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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 16:40:38 GMT -5
A. Mark Stebbins On February 15, 1976, at about 1:30 p.m., a 12-year-old boy--Mark Douglas Stebbins--left the Ferndale, Michigan, American Legion Hall to head for his home at 429 E. Saratoga Street in Ferndale to watch a movie on television. His mother, who spoke with him just before he left the hall, called the Ferndale Police Department that night at 11:00 p.m. to report that he had not yet returned home ano. that she was concerned, since he had never done anything like this before. He was, she told the police dispatcher, wearing a blue, hooded parka, blue jeans, a red sweatshirt, and black rubbe': boots. The missing person report filed by Mrs. Stebbins was of little help in finding her son, whom she described as being 4'8" tall, weighing 100 pounds, with reddish-blond hair and blue eyes. However, four days later, at 11:45 a.m. on February 19, a businessman named Mark Boetigheimer left his office at 15660 W. Ten Mile Road in southfield, Michigan, to walk over to the drugstore at New Orleans Mall. Along his route, he glanced toward the northeast corner of the parking lot he was crossing and noticed what he thought might be a mannikin or dummy dressed in a blue jacket and jeans. As he came closer, he saw that it was the body of a young boy; he immediately returned to his office and called the Southfield Police Department. The body, which would soon be identified as that of Mark Stebbins, was removed to the department's security garage where it was checked for injuries and possible cause of death. The autopsy, when performed by Dr. Thomas J. Pentinga, noted that death was due to asphyxia caused by smothering and added that there were also two small crusted lacerations of the scalp on the left rear of the head, that there were discolorations of the wrists and ankles that might be rope marks, and that the anal orifice was widely distended with obvious but superficial lacerations. In the light of the fact that Mark's body was found just befor~ noon on the 19th, the story told to Southfield police by Mack M. Gallop, another
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 16:41:57 GMT -5
occupant of the building housing Boetigheimer's office is of interst. Gallop said that at about 9:30 that morning he had walked his Schnauzer along the edge of the parking lot. He believed that if the body had been there at that time, the dog, who was on a 20-foot leash, would have smelled it and gone over to investigate, thereby leading to its discovery. Thus, there was some evidence that the body was placed near the building after 9:30 a.m. The murder of Mark Stebbins was the first of four interrelated crimes against cl1ildren in ths Woodward Cooridor; more than 10 months would pass before another would be reported. B. Jill Robinson Late in the afternoon of December 22, 1976, l2-year-old Jill Robinson had an argument with her mother, Karol Robinson, with whom she lived in Royal Oak, Michigan. Their dispute involved some household chores Jill had failed to do, and at its climax, Jill's mother told her to get out until she could become part of the family. Jill went to her bedroom, packed some clothes and a blue and green plaid blanket into her denim backpack and, dressed in blue jeans, shirt/ snow bdots, bright orrulge winter jacket, and blue knit cap with a yellow design in its border, walked out the door. She hadn't returned by early evening as her mother expected her to do, and at 11:30 p.m. that night, Jill's father, who is divorced from her luother and living in Birmingham, Michigan, reported her missing. She was not seen alive again. Her body was found about 8:45 a.m. on December 26, alongside Route I-75 just north of Sixteen Mile Road in Troy, Michigan; her killer had laid hex down on her back on the snowy shoulder of the road and blown the top of her head off with a l2-gauge shotgun. She was wearing her backpack, which still contained the plaid blanket. The autopsy report on Jill Robinson was prepared by Dr. Robert F. Sillery, chief pathologist for the Oakland County Medical Exanuner's Office; it said she had died from Shock and hemorrhage due to a shotgun wound of the head. There were no signs of sexual molestation or penetration, and her hymen was intact; a lightly stained tampon was in her girl thingy (it had come from a box which she had purchased herself and which her mother later discovered).
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 16:43:19 GMT -5
Despite the many reports that were telephoned to police of seeing a girl Jill's age in cars or along 1-75, no valid leads were developed, and there is little or no real information regarding her disappearance, whereaboutsfor four days, or who her murderer might be. The police know what kind of shotgun shell was used and what size shot; it is a common variety, easily obtainable in a number of local gun and hardware stores. One unexplained aspect of the case: Jill's bike was fuQ~d by a neighborhood boy on the afternoon of December 27 behind the Valenti and Lieberman offices on N. Main Street in Royal Oak; no one knows whether she rode it there on the 22nd when she disappeared or whether it was placed there later. c. Kristine Mihelich Just one week after Jill Robinson was found in the snow along a busy highway, Mrs. Deborah Ascroft called the Berkley, Michigan, Police Department at 6:00 p.m. on January 2, 1977, to report that her 10-year-old daughter, Kristine Mihelich (usually called Kris) had gone to the 7-11 Store at Twelve Mile Road and Oakshire at 3:00 p.m. that afternoon and had not returned. The clerk at that store remembered selling a teenage movie magazine to a young girl about 3:00 p.m.; she was able to tentatively identify the girl as Kris after being shown a photograph. By noon the next day, every police department in the area had a copy of that photo, and Detroit-area radio and TV stations were broadcasting information about the missing girl. Again, despite many telephone calls purporting to give clues or tips--including several calls from a l4~year-old girl pretending to be Kris--nothing of a useful nature was received by the police. On the 19th day after her disappearance, Kris Mihelich was found. A U.S. Postal Service mailman, Jerome Wozny of Walled Lake, Michigan was delivering mail on Bruce Lane, a dead-end street west of Telegraph Road in Franklin Village, Michigan, when he spotted something in the snow-filled ditch alongside the road; the time was about 11:45 a.m. Something of a scavenger of items he noticed it as he drove along in his mail truck. Wozny stopped, backed up, got out, and walked over to a "blue something" in the snow. When he saw an arm and a hand as he got closer, he realized he had found a body. Getting
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 16:44:31 GMT -5
back in his truck, he drove immediately to the Franklin Village Police Department to report his finding. Dr. Sillerly' s autopsy report and sl.lbsequen't comments were interesting' if not enlightening. The cause of death was asphyxia caused by smothering. Also, the body was not frozen through, it had been exposed in the snow for less than 24 hours, in all probability. There was no gross evidence of sexual molestation or penetration in either girl thingy or anus, yet Dr. Sillery told a startled group of state crime lab technicians he had found sperm in both girl thingy and rectum. He could not account for how they had gotten there, despite some unique theories about the forcefulness of ejacl,llat,ion. The fact that anothe~ pathologist and two State Police laboratory technicians were subsequently unable to detect sperm in the tissue slides he prepared perhaps explains things adequately--t.here were no sperm, and Kristine, like Jill, had not been violated. Dr. Sillery also expressed the view that Kris had dressed herself; her clothes were neat and clean, including her underwear, although she had been away from home 19 days. Deborah Ascroft, Kris' mother, commented th(~t two things made her think Kris had been dressed by someone else, probably after she was killed; her blouse was tied in front, not in back as she normally tied it, and her pants were tucked into her boots, a thing she never did. During the nearly three weeks between the day Kris disappeared from somewhere along her presumed t'oute between the 7-11 Store and the bowling alley where her mother tended bar, the task force concept of looking for the kidnapper first took shape. Lt. Jerry Simmons of the Southfield Police Department set up a meeting for all police departments with an interest in the recent Robinson homicide and the Mihelich disappearance. The officers present discussed the use of a computer for handling the information being accumulated by the departments in question, in order to avoid duplication of investigative effort, since the same names were coming in mQre than once or twice. They also talked about sett~ng up a group qf officers consisting of one or two from each department involved in the disappearances of the children; the gr.oup could be called on to assist as new information to be
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 16:47:11 GMT -5
investigated came in or they would be available as a knowledgeable group if they were needed. The Oak.land County Task Force had its beginnings at this meeting. D. Timothy King Police departments in Oakland County were still looking for the killer of Kris Mihelich when, on March 16, 1977, another child disappeared. Timothy King, a slim, attractive ll-year-old boy who lived at 1509 Yorkshire Street in Birmingham, Michigan, was last seen by a member of his family at about 7:40 p.m., when his older sister, Catherine, gave him 30 cents to buy candy at a nearby store. Cather;ine was going into Detroit that evening to see a stage show with some girl friends from her high school; Tim's two older brothers were out of the house, one babysitting for a neighbor's youngster and the other practicing with the cast of a school play; his parents were having dinner at a Birmingham restaurant. As Tim left, he asked Catherine to lea.ve the front door ajar so that he could get back into the house, and when the Kings returned home at 9:00 p.m. they fou;..d the door still ajar and Tim missing. After looking for him in the neighborhood and phoning the houses of friends where they thought he might have gone, they called the Birmingham Police Department. By 9:15 the next morning, the embryonic task force working in Southfield knew the King boy was missing, and Birmingham Police Chief Rollin (Jerry) Tobin had asked for full task force involvement in the case. By afternoon on March 17, a new task force headquarters was set up in the Adams Fire House in Birmingham and was hard at work processing the many reports that concerned citizens were phoning in. Routine investigative procedures established that the salesgirl at the Hunter/Maple drug store!where Tim was to have bought his candy did recall seeing Tim King; he had made the purchase. Further, in an important break, a woman witness came forth to report that at about 8:30 p.m. on the night Tim disappeared she had been loading groceries i.nto her car parked on the lot near the drug store. She remembered seeing a small boy in a rea. jacket with emblems on it (a good description of Tim's red nylon Birmingham Hockey Association jacket) talking to a man standing by a car some two car-lengths
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 16:51:47 GMT -5
from her. She was able to describe the man well enough for a police artist to produce a composite sketch of him; further, she thought his car ~as darkblue Gremlin with a white, upswept:. stripe (called a "hockey stick" stripe) along its side. The sketch of the suspect and a photo of a similar car were sent to all local police departments and were available to all members of the task force, now rapidly growing in size as more local detectives. were assigned to the case. Even as investigative activity accelerated, the report that many detectives had grimly anticipated was received. At 11:15 p.m. on March 22, the Livonia, Michigan, Police Department sent a car in response to a call from three witnesses who had discovered a body lying in a ditch on the west side of Gill Street, a tenth of a rule south of Eight Mile Road. The body was that of a boy approximately 10 years old, wearing a red nylon jacket with a BRA crest, denim shirt, green trousers, and white tennis shoes with blue and red stripes. Tim King had been found. Ten feet away from his body was the orange skateboard that he took with him to the store. On the death certificate prepared by Dr. John Smialek and Dr. Werner Spitz of the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office, the cause of death was listed as "smothered." Dr. Spitz's opinion, when he first examined the boy's body at 2:00 a.m. on March 23 was that Tim had been dead from six to eight hours and had been placed along Gill Road about three hours before he was found. The autopsy report showed that he had eaten a meal of fowl about an hour before he was killed. His wrists carried marks that might have been caused by binding, but his body was very clean, including fingernails and toenails. He had been sexually assaulted, the anal region showing clear signs of some form of ~use. E. Patterns In their analysis of the four Oakland County murders, the investigating officers noted certain similarities in the crimes that supported the theory that they were interrelated, that is coumdtted by a single killer or small group of killers: 1. All four victims were alone when abducted; also, they were all taken from business areas, in or near parking lots. 9
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 17:00:20 GMT -5
2. Two victims were abducted on a Sunday afternoon, two on a Wednesday evening. 3. Victims were held captive, for periods ranging from 3 to 19 days. 4. Victims appeared to have been well fed while held and not subjected to weather or other exposure. 5. The victims were well cared for during their period of captivity, including caring for their normal biological needs. All the bodies were clean, and Tim King's body was described as Clinically clean (his finger and toe nails had been scraped). 6. All four victims were dressed in their own clothing (possibly by someone else) just before or after death. 7. All four bodies were deposited along roadsides where they would be readily found. 8. There was no evidence of sexual molestation of either girl; both boys showed obvious anal dilation. 9. Apparently little if any force was used in the abductions; no commotions were reported in this regard. On the other hand, there are certain differences that tend to make the interrelationship of the crimes less positive. For example, Jill Robinson was killed along the edge of a highway with a shotgun, a noisy and attentiongetting method, while the other three were smothered, probably by holding a hand over their mouths and pinching their nostrils shut. Students of the pathology of sex would probably point to the probable lack of interest in pre-adolescent girls on the part of a homosexual assailant of young boys. And, the killeld~ timing was inconsistent; the Stebbins boy was murdered in February, 1976; the next victim was seized at the end of December, 1976, followed by one in January and one in March. Also, the victims were kept for varying lengths of time: 3~, 4, 6, and 19 days. There are other contradictory aspects as well; the cleanliness of the victims has been seen by investigators as a largely successful attempt on the part of the killer to destroy possible evidence--scrapings from under fingernails, dirt from clothing, or handprints on skin. These procedures, on the other hand, could have been part of the compulsive cleanliness of a far-from-normal individual. Perspective takes on special significance when making judgments on such details.
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 17:02:28 GMT -5
IV. THE OAKLAND COUNTY SPECIAL TASK FORCE A. Genesis The successful formation of a cooperative major crime task force in southern Oakland County north of Detroit speaks for the enormity of the crimes being investigated and the pressure on the police to solve them--pressure both from the public in demanding an end to this threat to children and from themselves as frustrated professionals faced with a cunning and careful criminal. There are more than 70 different police forces in the Detroit area, varying greatly in size from Franklin Village with 5 personnel to Livonia with 180 and to Detroit itself with over 5,,300 and exhibiting different degrees of territorial jealousy. In each murder, the abduction took place in one jurisdiction, and the body was found in another. Nonetheless, the task force was formed, funded, and has operated effectively in making inroads in the accumulation of 11,000 tips and leads that confronted the detectives in April 1977. B. Impetus For Mobilization As noted eaxlier, the Task Force originally began working out of the Intelligence Office of the Southfield Police Departme~t after Lt. Simmons of the department had called a meeting of the police departments concerned with the Kris Mihelich disappearance. That meeting was held on January 12, 1977, and there was still a nucleus of investigators working on the Mihelich case when Chief Tobin of Birmingham asked for assistance in dealing with Tim King's abduction. By afbernoon on March 17, a new Task Force l<eadquarters had been set up at the Adams Fire Station in Birmingham, and within a very short period of time as many as 180 to 200 detectives were working out of that office, including investigators from some 51 communities in the area as well as the Detroit Police Department, the Oakland County Sheriff's Department, and the Michigan State Police. Because the fire station quarters were inadequate for a group that size, on March 24 the Task Force was moved to Valley Wqod School at 32605 Bellvine Trail in Beverly Hill, just outside Birmingham. .~ elementary school that had been closed because of a dwindling student population, Valley Wood
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 17:05:44 GMT -5
was ideal for the round-the-clock Task Force operation, in that it had a large kitchen, a public address system, and a parking lot. A number of phone lines were put in so that the hundreds of calls coming in every day could be handled, and although they have the disadvantage of being single lines without a controlling switchboard or panel, time was the overriding factor. The phone set-,up wm'''s because the public adcl£ess system permits investigators to be called tu ~he phone. As the workload of investigating leads continued to grow after Tim King's body was found, it became necessary to make some plans for continuing the Task Force, whose costs were becoming an increasingly heavy burden on the budgets of the many police departments that had sent volunteer detectives (in late March there were still as many as 134 detectives on the day shift-plus 18 Michigan State Police officers running the tip room). By March 31, efforts were underway to seek Law Enforcement Assistance Administration funds in order to allow the Task Force to continue operations for up to six months. Chief Tobin was the spearhead of this effort, working with Dr. Noel Bufe and Don Jackson of the Michigan Office of Criminal Justice Programs and James Rhodes, coordinator of the Oakland County Criminal Justice Program, in preparing the preliminary request for grant aid. On April 12, Robert O. Heck of th~ LEAA Office of Regional Operations and Tom Tubbs of LEAA Region V in Chicago met with the Michigan state planners, Chief Tobin, and Michigan State Police officials. The final grant requests were worked out at that time, with LEAA assistance being predicated not only on the need to continue the investigative task force but also on the desire to document the incid~nts and the investigative activity in a process-evaluative manner so that future such major investigative efforts could fierive the benefit and guidance of Michigan's experience. C. The Grants As approved, the grants for the Task Force were as follows: Grant I, funded through the State Office of Criminal Justice Programs, was broken down like this: $306,888 in Federal funds channeled through the Michigan OCJP; $17,049 in state funds; and $17,050 in local funds ($2,131 apiece for the eight commmlities involved), for a total of $341,987. 12
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 17:12:42 GMT -5
Grant II totaled $295,675, including $133,675 to cover crime analysis personnel, support equipment, and management personnel (consisting of seven Michigan State Police officers, to be used as coordinators, field supervisors, and evidence technicians); $60,000 for 200 man-days of technical assistance, if needed; and $100,000 in technology transfer funds that include the development of a manual for handling similar major investigative efforts. D. Organization The Task Force organization, as structured for the six-month extended investigations phase, includes State Police 1st Lt. Robert H. Robertson as Coordinator, with State Police Det. Sgt. Joe Krease as his assistant as well as Street Coordinator. There are two d~tectives from ec\ch of the eight communi ties involved (the four from ~'lhich victims disappeared--Fernda1e, Royal Oak, Berkley, and Birmingham, and the four where they were found--Southfield, Troy, Franklin, and Livonia), plus two apiece from the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office and the Oakland County Sheriff's Department (Sheriff Johannes Spreen has assigned additional deputies to the case, working both with the Task Force and independently), and three Michigan State Police computer and tip room personnel. The Detroit Police Department has also kept four detective volunteers on hand to check out leads in the city. In addition to these 25 professional inve.'ltigators and specialists, four clerical personnel were authorized as well as two additional civilians -two work with the computers and the LEIN (Law Enforcement Information Netwclrk) • An organizational chart of the Task Force follows as Chart I. E. Operations Task FOrce operations have settled down to investigative checking out of the more than 11,000 accumulated leads or tips that were phoned or written in during the days of Tim King's disappearance and the following weeks, plus current leads and reports as they are received. The tips have been computerized, as will be discussed below, to improve handling procedures, prevent duplication of effort, and provide for record-keeping. The Task Force ran two shifts through April, then went on a one-shift operation on May 1.
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 24, 2011 17:15:41 GMT -5
OAKLAND COUNTY SPECIAL TASt< FOP~CE O.C.S.T.F. COORDINATOR MICH. STATE POLICE LT. R. H. ROBERTSON I TECHNICAL DENNIS MC KEE LIAISON OFFICERS STREET COORDINATOR f--.. SGT. JOE KREASE I COMMUNITY COHMUNITY PARENT VICTIM ABDUCTED FOUND LIAISON I 1 I I I I ~ STEBBINS LT. SULLIVAN LT. SIMMONS DOAN TIP RECEIVING f- I I I [SGT. GREEN 1 I TIP PROCESSING f- ROBINSON LT. RINGER GREEN \0- MICH. STATE POLICE SGT. R. TODD I I L.E.H.S. SUPPORT UNIT I [SGT. I I DET. IT»1I I-- HICH. STATE POLICE I- MIllALICH SGT. PICHE KREASE SGT. P. HOGAN "--- EV InENCE- KING ' - VARAJON ~GT. VARAJON ] I KALBl"LEISCH ] EVIDENCE- MIIIALICH- PICHE """- KING LT. KALBFLEISCH EVIDENCE- ROBINSON- GREEN EVIDENCE- STEBBINS- DOAN .,--
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 25, 2011 21:53:50 GMT -5
C. Jane Allan Jane Lou:Lse Allan of Royal Oak, Michigan, was the third fatality involving a young girl that has been erroneously linked by media coverage to the four southern Oakland County crimes. ~ well-developed girl of nearly 14 years, she was last seen in her Royal Oak home on Saturday, August 7, 1976, about 12:30 p.m. Sometime later that afternoon she hitchhiked 17 miles to visit her boyfriend, Tony Galassi, in Auburn H~ightsf Michigan. Tony reprimanded her for hitching, and she left his house shorrly thereafter, presumably to catch a ride home, for she was a confirmed hitchhiker who had remained away from home several times during the preceding year without telling her mother ( of her whereabouts. Four days later, the decowposed body of a girl thought to be about 17 years old was found floating in the Miami River, mear Miamisburg, Ohio, her hands tied behind her back with pieces of wh~te tee-shirt. Clothing, jewelry, and a recently sutured cut on the wrist led to the eventual identification of the body as that of the missing Jane Allan. The Ohio coroner's office believed Jane was dead before she was thrown into the river, possibly from carbon monoxide poisoning; it was impossible to tell if she had been assaulted. Police informants in Ohio linked Jane to a young girl seen with members of a motorcycle gang, the Dayton Outlaws, but no solid evidence ever tied her death to the circumstances of the report. It seems more probable that she was picked up while hitchhiking and either deliberately or accidentally killed by the motorist, who then disposed of her body in the river. 3
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 26, 2011 9:26:27 GMT -5
II. THE FIRST THREE A. Cynthia Cadieux The last time rulyone saw 16-year-old Cynthia Rae Cadieux alive in her home town of Roseville, Michigan, was at about 8:30 p.m. on the night of January IS, 1976. Her nude body was found by the side of Franklin Road in Bloomfield Township by a passing motorist at 1:05 a.m. the next morning, her skull crushed by a blunt instrument. She had been raped and sodomized, possibly by more than one person. Her clothing was never found, but there were unconfirmed reports from informer channels that she had been abducted by four hoodlums, violated, murdered, and dumped along the roadsid~. Her clothing may have been for a time in th~ possession of a girlfriend of one of the killers, but this report also was unconfirmed. The Cadieux case has been assessed by investigators as an unsolved sex-related murder having no connection with the four child killings in the Woodward Cooridor. B. Sheila Srock The second young victim to die was Sheila Srock, a chunky 14-year-old orphan who lived with her older brother in Birmingham, Michigan, an attractive and affluent community near the northern end of the corridor. Sh~ila was babysitting in an upstairs room of a house at 1772 Villa street early on the evening of January 19, 1976, when she was surprised about 8:20 p.m. by a man who had just come £rom breaking into three other houses in the neighborhood, ,,,-sing a prybar and a screwdriver. Her assailant, described by a witness as a thin, young, white male, 18-25 years old, 5'10" to 6' tall with a sparse beard, prominent nose, and pointed chin, removed her clothing, raped her, sodomized her, and, as a horrified neighbor watched from a nearby roof from which he was shoveling snow, killed her with a series of shots from his small-caliber, semi-automatic pistol. Taking with hjm what loot he could find, including a .38 revolver and some jewelry, he mingled with the crowd attracted to the house by the shots, asked several people what was happening, calmly got into a 1967 Cadillac parked along the street, and drove away. Despite the description of the man and the car, he has never been appreilended.
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 29, 2011 6:03:36 GMT -5
The Associate Press ran and article -30 years ago-about the father of one of the Oakland County Children-They told how the killer was being hunted by police...and they quoted Mr. Robinson-Jills Father...as being very angry at the 200,member Law Enforcement task force -at the time it had been three months since his 12 year old daughter Jill was found dead of a shotgun blast near Interstate Highway 75...For her father,Thomas Robinson of Birmingham,those months had been filled with frustration in the hunt for the person police believe killed Jill...Her father was bitter about the lack of attention her case was getting from a special task force probing the murders..."I know individual officers spared no efforts on Jills case,but where the hell is the imaginative leadership??".....I can just feel what he must be thinking today...34 years later...and not a new item has been written in Jills file.....even though -a witness has come forward-with the location of where her bike was really found and how it got to the next location So now I'm asking-"Where The Hell Is The Imaginative Leadership"??
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Post by Helen Dagner on May 30, 2011 0:23:32 GMT -5
RE-POSTED-I just read all about Tim and I am now inspired to start thinking about this again.When I was working the case back in the 70s I had to think like others however now I can think for myself.What do you think of this?John's passport has been a sticking point - correct? Here's a thought. If he had a passport in 1977, I think it would have been outdated in 1992. To get a new passport issued, one must turn in the OLD passport first.
If John has gone overseas anytime during the 90's or 2000's - it has to be on a new passport which means the old one would have to be on file with the government.
1) If he can still produce that passport now - then it must be a fake. He certainly wouldn't turn the fake one in to the gov't.
2) If he did turn it in to get a new one, then it might be filed away in a box somewhere and could be reviewed to see it's validity.
Just some thoughts.South Lyon, MI
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