Recorded Cases


Case: The Harrison Twins

DATE:03/22/47

SUBJECTS:

George & Gerald Harrison

09 yrs old (Twins)

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On March 22, 1947, municipal law enforcement in the rural township of Bellridge County responded to reports concerning the disappearance of two juvenile males identified as George Harrison and Gerald Harrison, twin sons of local agricultural worker Thomas Harrison.

According to witness statements provided by family members, both juveniles were last observed during the early afternoon hours performing routine farm duties on the Harrison property located approximately 4 miles outside township limit.

Following the failure of the juveniles to return, immediate search efforts were initiated by family members before escalating into a coordinated response involving local law enforcement officers and civilian volunteers. Search operations encompassedthe Harrison property, surrounding crop fields, nearby woodland areas, irrigation trenches, and adjacent rural roadways.

Despite extensive ground searches conducted over multiple days, no physical evidence, trace materials, or confirmed sightings of either juvenile were recovered.

The disappearance of George and Gerald Harrison remains unresolved.


Case: Samuel Grayson

DATE:10/11/49

SUBJECTS:

Samuel V. Grayson

31 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On October 11, 1949, the Blackwater County Sheriff’s Office received reports regarding the disappearance of 31-year-old railway maintenance worker Samuel V. Grayson following a scheduled overnight inspection assignment along the North Ridge freight line approximately 12 miles east of Hollow Creek Township.

Employment records indicate Grayson departed the Blackwater Rail Depot at approximately 21:40 hours accompanied by standard maintenance equipment and a motorized inspection cart. Grayson was expected to report back to the depot no later than 03:00 hours the following morning. When no contact was established, railway officials initiated a welfare inquiry.

Responding deputies located Grayson’s inspection cart abandoned along a remote section of track near Mile Marker 14. Personal belongings, including a flashlight, thermos, and work ledger, were recovered at the scene. The flashlight was found in an operational state despite signs of recent rainfall in the area.

Preliminary examination of the surrounding location revealed no indication of robbery, animal attack, or accidental derailment. Footwear impressions consistent with Grayson’s work boots were documented leading away from the tracks toward a densely wooded embankment before abruptly terminating approximately 40 yards from the rail line.

Coordinated search efforts involving sheriff deputies, railway personnel, and civilian volunteers were conducted over a six-day period. No trace of Samuel Grayson was recovered.

Case remains unresolved.


Case: Silver Lake Girl Scouts

DATE:07/18/52

SUBJECTS:

32, Silver Lake Girl Scout Troop

06-10 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On July 18, 1952, the Pinewood County Sheriff’s Department initiated an investigation following the unexplained disappearance of thirty-two juvenile members of the Silver Lake Girls Scout Troop during a scheduled summer camping excursion at Lake Everet Provincial Grounds.

The group consisted of twenty-eight female juveniles between the ages of 6 and 10, accompanied by two teenage counselors and one adult supervisor identified as Margaret Hensley, age 47. According to organizational records, the troop departed the township of Bellhaven on July 15, 1952, with an expected return date of July 18 at approximately 16:00 hours.

Concern was raised after the chartered transport vehicle failed to arrive at the designated pickup location and no communication was received from supervising personnel. At approximately 20:15 hours, responding deputies were dispatched to Lake Everet Provincial Grounds to conduct a welfare check. Upon arrival, law enforcement discovered Campsite #14 abandoned.

The site consisted of three occupied sleeping cabins and a central fire pit area. Investigators reported that all cabins contained personal belongings, clothing, food supplies, and sleeping materials belonging to troop members. Multiple sleeping bags were found laid out in a manner suggesting intended overnight occupancy. No evidence indicated preparations for departure or evacuation. The central fire pit showed recent signs of use; however, investigators identified no indication that clothing, equipment, or biological material had been burned or otherwise disposed of within the site.

Preliminary assessment conducted by responding authorities concluded that the group had most likely departed the campsite on foot during nighttime hours under unknown circumstances. Investigators were unable to determine what event or influence could have compelled the juveniles and supervising personnel to leave the relative safety of the campgrounds.

Extensive search operations involving local law enforcement, state forestry personnel, volunteers, tracking dogs, and aerial reconnaissance units were conducted over a fourteen-day period surrounding Lake Everet and adjacent woodland regions. No trace of the missing individuals was recovered.

The disappearance of the Silver Lake Girls Scout Troop remains unresolved.


Case: Elanor Whitmore

DATE: 02/03/54

SUBJECTS:

Eleanor Whitmore

29 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On February 3, 1954, officers of the Millhaven Municipal Police Department responded to a welfare concern at the residence of Daniel and Eleanor Whitmore located within the eastern residential district of Millhaven Township.

According to statements provided by Daniel Whitmore, age 34, he returned to the family residence at approximately 18:20 hours following the conclusion of his work shift at the Millhaven Foundry Company. Upon entering the residence, Whitmore reported discovering the family’s infant son unattended on the living room floor in visible distress. Eleanor Whitmore, age 29, could not be located within the residence or surrounding property.

Responding officers conducted a preliminary examination of the home and reported no signs of forced entry, physical struggle, or disturbance consistent with criminal activity. Investigators further noted that Eleanor Whitmore’s personal belongings, including clothing, handbag, identification documents, and personal effects, remained inside the residence.

Interviews conducted with neighboring residents yielded no reports of suspicious activity, unusual disturbances, or unidentified individuals observed near the property on the date of the disappearance.

Financial records reviewed during the investigation indicated that all known bank accounts and household assets were jointly managed under the Whitmore family name. Investigators identified no evidence suggesting Eleanor Whitmore had made preparations indicative of voluntary travel or relocation. Despite these findings, the disappearance was provisionally classified by responding authorities as a voluntary departure. Daniel Whitmore publicly disputed the conclusion, stating that his wife would not willingly abandon either her child or family responsibilities.

Subsequent investigative efforts produced no confirmed sightings or physical evidence relating to Eleanor Whitmore’s whereabouts.

Case remains unresolved.


Case: San Teodoro - School Children

DATE: 09/09/58

SUBJECTS:

Lucía Herrera

08 yrs old

Status: Missing

Mateo Rojas

08 yrs old

Status: Missing

Elena Vidal

08 yrs old

Status: Missing

Tomás Fuentes

08 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On September 9, 1958, municipal authorities in the rural township of San Teodoro, Chile, initiated an investigation concerning the disappearance of four juvenile students who failed to return home following a scheduled day of schooling.

The missing individuals, identified as Lucía Herrera (age 8), Mateo Rojas (age 9), Elena Vidal (age 10), and Tomás Fuentes (age 8), were reportedly observed walking together toward Escuela Primaria San Teodoro at approximately 07:15 hours. Multiple witnesses later confirmed the group arrived at the school property prior to morning attendance.

Concern was raised during the evening hours after all four juveniles failed to return to their respective residences at the expected dismissal time. Family members initially believed the children may have remained with classmates or relatives; however, subsequent inquiries determined none of the juveniles had been seen following the conclusion of the school day.

School staff reported no unusual incidents occurring during classroom hours. Attendance records confirmed the presence of all four students throughout the day. Witness statements obtained from faculty and students indicated the children were last observed departing the school grounds together shortly after 16:00 hours.

Responding officers conducted search operations along the primary roadway connecting the school to the residential district of San Teodoro, including adjacent farmland, irrigation canals, wooded areas, and abandoned agricultural structures.

No evidence of abduction, accident, or voluntary departure was identified during the initial investigation. Personal belongings belonging to the juveniles were not recovered, and no confirmed sightings were reported following their departure from school property.

Coordinated search efforts involving local police, civilian volunteers, and regional authorities continued for approximately three weeks before organized operations were formally suspended. No trace of the four children was ever recovered. Case remains unresolved.


Case: Black Spruce Park

DATE: 11/03/60

SUBJECTS:

Leonard Pike

51 yrs old

Status: Deceased

Howard Mercer

47 yrs old

Status: Missing

Daniel Voss

44 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On November 3, 1960, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, in coordination with Alberta Provincial Park Services, initiated an investigation into the disappearance of three adult male hunters within the northern Alberta wilderness region surrounding Black Spruce Provincial Reserve. The missing individuals were identified as Leonard Pike (age 51), Howard Mercer (age 47), and Daniel Voss (age 44), all described by relatives and local authorities as highly experienced outdoorsmen familiar with the surrounding terrain and seasonal hunting conditions.

According to witness statements and travel records, the three men departed the township of Coldriver on October 18, 1960, for their annual hunting excursion and were expected to return no later than October 25. Concern was raised when the hunters did not return as scheduled. Initial search operations were delayed due to severe weather conditions affecting visibility and accessibility within the reserve.

On November 8, 1960, Alberta park rangers located the group’s campsite approximately 34 kilometers north of the nearest service road. Investigators reported the camp appeared largely undisturbed. Multiple tents remained standing and stocked with food supplies, cold weather equipment, hunting gear, and personal belongings. No evidence indicated preparations for departure or evacuation.

Approximately 30 yards east of the campsite treeline, search personnel discovered the decapitated body of Leonard Pike lying partially concealed among dense brush. Investigators noted Pike’s body was still in possession of a loaded hunting rifle at the time of recovery.

A subsequent forensic examination identified a single spent rifle casing located near the remains. Ballistic analysis later confirmed the casing originated from Pikes firearm, indicating the weapon had been discharged once immediately prior to death. Additionally there were no signs of large animal predation consistent with the injuries sustained were identified at the scene.

Despite extensive search operations involving RCMP officers, provincial rangers, tracking dogs, and aerial reconnaissance units, no trace of Howard Mercer, Daniel Voss, or the missing head of Leonard Pike was ever recovered. Investigators were unable to determine the circumstances that resulted in the death of Leonard Pike or the disappearance of the remaining members of the hunting party.

Case remains unresolved.


Case: SKR-412 Vityaz

DATE: 01/14/62

SUBJECTS:

SKR-412 Vityaz

Status: Classified

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On January 14, 1961, United States naval personnel stationed within Allied-controlled Arctic waters reported radar contact with an unidentified Soviet maritime vessel operating within restricted patrol proximity of the Bering Strait maritime sector.

According to surviving military communications logs, the unidentified vessel was initially detected drifting at low speed on a northeasterly heading approximately 43 nautical miles from the U.S.S. Halberg, a United States naval patrol ship assigned to regional reconnaissance operations. Attempts to establish radio communication with the Soviet vessel were unsuccessful. Multiple warnings were issued ordering the craft to alter course or risk military engagement. No response was received.

Observational reports filed by U.S. naval officers noted the Soviet vessel displayed no visible indication of active propulsion. Investigators later concluded the ship appeared to be adrift under natural ocean current movement with no operational engine activity detected.

At approximately 14:20 hours, command authorization was granted for a six-man boarding team to approach and inspect the vessel. Boarding personnel reported no visible structural damage to the hull, deck, or external equipment. No evidence of combat engagement, fire, flooding, or environmental hazard was identified during preliminary exterior examination.

Upon boarding the vessel, American personnel discovered the ship entirely abandoned. No crew members were located onboard. Subsequent inspection of the bridge and helm indicated the vessel had maintained a deliberate navigational heading until approximately forty-eight hours prior to discovery, at which point all recorded activity abruptly ceased. Internal compartments reportedly contained personal belongings, food provisions, and operational materials left in place. No signs of evacuation procedures or distress signaling were identified.

The total number of Soviet personnel aboard the vessel at the time of abandonment remains unknown.

Following completion of a final search for survivors, United States naval command issued orders authorizing the destruction of the vessel. The Soviet ship was subsequently sunk within the patrol sector to prevent recovery or international escalation.

Further records regarding the incident remain restricted.


Case: Vietnam War Anomalies

DATE: 1957-1963

SUBJECTS:

United States Military

Viet Cong Army

Status: Classified

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

Between 1957 and 1963, escalating military activity throughout regions of South Vietnam generated an increasing volume of unexplained personnel disappearance reports involving both United States-aligned forces and North Vietnamese combat units operating within contested jungle territories.

Initial incidents were treated as isolated battlefield losses associated with hostile engagement, environmental hazards, desertion, or prisoner capture. However, internal military documentation later identified a growing pattern of disappearances occurring under circumstances inconsistent with conventional combat operations.

Multiple reports describe armed personnel vanishing during active patrol assignments without evidence of engagement, retreat, or extraction. In several documented cases, entire reconnaissance teams reportedly disappeared within heavily monitored operational zones without distress communication or identifiable signs of conflict.

Recovered remains associated with certain incidents were frequently described as exhibiting catastrophic mutilation inconsistent with known combat injuries, wildlife predation, or explosive trauma. Identification of recovered personnel often relied exclusively on partially intact military identification tags or fragments of issued equipment.

Field reports further document numerous cases involving soldiers disappearing from fortified encampments during nighttime hours despite the presence of surrounding personnel, perimeter security, and active watch rotations. Witness statements obtained from surviving servicemen routinely reference unusual auditory disturbances originating from dense jungle regions surrounding operational areas. Descriptions vary but commonly include reports of distant vocalizations, metallic sounds, low-frequency vibrations, and unidentified movement occurring beyond visible range.

Additional reports submitted by both military and civilian sources describe the discovery of remote villages exhibiting evidence of sudden mass casualty events. In several documented instances, entire civilian populations were found deceased or missing under unexplained circumstances absent indications of conventional armed engagement.

Operational losses became increasingly difficult to quantify due to overlapping combat conditions and inconsistent battlefield reporting standards between involved military forces. Internal assessments conducted during the period acknowledged that the total number of unexplained disappearances remains unknown.

Numerous records associated with these incidents were later sealed, reassigned, or removed from conventional military archives. Further review remains restricted.


Case: Flight A-271

DATE: 08/14/1965

SUBJECTS:

Flight A-271

48 passengers

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On August 14, 1965, French civil aviation authorities initiated an international search operation following the unexplained disappearance of commercial passenger Flight A-271 operating a scheduled route between Marseille, France and Rome, Italy. Flight records indicate the aircraft departed Marseille-Provence Airport at approximately 18:42 hours carrying 43 passengers and 5 crew members. Weather conditions along the planned flight corridor were reported as stable with no severe atmospheric disturbances identified at the time of departure.

According to archived air traffic control communications, all transmissions received from Flight A-271 during the initial stages of travel indicated normal operational status. No distress signals, emergency declarations, navigational anomalies, or mechanical concerns were communicated by flight personnel prior to disappearance.

Radar operators monitoring regional airspace later reported the aircraft abruptly vanished from tracking systems approximately 96 kilometers southeast of the French coastline while traveling over the Mediterranean Sea. No evidence of explosive decompression, rapid descent, or unauthorized course deviation was detected prior to signal loss.

Joint search operations involving French, Italian, and NATO-affiliated maritime reconnaissance units were initiated within hours of the disappearance. Search zones encompassed large sections of the Mediterranean flight corridor utilizing naval vessels, aerial reconnaissance aircraft, and sonar-equipped recovery teams. Despite extensive recovery operations conducted over a seventeen-day period, investigators failed to locate wreckage, fuel residue, flotation debris, human remains, or emergency transmission equipment associated with Flight A-271.

Subsequent reviews of passenger manifests and cargo records identified no materials considered hazardous or capable of contributing to catastrophic in-flight failure. The disappearance of Flight A-271 and its 48 occupants remains unexplained. Further records concerning the incident were later transferred to restricted archival custody.


Case:32768H - Hiroshi Takeda

DATE: 04/3/1967

SUBJECTS:

Hiroshi Takeda

40 yrs old

Status: Deceased

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On October 11, 1966, Hiroshi Takeda, age 40, a Tokyo-based financial administrator employed by the Kosei Trade Corporation, was reported missing after failing to show up at his work for four consecutive workdays.

Initial concern regarding Takeda’s whereabouts remained limited due to the subject residing alone and maintaining minimal documented social contact outside of professional obligations. According to employment records, Takeda’s absence was not formally addressed until approximately four days later when supervisors at Kosei Trade Corporation requested a welfare check after repeated failures to establish communication.

Responding officers of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department conducted a search of Takeda’s residence and reported no visible signs of forced entry, struggle, or preparation consistent with voluntary relocation. Personal belongings, financial documents, and identification materials remained within the apartment. Investigators were unable to determine Takeda’s movements following his last confirmed sighting leaving his workplace on October 11. The investigation remained inactive for approximately six months.

On April 3, 1967, Tokyo transit authorities received multiple emergency reports concerning an unidentified male discovered within the Shinkawa Station subway terminal during the early morning commuter period.

Witness statements describe the individual as completely unclothed, disoriented, and covered in a thick viscous substance of unidentified origin. Civilian witnesses further reported the individual appeared incapable of coherent speech and instead emitted distressed vocalizations described as animalistic whimpering.

Responding officers later identified the individual as Hiroshi Takeda.

Transit personnel and responding authorities observed Takeda displaying severe cognitive impairment and apparent inability to recognize surrounding individuals or comprehend verbal communication. Multiple reports noted the subject exhibited erratic motor behavior, extreme distress toward bright lighting and loud sound, and repeated attempts to conceal himself beneath station seating structures.

Medical personnel assigned to the case initially suspected severe psychological trauma or neurological deterioration. Subsequent evaluations conducted at Tokyo Metropolitan Medical Center concluded Takeda demonstrated cognitive functionality comparable to that of an infant child. Official psychiatric assessments documented complete loss of language comprehension, inability to communicate verbally, loss of bladder and bowel control, and near-total absence of recognizable adult behavioral patterns.

Hospital staff were unable to determine the cause of the subject’s condition.

Takeda was later transferred to long-term psychiatric care under restricted medical supervision. Internal records indicate his condition failed to improve throughout the remainder of his confinement.

On June 14, 1969, Hiroshi Takeda was pronounced deceased following reported natural medical complications while still under institutional care.

The circumstances surrounding Takeda’s six-month disappearance and subsequent mental deterioration remain unexplained. Case remains sealed.


Case: Oregon State College

DATE:05/17/1969

SUBJECTS:

Derek Jeeves

2 yrs old

Status: Missing

Ronald Pierce

20 yrs old

Status: Missing

Michael Vance

22 yrs old (son)

Status: Missing

Steven Holloway

20 yrs old (son)

Status: Missing

Alan Mercer

21 yrs old (son)

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On May 17, 1969, five students enrolled at Western Oregon State College departed campus grounds for a planned recreational hiking excursion through the Timber Creek Loop Trail system located within the Cascade Forest Region of northwestern Oregon.

The missing individuals were identified as Derek Jeeves (age 21), Ronald Pierce (age 20), Michael Vance (age 22), Steven Holloway (age 20), and Alan Mercer (age 21). According to witness statements obtained from fellow students and dormitory residents, the group intended the outing to serve as a final recreational excursion prior to the conclusion of the spring semester and subsequent return home for summer break.

The group reportedly entered the Timber Creek trail system during the late morning to early afternoon hours of May 17. Public forestry records classified the route as a commonly traveled recreational loop requiring approximately four hours to complete under normal hiking conditions.

Initial concern regarding the group’s whereabouts emerged following their collective failure to attend scheduled semester examinations on May 19. A formal missing persons report was filed approximately 72 hours later by a dormitory roommate of Derek Jeeves after repeated attempts to contact the group proved unsuccessful.

Investigators noted the missing individuals had not packed equipment or provisions consistent with extended wilderness travel or long-term camping activity. Search operations conducted by county authorities, forestry personnel, and civilian volunteers yielded minimal evidence regarding the group’s movements. Approximately three miles east of the established trail system, investigators recovered several items later identified as belonging to the missing students, including a hiking shoe, assorted food wrappers, and a baseball hat. No additional trace evidence or identifiable tracks were recovered.

Ongoing search operations were severely hindered following the onset of a prolonged thunderstorm system producing heavy rainfall and hazardous terrain conditions across the search sector. Meteorological reports indicate severe storm activity persisted for approximately 32 consecutive hours, resulting in widespread erosion and the destruction of potential physical evidence. Organized search efforts were subsequently suspended.

The investigation remained inactive until October 3, 1969, when a licensed hunter operating within a remote woodland region approximately 18 miles north of the original trail system reported observing an unidentified nude male wandering through dense forest terrain.

According to the witness statement, the individual briefly established direct eye contact before abruptly dropping onto all fours and fleeing deeper into the surrounding wilderness at what the witness described as “unnatural speed.” Upon approaching the location where the individual had been observed, the hunter discovered a collection of neatly folded clothing and personal belongings carefully arranged atop a fallen log. Recovered items included trousers, a flannel shirt, undergarments, socks, hiking boots, a backpack, thermos, and wallet. The belongings were positively identified as property belonging to Derek Jeeves.

Subsequent forensic examination determined the recovered materials displayed minimal environmental deterioration despite having allegedly remained exposed within wilderness conditions for over four months. Investigators were unable to account for the preserved condition of the items or establish the identity of the individual witnessed by the hunter.

No trace of the remaining four students was ever recovered. Case remains unresolved.


CASE: BRAIN TREE COACH

DATE: 03/14/1970

SUBJECTS:

Public Transport

09 Occupants

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On Febuary, 14, 1970, A public transport bus, carrying 8 passengers and 1 driver. Was operating a standard late afternoon route, transporting passengers between surrounding towns and villages.

At 16:40, The Bus was last seen departing the last bus stop on the outskirts of Braintree. Headed in the direction of its next stop approximately 14 miles north east of the BrainTree village.

The Bus never reached its destination. With concerns being raised by the family members of the passengers later that evening when they failed to retrun home.

On Febuary, 15, 1970, Local municipal law enforcement launches an investigation where they confirmed via eye witness statements that the bus was in working condition with no signs of damage or breaking down prior to its departure.

Authourities conduct a wide search of the remaining 14-mile segment of the route in detail, tracing every road, junction, and rural passage the bus would have been expected to follow.But find no indications of an accident with no vissible skid marks or tire impressions consistent with braking or impact, no debris field of any kind, no emergency calls or distress signals recorded.

No physical evidence has been recovered. All occupants remain missing. Case remains unsolved.


Case: Manpreet Singh

DATE:06/11/1971

SUBJECTS:

Manpreet singh

11 yrs old

Status: Deceased

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On June 11, 1971, municipal authorities in Lahore, Pakistan, initiated an investigation following the unexplained death of 11-year-old Manpreet Singh at St. Bartholomew General Hospital. According to hospital intake documentation, Manpreet Singh was admitted during the early evening hours after complaining of severe abdominal pain later diagnosed by attending physicians as acute appendicitis requiring immediate surgical intervention.

Medical staff reported the juvenile patient was transferred to a pre operating hospital room at approximately 19:12 hours while surgical preparations were finalized. Witness statements provided by attending nurses indicate Manpreet remained conscious and responsive prior to the scheduled procedure.

At approximately 19:26 hours, the nurse assigned to the room temporarily departed the area for what was later estimated to be less than three minutes. Upon returning, hospital personnel discovered the room unoccupied.

Immediate searches conducted by staff initially assumed the juvenile may have wandered from the room while disoriented or frightened. Hospital administration subsequently initiated a full building lockdown while staff and responding authorities conducted systematic searches of patient rooms, hallways, stairwells, maintenance areas, and exterior access points. No trace of Manpreet Singh was located.

Approximately three hours later, during routine maintenance procedures involving a scheduled ventilation inspection, a hospital janitor discovered the body of Manpreet Singh lodged within an upper ventilation shaft spanning between the third and fourth floors of the facility.

Investigators reported the juvenile’s body was found in a severely contorted position inconsistent with the dimensions and accessibility of the ventilation system. Preliminary examination determined portions of the duct network through which the body was recovered measured significantly smaller than the victim’s shoulder width. The subsequent autopsy concluded the official cause of death to be suffocation.

No evidence of forced entry, abduction, or third-party involvement was identified during the investigation. Hospital staff were unable to explain how the juvenile entered the ventilation system undetected within the limited timeframe between observations. Engineering assessments later determined that several access points connected to the shaft required specialized maintenance tools to open from exterior panels.

The circumstances surrounding the death of Manpreet Singh remain unexplained. The Case was officially ruled as an accidental death.


Case: Gareth E. Wynne

DATE:01/23/1974

SUBJECTS:

Gareth E. Wynne

32 yrs old

Status: missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On January 23, 1974, North Wales Police initiated an internal missing persons investigation concerning the disappearance of Constable Gareth E. Wynne following reports of unusual aerial activity occurring in the vicinity of Berwyn Mountain, Wales. According to departmental dispatch records, Constable Wynne was assigned to routine overnight highway patrol duties along the A4212 roadway sector during the evening hours corresponding with what later became publicly referred to as the Berwyn Mountain Incident.

At approximately 20:47 hours, regional dispatch received a final radio transmission from Constable Wynne reporting the presence of “unusual lights” visible above the Berwyn Mountain range. Surviving communication logs indicate the officer described the lights as stationary before reportedly observing rapid movement across the mountainside terrain.

The transmission abruptly terminated shortly thereafter.

Repeated attempts by dispatch personnel to re-establish communication with Constable Wynne were unsuccessful.

After approximately four hours without further contact, a secondary patrol officer was dispatched to Wynne’s last reported location. Upon arrival, responding personnel located the marked patrol vehicle abandoned alongside a remote stretch of roadway near the mountain access route.

Investigators documented the vehicle as unlocked with the driver-side door standing open. The vehicle’s engine and emergency radio system remained operational at the time of discovery.

Constable Wynne was not located within the surrounding area.

Search operations conducted throughout the Berwyn Mountain region by local police, volunteer rescue teams, and military personnel yielded no trace of the missing officer. No signs of struggle, blood evidence, or indications of voluntary departure were identified at the scene. Multiple civilian residents within nearby communities later submitted statements reporting unusual aerial lights and unexplained disturbances occurring throughout the same evening period.

Despite extensive search efforts, no remains or personal belongings associated with Constable Gareth Wynne were ever recovered. The disappearance remains unresolved.

Further records concerning the incident remain restricted.


Case: Alder Creek Elementary

DATE:12/04/1975

SUBJECTS:

Ms.Langstrom

35 students (fourth grade)

Status: missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On December 4, 1975, municipal authorities in Pine Ridge County initiated a large scale missing persons investigation following the disappearance of a fourth grade classroom during a scheduled field trip to the Black Hollow Ski hill located approximately 38 miles north of the township of Alder Creek.

The group consisted of 35 juvenile students accompanied by their homeroom teacher, Eleanor Langstrom (age 34), who was additionally operating the school bus utilized for the field trip. School records indicate the class departed Alder Creek Elementary School at 10:15 am and arrived at Black Hollow Ski hill at 10:45 am without incident.

Witness statements obtained from Black Hollow staff and visitors later confirmed the school bus was observed departing the ski hill parking area at approximately 15:00 pm under deteriorating winter weather conditions.

The bus never returned to the school.

Concern was raised by school administration and parents when the class failed to return. At approximately 18:40 hours, Pine Ridge County Sheriff’s Office formally initiated search and recovery operations along the designated highway route between Black hollow ski hill and Alder Creek Township.

Search efforts involving local law enforcement, state forestry personnel, volunteer rescue teams, and aerial reconnaissance units continued for approximately two weeks. Severe snowfall and hazardous terrain conditions significantly complicated operations. Despite extensive searches conducted throughout the surrounding mountain region, investigators recovered no trace of the bus, the missing 35 children or Elanor Langstrom.

Organized search efforts were eventually suspended.

On June 18, 1976, approximately six months after the disappearance, a private fishing party reported discovering what appeared to be a submerged vehicle beneath the surface of Lake Mercer located nearly 11 miles east of the intended bus route. Subsequent underwater examination confirmed the submerged vehicle to be the missing Alder Creek Elementary school bus.

A private recovery operation was authorized shortly thereafter. Investigators reported the bus was recovered largely intact from the lakebed despite significant structural deterioration resulting from prolonged submersion. Interior examination identified the remains of Eleanor Langstrom still positioned within the drivers seat. Due to extensive water exposure and postmortem aquatic predation, forensic examiners were unable to conclusively determine the precise cause of death.

No remains belonging to any of the 35 missing students were recovered from the vehicle or surrounding lake environment.

Subsequent dives and search operations conducted throughout Lake Mercer yielded no additional evidence explaining the disappearance of the children.

The circumstances surrounding the incident remain unresolved.


Case: S.S. Neptunes Hope

DATE:02/18/1976

SUBJECTS:

S.S. Neptunes Hope

Crew: 7

Status: missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On Febuary 18, 1976, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canadian Coast Guard initiated an investigation into the disappearance of the commercial lobster fishing vessel S.S. Neptunes Hope, following its failure to return to port along the Nova Scotia coastline.

The vessel, operated out of the fishing community of Black Harbour, Nova Scotia, departed during the early morning hours of October 18 with a crew of seven experienced fishermen aboard. According to harbor records and witness statements, weather conditions at the time of departure were considered stable and well within operational limits for seasonal fishing activity.

Concern regarding the vessels whereabouts was raised after repeated safety check-in communication attempts by harbor officials went unanswered.

Initial search and rescue operations conducted throughout the North Atlantic sector failed to locate debris, distress signals, oil slicks, or life rafts associated with the S.S. Neptunes Hope. Following several weeks of unsuccessful recovery efforts, investigators provisionally concluded the vessel had most likely sunk during severe offshore conditions or suffered catastrophic mechanical failure resulting in total loss at sea.

On May 31, 1976, local fishermen operating off the Gulf of Thailand reported encountering an unidentified fishing vessel drifting without visible crew activity. Thai maritime authorities later boarded the vessel and confirmed it to be the missing Canadian lobster fishing ship S.S.Neptunes Hope.

Investigators noted the vessel was in unusually preserved condition considering the reported duration of disappearance and presumed transoceanic drift distance. Preliminary inspection identified no catastrophic structural damage capable of explaining the disappearance of the crew. Personal belongings, clothing, food provisions, fishing equipment, emergency flotation gear, and all onboard lifeboats remained accounted for within the vessel. Multiple meals and partially completed maintenance activities were reportedly discovered abandoned mid task.

No human remains or evidence indicating violent struggle were identified onboard. Examination of navigational systems and fuel reserves failed to determine how the vessel could have traversed from the North Atlantic Ocean to Southeast Asian waters within the established timeline.

No trace of the seven crew members was ever recovered. The disappearance of the S.S. Neptunes Hopes crew remains unresolved.


Case: Hunan Roadway Contruction Report

DATE:09/14/1978

SUBJECTS:

High way repair crew

Crew: 6

Status: missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On September 14, 1978, provincial authorities in the Hunan Province of The Peoples Republic of China, initiated an investigation into the unexplained disappearance of a six man overnight construction crew assigned to highway maintenance operations along a remote rural roadway sector approximately 27 miles from the nearest municipal population center.

According to regional infrastructure records, the crew had been contracted to conduct emergency night time concrete repair operations on a deteriorated section of Route 118 following reports of structural roadway damage caused by seasonal flooding earlier that month.

The assigned personnel arrived at the worksite during the late evening hours of September 13 accompanied by standard paving equipment, portable lighting systems, concrete mixing machinery, and a supply transport vehicle. Witness statements obtained from a fuel station attendant located along the route confirmed the crew appeared in normal condition prior to reaching the repair sector.

The following morning, a secondary road crew arrived at the location after repeated radio contact attempts with the overnight team failed.

Responding workers discovered the construction site completely abandoned and reported all vehicles, machinery, portable floodlights, and construction equipment remained present and operational at the scene. Freshly poured concrete sections indicated repair work had been actively underway shortly before the disappearance occurred. Personal belongings belonging to the missing workers, including jackets, food containers, cigarettes, identification documents, and work gloves, were additionally discovered scattered throughout the site. No signs of vehicle departure, robbery, struggle, or environmental disaster were identified.

Provincial authorities conducted extensive search operations across surrounding farmland, woodland regions, and nearby river systems. Tracking teams and local military personnel reportedly participated in coordinated sweeps of the area for several days without recovering any trace of the six missing workers. Investigators were unable to determine why all personnel would have simultaneously abandoned an active overnight construction operation, particularly given the isolated nature of the worksite and absence of nearby settlements.

No remains or additional evidence associated with the crew were ever located. The disappearance remains unresolved.


Case: New Jersey Abductions

DATE:11/14/1979

SUBJECTS:

Emily Rourke

06 yrs old

Status: missing

Thomas Bell

09 yrs old

Status: missing

Rebecca Haines

10 yrs old

Status: missing

Andrew Pike

07 yrs old

Status: missing

Daniel Mercer

08 yrs old

Status: missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

Between November 1979 and February 1980, state and county law enforcement agencies operating throughout the northern Appalachian region documented a sequence of five child abductions occurring under highly unusual and interconnected circumstances.

The victims were identified as Emily Rourke (age 6), Thomas Bell (age 9), Rebecca Haines (age 10), Andrew Pike (age 7), and Daniel Mercer (age 8). All five juveniles disappeared during overnight hours from within their family residences over a period spanning approximately four months.

The first documented incident occurred on November 3, 1979, involving Emily Rourke of Blackwater County. Parents reported discovering the child missing from her second-floor bedroom shortly before dawn. Investigators noted the bedroom window had been left partially open despite freezing weather conditions. No signs of forced entry or disturbance elsewhere within the residence were identified.

The second disappearance occurred on December 1, 1979, when Thomas Bell vanished from a rural farmhouse located near the Pine Ridge woodland sector. Family members reported hearing what they believed to be scratching sounds outside the home during the early morning hours but did not investigate at the time. Thomas’s bed was later discovered empty, with muddy residue identified along the interior window frame.

On December 28, 1979, Rebecca Haines disappeared from her family residence in Alder Creek Township. Investigators documented that the victim’s bedroom was located on the upper level of the home, approximately twenty feet above ground level. Despite this, authorities recovered no evidence indicating how entry or removal from the room had been physically accomplished.

The fourth incident occurred on January 19, 1980, involving Andrew Pike, age 7. According to statements obtained from the child’s parents, Andrew had reportedly complained in the days leading up to his disappearance that someone was standing outside the trees near his bedroom window at night. Search operations conducted after the abduction yielded no trace evidence.

The fifth and final known disappearance occurred on February 17, 1980, involving Daniel Mercer of Ashgrove County. According to investigative records, Daniel had been left under the temporary supervision of an elderly female neighbor while his parents attended an overnight family emergency outside the township. The witness later stated that approximately one hour prior to discovering the child missing, she observed what she described as “a completely naked man” standing motionless near the forest treeline bordering the rear of the property. The witness further reported the unidentified individual disappeared into the woods before she could alert authorities.

Daniel Mercer’s bedroom was located on the third floor of the residence. Responding officers documented the rear-facing bedroom window open at the time of discovery despite exterior access appearing structurally improbable without specialized climbing equipment. Comparative analysis conducted by investigators later identified significant consistencies across all five abductions, including nighttime occurrence, removal from bedrooms positioned near open windows, absence of forced entry, and geographic proximity to dense forested terrain. No suspects were formally identified in connection to the incidents.

None of the five missing children were ever recovered.


Case: Larry Feldberg

DATE:02/18/1982

SUBJECTS:

Larry Feldberg

78 yrs old

Status: Deceased

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On Febuary 18, 1982, local authorities in Cedar Falls, Iowa initiated a missing persons investigation concerning the disappearance of 78 year old Larry Feldberg following his failure to return home after attending a weekly community bingo event.

According to witness statements and event attendance records, Feldberg departed the St. Agnes Community Hall at approximately 21:35 hours driving his personal vehicle, a beige 1978 Buick LeSabre. Friends and fellow attendees described Feldberg as being in normal physical and mental condition prior to departure.

Concern regarding Feldberg’s whereabouts escalated after Larry Feldberg failed to return home throughout the night.

At approximately 02:14 hours on Febuary 19, a passing motorist traveling along County Route 16 reported discovering Feldbergs vehicle abandoned on the shoulder of a remote rural roadway approximately 11 miles from St. Agnes Community Hall. Responding officers located the vehicle unlocked with the engine no longer running. Investigators documented no visible signs of collision, mechanical failure, or struggle within the surrounding area. Feldbergs wallet, eyeglasses, vehicle keys, and personal belongings remained inside the automobile. No trace of Larry Feldberg was located during the initial search.

Large scale search operations involving local law enforcement, volunteer rescue teams and tracking dogs were conducted throughout nearby farmland and woodland sectors over the following days without success.

On March 2, 1982, approximately two weeks after the disappearance, a Kansas highway maintenance worker reported encountering an unidentified elderly male walking barefoot along an isolated farming road outside the township of Redfield, Kansas — over 400 miles from Feldberg’s last known location.

Responding authorities identified the individual as Larry Feldberg.

Investigators described Feldberg as completely unclothed, severely dehydrated, physically malnourished, and exhibiting signs of acute psychological distress. Witnesses stated Feldberg appeared incapable of recognizing surrounding individuals or responding coherently to questioning. Multiple officers and medical personnel later documented Feldberg repeatedly muttering a single fragmented statement: Tall trees.

Larry Feldberg was admitted to St. Marys Regional Hospital under emergency treatment protocols. On March 4, 1982 at approxamitly 03:17 hours, Larry Feldberg suffered cardiac failure and was later pronounced deceased.

The circumstances surrounding the disappearance remain unresolved.


Case: Ostashkov Deaths

DATE:08/18/1984

SUBJECTS:

Viktor Malenkov

46 yrs old

Status: Deceased

Sergei Antonov

39 yrs old

Status: Deceased

Pavel Orlov

34 yrs old

Status: Deceased

Anatoly Sidorin

51 yrs old

Status: Deceased

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On August 19, 1984, Soviet regional authorities initiated an internal investigation following a catastrophic industrial accident within the Ostashkov Warehouse District, USSR, resulting in extensive structural destruction across approximately four city blocks.

Official reports issued at the time attributed the event to a large-scale gas main rupture occurring beneath a municipal storage and distribution sector during overnight loading operations. The explosion caused severe infrastructure damage, mass casualties, and widespread fires throughout the surrounding industrial zone. Recovery operations continued for several days.

Among the surviving personnel connected to the incident were four warehouse employees assigned to adjacent storage facilities near the reported blast origin point. Internal witness statements later indicated all four individuals expressed escalating fears for their personal safety within the 24-hour period following preliminary questioning by state investigators.

Multiple coworkers later reported the men repeatedly insisted on speaking out against the official explanation surrounding the events.

The first death occurred on August 19, 1984, when warehouse foreman Viktor Malenkov (age 46) was reportedly killed during an apparent street robbery while returning home from work. Municipal police records indicate Malenkov suffered multiple stab wounds during the assault. Personal belongings and cash were not present at the scene.

Approximately six hours later, Sergei Antonov (age 39), another employee connected to the warehouse sector, died in a high speed motor vehicle collision outside Ostashkov city limits. Subsequent mechanical inspection reportedly identified catastrophic brake failure.

On the evening of August 19, 1984, Pavel Orlov (age 34) was discovered deceased at the bottom of a public community swimming facility following what authorities classified as accidental drowning. Witnesses stated Orlov had no known history of swimming activity and had reportedly expressed fear prior to his death.

The fourth and final individual, Anatoly Sidorin (age 51), was discovered deceased inside his apartment residence on August 20, 1984. Official findings classified the death as suicide. Family members and acquaintances strongly disputed the ruling, later informing investigators that Sidorin had never shown indications of suicidal intent.

Internal documentation concerning the four deaths was later consolidated into the broader Ostashkov industrial disaster archive. No formal connection between the deaths was ever publicly acknowledged by Soviet authorities. Further records remain restricted.


Case: Neirgard Family

DATE:04/26/1986

SUBJECTS:

Christopher Niergard

33 yrs old

Status: Deceased

Madison Niergard

35 yrs old

Status: Deceased

Brent Niergard

11 yrs old

Status: Deceased

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On April 26, 1986, Nevada State Police initiated a missing persons investigation concerning the disappearance of the Neirgard family following their failure to arrive at a scheduled family gathering in northern Idaho. The missing individuals were identified as Christopher Neirgard (age 33), Madison Neirgard (age 35), and their son, Brent Neirgard (age 11). According to statements obtained from relatives, the family had departed their residence in southern Nevada several days earlier utilizing a newly purchased 1987 Class-C recreational vehicle for what was intended to be a multi-state summer road trip.

The family’s final confirmed sighting occurred during the afternoon hours of July 19 at the Silver Basin Fuel Station located outside the township of Tonopah, Nevada. Witnesses, including station employees and travelers present at the location, later confirmed observing the Neirgard family departing the station in their Class-C 1987 R.V. while traveling northbound along State Route 95. Surveillance photographs recovered from the station showed no visible signs of distress or mechanical difficulty involving either the occupants or vehicle.

Concern regarding the family’s whereabouts escalated after relatives failed to establish contact over several consecutive days. Nevada authorities subsequently coordinated a large-scale interstate search operation involving highway patrol units, aerial reconnaissance teams, volunteer rescue groups, and neighboring state agencies. Search efforts focused heavily on remote desert highways, abandoned service roads, and mountainous terrain throughout central Nevada due to the isolated nature of the familys last known location.

Despite extensive search operations conducted over several weeks, investigators failed to recover any trace of the Neirgard family or their recreational vehicle. No debris, tire tracks, abandoned campsites, fuel purchases, or confirmed witness sightings beyond the Tonopah fuel station were ever identified.

Investigators additionally noted no unusual banking activity, communication attempts, or evidence suggesting voluntary disappearance by any member of the family. The disappearance of the Neirgard family remains unresolved.


Case: Elroy Property

DATE:09/18/1988

SUBJECTS:

Johnathan Elroy

52 yrs old

Status: Closed

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On September 8, 1989, officers of the Greenridge County Sheriffs Department responded to a residential property located within the suburban outskirts of Hollow Creek, Pennsylvania following reports of a partially buried vehicle discovered in a redential backyard. The reporting party, identified as homeowner Johnathan Elroy (age 52), stated he initially observed an unusual metallic object protruding from backyard property. Upon further inspection Elroy discovers what appeared to be the front end of an automobile protruding from the ground.

Responding officers later confirmed the object to be a heavily deteriorated four-door sedan positioned nose up in the property at an approximate angle of forty degrees. Investigators documented that the majority of the vehicle remained completely submerged underground, with only portions of the hood, windshield frame, and front bumper visible above the surface.

Preliminary examination identified no evidence of recent burial activity despite the surrounding neighborhood having been developed only six years earlier. Utility and zoning records further indicated no documented excavation permits or prior knowledge of buried structures existing on the property.

Interior examination of the vehicle revealed extensive structural compression and severe environmental deterioration. Investigators additionally documented the presence of personal belongings, clothing, and household items remaining inside the passenger compartment. No human remains were recovered from the vehicle.

Forensic analysis later determined the vehicles engine and undercarriage displayed no collision damage consistent with roadway impact or accidental burial. Soil stratification surrounding the automobile further suggested the vehicle had remained underground for a substantially longer period than the age of the surrounding residential development itself. As well as the vehicle not being present on the property prior to September 9, 1989. Investigators were unable to determine how the vehicle became buried on the property.


Case: Kelly Duvall & Kristina Burnell

DATE:05/19/1989

SUBJECTS:

Kelly Duvall

10 yrs old

Status: Missing

Kristina Burnell

09 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On May 18, 1989, the Westbrook County Sheriffs Department initiated a missing persons investigation following the disappearance of two juvenile females within a wooded trail system located near the township of Westbrook.

The involved juveniles were identified as Kelly Duvall (age 10), Kristina Burnell (age 9), and Natalia Leers (age 9). According to witness statements and subsequent interviews, the three children departed the residential neighborhood area during the afternoon hours utilizing bicycles before entering a commonly used forest hiking trail situated near the Duvall residence.

Investigators were unable to conclusively determine the exact duration the juveniles remained within the wooded area prior to the incident.

Statements obtained from Natalia Leers later indicated that while traveling through the trail system, the group encountered what she described as a playground located deep within the forested area. Natalia consistently described the structure as appearing newly constructed and unusually clean despite its isolated location.

No records or evidence supporting the existence of a playground within the search sector were ever identified.

According to Natalia Leers, Kristina Burnell sustained a severe lower leg injury while the children were allegedly playing within the area surrounding the playground structure. Natalia later stated the injury rendered Kristina incapable of walking or operating her bicycle without assistance. It was subsequently decided that Kelly Duvall would remain with Kristina while Natalia exited the wooded area to seek adult assistance. At approximately 18:12 hours, Natalia Leers reportedly made contact with an unidentified adult male resident residing near the trail access road. The individual later informed investigators that Natalia appeared extremely distressed and repeatedly claimed her friend was hurt in the woods. The adult accompanied Natalia back into the forested trail system in an attempt to locate the remaining children. Upon arrival at the location described by Natalia Leers, neither Kelly Duvall, Kristina Burnell, nor the alleged playground structure could be located.

Initial search operations conducted by responding law enforcement personnel, volunteers, and forestry teams failed to recover any trace of the missing juveniles. Investigators later documented inconsistencies between Natalia Leers description of the area and the physical terrain examined during organized search efforts.

Subsequent interviews conducted with Natalia Leers over the following weeks revealed no significant deviation from her original account despite repeated challenges by investigators regarding the existence of the playground. No evidence explaining the disappearance of Kelly Duvall and Kristina Burnell was ever recovered. All investigative materials, witness interviews, photographic evidence, and related documentation concerning the case were later transferred under sealed federal jurisdiction.

Kelly Duvall and Kristina Burnell remain missing.


Case: CA-08-4419M - M.V. Horizon Vale

DATE:07/20/1990

STATUS: Unresolved

SUBJECTS:

VESSEL NAME: M.V. Horizon Vale

TYPE: Passenger Cruise Liner

FLAG: United States

LENGTH: 289 meters

PASSENGERS: 1,624

CREW: 612

TOTAL PERSONS ON BOARD: 2,236

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On July 20, 1990 (16:10hrs) The Vessel M.V. Horizon Vale, departs Port of San Diego under standard operating conditions.en route to Honolulu, HI.

On July 21-24, 1990 M.V. Vale Horizon maintains standard operating conditions and comunications checks, no issues reported.

On July 25, 1990 (23:48hrs) M.V. Horizon Vales final routine communication check is logged. No irregularities reported.

On July 26, 1990 (02:13hrs) M.V Horizon Vales last confirmed radar signature recorded. Vessel maintains course and speed.

On July 26, 1990 (23:45hrs) M.V. Horizon Vale misses Scheduled communications check.

On July 27, 1990 (23:47 to 06:30hrs) Repeated contact attempts fail across all frequencies.

On July 27, 1990 (08:20 hrs) Search and rescue operations formally initiated.

On July 27-Aug 02, 1990. Multi-agency search covering approx. 14,000 sq. nautical miles. Deployment of 6 aircraft, 11 surface vessels. Satellite imaging requested and reviewed.

On Aug 02, 1990. No debris field, oil slicks, lifeboats or emergency beacons were detected. Resources are being exhausted.

On Aug 02, 1990. Coastguard releases investigation report to the public, data showed no evidence of course deviation prior to disappearance along with reports of weather conditions being calm, visibility clear.

On Aug 02, 1990. Coastguard confirms all viable search leads were exhausted. Despite continued monitoring, no further evidence or contact has been recorded. Due to the case activity declining Its currently considered cold pending new information.


Case:32768H - Mason Family

DATE:08/25/1991

SUBJECTS:

Shane Mason

30 yrs old (father)

Status: Missing

Donna Mason

36 yrs old (Mother)

Status: Missing

Dylan Mason

3 yrs old (son)

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On August 25, 1991, the Mason family departed their residence for a planned two week vacation.

On September 02, 1991, the Mason family was last observed via surveilance footage at the Rapid Creek Falls National Park parking area. Footage shows all three Mason family members exiting the park grounds and entering their vehicle without visible signs of distress or coercion. The vehicle (1989,Blue,Dodge Caravan) was seen departing southbound on highway 2.

On September 10, 1991, Shane Mason's employer filed a request for a welfare check after Shane failed to return to work as scheduled. Responding officers reported no evidence of recent activity at the Mason residence.

On September 12, 1991, the Mason family is officially declared missing.

On September 25, 1991, coordinated search efforts were conducted by local law enforcement and civilian volunteers along Highway 2 and surrounding areas. No significant evidence or trace of the Mason family were recovered.

On October 9, 1991, jurisdiction of the case was transferred to federal authorities. Lead was assigned to F.B.I Missing persons unit, Detective Riley.


Case: Ron Baker

DATE:03/12/1992

SUBJECTS:

Ron Baker

34 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On March 12,1992. 34 year old Ron Baker was reported missing by his spouse after failing to return from an evening jog. Witnesses confirm seeing him enter the trail at approximately 7:10pm, this was last known sighting of Ron Baker alive.

On March 15, 1992. A search of the area where he was last seen was conducted. Police found Ron Bakers left running shoe approximately 0.5 km from the trail enterance.

On March 16, 1992. Police return to the search area with a K9 unit, which tracked Ron Bakers scent to a bench 200 feet away from the location where Ron Baker left running shoe was recovered.


Case: Marcus Allen

DATE:03/18/1993

SUBJECTS:

Marcus Allen

19 yrs old (GS employee)

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On March 18, 1993, Ashfield Municipal Police Department responded to a missing persons call placed by an employee of Ashfield Fuel & Service (Store #02), located at 1148 Route 6.

The reporting party, scheduled to relieve Marcus Allen at the conclusion of his overnight shift, arrived at approximately 05:45 hours and found the premises unattended. No staff were present on site. Cash register was active, and store lights remained on

Preliminary review of interior surveillance footage shows Marcus Allen present behind the front counter at approximately 03:02 hours. At 03:07 hours, Marcus Allen exits the counter area and proceeds to the rear “Employees Only” storage room.

All interior and exterior cameras remained operational except for the Storage room cameras feed which displays static beginning at 03:06:41 hrs. No recorded footage from within storage room after this time.

None of the interior or exterior cameras capture Marcus Allen exiting the buliding.

Duration between Marcus Allen entering the storage room and the discovery of his absence exceeds 2 hours with no recorded exit.

Officers arrive on scene and determine No signs of a struggle or indication of a robbery, abduction, or voluntary departure. No forensic evidence was found in the storage room or surrounding areas.

Officers found that the cash register contained the expected balance for Marcus Allens shift period.Along with locating Marcus Allens wallet, jacket and keys inside his designated employee locker

On March 21, 1993, 72 hours after initial response, all viable leads were exhausted. No further developments were recorded.

No further documentation available


Case: Kovac

DATE:11/19/1993

SUBJECTS:

Alina Kovac

27 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On November 19, 1993, Alina Kovac was left work at around 17:15p.m. via taxi. Alina was last seen alive by the taxi driver who reported witnessing Alina exit his cab and enter her apartment at around 18:10p.m.

On November 20, 1993, (08:00a.m.) Alina fails to report for work. Repeated attempts to make contact with Alina Kovac are made.

On November 20, 1993 (16:30p.m.) A concerned co worker calls the municipal law enforcement to perform a welfare check on Alina Kovac.

On November 20, 1993 (17:45p.m) Law enforcement arrives at Alina Kovacs apartment, upon approaching they find the front door open and a foul smell emitting from inside.

On November 20, 1993 (17:47p.m) Law enforcement enter Alina Kovacs apartment. Alina Kovac is nowhere to be seen.

On November 20, 1993 (18:10p.m) Law enforcement go to the building manager and request access to the security cameras specifically footage from the past 24 hours from all cameras facing entry and exit points.

On November 21, 1993 Law enforcement conclude that no footage exsists of Alina Kovac exiting her apartment after entering it on Novemeber 19, 1993.


Case:Santiago - Andrews

DATE:06/14/1994

SUBJECTS:

Sharon Santiago

24 yrs old

Status: Missing

Lilly Andrews

07 yrs old

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On June 14, 1994, at approximately 17:20 hours, Municipal Law enforcement received a emergency call from a frantic Melisa Andrews reporting her child and assigned babysitter missing from their residence. Melissa Andrews stated she returned home at 17:10 and found the residence unoccupied.

A handwritten note was located inside the home, believed to be authored by Sharon Santiago, stating that she and Lilly had gone to the park and would return by 15:00. No further communication was received from either individual.

Responding officers proceeded to the local park/playground identified by Melissa Andrews. Witnesses at the location confirmed seeing a young adult female matching Santiagos description at approximately 13:20-14:30.

Multiple witnesses observed the pair walking toward the public restroom facility located on the north end of the park. Both individuals were seen entering the womens restroom. No witnesses reported seeing either individual exit the restroom.

An unattended bicycle was found outside the restrooms, identified as belonging to Lilly Andrews.

A search of the womens restroom was conducted. Inside the third stall officers recovered a purse and a set of keys indentified as belonging to Sharon Santiago. The scene showed no visible signs of a struggle or physical evidence indicating foul play was immediately observed.

The public restroom facility has a single public entrance and no accessible secondary exits.

No confirmed sightings of Sharon Santiago or Lilly Andrews have been reported following their entry into the restroom facility. Case remains unsolved.


Case: Leung

DATE:01/11/1996

SUBJECTS:

Lucal Leung

42 yrs old (AC repairman)

Status: Missing

SUMMARY OF EVENTS

On January 11, 1996. 42 year old Lucas Leung was last seen captured on survelience footage within a parking structures 3rd level. He was filmed exiting his parked vehicle at aproxamitly (17:34).

On January 11, 1996. Footage shows Lucas walking toward the stairwell and does not apear to be under any signs of distress.

On January 11, 1996. No other footage from the security cameras around indicates that Lucas Leung exits the stairwell after entering it.

On January 14, 1996. A Local parking enforcement employee contacts police after finding Lucas Leungs abandoned vehicle on the 3rd level of the parkade.

On January 14, 1996. Police arrive to investigate, where they find Lucas's vehicle unlocked and his wallet and keys.

On January 15, 1996. Police ofially declare Lucas Leung missing.

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