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Saturday, December 8, 2018

What Natalee Holloway's Friends Have To Say About Her Disappearance.

At night everyone got really dressed up to have dinner at the Aruba Holiday Inn , and afterward people would go to Carlos'n Charlie's. 
It was your average beach bar; everybody mixed together, American kids and Arubans.
The Aruba Holiday Inn had a casino that they all went to the last night of the trip. 
Her friends found out after Natalee disappeared that Joran was a regular gambler there. 
Her friend Claire left, and Natalee went to Carlos'n Charlie's with some of the others.
The next morning Natalee's roommate and another friend noticed Natalee was missing and told some of the police stationed around the hotel.
Claire said as she was boarding the plane to leave Aruba, two of our friends ran up and said, 
"Natalee's not on the plane! 
We don't know where she is!" 
She said she thought that Natalee's might still be lying on the beach.
But by the time she landed in Atlanta, her dad called her and said,
                              "things aren't looking good."
Her fried Mallie said,

"We knew in our gut it was Joran. 
We just knew."
While the students were returning to Birmingham, Natalee's mother, Beth, talked to one of the boys who'd been on the trip.

She learned that he'd seen Natalee with van der Sloot on the last night. 
Beth was in Aruba and got the address of Joran's house.
She was standing outside the gates when she called Natalee's friends, who were gathered at Claire's house.
They put her on speakerphone and Beth said, 
"Kids, I need more details!" 
Anyone who had seen Joran in Aruba shouted whatever information they had. 
Beth pleaded to be let in the house so she could talk face-to-face with Joran,
Leaning into the speakerphone in Claire's living room, her friends were all screaming.
All of Natalee's friends thought that he was keeping her in his house.
Claire said,
"We were enraged Beth wasn't being let in. 
We were pacing the room and freaking out. 
Here is a mother in crisis, and if nobody will let her in the house…well, something is really suspicious! 
We knew in our gut that Joran was behind her disappearance.
 By now we knew from talking to other kids who'd been on the trip that Joran was a regular at the casino, and that Natalee had left Carlos'n Charlie's in the backseat of a car with him. 
Nobody would let Beth into the house. 
It just added up. 
He'd done something bad to her—we didn't know what, but we knew it was him."
On June 9, van der Sloot and brothers Deepak and Satish Kalpoe, who had been in the car with him and Natalee, were detained as part of the investigation.
The Kalpoe brothers were released on July 4, but van der Sloot was still being detained.
Searches for Natalee continued that summer, but with no results. Van der Sloot was released from custody on September 3 for lack of evidence.
In November 2007,van der Sloot was taken into custody again, as were the Kalpoe brothers, for "suspicion of involvement in voluntary manslaughter." 
But the prosecutors did not present enough evidence to charge them, and all three were released.
Mallie said,
"I used wine to hide my feelings from myself. I drank and drank. Numbness was what I was after."
Claire said she had horrible anxiety.
"I was afraid of parking my car in the dark. 
I would fly out of the car and into the house."
In March 2008 a Dutch journalist had taped van der Sloot saying that he had seen Natalee die on an Aruban beach.
All of Natalee's friends got together to watch the video on TV.
Claire said,

"There were 12 of us in our friends' basement, watching Joran saying 'of course' Natalee was dead. 

Did we believe it? 
Yes."
Mallie said, 

"We never spoke of Natalee anymore. 
She'd not only disappeared from our lives, she disappeared altogether."

Where do they think Natalee's body is?

They won't even talk about it.

Natalee Holloway

Was Football Partially To Blame For The Oklahoma City Bombing?

The Buffalo Bills lost four Super Bowls in a row in the early 1990s, 
Among their most heartbroken fans was Timothy McVeigh.
He was a New York native who killed 168 people and injured over 680 more in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.
It was their third consecutive Super Bowl loss and it was by far the worst of them all.
McVeigh left New York state, his only real home, a few days later. He would live adrift in a nomadic life of gun shows and spiraling extremism.
McVeigh was a Bills super fan.
He was working for little pay as an overnight security guard at the Buffalo Zoo when he bet $1,000 on the Bills winning the Super Bowl in 1993.
Quarterback Jim Kelly re injured his knee and the Cowboys scored four touchdowns, including two just 15 seconds apart, all before halftime.
The Waco siege happened a few weeks later.
This led to the deaths of 86 people, mostly children when the Branch Davidians cult refused to surrender to the FBI. 
McVeigh saw this and started plotting revenge against the U.S. government.
Two years after Waco, McVeigh targeted the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, with a truck bomb. 
It was the deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil until September 11, 2001, and remains the worst domestic terrorist attack in American history.
McVeigh was executed in 2001 for carrying out the attack.
McVeigh had a history of being bullied, a broken family.
He stayed in Buffalo with his dad when his mother moved to Florida with his sisters when he was an adolescent.
He spent his free time nursing conspiracy theories about the U.S. government and writing ominous letters to the editor of his local paper.
He reportedly suffered a nervous breakdown and contemplated suicide.
He also possibly suffered from undiagnosed PTSD from serving in the Gulf War.
The Oklahoma City Bombing
Interesting Things About The Oklahoma City Bombing.

Interesting Facts About The Missing Sodder Kids.

1n 1945, a Christmas Eve fire destroyed their home in Fayetteville, West Virginia where George and Jennie Sodder lived with 9 of their 10 children.
Their oldest son, Joe, was overseas fighting in WWII.
George and Jennie Sodder were able to escape the burning house with 4 of their children.
The remaining 5 Sodder children were never accounted for.
George Sodder and Jennie Sodder were Italian immigrants who came to the US separately as children. 
George started his own trucking company in West Virginia.
George had strong political opinions he expressed, which some people did not like.
He was strongly opposed to Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
George was able to break back into the house but was unable to make it back up the stairs on their 2nd story. 
Their bodies or remains were never found. 
The house burned down quickly, not allowing enough time to cremate their bodies completely.
So why were their remains never found?
The Sodder family believe that the remaining 5 children escaped the fire due to a series of events before and after the fire. 
At 12:30am on Christmas Jennie Sodder woke up to the phone ringing. 
On the phone a woman, whose voice she didn’t recognize, asked for a name Jennie was also not familiar with. 
She heard other voices in the background along with clinking glasses and “weird laughter.”
She then checked on her children. 
She had allowed her kids to stay up later, playing with new toys. She noticed that lights were on and the curtains were closed.
She found one child  asleep on the couch, then returned her to bed, assuming the other children were in the attic and had forgotten to close down the house.
At 1:00am, Jennie Sodder woke up again to the sound of “an object hitting the house’s roof with a loud bang, then a rolling noise.” 
She went back to sleep.
At 1:30am, Jennie Sodder woke up again to the smell of smoke. She got up and found a fire in George’s office.
This was also where the fuse box and telephone wires were.
Jennie woke George up and they escaped the house with four children.
The family yelled at the house, but did not hear from the other children and could not go upstairs to get them because the staircase was aflame.
The family tried to call for help, but their phone did not work so one of the children ran to a neighbor’s to call.
The family tried to locate their ladder to get to the children in the attic. It was usually resting against the side of the house but was now missing.
George Sodder tried to use both of his trucks to drive closer to the house so that he could crawl up to the attic. 
Both were previously in good working order and now would not start.
The fire department was small and volunteer only. They did not arrive until morning when the family assumed the other five children had already died.
When the fire department finally arrived, they began going through the ashes of the Sodder house.
They did not find any bones. 
The fire chief still believed the children died in the fire.

The family’s Christmas lights stayed on through the beginning part of the blaze.
Would this have occurred if it was truly an electrical fire?
They found the family ladder had been moved from the side of the house and hidden on an embankment hear the home.
The telephone company discovered that someone had crawled up a telephone pole and cut the phone line leading to the Sodder’s house.
While sorting through the rubble, they found kitchen appliances intact.
How could this be if the fire was truly hot enough to burn human bones to ash?
Jennie Sodder contacted a crematorium who told her a two hour fire at 2,000 °F, both hotter and longer than the Sodder’s house fire, would still leave human bones intact.
Why were neither of George Sodder's previously working trucks  able to move that night?
A local bus driver, passing through Fayetteville late Christmas, provided an alternate account.
The driver said he had seen some people throwing “balls of fire” at the house. 
A few months later, Sylvia found a small, hard, dark-green, rubber ball-like object in the brush nearby. 
George, recalling his wife’s account of a loud thump on the roof before the fire, said it looked like a “pineapple bomb” hand grenade or some other incendiary device used in combat. 
The family later claimed that the fire had started on the roof, although there was by then no way to prove it.
People in the town claimed they saw the missing children in a vehicle the night of the fire, or have seen them since.
In 1949 the site of the house fire was excavated and human vertebrae bones were found.
An expert said they could only come from a human aged 16-23 and had never been exposed to fire. 
The oldest of the missing children was 14 at the time of the fire.
The expert also noted that it was “very strange” that more bones weren’t found, as they should not have burned up in that situation.
A woman who ran a Charleston hotel, claimed to have seen the children a week afterwards. 
She said that the children had come in, around midnight, with two men and two women, all of whom appeared to her to be “of Italian extraction”. 
When she attempted to speak with the children, 
“One of the men looked at me in a hostile manner; he turned around and began talking rapidly in Italian. 
Immediately, the whole party stopped talking to me”.
In 1967 Jennie Sodder received a photo in the mail of a man resembling one of the missing children, Louis Sodder. The back of the photo read:
“Louis Sodder

I love brother Frankie

Ilil boys

Two months before the fire in October 1945 a traveling life insurance salesman tried to sell George Sodder a policy. 
When Sodder declined, the salesman told him his house would go “up in smoke … and your children are going to be destroyed.” 
The salesman told George the cause of this tragedy would be “the dirty remarks you have been making about Mussolini.”
Someone in town had told George that he could fix his fuse boxes, warning him that they needed to be fixed or they would catch fire. George opted not to hire him as he had recently had the house rewired and cleared by the electric company.
The month of the fire, some of the Sodder children noticed two people in a car that would watch them on their way home from school.
The family, believe the Sicilian Mafia may have taken the children and started the fire in an attempt to extort money from the Sodders, though no one has reached out to them to ask for money. 

The Death of the Sodder kids.
The Sodder kids forced into slavery?

Some Things You Might Not Know About JonBenet's Murder Case.

Did you know it was later determined that there had been some unlocked windows and an unlocked door the night of JonBenet's murder?
A basement window was previously broken by John Ramsey when he was previously locked out of the house. 
Some people believe that the intruder entered through this basement window. 
A suitcase was found on the floor almost directly underneath this window. 
Some people think that the attacker planned to use this suitcase to get either JonBenét alive as a kidnap victim, or her body, out of the house, but this proved impossible.
Was this all staged to look like someone planned to abduct JonBenet?
Former FBI profiler John E. Douglas, was brought in to assist the Ramsey's lawyers on case in January 1997 to assess whether the Ramseys were involved.
He stated that if a family member was involved in a murder, they would generally construe events so that another person found the body. 
John was the one that found the body and his friend followed him into the basement room. 
When a family member is involved in a murder, they are likely to cover their child's body in a protective manner, covering all but their head. 
Just JonBenet's torso was covered, which did not denote the kind of act a parent would generally perform. 
John removed the duct tape from her mouth and loosened the cord around her, which goes against the theory of "staging" the body. Arndt made an error when she moved JonBenét into the living room.
Have the police have coddled the Ramseys because they are rich and influential in Boulder?
In September 2016 that to date, the Boulder Police Department has processed more than 1,500 pieces of evidence, including the analysis of over 200 DNA samples.
The major crimes unit has received and reviewed or investigated over 20,000 tips, letters or emails. 
Detectives have traveled to over 18 states and interviewed or spoken with more than 1,000 individuals.
The initial District Attorney, Alex Hunter, pursued an investigation of convicted pedophiles in the Boulder area.
However, he said that he would not clear the Ramseys. 
The city's mayor Leslie L Durgin said he was extremely concerned about the relationship between the district attorney's office and the Ramsey attorneys. 
Allegedly there were weekly breakfast meetings between a Ramsey defense lawyer and Peter Hofstrom, the prosecutor's liaison to the Ramsey family.
Former FBI agent John E. Douglas who was hired by the Ramsey family, quibbled with a few of Smit's interpretations but generally agreed with the Smit's investigation and conclusions. 
Douglas particularly praised Smit's discovery in autopsy photos of what appeared to be previously-overlooked evidence of a "stun gun" having been used to subdue JonBenét.
The Ramseys have consistently maintained their innocence. but for four months after the murder they declined to talk to the police. They mounted a defense team that included eight lawyers, four publicists, three private investigators, two handwriting analysts and one retired F.B.I. profiler.
Burke testified at a 1999 grand jury hearing.

Burke was not and had never been an suspect.
In September 2013, Daily Camera reporter Charlie Brennan and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press filed a lawsuit to press DA Stan Garnett to release the grand jury's indictment.
In mid-October, the judge ruled that the DA must show why the indictment should remain sealed.
In light of the new DNA evidence, Boulder County District Attorney Mary Lacy gave a letter to John Ramsey that same day,
"This new scientific evidence convinces us ... to state that we do not consider your immediate family, including you, your wife, Patsy, and your son, Burke, to be under any suspicion in the commission of this crime.... 
The match of Male DNA on two separate items of clothing worn by the victim at the time of the murder makes it clear to us that an unknown male handled these items. 
There is no innocent explanation for its incriminating presence at three sites on these two different items of clothing that JonBenét was wearing at the time of her murder....
To the extent that we may have contributed in any way to the public perception that you might have been involved in this crime, I am deeply sorry. 
No innocent person should have to endure such an extensive trial in the court of public opinion, especially when public officials have not had sufficient evidence to initiate a trial in a court of law.... 
We intend in the future to treat you as the victims of this crime, with the sympathy due you because of the horrific loss you suffered.... 
I am aware that there will be those who will choose to continue to differ with our conclusion. 
But DNA is very often the most reliable forensic evidence we can hope to find and we rely on it often to bring to justice those who have committed crimes. 
I am very comfortable that our conclusion that this evidence has vindicated your family is based firmly on all of the evidence.
Former investigator for the Boulder County District Attorney's office Gordon Coombs claimed,
"We all shed DNA all the time within our skin cells. It can be deposited anywhere at any time for various reasons, reasons that are benign.
To clear somebody just on the premise of touch DNA, especially when you have a situation where the crime scene wasn't secure at the beginning . . . really is a stretch."
Authorities had tracked Karr down by using the Internet.
After Karr was arrested and brought back to the US, he was released to face extradition for child pornography charges in Sonoma County, California. 

Weird Facts About Jaymee's Abduction

Jaymee Closs’s abduction and her parents’ murder has revealed perplexing new details of the disturbing case.
The items at the crime scene were strangely undisturbed and nothing seemed out of place despite an attack that was clearly violent.
The shooter was inside the house for only four minutes.
It doesn’t appear that anything was taken, it doesn’t appear that Jayme packed up any clothing.
Investigators are also troubled by the utter lack of forensic evidence left by the killer.
The sheriff said the only thing the shooter left behind was bullet casings.
Detectives may already have spoken with Jayme’s kidnapper.
Investigators still have little to go on and nothing more than hope to suggest the teen is still alive.

Arrest Made In Hania Aguilar's Murder

34 year old Michael Ray McLellan was charged with 10 felonies including first-degree murder and first-degree forcible rape in connection to the death of Hania Aguilar.
McLellan was already being held in police custody on unrelated charges at the time his arrest related to Aguilar was made.
He will have his first court appearance at the Robeson County Courthouse Monday at 9 a.m.

13 year old Hania Aguilar was abducted from her driveway last month in southeastern North Carolina.
An abductor forced her into a relative's idling SUV and drove off, prompting an Amber Alert.
Hania's body was found last week in water off a rural road in Robeson County, while the stolen SUV was abandoned less than 10 miles from the home.
Aguilar's autopsy has yet to be completed.

Thursday, December 6, 2018

Death Becomes Her

Michelle and Braulio Castillo both wanted a big family.
They adopted their first two children, then had three of their own.
They purchased and ran a small IT company called Strong Castle. 
Their business was awarded $500 million worth of IRS contracts in 2012.
They lived the life of millionaires.
In 2013, it was revealed that the company had received preference on government contracts because Braulio Castillo claimed he was a “service-disabled veteran.” 
He had injured his ankle playing football at a military prep school in 1984.
They were active in McLean Bible Church.
Braulio Castillo coached his kids’ sports teams, and the family was well-liked.
They were struggling to save their marriage.
In March 2013, Michelle Castillo filed for a protective order from her husband, providing a four-page list of abusive behavior by him such as trying to force her to have sex and locking her in rooms.
She was terrified of him and repeatedly told her friends that if something happens to her that Braulio was the one who probably killed her. 
The order was imposed, and Braulio was forced to move to another home a few blocks away.
Before the ink on the divorce papers were dry, Braulio already was seeing someone.
He was dating a triathlete.
Michelle had an unbreakable bond with her kids.
She cared about her children and put their needs above her own.
Michelle was 43, and the couple had been married 18 years.
March 19th, 2014, the two had been in court for a hearing on temporary child and spousal support, and Michelle Castillo’s lawyer said she was seeking $14,000 a month.
But the hearing was postponed due to a crowded docket.
That night, Michelle went out for drinks with a group of runners because she had just qualified for the Boston Marathon. 
Braulio had four of their children over for dinner at his house a few blocks from their home, while Nicholas was away at college
Braulio's sister drove his children to a parking lot to drop them off for Michelle. 
Nearby surveillance camera captured a grainy figure going inside at 8:10 p.m.
That person, or someone, emerged from the house at 12:30 a.m. 
In the morning, the children could not find their mother, so they called their father.
With a neighbor he went inside and took them to school.
The neighbor called police while Braulio went home.          Michelle was found with bruises on her facehanging by an electrical cord wrapped around a basement shower head.
The shower in her master bathroom had been running all night. 
The medical examiner ruled she had not been strangled by the cord around her neck, but had been suffocated.
When the police went to Braulio's house to inform him of his wife's death, he was on the phone with his lawyer.
He told police that his lawyer advised him not to talk to them.
He also had a bruised eye and a scratch running down his face.
Braulio’s DNA was found on her bed and sweatshirt, though he hadn’t been in the house for a year.
The shower had been wiped down of all fingerprints.
Sheriff’s deputies obtained a murder warrant for Braulio. 
They alleged that Braulio staged his wife’s death to look like a suicide.
At trial in June, Braulio took the stand and denied having any role in his wife’s death.
After five weeks, the jury deliberated for more than nine hours before convicting Castillo on all three counts. 
The following day, they issued the sentence of life plus 16 years.

Is Lynette's Killer Going to Finally Pay The Price For Her Murder? Updated 01/30/2021

Lynette Joy Dawson  was born 1948.
She was a nurse and childcare worker.
She was 28 years old when she disappeared on the night of January 9th,1982.
She left behind 2 daughters and her husband, Chris Dawson.
Her whereabouts remain unknown.
Chris Dawson claimed he dropped Lynette off at Mona Vale shopping center on the morning of January 9, 1982. 
She had organized to meet her mother at Northbridge Baths that day, but didn’t show up.
Chris called Lynette's mother and said that Lynette needed some time on her own and she had gone off for a few days. 
He also called his 16-year-old lover, Joanne Curtis, and said,
"My wife has gone away. 
She’s not coming back."
Chris Dawson was a Physical education teacher and Joanne Curtis was a student of Chris' and the Dawson's regular babysitter.
Joanne moved into the Dawson house the same day as Lynette's disappearance. 
Chris reported Lynette missing on 18 February 1982. 
Chris claims that Lynette left after marital problems caused over her bankcard spending. 
He suggested that there was a possibility that she joined a religious organization. 
There wasn't a police investigation into her disappearance at that time.
In 1983 Chris Dawson filed for divorce and a year later married Joanne.
They left Sydney to live in Queensland, selling the house in Bayview.
In 1990 Chris Dawson’s second marriage broke down and Joanne left him and she contacted Lynette’s family via a social worker and volunteered information to the police.
She claimed she was groomed and seduced by Chris while still at school and how she had sex with him in the family home while his wife slept upstairs. 
She said a month before Lynette disappeared Chris had talked about hiring a hit man to get rid of Lynette.
The police still didn't launch an investigation.
Then in 1997, a full inquiry was finally launched. 
By then the only physical records were a piece of paper with Lynette Dawson’s name on it and her missing persons file number.
The pool and patio area of their old Bayview house was excavated and a pink cardigan was sent to America for mitochondrial DNA testing. 
It also came to light that Chris Dawson had returned to the house in Bayview three times and asked the new owners if he could look in the back yard because "it meant a lot to him…"
Several inquests came after this and Chris was never charged due to insufficient evidence.

New evidence has been uncovered and Lynette's husband Chris Dawson was arrested under suspicion of her murder in December 5th, 2018 in Queensland. He was granted bail.

In June 2019 pleaded not guilty to Lynette's murder.

In February 2020, Chris was committed to stand trial for her murder. He is also facing a charge of carnal knowledge with a girl between the ages of 10 and 17. This charge relates to his time as a teacher in the 1970s and 1980s.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Lost & Found: Shawn Hornbeck and Ben Ownby

Shawn Hornbeck
He was a really good kid and cared about people.
Shawn was always upbeat, happy and joking.
It was 1:00 p.m. on Sunday, October 6th, 2002, in Richwoods, Missouri, he was 11 years old and all he wanted to do was go out and play.
Shawn asked his parents if he could ride his bike to a friends house.
He had rode his bike to his friend's house so many times before, so his parents agreed.
They told him to be careful and be home by 5:00 p.m. for dinner.
His mom told him that she loved him, gave him a hug and a kiss, then Shawn took off.
On his way to his friend's house, Shawn turned down Indian Creek Road.
Mike Devlin came up behind him and bumped Shawn with his truck.
This sent Shawn into a ditch.
Devlin initially seemed concerned for Shawn’s safety, but moments later things changed.
Devlin picked Shawn up, tied his hands behind his back and put him in the back of his truck while saying,
 “You were just at the wrong place at the wrong time.”
5:00 p.m. came and Shawn wasn't home yet.
His parents were very worried.
Shawn was afraid of the dark, and for him not to be home yet, his parents knew that there was something terribly wrong.
48 hours after he went missing, police and search and rescue combed the rough terrain.
Shawn’s parents, Pam Akers and stepfather Craig Akers focused all of their time looking for their son. 
They also set up a foundation to help look for missing and abducted children which they called the Shawn Hornbeck Foundation. 
Both Shawn’s mother and stepfather spent all of their money and retirement savings looking for Shawn and paying investigators to help aid the police. 
Little did they know that Shawn was only living an hour away.
They said they believed that he was still alive and they would never give up on him.
Shawn would remain missing for four years.
Shawn was physically abused throughout this time.
Devlin had guns and would threaten to murder him if he ever thought about leaving or calling for help. 
Eventually Shawn became too old for Devlin’s tastes and Devlin decided to find a replacement for Shawn.

William "Ben" Ownby
It was January 8th, 2007, he was thirteen years old and getting off the school bus in Franklin County, Missouri.
A 15 year old neighbor saw Devlin’s truck and knew something was wrong when he saw Ben crying and the truck peeling out from the bus stop. 
The neighbor was able to give the police a description of the white truck and the FBI was able to link the truck to Devlin relatively quickly.
The FBI came to Devlin’s house four days later, to question him about the kidnapping.
Devlin seemed distant and nervous and kept referring to his godson named Shawn that he had to return to. 
The FBI quickly realized that the Shawn that Devlin was referring to was Shawn Hornbeck. 
Both children were rescued and returned to their families.
Devlin was charged with 80 counts of sexual assault, kidnapping, and attempted murder.
Devlin pled guilty to all counts and was sentenced to 72 life terms.
In 2013, the Shawn Hornbeck Foundation closed and was replaced by the Missouri Valley Shawn Hornbeck Search and Rescue Team.

Monday, December 3, 2018

Will We Ever Know How Nadia Died And Who Is Responsible?

Nadia Malik
Nadia Malik was 22 years old in 2014 and from Marple Township in southeastern Pennsylvania.
She was a Temple University as a pre-med student and had two daughters, ages 1 and 4.
She had a volatile relationship with her boyfriend and the father of her children, Bhupinder Singh.
They also had a baby who died of unknown causes in 2012.
She was very shy, an introvert and she liked staying to herself.
She was also very smart and a devoted mother.
One night Nadia decides to leave Bhupinder after he breaks her ribs.
She made calls to her brother and a friend Sunday, February 9th 2014, to say Bhupinder was holding her against her will.
The family calls the police and the police attempt to locate the couple to no avail. 
The next day the family files a missing person's report and the police put a tracker on Nadia's phone.
The authorities think that the couple are riding around in Bhupinder's car.
Tuesday, February 11th, 2014, Bhupinder sends texts from Nadia's phone to her family stating,
"Look for us in the whole United States i guarantee my life you won't FIND US #!#!!!!!!! Bye."
He also sends texts demanding money from the family if they ever want to hear from her again.
Wednesday, February 12th, police have pinged Nadia's cellphone from Philadelphia to Washington, and to New York City, but it stops moving when it gets to Solon, Ohio.
Authorities send someone to the location in Ohio.
It turns out, it is Bhupinder's parents house.
When the Authorities show up, Bhupinder bolts out the back door.
Police arrest Bhupinder, but there is no sign of Nadia or her boyfriend's car.
When they go through Bhupinder's pockets they find Nadia's driver's license, her cellphone and the car keys. 
The authorities then ask him where Nadia is and he claims not to know.
It turns out that Bhupinder was on a bus when he was trying to extort the money from the family.
He then told cops that he had left her back in Philadelphia.
He had left her with the car, but the car only had one set of keys, which he had taken with him.
Thursday, February 13th, a snow storm hits Philadelphia, the biggest the city has ever seen, just as authorities there attempt to locate the car.
Thursday, February 20th, the car was finally found, covered in parking tickets in down town Philadelphia.
Police find Nadia slumped down in the reclined passenger seat, covered with a backpack and other items.
Later, police discover the car had been previously found in a different location.

If the police that gave those tickets would have run the plate, then they would have seen it was involved in a on going investigation.

When she was found Bhupinder had no reaction to the news of her death, except for immediately asking for his lawyer.
Nadia's body had no signs of violence, so the police were unable to determine her cause of death.
In October of 2014, the family finally received the official autopsy results.
Nadia's official cause of death was undetermined.
The coroner couldn't find an anatomical or toxicological cause.
However, there was an injection mark in her right hand.
Nadia was right handed, so it is highly possible that someone else did that to her.
No charges were filed against Bhupinder or anyone for Nadia's death.

In 2016, Malik's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Bhupinder Singh.
In the lawsuit, the family contended that Bhupinder was responsible for Malik's death. 
They said he "intentionally harmed her and left her dead or near-dead" in the car, abandoning her without her identification, cell phone, or even the keys for the vehicle.
In July of that year, a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court judge issued a default judgment and ordered Singh to pay the Malik family $10 million, damages they had sought to offset the emotional hardship and financial strain Malik's death had caused.

Bhupinder's dad was also named in the suit.
He gave Bhupinder the car when his son had a suspended license.

Nadia's family is still searching for answers and justice.
Justice for Nadia Facebook