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Post by Admin on Apr 25, 2020 17:29:32 GMT
First page, new forum.
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Post by Admin on Apr 25, 2020 17:29:41 GMT
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Post by Admin on Apr 29, 2020 1:28:21 GMT
4/25/20 Vanessa G
An “extensive search” is underway for a 20-year-old soldier, who went missing earlier this week while stationed in Texas.
Private First Class Vanessa Guillen was last seen on Wednesday, April 22, at 1:00 p.m. local time in a parking lot at squadron headquarters in Fort Hood, army officials said in a press release, as they asked members of the public for help finding the missing soldier.
Afterward, several items belonging to Guillen were “found in the armory room,” where she had been working before her disappearance. The items included her car keys, ID and wallet.
In addition to releasing several photographs of Guillen, authorities advised that she “was last seen wearing a black T-shirt.”
The soldier’s sister has also shared a series of emotional messages on social media.
“My sister.... last seen two days ago. Phone last tracked at Belton, Texas. No contact with boyfriend, close friends or family,” Mayra Guillen said in a Facebook message on Friday. “Something is not right please help me find her.”
“My little girl,” Mayra wrote in another post. “I promise I'll find you.”
Also, Guillen’s boyfriend, Juan Cruz, wrote in his own message: “Please help me find my girlfriend.”
“She has 3 tattoos on her left arm,” he added. “Please anything helps.”
Anyone with any information about the soldier’s whereabouts is urged to call Army CID Special Agents at 254-495-7767 or the Military Police Desk at (254) 287-4001.
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Post by Admin on Apr 29, 2020 5:24:30 GMT
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Post by Admin on Apr 29, 2020 5:29:04 GMT
4/28/20 Vanessa
A reward of up to $15,000 is being offered for information leading to the whereabouts of a 20-year-old soldier last seen at Fort Hood near Killeen last week, U.S. Army officials said late Monday.
Pfc. Vanessa Guillen was last seen at 1 p.m. April 22 in the parking lot of the Regimental Engineer Squadron Headquarters at Fort Hood, officials said.
The soldier’s identification card, wallet and the keys to her car and base apartment were later found in the armory room where she had been earlier in the day, Army officials said.
Mayra Guillen, the soldier’s older sister, said she sat anxiously in a hotel room near the base on Monday as she waited for any news regarding her sibling’s disappearance. She said officials planned to search the base for her sister.
In response to the coronavirus pandemic, Fort Hood earlier this month closed three of its gates to help control the spread of the virus and limit base access.
However, it’s still unknown whether officials believe the soldier left base using one of the gates that remained open.
“I’m just hoping someone speaks out,” Mayra Guillen told the American-Statesman on Monday. “This is already day six and nobody has said anything.”
Mayra Guillen said the last text conversation she had with her sister was the night before she disappeared. The pair talked about Vanessa’s plans to buy a new car, she said.
However, Mayra Guillen suspected something was wrong the next day when her sister’s boyfriend said she was not answering texts or phone calls.
“As soon as I saw the clock strike 9 p.m. I knew she wouldn’t be working from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m.,” she said. “That’s when I started getting in touch with her sergeant.”
Mayra Guillen said she and Vanessa’s boyfriend have been in Killeen since her sister was listed as missing.
A Facebook page called “Find Vanessa Guillen” was also created by her family to provide updated information on the search.
“She’s such a hardworking girl and positive,” Mayra Guillen said. “She wanted to go into the military for a better opportunity.
“I feel completely lost right now. I don’t know what to do.”
Mayra Guillen said officials have yet to release any clues to the family regarding the circumstances of her sister’s disappearance.
U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command officials, who are leading the investigation, also have not returned requests for comment regarding possible leads in the case.
Anyone with more information about the case should call Army CID special agents at 254-495-7767 or the Military Police Desk at 254-287-4001.
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Post by Admin on Apr 29, 2020 14:02:57 GMT
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Post by Admin on Apr 29, 2020 14:05:44 GMT
4/28/20 Vanessa G
The U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command is offering up to $15,000 for information on the whereabouts of a 20-year-old service member who disappeared last week.
Pfc. Vanessa Guillen was last seen at 1 p.m. on April 22, according to a release from the Fort Hood Press Center. She was last seen outside her Regimental Engineer Squadron Headquarters in Fort Hood, Texas.
Her car keys, room key, wallet, and ID card were all found in the armory where she had been working earlier that day.
"Individuals are strongly encouraged to come forward if they have credible information to help locate Guillen," the release reads. "People wishing to remain anonymous will be honored to the degree allowable under the law and the information will be held in the strictest confidence allowable."
Guillen is 5 foot 2 inches tall and is Hispanic. She was last seen wearing a black T-shirt and purple workout pants, according to the release.
She has had no contact with her friends or family since her disappearance — and all of her belongings were left at base in Fort Hood, sister Mayra Guillen said in a Facebook post.
“Something is not right please help me find her,” she wrote.
Military and civilian police, along with Fort Hood military members, have spearheaded an “extensive search” for Guillen, according to the press release.
Meanwhile, her family continues to hold out hope.
A Facebook page, Find Vanessa Guillen, has been publicizing media reports about her case for the past two days.
“Vanessas biggest passion came to life after joining the military as she did right after graduating high school,” one post reads. “Help us find her.”
Meanwhile, Guillen’s boyfriend has taken to his Twitter feed, sharing reports and asking for help. He also shared a Snapchat apparently sent by Guillen’s brother.
“I promise im gonna find you, even if it’s the last thing I do,” the Snapchat reads. “I ask you guys for prayers for my sister if anyone has seen her pls let me know.”
Anyone with information on this case should contact Army CID Special Agents at (254) 495-7767 or the Military Police Desk at (254) 287-4001.
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Post by Admin on Apr 30, 2020 14:47:21 GMT
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Post by Admin on Apr 30, 2020 14:48:20 GMT
4/29/20 Lisa Irwin
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has an updated age-progressed rendering of what Lisa Irwin would look like today.
She would be 9 years old.
Lisa Irwin was 10 months old when she was last seen at her family's home in the 3600 block of North Lister Avenue on Oct. 3, 2011. She was reported missing early the next day.
Her parents, Jeremy Irwin and Deborah Bradley, told police someone came into their home in the early morning and took the girl while Deborah was asleep and Jeremy was working.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has released a few age-progressed photos of her over the years.
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Post by Admin on May 5, 2020 23:00:46 GMT
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Post by Admin on May 5, 2020 23:02:38 GMT
5/5/20 Gannon
Farstveet.leaked
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) -- The 4th District Attorney's Office says a resident of Adams County has been criminally charged for leaking the arrest affidavit of Letecia Stauch, who's accused of murdering her stepson, Gannon Stauch.
The affidavit was leaked in early April and provides many details that led police to arresting Letecia Stauch after the disappearance of her stepson. Read the KRDO recap here.
Officials haven't identified the person who leaked the affidavit, but we've learned that the suspect is Brighton City Attorney Executive Administrator Sherie Farstveet.
A news conference was held Tuesday afternoon.
Farstveet was charged with official misconduct, a class-2 misdemeanor, and cited Tuesday morning by an investigator with the Adams County DA's Office. Prosecutors said she had access to the court system but didn't work directly for the courts.
The affidavit was filed before Gannon's body was found in Florida, but it alleges a scheme by Letecia to hide his body after she murdered him in their Lorson Ranch home on the Jan. 27, the day he was reported missing.
A judge had sealed the affidavit to the public, but it was ordered unsealed after it was leaked to social media groups. A statement from the 4th Judicial District Attorney's Office says the person accessed the affidavit and released it to an online website that tracks crimes.
Stauch is currently in custody in El Paso County and awaiting trial for first-degree murder, tampering with evidence, and a slew of other charges.
Prosecutor Michael Allen said he doesn't believe there will be any ramifications on Letecia Stauch's case.
Allen said the affidavit was set to be unsealed a week after it was leaked, but officials sought that time to help Gannon's family process the information and answer any questions.
Farstveet has been placed on administrative leave pending an internal investigation, according to the Brighton City Attorney's office.
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Post by Admin on May 5, 2020 23:56:09 GMT
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Post by Admin on May 5, 2020 23:56:25 GMT
5/5/20 Gannon
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — An Adams County woman has been cited for allegedly leaking documents online in the Gannon Stauch murder case, officials announced on Tuesday.
Sherie Farstveet, 53, faces a misdemeanor charge of criminal misconduct, according to the 17th Judicial District Attorney's Office. Officials said she leaked the sealed arrest warrant affidavit for Letecia Stauch, the stepmother of 11-year-old Gannon who is accused of killing the boy in January.
Farstveet is not an employee of the district attorney's office or the court system, nor is she associated with the Stauch case. But Farstveet did have login information for the courts' online system and accessed the affidavit before it was sealed, prosecutor Michael Allen said.
Allen said prosecutors had planned to unseal the affidavit warrant affidavit after discussing the details of the document with Gannon's family.
Letecia Stauch faces a murder charge and eight counts of crime of violence in the case and was arrested March 2. Sixteen days later, on March 18, a road construction worker found Gannon's body just off Highway 90 in Pace, Fla. Letecia Stauch also faces charges of child abuse resulting in death and tampering with a deceased human body.
The affidavit was written on Feb. 28 and did not include information about how Gannon's body ended up in Florida.
Letecia Stauch reported her stepson missing from their Colorado Springs home on Jan. 27. She told police that Gannon Stauch left on foot to play at a friend's house and never returned.
According to the El Paso Sheriff's Office, she made the report around 7 p.m. that day.
The affidavit said Letecia Stauch killed Gannon earlier that day, after about 2:15 p.m. Gannon's body was then likely taken into the garage and loaded into the back of Letecia Stauch's leased Volkswagen Tiguan, the affidavit said.
She later cleaned the scene in Gannon's bedroom and then, on the following evening, Jan. 28, drove Gannon's remains and dumped them in an area off Highway 105 and South Perry Park Road in southern Douglas County, according to the affidavit. Investigators said the Metro Crime Laboratory later determined that blood discovered in Gannon's bedroom and in the Stauchs' garage matched blood on a piece of particleboard found near Highway 105 and South Perry Park Road.
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Post by Admin on May 7, 2020 22:57:22 GMT
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Post by Admin on May 7, 2020 22:59:44 GMT
5/6/20. Dominic Davy
Endicott police are continuing to ask for help from the public in their efforts in locating Dominic Davy, who was last seen almost a month ago in Endicott.
Davy, 30, an adjunct professor at Binghamton University and a Ph.D. student in BU's College of Community and Public Affairs, was last seen leaving a residence on Moss Avenue around 4 a.m. April 10.
His brown Jeep was found that same day unoccupied on the 400 block of River Terrace in the village.
More than a dozen of Davy's students have shared a YouTube video, where they talk about what he means to them. One student said, "He was selfless, he lit up a room as soon as he walked into it, he always put the needs of his students first, he always had his students' backs, and it's our time to have his, so let's bring Dom home."
Davy is in the video, with footage from a class he was instructing remotely. He said it was nice seeing everyone's faces and hearing their voices, and encouraged anyone struggling to reach out to him.
A Facebook page, Help Bring Dom Home, has garnered nearly 6,000 followers and was created in an attempt to spread the word about Davy's disappearance. A $2,000 reward is being offered for information leading to his return.
According to the Facebook page, Davy is an Army veteran, and typically does his morning run and workout around the time he was last seen.
Police are requesting residents and businesses in Endicott, West Endicott or those near the Susquehanna River to review their home or business security videos from between 4 and 8 a.m. April 10.
This is in an effort to see if Davy or his Jeep can be seen in any footage. Police said several ground and river searches have been conducted.
Davy is a black male, about 6 feet tall with black hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a dark-colored shirt, dark shorts and gray/orange sneakers.
Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages are all using the hashtag #HelpBringDomHome to bring information about his case to a wider audience.
Authorities said there is no suspicion of criminal activity but it cannot be ruled out.
Anyone with video or other knowledge or information regarding Davy is asked to contact the Endicott Police Department at 607-785-3341.
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