that should raise some questions for fans of the television series: why was he convicted, and if his sentence was for so many decades, how is it that he could be released already?

The episode was the 7th "Special Edition" of "Unsolved Mysteries." This was a time period in the show's history when they appeared to be feeling out the ratings. The following preview of the show appeared in the News-Press out of Fort Myers, Florida on May 18th, 1988.

18 May 1988, Wed News-Press (Fort Myers, Florida) Newspapers.com
With the newspaper databases I used, Raymond Tempest's name starts to enter journalism related to the crime in June of 1991. The following article is the earliest journalism I found that associated Raymond Tempest with the case.

09 Jun 1991, Sun The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, Massachusetts) Newspapers.com

Later journalism suggested that Raymond Tempest benefited from having family ties involved in law enforcement in the community that Picard was murdered in:

 
21 Apr 1992, Tue Record-Journal (Meriden, Connecticut) Newspapers.com

The conviction came in what would have been late June of 1992.

05 Jul 1992, Sun The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) Newspapers.com

The conviction was vacated in July of 2015:

 
14 Jul 2015, Tue The Boston Globe (Boston, Massachusetts) Newspapers.com

After the vacation of the conviction in July 2015, I did not find any more newspaper coverage. However, there are online news articles as this saga appears to be ongoing even in very modern times.

Dottie Caylor's Disappearance - What Happened After the "Unsolved Mysteries" Episode

By: Shane Lambert

03 Apr 1998, Fri The News Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) Newspapers.com

Dottie Caylor's disappearance was featured in one of the opening episodes of the "Unsolved Mysteries" television program. According to a Youtube video I watched, it was in the pilot episode. From Wikipedia, it was a special program that was aired before the series became the series that fans grew to love. According to a newspaper article I consulted (The Leaf-Chronicle out of Clarksville, Tennessee), the show aired on November 29th, 1987. If you watched the "Unsolved Mysteries" program and wondered what happened with this case, then this article is for you.

29 Nov 1987, Sun The Leaf-Chronicle (Clarksville, Tennessee) Newspapers.com

Firstly, this individual, as of the time of writing (December 17th, 2021), still has an active missing person's profile with NamUs, America's national database of missing people. Dorothy May Caylor is case number #MP14589. Her profile says that her last date of contact was June 12th, 1985 in Concord, California, which is information that is available in the "Unsolved Mysteries" episode.

I found an article in The Salt Lake Tribune from March 31st, 2004 that Kristen Stewart wrote. The article indicated that Jule Caylor, Dottie's husband, faced some problems when he attempted a career in politics. Ultimately, Jule Caylor withdrew his candidacy for the Utah Legislature (The Salt Lake Tribune/Page 24/April 18th, 2004).

One interesting piece of information in this article is that Jule had "an engagement to another woman six months before Dottie went missing." This wasn't covered in the "Unsolved Mysteries" episode, perhaps because it wasn't known when they made the episode. Furthermore, the Stewart article in the Tribune mentioned an interest in a concrete slab, possibly as a place to look underneath for Caylor. I think the following article is good reading for anyone looking for follow-up information on this case after watching the "Unsolved Mysteries" episode. You can click the article to enlarge it.

31 Mar 2004, Wed The Salt Lake Tribune (Salt Lake City, Utah) Newspapers.com

 I didn't find any journalism after 2004 with the sources I use. However, based on the fact that Dottie still has a missing person profile with NamUs, it's clear that she is yet to be found.

Christi Jo Nichols, Mark Nichols - What Happened After the "Unsolved Mysteries" Episode

By: Shane Lambert

The missing person case of Christi Jo Nichols was profiled in the hit television show "Unsolved Mysteries" back in 1988. Christi Jo Nichols, as presented in the show, was a mother who disappeared from Gothenburg, Nebraska while contemplating a divorce from her physically abusive husband.

If you watched the episode online and are wondering what happened with the case, then this article is for you. 

In the episode of "Unsolved Mysteries," the husband, Mark Nichols, claimed that he awoke one morning and saw that Christi wasn't beside him in bed. His side of the story is not presented as particularly credible in the episode.

This was Season 1 of the series and Episode 6 of that season, according to my research on the show. It originally aired on November 16th, 1988. The episode had the following synopsis in the November 16th, 1988 edition of The Evening Sun in Baltimore Maryland:

Unsolved Mysteries. Season 1. Episode 6.
Unsolved Mysteries. Season 1. Episode 6. 16 Nov 1988, Wed The Evening Sun (Baltimore, Maryland) Newspapers.com

Christi Jo Nichols went missing on December 10th, 1987. She was 22 years old at the time. The first instance of journalism I found on the case was dated February 8th, 1988 in the Lincoln Star Journal (page 9). Much of this article is based on information from that newspaper source.

Mark Nichols is cited in the article.

08 Feb 1988, Mon Lincoln Journal Star (Lincoln, Nebraska) Newspapers.com

According to the journalism that I reviewed, this case was not solved as of October 29th, 2006. I found an article in the Lincoln Journal Star for that date where she was included among the cold cases for the state of Nebraska.

29 Oct 2006, Sun Lincoln Journal Star (Lincoln, Nebraska) Newspapers.com

Here are some interesting details that weren't covered in the Unsolved Mysteries episode, probably because they weren't known at the time. Firstly, Christi's "blood was found in the trunk of her husband's car and on the floor of their bedroom" (Lincoln Journal Star/Page 1/August 24th, 2003). However, there wasn't enough blood to build a murder case. Mark Nichols said that a drop of blood found in the bedroom was menstrual blood, however, "tests proved" that it was not.

There was also some lye stolen from a local farm at about the time of her disappearance. Lye is a substance that can be used to destroy human remains (Lincoln Journal Star/Page 1/August 24th, 2003). Whether this theft should be connected to the case is not clear. Also, Mark Nichols divorced Christi Jo Nichols in April 1990, claiming that he and the three children were abandoned.

24 Aug 2003, Sun Lincoln Journal Star (Lincoln, Nebraska) Newspapers.com

The "Unsolved Mysteries" episode covered the discovery of Christi's luggage. The luggage and other items were found "at a rest stop near Maxwell in March 1988." Furthermore, if Christi left on her own volition, then there is a question as to why she didn't take her paycheque, her tips from her job, or his driver's license.

There is journalism that suggests that there may have been another man in Christi's life. However, this man was ruled out as a suspect.

The babysitter that is in the "Unsolved Mysteries" episode claimed in the 2003 Lincoln Star Journal article that she had not been questioned in the case since 1988.

At the time of writing (December 17th, 2021), this missing person case was still unsolved. Christi Jo Nichols has an active profile at NamUs, where she is #MP4677. You can click the link to exit to her NamUs profile if you want further updates. If the profile is still active, it would strongly suggest that the case has not been solved.

3 Decades Old Cold Cases That Perplex Me

By: Shane Lambert
Original time of writing: August 30th, 2021

While working on this website, I have generally gravitated toward cases that are forty years old or less believing that they are the ones that are still most likely to be solved. However, from time to time I have not been able to help but look at older and colder cases. These are three old and cold cases that stand out in my memory.


Paula Jean Welden Missing for Nearly 80 Years

Something happened to Paula Jean Welden on December 1st, 1946 that, at the time of writing, has not yet been traced. The then 18-year old student at Bennington College in Vermont left her home after telling her roommate, a young woman named Elizabeth Johnson, that she was going to hike a trail known as The Long Trail. Many others besides Elizabeth would see Welden that day but no one has seen her since December 1st, 1946. At the original time of writing, the 75th anniversary of her disappearance was on the horizon. As of January 2025, she has now been missing closer to 80 years.

My guess on what happened to Paul Jean Welden is that got lost while hiking. A plausible enough competing guess might hold that she was abducted. After all, she was known to have been hitchhiking that day, although she was spotted after exiting her driver's vehicle. There is a question as to whether she hitchhiked on her return route.

But Paula Jean Welden, according to my research, was lost from the get-go. According to witnesses that saw her on December 1st, 1946, she was reliant on directions just to find the trail that was interested in. 

When I examined this case in 2020, I found that she was still receiving directions to The Long Trail even as dusk quickly approached. My thoughts on her disappearance are that she got lost and in the resulting panic that night, she only went further and further into the forest due to disorientation. I think she would have tried to find a spot that felt safe, even off-trail, and that she then perished in the cold December night in what would have been a little bit of a hiding spot from the cold wind. It's this, her desire to escape the cold (which may have resulted in going off trail) and the fact that it snowed soon after she went missing, that made her hard to find after she died, in my opinion.

Beverly Sharpman Missing for More Than 85 Years

Beverly Sharpman's case is one that has grabbed my attention on plenty of nights. This high school student disappeared and was last seen in Philadelphia on September 11th, 1947. The 74th anniversary of her disappearance, at the original time of writing, was nearing.

Sharpman's case details included a telegram that was sent from a train station. It read "Got married. Leaving town. Will not be back." If you don't question the authenticity of that telegram, then it seems like she meant business with the last sentence.

Questions with this case are aplenty. Firstly, why did Beverly Sharpman register for her senior year of high school the morning of September 11th, 1947 if she was running away that night? My suggestion is that she didn't want anything to seem amiss but that's just speculation.

Another question is what did she want to tell her mother the evening before she disappeared? Beverly appeared to have something to say to her mother, perhaps something difficult, but Beverly decided to keep quiet about what she had to say. You would think that would have to do with pregnancy or maybe just a relationship with someone who might be inappropriate from her mother's perspective.

The question of the ages with this case is one that could crack it wide open. The telegram said she "Got married." Assuming she was telling the truth, then where is Beverly Sharpman's marriage certificate? I know I've spent hours combing through the records that you find at Ancestry looking for it but it has been to no avail.

My efforts lead me to believe that it was not straightforward for a 17-year old (ie. a minor) to get married in Pennsylvania in 1947. I remember seeing other married records involving minors where parental consent was required.

This, in itself, brings a lot of questions into play. What options were there for a 17-year old to get married in 1947 without parental consent? How easy was it to assume a false identity? Did she not really get married?

With Sharpman's case, I've always thought that she really did leave town on her own volition. I think she married into a new name and was then able to live a life under a different identity. Under this new identity, no one ever connected her to the Beverly Sharpman missing person case precisely because she married into a new name -- somehow. There were a lot of classified ads placed by the mother asking for information on where Beverly Sharpman was but no one in her new circles would know her maiden name, from this perspective.

The Rahway County Jane Doe Unnamed Since 1887

Picture this scenario. Late one evening in March 1887, a young woman alights a train in Rahway, New Jersey. A short time later, she is murdered, a dog nearby in the darkness of night seems to be aware of the drama, and then four brothers find her the next morning. The resulting 'whodunit' and "Who is she?" stories are a coast-to-coast media hit and the details of the Rahway County Jane Doe story gets plenty of coverage. However, to this day she remains unnamed.

I looked at this case back in 2017. One angle I took that I hoped would lead to her identity was to search newspaper classifieds for someone that was looking for a missing person. Newspapers used to have a section where you could post information on someone you were trying to reconnect with. In fact, Beverly Sharpman's mother used such classfieds. 

What I hoped with the Rahway County Jane Doe was to find a classified advertisement where someone was looking for their friend, daughter, or wife who was last known to be traveling via train to New Jersey in March 1887 and has not been heard from since. I failed at that but this is a process that could be done over and over again as time goes by. That's because newspaper databases are constantly expanding.

I've always felt that the best chance for this case to be solved is just for a television network to take an interest in her case for nothing more than TV ratings. It would be a captivating hour-long television program to name a Jane Doe from the late 1800s using modern forensics, I think.

Ted Bundy, the 1969 Memorial Day Weekend Murders, and the Composite Sketch of Suspect

Author: Shane Lambert
The original time of publication: January 7th, 2021

Susan Margarite Davis and Elizabeth Perry, both 19 years of age as of the Memorial Day Weekend in 1969, were murdered on May 30th of that year outside Somers Point, New Jersey. The area they were found in was about 100 kilometers from Philadelphia. At the time of their murders, Ted Bundy was a student at Temple University and he has been considered a suspect in the case for several years now.

Bundy was not consistent when he told stories of his first crimes. However, apparently, he told Art Norman, a forensic psychologist, that his (Bundy's) first murders were of two women in the Philadelphia area. This admission was in a roundabout way: Bundy appeared to be talking about himself in the third person.

Mon, May 31, 1993 – Page 60 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com

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The case against Bundy in these two murders is not rock solid. But Richard Larsen, a Bundy biographer, is one prominent individual who knows a lot about the life and times of Bundy that has expressed belief in Bundy being the Memorial Day Weekend 1969 murderer.

One point pertaining to these murders that has not gotten enough attention in my view is that there was a composite sketch of a young man that was wanted for questioning in the murders of Davis and Perry. In my opinion, Bundy, who would have been 22 at the time of the murders, resembles the composite sketch.

Sat, Aug 9, 1969 – Page 1 · Standard-Speaker (Hazleton, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com

Ted Bundy's photo from the 1965
yearbook for Woodrow Wilson High School.

There is about a four-year gap between the composite sketch and the photo above. Bundy is definitely in the ballpark of resemblance, in my view. The sketch was taken from the description of two witnesses who claimed that they saw the suspect near the victims' car.

Mon, Aug 11, 1969 – 1 · The Sentinel (Carlisle, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com

Ashley Summers -- Missing From Cleveland Since 2007

Author: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing: December 30th, 2020
All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.

Missing person: Ashley Nicole Summers (birthday: June 16th, 1993)
Last-seen date: July 4th, 2007 (a Wednesday) at about 6pm (At time of writing, NamUs says July 9th, 2007)
Where last seen: Cleveland, Ohio near West 96th Street and Madison Avenue


The case of Ashley Nicole Summers is one that might have a red herring. When a known child abductor (Ariel Castro) popped up as active in her neighborhood that lead was investigated but it did not turn up any evidence of what happened to Summers. Accordingly, her whereabouts remain a mystery.

One source on the topic, News 5 Cleveland, posted an article that contained information that would make you think that she is, in fact, safe (or was in the weeks after her disappearance): "Summers packed all of her clothes and took them with her. She reportedly called her mother one month after she went missing, telling her not to worry and that she would be okay" (July 11 2017/Bretton Keenan).

If that information is correct, then the runaway hypothesis carries a little more weight than normal. It is hard to picture a reasonable scenario where someone who isn't Ashley makes that phone call. If that phone call wasn't Ashley then it would have to be a person with a small conscience or someone with an interest in obstructing the investigation. Either scenario is possible but what a coincidence that such a person had a voice that sounded enough like Ashley's to make her mother a little bit of a believer.

But it's here that there is some weight added to the guess that Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro has something to do with Summers' disappearance. The phone call after the kidnapping sounds like the Amanda Berry case, one that Castro was responsible for.

According to that case's history, a man made a phone call using Berry's cellular about a week after she disappeared. This phone call contained comments that seemingly were meant to reassure the mother of the missing person that the missing person was safe. That is similar to the phone call that Ashley's mother received, albeit from a different source.

There has also been an unconfirmed sighting of Ashley. Her step-grandmother thought she spotted the girl on west 44th Street in November 2007 with short and dyed-blonde hair. What does one make of that? It's simply food for thought.

Another news event that is often reported in conjunction with Ashley Nicole Summers is the 2020 conviction of her great-uncle, Kevin Donathan. He received a 35-year sentence for sex offenses related to minors in 2020. The FBI searched his home but say he isn't a suspect -- which takes us back to the runaway hypothesis or the abducted-by-Castro guess.

What sits heavily with me, in this case, is the description of events leading up to the disappearance that had to do with her packing all of her clothes. When working on this case, I'm proceeding as though she's a runaway that was alive as of 2007. However, I assign a 60% probability for that in this difficult case with the uncle and Castro taking a heavy portion of the balance of the chances. 

If she is alive and if she went missing voluntarily, then marriage is a possibility. "Ashley [Any Last Name] nee Summers" would be an interesting hit in a database.

NamUs # and Link: #MP1687
Ethnicity/Race: White
Sex: Female

Age at time of disappearance: 14 years old
Hair: Brown, long
Eye color: Blue
Height and weight at the time of disappearance: 5'5" and 130 pounds
Clothing: White t-shirt and blue jeans
Other: tattoo of the word Gene in black ink over a red heart on her right upper arm


Mary Anne Wesolowski Missing Since 1971

Author: Shane Lambert

Original Time of Writing: 

All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.


The case of Mary Wesolowski is the kind of case that takes you in two different directions. From one perspective, you have to wonder if she was abducted. She was last known to be walking to Havilland Cove on the Hudson River. A known abductor, Kenneth Arnold Yarter Jr., didn't work that far away from where Mary lived. With that in mind, it's hard not to think about an abduction.

Wesolowski might also have run away. She left a note for her mother saying "I'm leaving. I might miss you." That's present tense in the first sentence and future tense in the second, the latter indicating a look to an uncertain future. It's an interesting note in that the second sentence communicates mixed emotions for her mother. That certainly hints at problems at home for this child, something that has been communicated at various sources about this case, like at Charley Project.

That site offers a lengthy description of Mary's disappearance. One excerpt states "Some agencies give Mary's name 'Mary Ann' or 'Maryanne.' Interestingly enough I found a woman in northern New York who died in the late 1970's with a name match, regardless of the spacing between Mary and Ann or not. It may be worth a look despite a one-year difference in age.

Missing Person: Mary Wesolowski, aka Mary Anne or Maryann

Last seen or contact date: August 18th, 1971

Where last seen: Glen Falls, New York

Let's assume that Mary ran away. For me, that's a difficult assumption because I have trouble picturing a 13-year old surviving as a runaway. However, people have survived worse so it can't be thrown to the wind. If we assume that she ran away, I think it's safe to assume that she made it a little way out of Glen Falls, New York. Chances are if she stayed put she would have been found. How far could she make it with whatever means she had? Probably not too far. Maybe getting out of New York would have been hard.

Take a look at the following two articles. They both describe the same person and event despite different name spellings and different ages:

Name matches to missing person but Mary Ann Wesolowski but the age is one year off.

Name matches to missing person but Mary Ann Wesolowski but the age is one year off. Tue, Nov 21, 1978 – Page 14 · Poughkeepsie Journal (Poughkeepsie, New York) · Newspapers.com

Tue, Nov 21, 1978 – 3 · The Post-Star (Glens Falls, New York) · Newspapers.com

The problem with the articles is that one describes a "Mary Ann Wesolowski, 21" and the other describes a "Maryann Wesoloswki, 22." Note the difference in spelling of both the first and last names but Wesolowski spelled correctly for Billy. Also, note the different ages. Furthermore, note all the other similarities because they practically eliminate the chance of these two people, "Mary Ann Wesolowski, 21" and "Maryann Wesoloswki, 22" actually being different people. Clearly, the two news articles cover the same event.

Lastly, and importantly, note that our Mary Wesolowski, NamUs #MP2876, was neither 21 nor 22 on November 21st, 1978. She would only have been 20. But it's funny how she was referred to as Maryann and Mary Ann and that's how different agencies described her as well. That the age doesn't match is important -- in fact, in some cases that's a rule out. In this case, I can't ignore the journalism that didn't care to get her age right or name spelled right. Maybe they were working with shoddy sources themselves.

The Mary described in the news articles was likely white. One photo had a picture of the dying Billy, Mary's child, and he was white. It's not a slam dunk to have the same color of skin as one of your parents but the tendencies are real. Our Mary, the missing person, was also white.

Tue, Nov 21, 1978 – 17 · The Herald-Palladium (Saint Joseph, Michigan) · Newspapers.com

For me, this all means that this "Maryann Wesoloswki, 22" or "Mary Ann Wesolowski, 21" should be looked at as a rule-out for Mary Wesolowski, #MP2876. A good idea would be if websleuths or amateurs took to the databases they have memberships for and looked for the Mary that died in this house fire. We're interested in someone with a different birthdate, a different photo, or something that rules her out because the crummy journalism doesn't do that for me.

On the matter, I did look at ancestry.com for the deceased two-year-old Jennifer Wesolowski. I found someone by that name in the Buffalo area that was born in 1976, someone that had an address in N. Tonawanda, New York, USA. I wondered if that was the Jennifer mentioned in the article because the age would match. I'm thinking that this address might be a clue in this case.


If Mary from the housefire is our missing person, then be aware that she did die from the injuries sustained from the fire. This would be about closure and not a reunion.

NamUs # and Link: #MP2876

Wed, Nov 22, 1978 – 2 · Star-Gazette (Elmira, New York) · Newspapers.com

Ethnicity/Race: White

Sex: Female

Age at time of disappearance: 13 years old

Hair: Brown to light brown

Eye color: blue

Height and weight at the time of disappearance: 4'6" and 85 pounds

Other: scars -- abdomen and chest; teeth -- crooked in 1971

Clothing: black leather belt, a white t-shirt, and red-and-white shorts



Jessica Heeringa Missing From Michigan Since 2013 -- Gas Station Employee Vanishes

Author: Shane Lambert

Original Time of Writing: December 22nd, 2020

All articles are subject to editing after the original posting.

Missing Person: Jessica Heeringa

Last seen or contact date: April 26th, 2013 (Friday) late in the evening, likely between 1050pm (time of her last sale as a clerk) and 1115pm. She may have been behind the building as a small drop of her blood was found there.

Where last seen: in Norton Shores, Michigan. She was working at an Exxon Mobil gas station as a clerk at the location that was on East Sternberg Road. The gas station was between Grand Haven Road and Highway 31. Google Maps: 43.15449809998207, -86.21656688503997.

Jessica Heeringa has been missing from Norton Shores in Michigan since April 26th, 2013. She was working at an Exxon Mobil station as a clerk. A customer, no later than 1120pm, found the gas station open but no one was around. She disappeared late in her shift, leaving her personal belongings in the store -- including $400 in her purse. The station did not have surveillance. One early article that was published a few days after her disappearance is snipped below.

Jessica Heeringa
Jessica Heeringa Mon, Apr 29, 2013 – 2 · Livingston County Daily Press and Argus (Howell, Michigan) · Newspapers.com

This case was treated as an abduction since an early part of the investigation. In the early coverage, they communicated interest in questioning a white male with a silver Chrysler minivan (sometimes called a van). The cash register was untouched so this didn't look like a robbery gone wrong.

The witness in the case was an off-duty employee, a woman who drove by the Exxon store. She noticed a van behind the store and circled back. I think she may have been the one that gave the description that lead to a composition sketch of the suspect and the report of the van.

Jessica Heeringa
Jessica Heeringa Mon, May 27, 2013 – Page A2 · Detroit Free Press (Detroit, Michigan) · Newspapers.com

The van was thought to have been captured in other footage from businesses in the area. This suspicious van may have passed Coin Zone on Grand Haven Road at about 11:04pm. They also had a video from a tavern, one that also allegedly showed the vehicle in question.

Jessica Heeringa
Jessica Heeringa Tue, Apr 30, 2013 – 2 · Livingston County Daily Press and Argus (Howell, Michigan) · Newspapers.com

The person of interest in the case was Jeffrey Willis, now convicted. At the time of writing, he was in prison for a separate crime that involved killing a female jogger in western Michigan. Willis is a reasonable match to the composite sketch that was generated of the driver of the minivan.

Jessica Heeringa

Jessica Heeringa Sat, Dec 28, 2019 – A5 · Detroit Free Press (Detroit, Michigan) · Newspapers.com

There is some closure in this case in the sense that her abductor has been brought to justice. However, Jessica remains a missing person. On that matter, her direction of travel could be speculated on.

Coin Zone, the name of the company that had the footage of the vehicle in question, is permanently closed at the time of writing. However, I found an address of 4300 Grand Haven Road in North Shores for the expired business. There's a possibility that Jessica was in this vehicle, meaning her direction of travel was northern from her last known location.

Jessica's distinctive physical characteristics, listed below, are not likely to aid in this investigation. If we assume that she is long dead then her tattoos and lazy eye would not be ascertainable should a Jane Doe be found that might be her (decomposition). Her short height of 5'1" is what should be remembered in this case, as well as the distinctive clothing that was wearing.

There is some reason to believe that she was buried near Sheridan Road and Laketon Road "near abandoned railroad tracks." However, leads on this tip have not been fruitful. 

If she is buried in the area, then future amateurs working on this case could note any human remains at future construction sites in the area. An area that may have been secluded in 2013 might be developed at a future date. Sometimes construction workers unearth human remains as the lay groundwork for foundations and that's where the strongest likelihood of finding her maybe.

NamUs # and Link: #MP20137

Ethnicity/Race: White

Sex: Female

Age at time of disappearance: 25 years old

Hair: strawberry blonde, shoulder length

Eye color: Blue

Height and weight at the time of disappearance: 5'1", 100 to 110 pounds

Other: One of her eyes is lazy. She has a tattoo on her left ankle of a musical note and a peace sign. She has a star tattoo on her back. Also, she has sleepy z's tattooed on her left foot. Lastly, on her right calf she has a sun and moon tattoo.

Clothing: High-heeled boots, polo shirt with "Sternberg Exxon," blue jeans, and a black tank top.

Song Im Joseph - NamUs #MP6936

By: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing
: December 13th, 2020

Song Im Joseph went missing back in 1976 with a last-seen date that isn't clear. According to NamUs, she went missing on June 8th, 1975. According to a newspaper article, the date was June 6th. There's a small difference there and perhaps those looking at this case need to be aware of both dates. She disappeared from a place called Rehoboth, Delaware and her vitals are below:

  • Asian female
  • 20 years old when she disappeared
  • 5'2" to 5'3"
  • 100 - 105 pounds
  • Black hair
  • brown eyes



NamUs offers a description that states that the missing person is a native of Korea. It says that she went to the USA in November of 1974 with her husband, an American serviceman named Alton Edward Joseph. They called her disappearance "suspicious" and indicated that US immigration had no reason to believe that she went back to Korea.

Her disappearance wasn't well covered in the newspapers that are included in the database I searched. One short blurb about her appeared in 1983's The News Journal (October 31st, 1983 - page 9). This marginal said there was a $1000 reward "for information about the mysterious disappearance." Furthermore, this marginal indicated that Song had "told friends" that she had been "followed by a man who spoke Korean."

NamUs #MP6936
NamUs #MP6936 Mon, Oct 31, 1983 – Page 9 · The News Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) · Newspapers.com

The report of the man following Song Im Joseph is interesting. It may also be noted that her husband, Alton E. Joseph, was committing crimes in the 1970s that would land him a 30-month prison sentence in the early parts of the next century. Joseph, who remarried, was found guilty of stealing explosives from the military in the 1970s.

Thu, Feb 13, 2003 – Page 22 · The News Journal (Wilmington, Delaware) · Newspapers.com

NamUs Mising Persons -- Five Unidentified from Hartford Circus Fire 1944

By: Shane Lambert
Original Time of Writing: December 11th, 2020

The Hartford Circus Fire was a fire disaster that occurred during the WWII years when, in July of 1944, a small fire broke out at a live circus show. The tent that housed the circus had a coating on it that was meant to waterproof it. One side effect of that was that the tent was hardly fire retardant. In fact, it was a very flammable material as were many of the fixtures used to house the show.

What resulted when a small fire broke out, which may have been due to arson or from a discarded cigarette, was a quickly spreading fire that led to immediate panic among thousands of attendees and performers. Most of these attendees escaped to safety but a combination of chaos, trampling, asphyxiation from smoke inhalation, and burning to death killed 167 people and injured hundreds and hundreds more. The headline below, which is taken from journalism from the day after the fire, states 139 were dead but this was just the preliminary number. The number increased to 167.

Fri, Jul 7, 1944 – 1 · Hartford Courant (Hartford, Connecticut) · Newspapers.com


Not all of the victims who died in this tragedy were identified. In fact, there was a famous missing person case that resulted from this fire. A young girl, who was trampled to death in the panic, went unnamed for several decades. Once known as Little Miss 1565, she was believed to have been Eleanor Emily Cook.

Sun, Jun 23, 1991 – 7 · The Journal Times (Racine, Wisconsin) · Newspapers.com

At least five people remain unidentified at the time of writing. They are #UP59498, #UP59500#UP59502, #UP59503, and #UP59504. If you are looking at a missing person's case with a lead that points to the Hartford, Connecticut area on or in the days leading up to July 6th, 1944, then keep these Jane and John Does in mind. If you are interested in a decent video that reviews the fire, then I watched a good one on Youtube and have it embedded below:

Elizabeth Gamblin, Missing Person -- NamUS #MP76254

By: Shane Lambert

Time of writing: December 10th, 2020

Elizabeth Gamblin, at the time of writing, has a fairly new profile at NamUs. The website says that she went missing on June 28th, 2020. Her case was uploaded on December 8th, 2020, making for just over a five-month interval. There are some details to reconcile between two sources on this case.

Firstly, Gamblin's vitals are as follows:

  • Female
  • Caucasian
  • Brown hair
  • Green eyes
  • 27 years old when she went missing
  • 5'6" to 5'8"
  • 85-95 pounds
For circumstances, NamUs states the following:

"Boyfriend of missing stated Ms. Gamblin left for home on foot headed East on Manship Drive wearing a gray shirt and blue jeans. She stated she was going to a friends house, she did not give the friends name or address. She hasn't been seen or heard from since" <sic>.

The address in Jackson, Mississippi that she went missing from can be taken from another source. The missing person's poster for Gamblin at the Jackson Police Department lists a "missing from" address of  927 Manship Drive. Importantly, this poster states that Gamblin went missing on July 4th, 2020, which would have been Independence Doe. That contradicted NamUs's last seen date of June 28th, 2020. In truth, either time could be erroneous. 





NamUs #UP51552 - Dead Man Found After Several Decades

By: Shane Lambert

Time of writing: December 9th, 2020

The following case was interesting to do some research on. It's NamUs #UP51552 and it involves the discovery of human remains that were long deceased.

The decedent was found on February 26th, 1978. He was a white male in life and an adult. His height was estimated to be between 5'8" and 5'10" with a weight that could not be estimated. According to NamUs, he was dead since as early as 1940. NamUs also states that the skulls and bones of the man were "found by students who were planting trees in the area."

The date of his death is interesting to debate. NamUs does state that the man was in possession of a 1920 US mint half-dollar (the coin was near the body). Of course, the man having a coin that was, assumingly, his from 1920 doesn't actually mean a lot about his time of death except that it didn't happen before that year. For jewelry, NamUs also stated that the man had a "Yellow metal Elgin pocketwatch." I guess finding the person's time of death wasn't as simple as checking the time.

The news on this case was a little different than what's stated at NamUs. That's not to say that one source is better than the others. But one article said that the body was found by a singular hiker, not tree planters. The source I found was the San Francisco Examiner on Feb 27 1978 (page 32). That source named one "Bill Tempelis" as the discoverer of the body "off Claremont Road." Furthermore, the police described in the article as claiming that "a badly rusted pistol" was near the body, a pistol of .22 caliber or .38. The news article described the coin as a "1920 eagle silver dollar" (article embedded below).

As far as identifying this person goes, the date of the coin is interesting as a clue. However, the pocket watch is probably more of a clue when it comes to conjecture. According to an article at The Atlantic, "By the Great Depression, wristwatch production had eclipsed pocket-watch production; by World War II, the pocket watch was obsolete" (Uri Friedman/May 27th 2015 article at The Atlantic).

The Great Depression happened in the 1930s and the start of the second world war was 1939. NamUs claim the body was there from "as early as 1940" but maybe they are wrong. Could be the body was there as early as 1920. That's the year of the coin and it's the decade where the pocket watch was still a little in style.

When I search for "Elgin Pocket Watch" in newspapers.com, the earliest hit is in the Los Angeles Times on December 15th, 1918 (snipped below). There could be many explanations for that: the brand might not have been popular before then, it might have been new at that time, or maybe they just didn't advertise in newspapers.  However, the decade of the 1920s produced 1279 hits at the time of writing and the 1930s saw more than triple that. The keywords peaked in the 1940s at 6129 hits. When I add the word yellow, the results go down by quite a lot but the same trend is present for popularity.


When it comes to the gun, all the caliber means is how wide the barrel is. A .22 caliber gun is 0.22 inches and a .38 caliber gun is a lot wider. It is significant that they couldn't tell the caliber of the gun. Guns are made of metal -- I think it would take a lot of weathering for a gun to deteriorate. To me, the rusted gun, the coin, and the pocket watch all speak to a man who was dead for several decades as of his discovery in 1978. I would estimate a time of death in the 1920s. In order words -- good luck in identifying this cowboy.

NamUs #UP51552NamUs #UP51552 Mon, Feb 27, 1978 – 32 · The San Francisco Examiner (San Francisco, California) · Newspapers.com

Olga Mauger, Missing Since 1934 -- NamUs #MP27783

By: Shane Lambert
Time of writing: December 7th, 2020


Olga Mauer has one of the older cases that is still listed at NamUs. She went missing on September 17th, 1934, from the wilderness near Dubois, Wyoming.

She had black hair, her eye color is not listed, she was 21 years old at the time of her disappearance, she was 5'5" to 5'9", and she weighed between 120 and 150 pounds. NamUs says that she "and her new husband went scouting for elk, camping up at Togowotee Pass when she went missing." Below are the key details regarding this missing person, as per what is available at NamUs.

Key Details from Olga Mauer's NamUs Profile

Category Details
NamUs Case Number MP27783
Full Name Olga Mauger
Biological Sex Female
Race / Ethnicity White / Caucasian
Missing Age 21 Years
Current Age Deceased - Would be 112 years old
Date of Last Contact September 17, 1934
Missing From Dubois, Wyoming
County Fremont County
Missing From Tribal Land No
Primary Residence on Tribal Land No
NamUs Case Created February 20, 2015
Circumstances of Disappearance Olga Mauger went missing near Togwotee Pass while elk hunting with her new husband.
Height 5' 5" - 5' 9" (65 - 69 Inches)
Weight 120 - 150 lbs
Hair Color Red/Auburn
Left Eye Color Blue
Right Eye Color Blue
Distinctive Physical Features No Known Information
Clothing Riding trousers, a man's shirt, a gray and blue pullover sweater, and a green felt tam
Footwear High-laced boots
Accessories A hand-axe was fastened to her belt; she carried a sack lunch
Transportation No Information Entered

Points That I Found While Researching Olga's Case

  1. The earliest newspaper coverage that I could find of her disappearance was from September 20th, 1934, in the Jackson's Hole Courier (front page; the points below until No. 10 are from that article)
  2. An airplane was used in the search for her
  3. Two-Gwo-Tee Pass is how the area is spelled
  4. There were "scores" of men involved in the ground search
  5. The husband reported her missing at a camp; he said that he left her resting while he pursued "big game"
  6. The searchers believed that they found tracks of the woman's about "eight miles from where she was last seen" but this was later disputed
  7. Olga Mauger had been married just six days earlier
  8. She was only "lightly clothed" and likely would not have survived the night due to the altitude, according to those familiar with the area
  9. She was believed to have had three sandwiches but no blanket
  10. Mr. Mauger was reported to have been in a sleepless state over the ordeal
  11. She went missing on a Monday afternoon; one article said that cries for help were heard from a canyon on the Wednesday night that followed (Casper-Star Tribune/Sept 20 1934/Page 1; points to No. 15 are as per this source)
  12. The husband's name was Carl S. Mauger as per this source. As per another one, it was Carl R. Mauger. The print in these old newspapers can be hard to read and maybe to blame. The middle initial is likely "S," in my opinion
  13. The camp they went to was called the Floyd Stalnacker camp
  14. Carl said that he left her to rest in the forest, but when he returned, he could not find her
  15. No one had any hope of her being alive by the soonest Friday (Casper-Star Tribune/Sept 21, 1934/Page 1; points 17 and 18 as per this same source)
  16. A paper sack of hers was found; she had used it to carry lunch
  17. Her tracks were reportedly found in a wooded area known as Turpin Meadows
  18. The search continued into October, but there were periods when inclement weather caused stoppages (Casper Star-Tribune/Oct 3, 1934/Page 10; Points 20 to 22 are from this source)
  19. There were reports that she had been found, but these were not true
  20. The county attorney said he intended to question the husband, a man who stayed in the frontier area during the entire search; the husband claimed that he had not been arguing with his wife
  21. The period that he claimed to have left his wife alone in the forest was a mere 20 minutes, which was later seemingly contradicted
  22. Olga Mauger had a doppelganger in Bridgeport, Nebraska, that had to be ruled out as the missing woman (Casper Star-Tribune/Oct 14 1934/Page 11)
  23. The husband was held in jail as per an article in the October 9th 1934 Casper Star Tribune (Page 10); he had the unfortunate luck of resembling a man with a warrant out for his arrest, a man with the name Carl Mager as opposed to Carl Mauger; Mauger didn't have the birthmark that Mager had
  24. Heavy snow in the region ended all hope of finding her
  25. In 1941, Carl Mauger filed for divorce from his missing wife. They married on September 11th, 1934, and she disappeared on September 17th of that year as per the Casper Star-Tribune, May 6/1941, Page 5.
  26. This same source said that no trace of the missing woman was ever found. It also said that the search was intensive but was affected and hindered by snow.
  27. A major piece on the disappearance was published in the San Francisco Examiner on Nov 23 1941 -- page 81
  28. It says that the husband married Olga's "rival after seven years of waiting"
  29. Bloodhounds were used in the search, as per the SF Examiner
  30. Olga's younger sister believed that the missing person had a motive to disappear
  31. Olga's maiden name was Schulz
  32. The balance of the Nov 23, 1941, piece is that there should be suspicion around the husband because of his other romantic interest and suggestions of friction in the days after the wedding between Carl and Olga
  33. Olga was wearing tan breeches, lace boots, a blue shirt, and a green and grey pullover tam. She had a little hatchet in a belt and a paper bag with sandwiches.
  34. In this source, Carl is cited as stating he had returned much later than 20 minutes, the time he had promised to return.
  35. Indian trackers were employed to apply "their special talents." These were people who were believed to have the skill to tell whether a stone had been turned recently or years earlier.
  36. A Casper Star-Tribune article on the 20th anniversary of the disappearance said no more was known of her fate than the day she disappeared. This is pretty much true as of the time of writing this article as well.
What confused me with this scene is that Olga and her husband Carl were on a big-game hunting expedition. I've assumed that Carl had a gun. I've wondered, on that note, if simply firing this into the air or firing a blank might have helped his wife find him in the immediate aftermath of her disappearance. However, I found nothing that conclusively said that he had a gun with him as they were on a scouting mission to find elk, perhaps intending to hunt them at another time.

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Theories and Suspicions Surrounding Her Disappearance

There was suspicion surrounding the husband, but my personal feeling was that he did not kill her. The one article that cast him poorly for marrying his wife's rival was not convincing. Anyone might wish to remarry if his or her spouse is missing for seven years, especially under the conditions that Olga went missing. That the next wife was a rival of hers only speaks to his affections for both women, not to something diabolical. Furthermore, I found no mention of a murder-for-life-insurance motive.

But one interesting point of view that would look to increase the husband's guilt was made by one of the 20 Indian trackers who were asked to lend their skills to the search. I think it's important to point out that these Indians were people who weren't assimilated like modern Indians. These were people who would have been raised by Indians who actually lived off the land, and, in 1930, I think these Indians would have had a lot of the outdoor skills that their ancestors had. That they were sought for their tracking abilities speaks to a level of authority that they had in the region.

These people said that the footprints that were found eight miles away were NOT Olga Mauger's. What's also interesting is that these Indians said that Carl Mauger's path away from his wife would have kept him in full view of her sitting place from the moment he left her to the moment he claimed he turned around.

If true, that's something powerful to consider: the scene the Indians described was rugged and difficult terrain but wide open for viewing (September 23rd 1934 Casper Star-Tribune):

"The Indians said the footprints found eight miles from the spot where Mauger said he last saw his wife, were not those of the missing woman. They also pointed out that, although the country is rugged, it is open and that Mauger was in full view of the place, where he claimed he left his wife until he reached a small path where he said he turned around and retraced his steps."

I don't think the footprints eight miles away were those of the missing woman's. That's a huge distance to hike. In fact, some hikes in uneven terrain of that length would take an already-tired individual all the sunlight hours at the time of year that Olga went missing.

If the husband is to be treated as a suspect, then it calls into question the last time someone other than him saw his wife. They did camp alone, away from a group that was also in the area.

But the scenario the husband offered as an explanation isn't a bad one in my view. His wife grew tired before him, which makes perfect sense given the differences in physical abilities between the sexes. He wanted to get up the peak and said he would be 20 minutes to return. It ended up taking him much longer, which jives with my personal hiking experience. Points that appear close in wide-open terrain actually can take a long time to reach.

What if he took an hour to return or more? Does Olga get mad waiting, or does she think that she has to go get help out of fear that something happened to him? If she can't navigate her way back to the camp, then she is lost with little food as the evening looms.

Furthermore, her screams might have been heard, and her lunch bag was found -- in my mind, those circumstances both mitigate the suspicion that a reasonable person might direct toward the husband.

What Happened to Olga Mauger? Theories Explored

Olga might have panicked when her husband didn't return, attempted to make her way back to their camp, and got lost. She then suffered from exposure to the elements. This opinion might not totally jive with the Indians' point of view, though, because according to their assessment, the two people never would have been out of view of one another in the wide-open area. How, then, could they become separated? A counterpoint to that calls into question the strength of the eyes of the two people and exactly how far they were from one another. If Olga loses sight of her husband just for a few moments, then it might have been enough to cause her to panic.

People claimed that they may have heard her screams come from a canyon at night -- the third night that she was missing. Surely, this would be a time when she would be most desperate and near her life's end. I do believe that they did hear screams because they would echo in a canyon. Furthermore, since canyons are the low points in a region, it's where the night-time air would be the least frigid and thus most attractive to someone facing the hardships of the mountain nights.

Why Olga Mauger’s Remains Were Never Found

She couldn't live forever with no food or heat. There were snowstorms in the area, meaning that a dead body could get covered up. Natural areas swallow up a lot of evidence.

Also, animals move bodies or parts around, including to secret spots like underground dugouts or dens. Lastly, if the area had avalanches then they could move her body to low points that one would not think to search, even after the spring melt of the next season. When someone dies in a forest, there are, in fact, loads of ways that the body can still be moved around.

Chances are, in my opinion, that Olga is within a couple of miles of her last-known location, long dead. Her remains might not be intact, but something of her is there.

That the area was scoured over by hundreds of people doesn't mean that they couldn't miss her. Many people are found not far from where they went missing, years after their disappearance, despite extensive searches taking place.

Mary Agnes Moroney -- NamUs MP#14705

By: Shane Lambert
Time of writing: December 6th, 2020

If you are reading this, then I would not be surprised if it's because you looked up the oldest cases on NamUs and found the case of Mary Agnes Moroney. She went missing as a two-year old back on May 15th, 1930. At the time of writing, she was the oldest female case on the website and could still be alive as a senior citizen. Generally, I stick to cases that are 50 years old or less but I decided to make a dabble on Mary's case because the newspaper coverage was good.

Mary was a white female with a height of 3'0" and a weight of 20 pounds when she disappeared at the age of two. Her NamUs profile was created on May 12th, 2012, making for an 82-year gap between her disappearance and her uploading date. You'll be hard-pressed to find a bigger gap than that but, in this case, it's partly due to the fact that NamUs itself simply wasn't around for several of the decades since Mary's disappearance. Her hair is called strawberry-blond and her eyes are blue. She also had a strawberry birthmark on her face and a scar on her belly button.

What happened with this kidnapping, as I've gleaned from the journalism at the time of the kidnapping, was that the mother was in financial need. She placed an advertisement asking for help. A woman, who claimed to be a social worker, entered the mother's life in response to the advertisement. This woman suggested that Mrs. Moroney give her children up for adoption at one point but Mrs. Moroney vehemently refused. Then, on the night of the kidnapping, the mysterious woman offered to purchase clothing for the child at a local store. When she took the child to the store, she did not return but did send a note -- or two.

The newspaper coverage of this case began in 1930, just two days after the disappearance as per the database that I use (newspapers.com). In the Belvidere Daily Republican on May 17th, 1930, an article headlined on page 1 stated "STOLEN BABY BEING TAKEN TO CALIFORNIA." To summarize the article, there is an indication that "a young woman who posed as a social worker" stole Mary and took her to the Pacific from the Chicago area (the exact address of the kidnapping was 5200 Wentworth Avenue).

The kidnapper signed a note as Julia Otis, a name that we have to take with some skepticism. Furthermore, the note that the woman left has details that we should be skeptical of as well. 

Reportedly, this note said: "Don't worry about your baby. I've taken her to California and we'll be on our way when you receive this. You can spare her for two months."

In the May 18th, 1930 edition of The Chicago Tribune (page 2), a partial copy of the handwritten letter was inserted into the newspaper. This portion of the letter is not comprehensive and the quote above may have come from another portion of the letter. I post this letter below for those that want to see exactly what was said. If you find the handwriting difficult then perhaps my own interpretation can guide you:

"Dear Mrs Moroney
        
    please don't be alarmed. I have taken your little girl to California with me. I have hired a special nurse to care for her. we'll be back in two months. by that time you will be on your feet again and will be able to care for her.

As ever,
Julia Otis"



What do we know about Julia Otis -- if that is her real name? The note doesn't have any glaring grammatical or spelling errors. That does suggest that this "Julia Otis" is an educated person. Certainly, those that read the Zodiac's letters might scoff at his spelling and grammar and see that he was a bit of a dufus. It's my opinion that this 'Otis,' conversely, was educated.

If she was a thinking person, then it stands to reason that she wasn't going to California at all and that her name wasn't Julia Otis. The starting point with this letter is to take it as nothing but food for thought: using a fake name and communicating a false travel itinerary is how a thinking person might throw off an investigation. Importantly, they searched the trains from Chicago to California and did not find the baby or the kidnapper. 

However, there were some possible sightings and this suggests that there may have been some truth to the letter. There was a tip from transients who claimed that they saw the baby and kidnapper at the Rock Island station in a place called Hutchinson. Furthermore, a bathroom attendant at one of the stations saw a woman whose description matches Julia Otis's. The baby was crying and attracted much attention because of that. The nurse that is mentioned may have been in their company.

Another letter was received from one "Mrs. Alice Henderson," a letter that was meant to explain why Mary Agnes was kidnapped. This letter said of Julia Otis: "Last year she lost her baby girl, the year before she lost her husband, and ever since she has been a nervous wreck. She will bring her back to you as safe and sound as ever." The police believed that this letter was in the same handwriting as the one attributed to Julia Otis (The Bismarck Tribune/May 21 1930/Front Page). Furthermore, this second letter had two sets of handwriting on it (Chicago Tribune/May 20 1930/Page 16), suggesting that two people were at work in this crime. That would corroborate the sighting of the bathroom attendant. 

I do think this letter was written in whole or in part by the Julia Otis. The statement to how Otis will behave in the future is not written with any doubt -- yet, no one really knows how another person's mind is functioning. To me, there's a bit of a giveaway there and I think whoever wrote the first letter wrote this one too.

If Mrs. Alice Henderson did exist then her knowledge of the kidnapping might entail the same punishment as the punishment for kidnapping itself. In American law, once you learn of a crime and fail to report it then there are scenarios where you then acquire your own guilt. It seems that Julia Otis and Alice Henderson each evaded the law. Finding out who they were is still a big part of finding out what happened to Mary Agnes.

This Julia Otis was described as "chic" in the same newspaper article that I took the above letter from. Another phrase to describe her was "expensively garbed."  Furthermore, another source called her "apparently wealthy" (The Edwardsville Intelligencer/May 19th, 1930/Page 1). Additionally, she was called "apparently cultured" and "about 22 years old" (Chicago Tribune/May 15th, 1952/Page 14). 

Other details that you may wish to know about this investigation as are follows:
  • the mother's name was Kathryn Moroney, she was just 17-years old, and she had another child expecting at the time of the kidnapping; I saw her name also spelled as Catherine Moroney and believe that this spelling was correct; Catherine died in 1962
  • her and her husband (Michael Moroney d. 1957) had 2 daughters and 5 sons additional to Mary Agnes Moroney; the names of these children may yield insight into this mystery given the advancements that are being made in familial DNA and online family-tree databases; Anastasia Mirantie, Catherine Land, Michael Jr., Patrick, William, George, and Harold -- those are the names of Mary Agnes's blood siblings
  • Mary Agnes Moroney was kidnapped on what was the second time Julia Otis visited the family and a day after originally meeting them
  • Julia Otis game the title "Mrs." as her own according to The Chicago Tribune's May 8th, 1950 edition (page 59)
  • A "Mrs. Mary McClelland" of San Pablo, California imagined that she was the missing baby in 1952 but I'm assuming this didn't pan out as the case is still active (March 4th, 1952/The Pantagraph/Page 9). McClelland was adopted, she was the right age, she was in California, she resembled the Moroney's other children, she was named Mary, and early results from a blood test didn't eliminate the possibility -- although this was well before DNA testing (Chicago Tribune/March 4th, 1952/Page 11). One source on the matter said "the purported identification is based on alleged similarities in finger prints, blood type and teeth" between McClelland and the Moroneys (Dixon Evening Telegraph/September 4th, 1952/Page 12); that sounds laughable given how we identify people now
  • The parents of Mary Agnes were arrested and questioned by police for about an hour; the feeling I got from this case was that they were not parents that would harm their own child
I would also suggest that this Julia Otis was infertile for a reason other than age. The articles I read frequently call her "young" so age could not have made her infertile. But this case seems to be about a woman who couldn't have children, perhaps due to disease, accident, or genetics. I think she wanted to adopt but kidnapped instead, perhaps because of the red-taped difficulties that might come with adoption. If someone found a Julia Otis born around 1908 in California that was barren but that had a child appear in her custody around 1930 that would be an interesting person to look at -- especially if she was educated, employed a nurse, and was rich.

It could be that Julia Otis was attracted to Mrs. Moroney because the newspaper ad she placed suggested that she, Mrs. Moroney, couldn't afford to care for her children. We can see how someone like Julia Otis -- if that's her real name -- might want to befriend such a person in hopes of an adoption agreement developing.

The keywords with this kidnapping I used for searching were simply "Mary Agnes Moroney." Of course, they spiked in the 1930s as that's when the kidnapping occurred. They dipped in the 1940s but spiked again in the 1950s.

At this time, Catherine Moroney went missing after leaving her husband a note (she returned). Also, around this time there was someone that thought that she was the missing baby and that produced an interest in what was an old case by the 1950s. This person was deemed to not likely be the missing Mary Agnes by the investigators as stated in the oldest article I found on this matter (Chicago Tribune/March 9th, 1962/Page 29).

I also took a look at the name "Julia Otis" when I did keyword searches. I did this with a grain of salt because I don't think it's her real name. Of course, a "eureka" moment would be the name in conjunction with a similar crime. However, I never found that.

Nor did I find the name mentioned in conjunction with "Alice Henderson" except for in the reporting involving this case. I was hoping to find something before the kidnapping that linked any "Julia Otis" to any "Alice Henderson" and then looking at that but it never transpired. If they are fake names, then that would all be a wild-goose chase anyway.

What I did come to was an opinion that this crime was perpetrated by two people. The letters are the huge clues in this case and they seem to be meant to minimize guilt and to manage the emotions of the deprived mother. 

The letters offer assurance to Catherine Moroney that Mary Agnes is safe. This kidnapper is a person with a conscience -- a conscience that doesn't cover kidnapping but that accounts for the emotions of the child's parents. I would say that Julia Otis is not a diabolical person but she's selfish enough to subordinate the emotions of Catherine Moroney to her own desires to have a child in her life.

However, there is a calculative aspect of the letters. "I'm not kidnapping your child -- I'm just borrowing her." This message is communicated and may have been done so to create a legal defense (that I'm sure would fail) in the event that Julia Otis ended up caught any time in the next two months.

If this case is solved, then it will likely be through modern DNA. The Moroneys were a busy bunch and produced eight children. If that created a big family tree and if Mary Agnes Moroney had her own children then DNA links might develop.


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