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| Haynes,Jon T.missing July 24,1981; Colorado | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Aug 9 2006, 12:41 PM (433 Views) | |
| oldies4mari2004 | Aug 9 2006, 12:41 PM Post #1 |
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Unregistered
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http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/h/haynes_jon.html |
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| oldies4mari2004 | Dec 21 2006, 11:53 PM Post #2 |
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Unregistered
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Jon Truscott Haynes Above: Haynes, circa 1981 Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance Missing Since: July 24, 1981 from Boulder, Colorado Classification: Endangered Missing Date Of Birth: December 21, 1962 Age: 18 years old Height and Weight: 5'10, 140 pounds Distinguishing Characteristics: Caucasian male. Blond hair, blue eyes. Details of Disappearance Haynes moved from San Francisco, California to Boulder, Colorado in late July of 1981 to attend the University of Colorado. He was last heard from on July 24 of that year when he called his father in California from a 7-11 store in the vicinity of 28th Street and Baseline in Boulder. Haynes has not been heard from since that phone call. His car, a beige 1981 two-door Subaru, which had California license plates numbered 1CPK205, was found abandoned off a county road in the small town of Nederland in Boulder County, Colorado. The windows were rolled down and it was raining. Police had no reason to be suspicious about the vehicle and did not pick it up, since Haynes was not reported missing until August 10. A few days after they saw the car, when the police returned to the scene where it was seen, the vehicle was gone. Information on it was entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) computer database, which is accessible by law enforment officers all over the country, but the car has never been seen again and neither has Haynes. On the way from San Francisco to Boulder, Haynes had picked up a hitchhiker, who later told police that Haynes mentioned plans to buy marijuana in Boulder. The hitchhiker is not considered a suspect in Haynes's disappearance, but his information suggests that drugs may have been a factor in his case. Some speculate that Haynes ran afoul of a drug dealer in Boulder and was murdered as a result. Another theory is that Haynes joined a religious cult that was active in the area at the time. No evidence has been found to support any hypothesis, however. Haynes's father petitioned to have his son declared legally dead in Contra Costa, California in June of 1982. The petition was granted in March 1983. Haynes's sister is still looking for him. His Social Security number was thought to have been used in California in the late 1990s, but this turned out to be a clerical error. Some of Haynes's loved ones believe he staged his disappearance for unknown reasons; others say he would have never left his family and probably met with foul play. His case remains unsolved. Boulder authorities are handling the investigation. Investigating Agency If you have any information concerning this case, please contact: Boulder County Sheriff's Office 303-441-3621 OR 303-441-4444 Source Information The Doe Network The National Center for Missing Adults Charley Project Home |
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| luvmycat | Dec 28 2006, 12:49 PM Post #3 |
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Sneezy!
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http://z13.invisionfree.com/PorchlightUSA/...?showtopic=1172 |
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Albert Einstein: The world is a dangerous place to live, not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it. ![]() http://icaremissingpersonscoldcases.yuku.com/ | |
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| Ell | Aug 9 2009, 08:01 AM Post #4 |
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Heart of Gold
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Missing and unidentified need our help BOULDER, Colo. — The U.S. Justice Department calls the plight of the missing and unidentified dead "the nation's silent mass disaster." Where are the missing, and who are the dead? In the hopes that someone will come forward with a tip, the Boulder County Sheriff's Office is releasing information on its cold missing-persons cases. "Someone may have a clue, and if so, we'd certainly like to hear from them," said Division Chief Phil West in a recent interview. STORY TOOLS E-mail story Comments iPod friendly Printer friendly More Lifestyles Columnists 'Buddy Boulder' mascot was short-lived A lifelong love affair with Eldora Boulder Canyon's "perfect tree" was a tourist attraction Share and Enjoy [?] ShareThis Share your video, photos and news tips. In a notebook in West's office are all the known facts about the disappearance of Jon Truscott Haynes. In 1981, the 18-year-old graduated from high school in Orinda, Calif. As a graduation present, his father gave him a brand new beige Subaru hatchback. Haynes had been accepted at the University of Colorado and arrived in Boulder on July 22. He picked up a hitchhiker who was later interviewed by Sheriff's detectives, and he spent his first night at the KOA Kampground, then located in Boulder. The next day, Haynes called home and asked his father for money and promising to keep in touch. On July 24, he called a friend from a pay phone in Nederland, in the mountains west of Boulder. That friend -- 28 years ago -- was the last person to talk with the missing man. On July 26, a Sheriff's deputy and a Nederland deputy marshal saw Haynes' Subaru parked near the community. The following day, the Subaru was gone. Haynes was officially reported missing on August 10. According to Camera accounts from the time, Haynes' father was convinced that his son was murdered near Nederland. In 1983, Haynes was declared legally dead, and his car has never been found. Another missing person still on the books is the Rev. Rex L. Douglas, former pastor of the Old Stone Congregational Church in Lyons. His wife last heard from her then-61-year-old husband in January 1984. He had called her while on a business trip to Missouri, explaining that he would be spending a few days in Kansas City, but he never boarded a return flight to Denver. Mark Allen Bonner, 24, disappeared under suspicious circumstances in 1978 while house-sitting at a residence on Neva Road, north of Boulder. Investigation at the time implicated him in drug trafficking; whether his disappearance was voluntary or involuntary has never been established. In 2005, Alzheimer's patient Fred Dingler, 82, left his Boulder home in his car, without explanation or notification to his family. His vehicle was found several weeks later near Hanna, Wyoming, but Dingler, like the others, has never been found. The Sheriff's Office also would appreciate any leads on the identities of the remains of three adult males, all thought to have been transients. In October 1993, hikers found a 30- to 35-year-old black male on the north side of the second Flatiron. The following month, the badly decomposed remains of a 26- to 30-year-old Caucasian male with a beard, brown shoulder-length hair, and a large hooked nose were found near Gregory Canyon. Then, in August 2002, skeletal remains of a 16- to 21-year-old Hispanic male were discovered behind the Silver Saddle Motel at the mouth of Boulder Canyon. Anyone with information on these cases is asked to call West at 303-441-3621. Silvia Pettem and Carol Taylor now alternate as authors of the history column. To reach Pettem, write her at the Camera, P.O. Box 591, Boulder 80306, or email pettem@earthlink.net http://www.dailycamera.com/news/2009/aug/0...elp/?printer=1/ © 2006 Daily Camera and Boulder Publishing, LLC. |
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Ell Only after the last tree has been cut down; Only after the last fish has been caught; Only after the last river has been poisoned; Only then will you realize that money cannot be eaten. | |
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| monkalup | Jan 8 2010, 08:33 PM Post #5 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Haynes, Jon Date Missing: 7/24/1981 Date of Death: Jurisdiction: Boulder County Location: Local Case Number: CBI Case Number: Case Status: Unresolved Case Type: Missing Person Detective Name and Phone: http://www.echelondata.com/clients/FOVAMP/...tail.php?id=180 |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Jul 2 2011, 07:30 PM Post #6 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Jon Truscott Haynes Last seen in Boulder, Colorado on July 24, 1981 Vital statistics: White male. Born on December 21, 1962. Blond hair, green eyes. Was eighteen at the time. NCIC number: M-087563573 Circumstances: Jon Haynes disappeared on or about July 24, 1981. He was originally from the San Francisco, California, area, and he was relocating to Boulder to attend the University of Colorado. He was last heard from when he called his dad, in California. From phone records, that call was placed from a 7-11 store in Boulder. He was reported missing by his father on August 10, 1981. He had driven to the area and had picked up a hitch hiker (Danny Torres) via an acquaintance, enroute. Torres provided information that Haynes had been trying to buy some marijuana (cold contacts in Boulder) before they parted company. Torres was interviewed and is not considered a suspect in Haynes' disappearance; his information fueled speculation that Haynes ran afoul of a drug dealer and was killed. There was no firm evidence to support that speculation. His car, a beige 1981 Subaru hatchback with California license plates 1CPK105, was located by a Sheriff's deputy off of a county road near the town of Nederland, in the mountainous western half of Boulder County, on July 26, 1981 (before he was reported missing). It was unoccupied and, aside from the fact that the windows were down and it was drizzling rain, nothing appeared suspicious. When the deputy returned a few days later, the car was gone. It was subsequently entered into the CCIC/NCIC computer, but it has never been re-located. A religious cult was active in the area at the time, and it was speculated (again, without substance) that he had been brainwashed and had joined the cult. Interviews with Haynes' friends from high school were about equally split: half of them believed that he would orchestrate his own disappearance; the others claimed that he would never do that to his family. No one had any idea as to where he would go. James Haynes (an attorney) had his son declared legally dead in Contra Costa, CA, County Superior Court in March, 1983 (having filed the petition in June 1982). Haynes sister is still pursuing the case intermittently. She found that Jon's social security number was being used in California a couple of years ago. That was found to be a clerical error. Classified as Endangered Missing. Theories: The Haynes case seem to be pretty complex, mostly because of that, if we consider all circumstances of his disappearance as well as his lifestyle and personality, there is almost no option impossible about what his fate could be. Seemingly he was young and independent person, for the first time far from his home and on his own. There is a witness who claims that Haynes enjoyed smoking marijuana, and had contacts with drug-dealers, what could put person like him in very dangerous situation. Independent but still naive young people are sort of ideal victims for drug-related crime, and can become very easily manipulated, blackmailed or otherwise controlled by drug-dealers. The first possibility that I will discuss is a drug deal gone bad, and crime committed by his acquaintances that Haynes might be victim of. The fact that his car was left for a short time off of a county road in mountainous part of Boulder, unoccupied and with its windows opened, and after it disappeared never to be found again, supports the theory that Haynes might be dead. His murderers could drive in his car to the mountains in order to dump Haynes's body (the sheriff's deputy might have seen the car just in time when murderers were hiding his body), and after it's done they probably disposed the car itself (what explains the fact that it never appeared again somewhere). There is still a possibility that hitchhiker Danny Torres knows more about Haynes's fate, because as he the last known person to see Haynes and aware of his drug-related acquaintances. But, Torres is not considered a suspect. Some of Haynes's friends say that there was a possibility for him to stage his own disappearance. Maybe he would do that in order to be able to continue with his drug-related lifestyle and live amongst people who share his interests. If he actually did that, there is also a possibility that he died or was killed some longer time after his disappearance. The less probable, especially because of the amount of time passed, but still not impossible, is that Haynes is still alive and does not want to have contact with his family. I do not think that he joined religious cult that some say was active in the area. People who hang around religious cults usually let others know what they are in or show some signs of brainwashing before they cut all contact with their families and friends. If you have any information as to Haynes' whereabouts, please e-mail For the Lost at this address. Or you may contact the Boulder County Sheriff's Office, Lt. Phil West, at 303-441-3621. Any tips sent by e-mail will be kept confidential. Information used to compile this case file came from the following sources: The National Center For Missing and Exploited Children National Center For Missing Adults The Charley Project The Doe Network http://www.forthelost.org/jhaynes.html |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Jul 2 2011, 07:32 PM Post #7 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Boulder County Sheriff's Office Lt. Phil West 303-441-3621 Agency Case Number: S81-6082 NCIC Number: M-087563573 dentals |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Jul 2 2011, 07:35 PM Post #8 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Missing and unidentified need our help Article Text: T he U.S. Justice Department calls the plight of the missing and unidentified dead "the nation's silent mass disaster." Where are the missing, and who are the dead? In the hopes that someone will come forward with a tip, the Boulder County Sheriff's Office is releasing information on its cold missing-persons cases. "Someone may have a clue, and if so, we'd certainly like to hear from them," said Division Chief Phil West in a recent interview. In a notebook in West's office are all the known facts about the disappearance of Jon Truscott Haynes. In 1981, the 18-year-old graduated from high school in Orinda, Calif. As a graduation present, his father gave him a brand new beige Subaru hatchback. Haynes had been accepted at the University of Colorado and arrived in Boulder on July 22. He picked up a hitchhiker who was later interviewed by Sheriff's detectives, and he spent his first night at the KOA Kampground, then located in Boulder. The next day, Haynes called home and asked his father for money and promising to keep in touch. On July 24, he called a friend from a pay phone in Nederland, in the mountains west of Boulder. That friend -- 28 years ago -- was the last person to talk with the missing man. On July 26, a Sheriff's deputy and a Nederland deputy marshal saw Haynes' Subaru parked near the community. The following day, the Subaru was gone. Haynes was officially reported missing on August 10. According to Camera accounts from the time, Haynes' father was convinced that his son was murdered near Nederland. In 1983, Haynes was declared legally dead, and his car has never been found. Another missing person still on the books is the Rev. Rex L. Douglas, former pastor of the Old Stone Congregational Church in Lyons. His wife last heard from her then-61-year-old husband in January 1984. He had called her while on a business trip to Missouri, explaining that he would be spending a few days in Kansas City, but he never boarded a return flight to Denver. Mark Allen Bonner, 24, disappeared under suspicious circumstances in 1978 while house-sitting at a residence on Neva Road, north of Boulder. Investigation at the time implicated him in drug trafficking; whether his disappearance was voluntary or involuntary has never been established. In 2005, Alzheimer's patient Fred Dingler, 82, left his Boulder home in his car, without explanation or notification to his family. His vehicle was found several weeks later near Hanna, Wyoming, but Dingler, like the others, has never been found. The Sheriff's Office also would appreciate any leads on the identities of the remains of three adult males, all thought to have been transients. In October 1993, hikers found a 30- to 35-year-old black male on the north side of the second Flatiron. The following month, the badly decomposed remains of a 26- to 30-year-old Caucasian male with a beard, brown shoulder-length hair, and a large hooked nose were found near Gregory Canyon. Then, in August 2002, skeletal remains of a 16- to 21-year-old Hispanic male were discovered behind the Silver Saddle Motel at the mouth of Boulder Canyon. Anyone with information on these cases is asked to call West at 303-441-3621. Silvia Pettem and Carol Taylor now alternate as authors of the history column. To reach Pettem, write her at the Camera, P.O. Box 591, Boulder 80306, or email pettem@earthlink.net |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Jul 2 2011, 07:36 PM Post #9 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Daily Camera (Boulder, CO) June 1, 2003 Section: Living & Arts Page: D1 VANISHED Families of missing adults find search frustrating, heartbreaking Author: Susan Glairon, Camera Staff Writer Article Text: "I have a really bad feeling." Sarah Haynes never forgot those chilling words. Her father, Jim Haynes, a San Francisco lawyer, made the statement at breakfast only hours after her brother Jon failed to call home as planned. Jon, 18, had arrived in Boulder July 22, 1981, to attend the University of Colorado. On July 23, he called home and requested money to tide him over until the university dormitories opened. Jim instructed his son to get a post office box and to call him the following day with the number, so Jim could send the money. Jon never called. His new beige Subaru was seen outside Nederland on July 26, with the windows down. It was raining. The next day, the car vanished. The blond teenager with greenish brown eyes was never heard from again. His car was never found. "My brother was 10 hours late calling, and my dad knew something was going on," says Sarah, 38, a Mill Valley, Calif., resident who was 15 when Jon disappeared. He is one of at least six adult missing person cases in Boulder County listed as unsolved by law enforcement agencies. All of them are men, ranging in age from 18 to 61 at the time of their disappearance. Juveniles who are missing, often chronic runaways, are handled differently. As of March 31 there were 97,297 active missing person cases in the United States, according to the Nation's Missing Children Organization & Center for Missing Adults. Of those missing, more than 43,000 were 18 and older. Missing children are given priority and immediately entered into the FBI's National Crime Information Center, an action mandated by the Missing Children's Act. But some families claim adult cases are not given the urgency they deserve. "The families (of missing adults) have to prove the unusual circumstances," says Broomfield resident Stephanie O'Bryan, who has been looking for her niece, Kimberly Greene Medina, since 1996. "Resources aren't allocated toward missing adults. Unless a crime scene is left behind, frequently the attitude is taken that it's an adult walking away from their lives." Law enforcement departments say most missing adults are not truly missing or endangered. In most cases, they say, adults either don't want to be found or don't bother to tell others they have gone out of town. Often searches are called off because there are no leads. Boulder County's sheriff's office lists four unsolved missing-adult cases, including Haynes. Detective Jenny Paddock with the Boulder Police Department says there are two additional open missing-person cases in the city of Boulder. Louisville has no open missing-adult cases. Lafayette's and Longmont's police departments did not return calls from the Daily Camera. Besides Haynes, the county's missing include Mark Allen Bonner, who disappeared while house-sitting in unincorporated Boulder County in 1978, when he was about 24; Antonio Cappola, who was reported missing by housemates in September when he disappeared from their Superior home; and the Rev. Rex Douglas, a then-61-year-old Lyons minister who disappeared in 1984 while traveling in Missouri. Boulder Police Department's unsolved missing-person cases include Boulder residents Terry Johnson, 46, who disappeared Sept. 25, and Robbie Bockmann, 26, who vanished April 19. Bockmann's car was found on Walker Ranch. Johnson's car was never found. Others missing from the county, such as longtime Boulder resident John Cooper and his second wife, Jan, have never been formerly reported to law-enforcement agencies. The Coopers departed Boulder with the Denver-based Concerned Christians cult. John's daughter, Jennifer Cooper, says no one has heard from her father since December 2000; she doesn't know if he is alive or dead. Other unreported cases may include missing transients and those estranged from family, says Phil West, a detective lieutenant with the Boulder County Sheriff's Office. He cites one case in which a transient man died in Boulder. It took a while to find his mother, who hadn't reported him missing, he says. West says missing person cases stay with detectives. He never forgot Jon Haynes' license plate: 1CPK105. For years, the Boulder County Sheriff detective obsessively checked any California license plates that crossed his path to see if the numbers and letters matched the missing car. It was West's first unsolved missing person case. It's still his only one. West has worked for the Boulder County Sheriff's Office for 25 years. "It's troubling that there isn't a clear resolution to it," he says. Gone Jim Haynes made a deal with his son, Jon: Do well in school and he'd get a car, and tuition and room and board at the college of his choice. Jon responded to his father's overtures by turning his life around. He went from being a D student to class valedictorian at the Olympic Valley Ski School in Taos, which mixed regular academic classes with skiing instruction, Sarah says. He chose CU and was looking forward to being on the ski team. He also selected a four-wheel-drive Subaru -- the car of his dreams, Sarah says. That car is now Sarah's nightmare. Sometimes she dreams her brother is dead in the car in a ravine. Sometimes he's begging for help. More than two decades later, she checks to see if Jon's Social Security number has been active. As recently as 18 months ago, she found evidence that his number was being used in Sacramento. But that turned out to be a computer error. Her father has compiled two filing cabinets of evidence and letters he wrote to the Boulder Police Department. More than 20 years later, Jim Haynes can't talk about his son without breaking down, Sarah says. "When do you stop searching?," she asks. Police work Both the Boulder Police Department and the Boulder County Sheriff's Office say cases with missing children younger than 12 are always considered urgent. But authorities begin an immediate search for an adult only when there is evidence of a crime or the missing person has mental or physical problems. A missing-person case isn't closed until a person is found or a body is identified. In most cases, missing adults usually turn up within a month, West says. But there are some, like Haynes, who disappear without a clue to their fate or whereabouts. Despite Jim Haynes' pleas that his son had been killed, Sarah says Boulder police initially treated Jon's case as if he were a runaway. West denies Jon was considered a runaway, but he did speak with several of Jon's friends about the possibility that he disappeared voluntarily, possibly with a cult. Some said he would never do that to his family; others said he would do so in a heartbeat, West says. For 10 years, Jon's family searched, hired private detectives and kept in close contact with Boulder police. His father filed a petition in Contra Costa, Calif., Superior Court on or about June 16, 1982, asking that Jon be declared legally dead. It was accepted. Jon's case is still open, because the police department must treat it as a murder, Sarah says. Jon's disappearance is highly suspicious, but there is no physical evidence indicating that he was murdered, West says. His case is still not considered a homicide. O'Bryan says Aurora police also assumed the disappearance of her 19-year-old niece on Oct. 29, 1996, was voluntary. They thought Medina, a former Broomfield High School student, was just a young mother who wanted out of her situation, she says. The Aurora police did not return calls by the Daily Camera. O'Bryan took the investigation into her own hands. She learned to circulate flyers quickly and to handle the press and the police department, she says. She found out how bloodhounds work and trained with the Civil Air Patrol on how to search fields and pastures. She went online and learned how to search for clandestine grave sites and hunted for Kimberly's body with Medina's father in remote eastern Colorado areas. She did it for years, until she was physically and emotionally exhausted. O'Bryan says the police department took Medina's disappearance more seriously only after she didn't use her Social Security number or driver's license or try to contact her children. Occasionally they would join a search when O'Bryan brought information. "I used to track the homicides in Aurora each time (knowing) there was that much less being done on Kimmy's case. They (the Aurora police) are caring people, they just didn't have the resources." The end of the road The decision to call off a search is dependent on many factors, Paddock of the Boulder Police Department says, including a lack of leads, or not finding clues in a search area. Active searching typically concludes when authorities believe they've pursued available leads to exhaustion, West says. A supervisor is always involved in the decision to inactivate a case. Cases are reactivated if new information is received. On Dec. 16, 1981, the search for Jon Haynes was called off, despite his family's insistence that he was murdered in Boulder County. "Somebody out there knows something," Sarah says. "Someone had to take the car." "Don't wait till it happens to you. It takes a village. We all have to look out for our neighbors." There is a $20,000 reward for information leading to Jon Haynes' location, whether he is dead or alive, Sarah Haynes says. If you have information about the case, contact her at (415) 388-0806. Those who have information about Kimberly Greene Medina should contact Detective Chuck Mehl with the Aurora Police Department at (303) 739-6127. Contact Susan Glairon at (303) 473-1392 or glairons@dailycamera.com Help for families Prior to 2002, no federally funded assistance was available to family members of missing adults. Broomfield resident Stephanie O'Bryan and others lobbied for the Center for Missing Adults to be placed under the Justice Department. Their efforts paid off. In 2002, the center received a two-year $1.6 million grant from the federal government. "Now there is a resource if someone has a missing adults," she says. To reach the Center for Missing Adults, call 1-800-690-FIND, or visit www.missingadults.org Caption: Stephanie O'Bryan, of Broomfield, looks through the hundreds of documents she compiled while searching for her niece, Kimberly Greene Medina, who has been missing since 1996. Mark Leffingwell/Daily Camera Mug shots: Jon Haynes; Kimberly Greene Medina High-profile missing persons cases generate a lot of interest initially, but families have a difficult time keeping the media and police fofused on their loved ones after time has passed. Camera File Photo |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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1:59 PM Jul 11