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Rogers,Kristy J.missing August 2,1997; Florida
Topic Started: Sep 2 2006, 12:46 PM (637 Views)
oldies4mari2004
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http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/r/rogers_kristy.html
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Kristy Jean Rogers


Left: Rogers, circa 1997;
Right: Age-progression at age 24 (circa 2004)


Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance

Missing Since: August 2, 1997 from Crestview, Florida
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date Of Birth: August 23, 1980
Age: 16 years old
Height and Weight: 5'3, 109 pounds
Distinguishing Characteristics: Caucasian female. Brown to sandy-blonde hair, blue eyes. Rogers has a lazy right eye. Her navel is pierced and she has pierced ears.
Clothing/Jewelry Description: A dark-colored t-shirt and white shorts.
Medical Conditions: Rogers may be in need of medical attention for unspecified reasons.


Details of Disappearance

Rogers told her family she was spending the night of August 1, 1997 at a girlfriend's home in Crestview, Florida. She stayed at her boyfriend's residence instead. The boyfriend, Mack Cawthon, told authorities Rogers departed his house on North Lloyd Street at approximately 5:00 a.m. on August 2, but she never arrived home. Cawthon's residence was located less than one mile from Rogers's family's Walnut Avenue house, about a fifteen-minute walk. Rogers has never been heard from again.
In February 1998, six months after Rogers's disappearance, a bag containing clothing belonging to her was found in a wooded area behind the Crestview Plaza Shopping Center. The area had already been thoroughly searched by investigators and cadaver dogs; they believe, therefore, that the bag was left there after the search. The contents included a shirt, shorties, underpants, a bra, socks, keys, and makeup, all belonging to Rogers. The bag was not hidden and the clothes inside appeared to be more weathered than the bag.

Unidentified female remains were located in a canal west of Boynton Beach, Florida in 1999, two years after Rogers vanished. Authorities incorrectly identified the body as Rogers in January 2001. Her loved ones finalized funeral arrangements by the time the mistake was corrected, but the burial had not taken place. Investigators initially believed that Rogers's dental records matched the victim. The error was reported less than one week after the incorrect identification was announced.

Police originally believed Rogers was a runaway, but later decided she met with foul play due to the long period of time that passed where she didn't contact anyone. At first they investigated her family, who have all since been ruled out as suspects. Authorities believe Rogers was abducted by someone she knew and trusted. Her case remains unsolved.



Investigating Agency
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:
Crestview Police Department
850-682-2055



Source Information
The National Center For Missing and Exploited Children
Child Protection Education Of America
The Palm Beach Post
Northwest Florida Daily News



Updated 1 time since October 12, 2004.

Last updated October 23, 2004.

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http://z13.invisionfree.com/PorchlightUSA/...opic=9481&st=0&
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Ell
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Heart of Gold
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10 years of frustration: Kristy Rogers' disappearance still baffles lawmen, family
BRIAN HUGHES Florida Freedom Newspapers
Tuesday July 31st, 2007
Comment on this Story | Read Comments


CRESTVIEW - Ten years ago Thursday morning, Kristy Jean Rogers left her boyfriend's home and strolled into oblivion.

Rogers' disappearance remains a perplexing case for Lt. Kay Pitts, an investigator for Crestview Police Department.

"It's been really frustrating because this is the first and only case I haven't been able to solve," she said.

The substantial case file is packed full of reports and interviews accumulated over the years.

"If there's any kind of lead, we follow up on it," Pitts said.


Special to the Daily News
This poster shows what Kristy Rogers may look like 10 years after she was reported missing.
---------------------------------

Yet every promising development has only led to a dead end.

Rogers, who was just three weeks shy of her 17th birthday, spent the night of Aug. 1, 1997, with her boyfriend, then 18-year-old Mack Cawthon, at his home on Lloyd Street. It was the first time she spent the night with him.

Although Pitts described their relationship as "on-again, off-again," she said there are "no inconsistencies with his story."

According to Cawthon's testimony, he had asked Rogers to leave at 5 a.m., so his grandparents, who lived next door, wouldn't know he'd entertained an overnight guest.

"He wanted her (Rogers) out of there before anyone saw her there," explained Pitts.

However, the early hour of Rogers' departure meant the likelihood of someone seeing her as she took the 15-minute walk to her home on Walnut Avenue was remote.

"I interviewed people up and down the streets where she would've walked, but not a whole lot of people are stirring around at that hour," said Pitts.

She investigated Rogers' home life, but found no reason for her to want to leave.

"She wasn't a runaway. She had no problems at home," Pitts said. "There was no reason for her to leave home. She took nothing with her," including medication she was taking for a kidney infection.

"If you're a teenage girl planning to leave home, your best friend knows what's going on. But none of (Rogers') friends knew anything," Pitts added.

Rogers' mother, Wilma Sanders, who now lives in Enterprise, Ala., confirmed Pitts' assessment.

"We were more like friends or sisters than mother and daughter," Sanders told the Daily News in 1997.



Special to the Daily News


The Florida Department of Law Enforcement entered the case, and with Crestview Police searched Cawthon's home, the woods near his house, and "numerous areas where we thought she could be," said Pitts.

Regional and national leads were pursued, including the disappearance of Kimberley Ramer from Opp, Ala., who was about Rogers' age and shared a similar description. Ramer disappeared a couple of weeks before Rogers.

However, Ramer's disappearance was clearly an abduction because there were signs of a struggle at the scene. Still, investigators interviewed the mothers of both girls to try to identify potential links. None were found.

A month later, 18-year-old Brandy Nicole Howard's battered body was discovered in south Crestview, generating rumors of other teen disappearances and slayings in the area. Those proved unsubstantiated.

A few leads, and even the discovery of a body initially identified as Rogers, surfaced during the years-long investigation. According to Daily News reports:

In February 1998, a bag containing clothing, keys and makeup belonging to Rogers was discovered behind a shopping center close to where she disappeared.

A body found in a Palm Beach canal in 1999 was tentatively identified as Rogers. Sanders even planned a funeral, but a last-minute examination of dental remains proved the body was not her daughter's.

A December 1999 analysis of blood samples found in the home of Sanders' then-boyfriend, Robert Willcut, were not from Rogers.

A July 2001 search for bones under a house revealed only animal fragments.
Allen Glass, Rogers' uncle who lives in Auburn north of Crestview, remains incredulous that anyone would harm his niece.

"She was such a sweet girl," Glass said. "She'd give you the shirt off her back. She never had a mean word to say about anybody."

"Working cases is like a big puzzle," said Lt. Pitts. But in the Rogers case authorities "just can't find the missing piece," she said.

Her frustration continues, as it does for Sanders.

"You just can't tell me somebody can just disappear and nobody knows anything," she said.

"How does a human being just disappear into thin air, without a trace, without a clue?" said Pitts. "I keep hoping that one day somebody's going to call.

"I'd like to give closure to Kristy's family," Pitts said
http://www.nwfdailynews.com/article/7398
Age Progression
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
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Ell
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Files on Kristy's case
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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
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http://www.nwfdailynews.com/archive/news/01/010117news1.html

This article can be found on page A1 of the January 17, 2001 Daily News.

Remains may not be Rogers

The local medical examiner will review the skeleton and run more tests after finding problems with the original ID.
By MICHAEL STEWART, Daily News Staff Writer
CRESTVIEW - The parents of Kristy Rogers planned to bury their daughter today.

Now, it's unclear if the skeletal remains shipped from Palm Beach County for burial belonged to the missing teen.

The local medical examiner confiscated the remains for further examination Tuesday, saying the bones may not be those of Rogers, who has been missing 3 1/2 years.

"This whole thing has got me so frustrated, it is driving me crazy," said Wilma Sanders, Rogers' mother.

Early last week, the Palm Beach County medical examiner positively identified a Jane Doe as Rogers. Using previous dental records for comparison, Palm Beach investigators said there was little doubt that the skeletal remains discovered in a canal in Boynton Beach in May 1999 belonged to the missing Crestview teen.

They were so sure that the body belonged to Rogers, who disappeared on Aug. 2, 1997, that they sent the remains to Hayes Funeral Home in Elba, Ala., for burial.

But the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and Associate Medical Examiner Dr. Michael Berkland say the identification may have been premature.

For one thing, Berkland says, the dental comparison did not yield a perfect match.

"There was some dental work there that we do not have a record of being there," Berkland said.

In addition, officials in Palm Beach County listed the cause of death of the Jane Doe as blunt-force trauma to the head.

Berkland said reports indicate that the skull showed evidence of a blow to the head that had healed over. It is unclear at this point if the injury is the same as that reported as the fatal blow.

Either way, Rogers' parents say their daughter was never injured in that manner. But Berkland said the injury could have occurred after Rogers disappeared.

The most serious discrepancy is the estimated age of the skeletal remains. Rogers was 16 when she disappeared in 1997. Palm Beach officials estimate the person they found in 1999 died in late 1998 or early 1999.

If the body was indeed that of Rogers, she would have been 18 at the time of her death. Berkland would not give specifics, but he did say that a forensic anthropologist's report indicates that the body found in Palm Beach "was considerably older than that."

"With all these questions, it would be very poor on my part to allow this to go ahead and continue and to allow the burial of what could potentially be the remains of someone other than Kristy Rogers," Berkland said.

The remains were taken from the funeral home Tuesday by FDLE officials and transported to the Okaloosa County Medical Examiner's Office. Berkland intends to conduct an extensive comparison of dental records and have the forensic anthropologist conduct more tests.

If the body is not positively ruled out or identified as Rogers, a DNA test is possible. Berkland does not know how long it will take to conclude the tests.

The twists and turns of the complicated case have begun to take a toll on Rogers' loved ones.

"They should have done all this before they notified the family," Sanders said.

The family originally planned to bury the body they believed to be their daughter's last Sunday. But the remains, which were reportedly shipped from Palm Beach early last week, did not show up in time for the funeral.

The remains arrived Tuesday, just in time for today's funeral, only to be taken away once more.

Mack Cawthon, the boy Rogers was dating, was the last known person to have seen the girl alive. Rogers reportedly left his home around 5 a.m. the day of her disappearance.

Cawthon said last week that he did not believe speculation that Kristy had run away and wound up in Palm Beach.

"I would have rather been wrong," he said Tuesday following the announcement of the latest development. "I didn't feel it would be her unless they were able to prove it with DNA testing."


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
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http://staugustine.com/stories/012101/sta_0121010041.shtml

Funeral off after Boynton Beach remains misidentified

WEST PALM BEACH (AP) -- The delayed funeral of a Panhandle teen-ager missing since 1997 has been called off after authorities in South Florida acknowledged incorrectly identifying a body found by a canal in 1999.

Earlier this month, the medical examiner's office in Palm Beach County identified skeletal remains found in suburban Boynton Beach in May 1999, using dental records, as those of Kristy Jean Rogers. She was 16 when she was last seen in Crestview, her hometown, on Aug. 1, 1997.

The identification, however, was based on outdated dental records prior to the removal of Rogers' wisdom teeth in 1996, Dr. Michael Berkland, associate medical examiner for Okaloosa County, said Friday.

The skull of the Boynton Beach remains still had all four of its wisdom teeth, he said.

''I think it would have been a travesty if the wrong person had been buried and someone could have potentially got away with murder down there,'' Berkland said.

Dr. Lisa Flannagan, the medical examiner for Palm Beach County, agreed with Berkland's finding, and blamed the misidentification on the outdated records.


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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http://www.polkonline.com/stories/012001/s...cancelled.shtml

Funeral cancelled after remains misidentified

Associated Press

WEST PALM BEACH -- The delayed funeral of a Panhandle teen-ager missing since 1997 has been called off after authorities in South Florida acknowledged incorrectly identifying a body found by a canal in 1999.

Earlier this month, the medical examiner's office in Palm Beach County identified skeletal remains found in suburban Boynton Beach in May 1999, using dental records, as those of Kristy Jean Rogers. She was 16 when she was last seen in Crestview, her hometown, on Aug. 1, 1997.

The identification, however, was based on outdated dental records prior to the removal of Rogers' wisdom teeth in 1996, Dr. Michael Berkland, associate medical examiner for Okaloosa County, said Friday.

The skull of the Boynton Beach remains still had all four of its wisdom teeth, he said.

"I think it would have been a travesty if the wrong person had been buried and someone could have potentially got away with murder down there," Berkland said.

Dr. Lisa Flannagan, the medical examiner for Palm Beach County, agreed with Berkland's finding, and blamed the misidentification on the outdated records.

"We rely on the information that is supplied to us from the local agencies in missing-person cases," Flannagan said. "You have to work each case with the information available."

Both medical examiners' offices agreed the remains, again unidentified, would be sent back to Palm Beach County. The cause of death has been determined to be blunt force trauma.

Wilma Sanders, who had a casket picked out and funeral arrangements set for her missing daughter, had conflicting feelings Friday when she learned the remains she had been about to bury were not Kristy's.

"I don't know how that big a mistake could be made," Sanders said at her Crestview home about 45 miles northwest of Pensacola. "I'm angry, I'm hurt, I'm relieved."

Sanders found out the Florida Department of Law Enforcement was questioning the identification Tuesday, when she went to a funeral home across the state line in Elba, Ala., to make final burial arrangements. She was told the FDLE had seized the remains.

While spending the next few days waiting to hear if the skeletal remains belonged to her daughter, Sanders admitted she convinced herself that they were.

"We had picked out the casket. I had her pictures put in nice frames to match it," she said, adding the search for her daughter would be resumed. "I had taken down the fliers about her. Now I have to put them back up."

Still, Sanders said she was grateful the mistake was caught.

"I'm glad they didn't just stand by and let us bury somebody else's child," she said.


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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This article can be found on page A1 of the January 11, 2001 Daily News.

Police starting case over

By MICHAEL STEWART, Daily News Staff Writer

CRESTVIEW - Police officers say they have spent hundreds of man-hours tracking down leads and developing theories in the Aug. 2, 1997, disappearance of Kristy Rogers. Now they are starting over from scratch.

Earlier this week, investigators with the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office announ-ced that dental records of a corpse found floating in a canal in Boynton Beach on May 23, 1999, matched those of Rogers.

"None of the old theories or leads are relevant anymore," said Sgt. Kay Pitts, Crestview's lead investigator on the case.

"We assumed that she was still in the area."

The medical examiner in Palm Beach County said that Rogers' body had been in the canal for no more than six months and that she could have been alive as late as February of 1999.

That means she was not murdered in the Crestview area as originally suspected and was alive for well over a year after she disappeared, authorities said.

Although they had not ruled out the possibility that Rogers had run away, local officers were looking for a body in the Crestview area.

They dug up bone fragments in December of 1999 that were found at a home site close to where she disappeared. But the bones turned out to be those of an animal.

There were several suspects police officers were looking at as well.

None of the suspects were gone from the area long enough to harbor Rogers during the time she was alive. Investigators said they plan to switch tactics now.

"We, along with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, are now going to try to find out how she left here and with who if possible," Pitts said.

Crestview police say they plan to join forces with Palm Beach County sheriff's deputies to try to solve the case. Pitts is boxing up copies of all the information they have and plans to send it to Palm Beach County investigator Wayne Robinson.

Robinson said he will try to find out what happened to Rogers from his end. Right now, he is not sure if the blunt-force trauma to the head that killed Rogers is the result of murder or a possible hit-and-run accident.

Robinson also plans to circulate a photo of Rogers to see if anyone in the Palm Beach County area knew her.

Both investigators say the case is puzzling. Friends and family say Kristy would not have run away without telling somebody.

"And it is highly unlikely that she was held against her will for that length of time," Robinson said.

Pitts said the new development does give them a starting point, however.

"We haven't had anything we could actually pinpoint and say, 'Well, this is where she was,' " Pitts said.

"At least now we have somewhere to look."

http://www.nwfdailynews.com/archive/news/01/010111news3.html

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.


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http://www.nwfdailynews.com/archive/news/01/010120news1.html

Examiner: Remains not Rogers


Dr. Michael Berkland attributed the misidentification to Palm Beach County having outdated dental records.
By MICHAEL STEWART, Daily News Staff Writer
Skeletal remains found in a Palm Beach County canal do not belong to missing teen-ager Kristy Rogers, local authorities said Friday.

"The remains are absolutely not those of Kristy Rogers and the conclusion is rendered with the highest possible degree of certainty," said Associate Medical Examiner Dr. Michael Berkland.

A comparison of the skull found in Boynton Beach and Rogers' dental records led to the determination. The skull has four wisdom teeth, while Rogers had none, Berkland said.

The news was another painful revelation to Rogers' mother, Wilma Sanders, who has been riding an emotional roller coaster since her daughter disappeared 31/2 years ago.

She hit a low point last week when Palm Beach County sheriff's investigators said they'd identified the remains as Rogers, again using dental records.

Sanders said she does not recall her daughter undergoing any oral surgery.

"She didn't have any taken out that I know of. But this whole thing has messed me up so bad maybe I just don't remember," she said.

Berkland in-sists that his findings are conclusive. He did not identify the oral surgeon who removed Rogers' wisdom teeth, but said records show she underwent oral surgery twice, once in July of 1996 and once the following September.

Berkland attributed the Palm Beach County Medical Examiner's Office's misidentification of the remains to outdated records. Investigators were sent dental radiographs that were taken prior to the teen's oral surgeries, Berkland said.

Sanders said she was told last week that the skeleton also had two fillings that were not on her daughter's dental records, which, along with other discrepancies, prompted Berkland's investigation.

Palm Beach officials aren't talking about the findings. Sanders said Palm Beach Detective Wayne Robinson told her Thursday, prior to Berkland's findings, that they were sticking to their identification.

"He said the guy that does the dental records has been working with him 15 to 20 years and he has never been wrong yet and he doesn't suspect he is wrong this time," Sanders said.

Repeated phone calls to the sheriff's and medical examiner's offices in Palm Beach County on Friday yielded no results. But Berkland said there is no room for doubt now.

"I think it would have been a travesty if the wrong person had been buried and someone could have potentially got away with murder down there," Berkland said, referring to the blunt force trauma to the skull that is listed as the cause of death of the victim.

After Palm Beach County officials determined the remains belonged to Rogers, the body was shipped to Hayes Funeral Home in Elba, Ala., for burial, but the remains were taken for further testing the day before the funeral.

The mother of the missing teen took the news hard. After 31/2 years of not knowing anything the family was desperately seeking some kind of closure.

"They got all my hopes up that I had finally got it over with and now I am right back to where I started at," she cried.

Sgt. Kay Pitts is the lead investigator on the case for the Crestview Police Department. She said the finding puts them back at square one as well, with scant leads to go on.

Rogers disappeared in the early hours of Aug. 2, 1997, while walking home from Crestview resident Mack Cawthon's house.


Staff Writer Michael Stewart can be reached at 682-5608 or mikes@nwfdailynews.com

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
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Crestview Police Department
Lt. Kay Pitts
850-682-2055


Agency Case Number:
7790-97

NCMEC #: NCMC836052

NCIC Number: M-041321375

dentals
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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tatertot
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http://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/20170709/cold-case-crestview-woman-missing-since-1997

COLD CASE: Crestview woman missing since 1997

By Genevieve DiNatale
Posted Jul 9, 2017 at 12:01 AM

“We have nothing indicating she’s dead; we never found her body.”

CRESTVIEW — Kristy Rogers has been missing ever since she returned home from her boyfriend’s house about 5:30 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 2, 1997.

At the time of her disappearance, Rogers, then 16, was living with her mother by the overpass on Walnut Street in Crestview. Extensive searches by investigators — through the woods and into Hurricane and Bear Lake with sonar — were fruitless.

“We have nothing indicating she’s dead; we never found her body,” said Dennis Haley, a special agent with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, who originally worked on the case. “For someone to be abducted in Crestview back in ’97, that stuff just didn’t happen.”

The only evidence investigators found was located after the initial search.

“We found clothing behind the old Winn-Dixie that the mother identified as being her clothing, and there happened to be a house key in there and a key ring with a picture on it that was definitely Kristy’s.”

“No one has ever come forward,” said Ralph Garrett, an investigator with the Crestview Police Department who is overseeing the city’s cold cases and crimes against children. “We can’t say she’s dead; she could walk up tomorrow.

“Shortly after she came home, she disappeared,” Garrett added. “We don’t know who she left with or if she left by herself, but the information we are receiving at this point might point us in a different direction.”

Police have received some tips recently.

No one has been charged in connection to Rogers’ disappearance. That includes her then-boyfriend, William “Billy” Cawthon and his entire family, who all passed a polygraph test. Rogers’ mother’s live-in boyfriend, Robert Willcut, passed the polygraph twice. Willcut had a lengthy criminal record and spent time in prison for shaking a baby.

“She could be alive and well and married with children for all I know,” Garrett said. “There could be reasons for her not wanting to be found, so I’m just not sure. It’s a very interesting case and very little information has come in on this.”

If you have information on Kristy Rogers’ whereabouts, contact the Crestview Police Department at 682-3544.
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