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Monday, December 16, 2019

Where Is Michelle Nicolaou And Who Was Connecticut River Valley Killer?

๐ŸฆCatherine Vaughan “Cathy” Alexander Millican๐Ÿฆ
Image result for Catherine Millican
She was an accomplished young woman who graduated high school with honors.

Cathy was born on May 25th, 1951 in Newport, Sullivan County, New Hampshire.  She graduated the Connecticut College in 1972. Her husband was named Charles "Chuck" Millican. He qualified for the Olympic Sailing Trials in the 470 class in 1977 i think.  Cathy worked for the phone company. 

On October 24th, 1978, at around 5:30 p.m., Cathy was 26-years-old when she was at the Chandler Brook Wetland preserve on Route 11 in New London. She was taking pictures for the New Hampshire chapter of the Audobon society. She failed to returned home that night. The next day, only yards away from where she was last seen, her body was found sprawled out. She died of stab wounds to the throat, which were followed by stab wounds to her lower body. She had been stabbed a total of 29 times.Theft didn't appear to be a motive. Her belongings were scattered on the trail. as well as her car, parked out by the state highway were undisturbed. There was one article that i read that stated her car was a Volkswagon rabbit or the Volkswagon was seen in the area. Another vehicle seen in the area was described as a "grey car."

๐Ÿ“šMary Elizabeth “Betsy” Critchley๐Ÿ“š
Image result for Mary Elizabeth CritchleyImage result for Mary Elizabeth “Betsy” Critchley
She was born on December 25th, 1943. She was the oldest born to James Joseph Critchley and Elizabeth McLaughlin Critchley. 

Mary, who was taking classes at the University of Vermont and planned on hitchhiking to Waterbury, Vermont, where she lived with a friend. She was as last seen alive July 25th, 1981, near Exit 13 of the Massachusetts Turnpike in Framingham, Massachusetts. A friend dropped Mary off at the exit. Her body was found August 9th, 1981, in a wooded area off of Unity Stage Road in Unity. The only thing missing was her sandals and napsack. The medical examiner was unable to determine the cause of Mary's death because of the condition of her body. However, authorities said the circumstances surrounding her disappearance and death are suspicious. 

๐ŸฅBernice Courtemanche๐Ÿฅ
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She was born on December 24th, 1966 in Claremont, Sullivan County, New Hampshire. She was a nurses aide. 

On May 30th, 1984, Bernice was 17-years-old when she was last seen at approximately 3:30 p.m. She had left her nurses' aide job at the Sullivan County Nursing Home in Beauregard Village and was hitchhiking in Claremont. She was on her way to see her boyfriend eight miles away in Newport. Bernice never arrived and was reported missing the following day. Her remains were found by a fisherman just off Cat Hole Road in Newport on April 19th, 1986. She had died from stab wounds to the neck. Bernice also had an injury to her head.


๐Ÿ‘ฉ‍⚕️Ellen Ruth Fried๐Ÿ‘ฉ‍⚕️
Image result for Ellen Fried
She was born on August 9th, 1957. She was a supervising nurse at Valley Regional Hospital.

On July 22nd, 1984, Ellen was 26-years-old when she was last seen, late at night, talking to her sister on a payphone outside of a convenience store in Claremont. She talked to her sister for about an hour and commented about a car kept driving by that made her nervous.  Ellen stepped away from the phone briefly to make sure her car's engine would start and then returned to talk a few minutes longer. She failed to report to work and her car was found abandoned on Jarvis Road, a few miles away from the market where she used the payphone. 

Ellen's skeletal remains were found in a wooded area next to the Sugar River in the Kelleyville area of Newport, New Hampsire on September 19th, 1985. The autopsy revealed the cause of death to be undetermined because of the skeletal remains that were found. However, the circumstance of her disappearance and the findings at the scene were consistent with Ellen having been sexually assaulted before her death. The case has been treated as a homicide. 

Ellen's and Bernice's bodies were found 1 mile apart from each other.

๐Ÿ‘ฉ‍๐Ÿ‘งEva Marie Morse๐Ÿ‘ฉ‍๐Ÿ‘ง
Image result for Eva Morse
She was a 27-year-old single mother of a 10-year-old daughter.

Eva was born on May 6th, 1958 in Springfield, Windsor County, Vermont to Nelson Henry Morse and Marie Eva Josephine Rititpas Morse. 

In the morning on July 10th, 1985, 27-year-old Eva was last seen hitchhiking on Route 12 in North Charlestown, New Hampshire.  It was 7 a.m. and she had told her supervisors at work that she was going home sick.  Before Eva left she made a quick phone call. Later, a co-worker of Eva's told police that she said she was going to visit a one time lesbian lover. A motorist reported that he gave her a lift to the Charlestown/Claremont line. That was the last known sighting of Eva.

On April 25th, 1986, her body was discovered by loggers in a wooded area next to Sugar River in West Unity, New Hampshire. The medical examiner determined that Morse had been stabbed to death in the neck, her head nearly severed. 

Eva's body was found about 500 feet  from where Mary's body had been discovered in 1981.


๐ŸŒนLynda Marine Moore๐ŸŒน

Lynda Moore
She was a loving mother of two. She was active with the Rockingham Hospital Auxiliary, where she served as president, she actively pushed for a requirement for car seats for infants.
Lynda was born on April 20th, 1949 in Brattleboro, Windham County, Vermont to Harold Frederick Marine and Ruth Alice Staples Marin.

On April 15, 1986, Lynda was home alone doing yard work in Saxtons River, Vermont. That evening, her husband returned home to find his wife's dead body in their kitchen. She had more than two dozen stab wounds to the her throat and abdomen. Lynda also had defensive wounds on her hands and arms. By looking at the crime scene, it was obvious that Lynda and fought her attacker. Lynda's husband was a suspect, but was swiftly cleared.

The house was searched, road blocks were set up around the area. Neighbors were questioned for any details they could give.  Numerous witnesses reported having seen a slightly stocky, dark-haired man with a blue knapsack lingering near Moore's home the day of the murder. The man was thought to be between 20 and 25 years old, clean shaven, with a somewhat round face, and wearing dark-rimmed glasses. The following year, a composite sketch was released.

Her case is still opened and her son thinks it's solvable.


๐ŸŽฟBarbara Agnew๐ŸŽฟ
Image result for Barbara Agnew
She worked part time at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital.

On January 10, 1987, 38-year-old nurse Barbara Agnew was returning from a skiing outing with friends in Stratton, Vermont. She never showed up for work. Three days later, her wallet and blood stained clothing were found in the dumpster at a gas station of White River Junction. In the evening on January 14th, a snowplow driver encountered her green BMW at a northbound I-91 rest stop in Hartford, Vermont. The door was cracked and there was blood on the steering wheel. Her skis were missing but her boots and poles remained.

There was a heavy snowstorm in the area during the night of Barbara's disappearance, and she was a mere 10 miles from her home. Her reasons for pulling into the rest stop have puzzled investigators.

On March 28, 1987, hikers found Barbara's body near an apple tree in a remote part of Hartland, Vermont. She had stab wounds to the neck, inflicted from behind. She also had gashes to the lower abdomen. 

A criminal psychologist, John Philpin, was called in and interpreted the facts of the case. He came to believe that all the woman, except one, were abducted by the killer and taken to remote places. He liked to scare them and to be in control. He feels like he owns them. He also is probably a loner.


๐ŸคฐJane Boroski๐Ÿคฐ
Around midnight on August 6th, 1988, she was 23-years-old and 7 months pregnant and on her way home from a county fair in Keene, New Hampshire. It was hot and muggy and Jane decided to stop and get a soda from a vending machine next to a closed convenience store in West Swanzey. When she returned to her car she noticed of a Jeep Wagoneer parked next to her. Through her rear-view mirror Jane  saw the driver of the vehicle walking around the back of her vehicle. The strange man approached her and inquired on whether the pay phone was in working order. He then yanked open her car door and tried to pull her from her vehicle. They struggled and the man pulled out a knife and forced Jane out of the car. The man then claimed that Jane had beaten up his girlfriend. She denied this and tried to run, but he chased her and stabbed her twenty-seven times. Jane's attacker then got in his vehicle and left her to die. As he left he drove passed her, staring her straight in the eyes. 

As the blood rushed out of her body, Jane managed to crawled back to her car and to drive to her friend's house two miles away. On her way to her friend's house, Jane was terrified when she noticed that she was right behind the attacker's car. When she got to her friend's house, the occupants of the house came running to her aide. Her attacker performed a U-turn and slowly passed by the house as Jane was being helped before he sped away into the night. 

Jane was treated at the hospital, where it was determined that the she had a severed jugular vein, two collapsed lungs, a kidney laceration, and severed tendons in her knees and thumb. Fortunately, the baby was unharmed. Two months later, Jane gave birth to a healthy baby girl, who later was diagnosed with mild cerebral palsy. 

John Philpin interviewed Jane and put her under hypnosis. While under hypnosis, Jane was able to describe her attack in great detail.  She remembered that the attacker seemed extremely calm and collected. She also recalled that when she stopped struggling with him, he seemed to lose interest and stop attacking her. 
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As a result of the hypnosis, Jane was able to provide authorities with a composite sketch of her attacker to authorities. She was also able to recall the attacker's car and part of the license plate number. She believed that it was a '75 to '85 Jeep Wagoneer and that the license plate had the numbers "6 6 2". Authorities were able to narrow down the vehicles to approximately 350. Despite this, they were unable to determine who the attacker was.

The killings seemed to stop following the Jane's attack.

Who Is The Killer?


๐Ÿƒ‍♀️ Heidi Martin๐Ÿƒ‍♀️
On May 20th, 1984, Heidi was 16-years-old when she went for a jog in Hartland, Vermont, on Martinsville Road. The next day, her body was found in a brook off of a logging road behind Hartland Elementary School. She had been raped and stabbed to death. Her body was found about a mile away from where Barbara's body was found. 
Image result for delbert tallman vermont
21-year-old Delbert C. Tallman confessed to the crime and was tried; however, he later recanted his confession and was acquitted. 

Tallman, was born in Claremont, New Hampsire, but grew up in the White River Junction area.

In 1996, in an unrelated case, Tallman was convicted of two counts of lewd and lascivious conduct with a child. In 2006, Vermont authorities issued the warrant for his arrest after he failed to respond to a routine registered letter from the sex offender registry that was sent to his last known address on Park Street in Springfield.

In October of 2010, Tallman was arrested after he stepped off a bus from Florida with his fiancรฉe and her three children in tow. He was taken into custody without incident. Tallman said he had spent the past five years in jail in Florida and had just been released on  before hopping the bus back to Vermont. 

There is no evidence presently available to the public that Tallman was involved in any of the other cases and little evidence, besides his confession that ties him to Heidi's murder. 

Tallman would have been 25 years old in 1988 when Jane Boroski was attacked. She did hand to hand combat with her attacker and stated his age at between 35 and 40 years old.

In October 1997, 46-year-old Gary Westover. a paraplegic, confessed to his uncle, retired Grafton County sheriff's deputy Howard Minnon, that he and three other men had abducted and murdered Barbra Agnew. Minnon shared Westover's information with his wife, daughter, and law enforcement. However, Minnon felt that authorities were not interested in his information. Westover died shortly after his confession, and Minnon died in 2006. It is unknown if he was actually responsible or involved in the other murders.

๐Ÿ‘—Michelle Marie Ashley Nicholaou๐Ÿ‘—
Image result for Michelle Marie Ashley Nicholaou
She was born on October 18th, 1966 to Rose Young.

Michelle was a bubbly young woman. In her youth, she was a tomboy who built tree forts in the woods. As she grew older, she became interested in fashion. One day she ran away with a young man and the two had a baby together. However, she ended up leaving both of them. 
Image result for michael nicholaou
Michelle then met a man named Michael Nicolaou. His birth father, Edward Stafford, was a registered sex offender for molesting children. When Nicolaou was 3-years-old, his mother divorced Stafford due to extreme cruelty. Nicolaou's mother remarried a man named Rudy, who would hit Nicolaou. 

Nicolaou grew up in Long Island. While high school he distinguished himself as a wrestler and had a black belt in Karate. In 1978, Nicolaou enlisted in the Army. He served as a helicopter pilot and received two Purple Hearts, two Silver Stars and two Bronze Stars for his service in combat. However, also while in the army, Nicolaou often would leave camp without permission in order to seek out the enemy and engage them in one on one knife fights.  Then, in 1970, he and seven other crew men where charged with murder and attempted murder for strafing civilians in Mekong Delta. This means they allegedly flew really low in their helicopter and repeatedly attacked the civilians with bombs or machine gun fire. The charges were dropped after six months due to insufficient  evidence. However, Nicolaou was released from active duty and sent home. 

Feeling disgraced and bitter, he filed a lawsuit against the United States Army.  Nicolaou also was plagued by nightmares, flashbacks and angry outbursts. He received psychiatric treatment from the Department of Veterans Affairs for his Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Michelle's family weren't to fond of Nicolaou. They found him unsettlingly quiet and creepy. He was very possessive of Michelle and controlling. Allegedly, Nicolaou was so controlling that he wouldn't even let Michelle shave her underarms. Michelle's family also didn't like the fact that her personality changed and she became paranoid.

Nicolaou and Michelle moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, where Nicholaou opened a sex shop called, "The Pleasure Chest". His business went under after Nicolaou and his business partner were charged with selling obscene materials. In one instance they were convicted and in another it ended in a mistrial.

Michelle soon became pregnant and she allegedly married Nicolaou. They then moved to an apartment in Holyoke, Massachusetts. Michelle gave birth to Joy in 1986 and Nick in 1988.

Even though Nicolaou rarely let Michelle out of sight, she was finally able to confide in her mother that she was afraid of Nicolaou and wanted to leave him. In August of 1988, Michelle left and took her two children with her. Nicolaou was very angry about this and confronted various relatives of Michelle, demanding to know her whereabouts. Michelle told her mother that she was afraid for her life and that if Nicolaou ever accomplished his threats, that she wanted the children rescued from his possession. 

Nicolaou eventually tracked Michelle down and convinced her into coming back home with him. Soon afterwards, Michelle expressed her desire to want to leave Nicolaou again. Michelle told her family that she planned to leave Nicolaou once and for all after her sister's wedding in November of 1988. 

Michelle's sister's wedding came and went and after not hearing from Michelle for weeks, her mother went to the couple's apartment to check up on her. The apartment was deserted. The Christmas tree was up but the presents were unopened. The refrigerator was full of spoiled food. The baby books that Michelle meticulously and religiously filled in were left incomplete. The family filed a missing person's report, but Michelle was never found.

Just days after the family vanished, Nicholaou met up with a female acquaintance in Charlottesville. The kids were dirty and hungry, and he stole the woman's brand new car, the woman later told Michelle's aunt.

In 1992, Nicholaou was working at Pete's Restaurant in Boca Raton. Nicholaou and the children had been living in the stolen car.

In 1996, Nicholaou was an in-patient unit of the post traumatic stress disorder clinic at a Miami veteran's hospital. He had been under treatment for a year. 

In 1997, he and the kids stayed with a friend in Dade City. Nick, then 9, got into a fight with the boy next door. Nicholaou later pleaded no contest to torching the neighbor's car and got three years probation.
Image result for Lynn-Marie Carty
In 2001, Michelle's mother hired private investigator, Lynn-Marie Carty, also known as the "Reunion Angel." Carty went to work right away, tracking Nicolaou's movements across the country.  Sometimes he had the children with him, and sometimes he left them in the care of relatives or friends. Nicolaou had told some people that Michelle was dead and others he told that she had run off with a drug dealer. 

After doing a quick internet search, Carty found a phone number for Nicholaou. He was married to a woman named Aileen Bowman and living in Tampa. When Carty called Nicolaou, he denied ever knowing Michelle. Eventually, he admitted to his relationship with her. He denied that they were ever married, however, and stated she had run away with a Colombian drug dealer. Nicholaou stated that the kids were fine and they were with him. At the end of the conversation, Carty told Nicholaou she was giving Michelle's mom his number and hung up. After the call ended, Carty called Michelle's mother in Vermont, who called the police. The next day, Nicollaou's phone number was disconnected. Nicholaou again went on the run and took the kids and his new family with him to Georgia.

Aileen M. Bowman Nicolaou (Alina Torrens)
She was a a Cuban fireball who charmed every man she met. Her only flaw was that she had poor judgement. Aileen had a daughter named Terrin Lee Bowman.
"I love you. Life will bring us again, trust that."

She wanted to fly to the moon. She had a firm handshake and a flirtatious wink. She had met many friends backpacking through Europe. Terrin he had a job waiting tables but was so bright she had taken college courses as a 16-year-old. 

Terrin was born on Mar 21st, 1985. Her father was Gordon Bowman and she had a sister named Vicki and a brother named Danny.

Aileen and Nicolaou connected through a newspaper personals ad.  Two weeks later, Nicholaou and his kids moved into Aileen's Tampa home. When relatives visited, Joy sat on Aileen's lap and called her "mom." Four years later, Ailen and Nicolaou were married in Vegas.

In September 2004, a family friend discovered an online news story about Michelle's disappearance. This was news to Aileen and Nicholaou convinced her Michelle had run off, but her family suspected he had killed her.

By 2005, Aileen and Nicolaou were allegedly fighting a lot and abusing pain killers. The couple was separated and after a heated argument with Aileen in their home, Nicholaou and his son got in their Jeep to leave. Aileen approached the Jeep. She needed Nicholaou's military sticker to get on base to buy groceries. She told deputies Nicholaou threatened her with a pistol and told Nick to step on the gas. The Jeep hit Aileen and the two men took off. There was a warrant out for a Nick's arrest.

Tampa relatives learned Aileen was recovering in a hospital, and brought her to her father's Walnut Street home.

On the night of December 30th, 2005, Nick's father bought some beer for him and dropped him off at a friend's house.

On December 31st, around 3 a.m., a friend saw Terrin heading home to her aunt's house in Town 'N Country. It was believed that Nicholaou held Terrin hostage in her bedroom for at least five hours as her aunt and uncle slept. Terrin's room was usually tidy, but cigarette ashes peppered her room, along with marijuana residue, pills and fiberglass tape.

Just after noon, when Aileen's sister, Audrey Leon, opened the door on Walnut Street, a terrified Terrin rushed in and hugged her tightly. Wearing a black trench coat, Nicholaou came in right behind Terrin with a .30-caliber M-1 carbine rifle and a semiautomatic pistol concealed in a guitar case. He went straight to the dinning room and confronted Aileen. Audrey told Nicolaou to get out, but he wouldn't listen. When Aileen asked him what he was going with the gun, Nicolaou said he was going to shoot himself.

As Audrey scrambled to get her two children out of the home, call her father and call police, Nicholaou and Aileen walked toward a bedroom. Aileen calmly told her sister that it would be ok, that they were just going in the bedroom to talk.  Audrey tried to get Terrin to leave with her, but Terrin either didn't want to leave her mom or was too afraid to go and followed Nicolaou and Aileen in the bedroom. 

Audrey greeted police in the driveway. When an officer announced herself and walked toward the bedroom, Nicholaou pointed a rifle at her. Aileen threw herself at the door, closing it. Then shots rang out. When the officer opened the door, Aileen and Terrin had both shot in the head. Nicolaou and shot them both before he turned the gun on himself. Terrin was the only one still alive, she was lying on her mother's body. Terrin was taken to the hospital where is passed away the next day.

When Lynn-Marie Carty read about the murder-suicide in the newspaper on New Year's Day 2006, she wanted to introduce Nick and Joy to their grandmother, who had since died. She wanted to tell them there were good people on their mother's side of the family. Carty was able to track down Nick's phone number and gave him a call. Nick cried as he talked about his life growing up, moving from place to place. Carty urged him to move on and told him that her arms were open if he ever needed anything.

Carty had a nagging feeling and decided to look deeper into Nicolaou's past as well as searching the Internet for unsolved killings in the Northeast, where the family was living when Michelle disappeared. Carty googled "New England 1988 Murder." This led her to articles about the Connecticut River Valley Killer. Carty noticed that the victims had been nurses. She remembered that Nicolaou's first wife had been a nurse and that Nicolaou's mother had worked in a hospital.

Susan had married Nicolaou in 1978. The two divorced in 1982. Nicolaou had taken off with their daughter shortly she was born. Susan was terrified of Nicolaou. A year before the divorce Mary Critchley disappeared off I-91. 

When Carty looked in the baby books that Michelle had left behind, it placed Michelle and Nicolaou at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital on Thanksgiving 1986. In January 1987, Barbra Agnew, who was a nurse at that hospital, disappeared a few miles from Michelle's parents' Vermont home where Nicolaou and his family spend Christmas and the month after. 

Michelle's parents lived on the opposite end of the street where Gary Westover's mother also lived. Her parents also knew Gary Westovers Mother. 

In August 2006, one of Westover's aunts wrote to Barbra Agnew's sister with the information originally given by Westover to Minnon. Agnew forwarded the letter to Carty, who ran Nicholaou's name by Westover's aunt, who stated that the named "sounded familiar."  

Carty believes that authorities are in possession of the names Westover provided to Minnon, and that Westover may have become acquainted with Nicholaou at a local VA hospital.

When Carty studied the testimony of Jane Boroski, she discovered that the attacker used a martial arts grip. Carty remembered that Nicolaou had a black belt in Karate and also wore dark rimmed glasses like the man in one of the composite sketches of the Connecticut River Killer.
Carty also talked to Michelle's relatives who said that they remembered in the 1980's taking Christmas presents out of a station wagon with wood paneled sides. Jane had told her attacker's vehicle had wood panels. 

When Jane was attacked, it was only four Months before Michelle disappeared and Nicolaou left the area. The Connecticut River Valley allegedly stopped after Jane's attack.

The people that had been in Nicholaou's life said that he was in the business of buying, selling, and delivering large quantities of cocaine in Virginia and up and down the east coast to New England for over a decade, including during the time frame the Connecticut River Valley murders occurred. A witness rode with him in the Jeep Wagoneer to work. She found his collection of bondage photos in a closet at the construction site. The collection of pictures were taken over time. He was pictured in the bondage photos sometimes with facial hair, other times without, sometimes with glasses, sometimes without, with many different woman who appeared drugged and out of it.

Carty contacted John Philpin, who agreed that Nicolaou could be the killer. She also called the New Hampshire State Police and spoke with Detective Steve Rowland. It was the first time Rowland had heard of Nicholaou, and Carty's information revived the investigation. She also suggested the police might try to match Nicholaou's DNA with evidence from the crime scenes. 

Nicholaou is now one of their three strongest suspects. As far as i know, his DNA still sits in a police storage locker waiting to be tested.

Other Possible Victims Of The Connecticut River Valley Killer.

JoAnne Dunham
Image result for Joanne Dunham Charlestown, New Hampshire
She was born on August 15th, 1952 in Buffalo, Erie County, New York. 

On June 11, 1968 at approximately 7:10 a.m., 15-year-old JoAnne, was last seen while walking from her home at Raiche Mobile Homes in Charlestown, New Hampshire. She was on her way to her school bus stop, She never came home from school. Her parents learned that she had never even made it on the bus that day and filed a missing person's report.

JoAnne's body was found at approximately 4:15 p.m. the following day on a roped-off dirt road on Quaker City Road in Unity NH approximately 5½ miles from where she was abducted. She had been sexually assaulted and strangled.

Some think that JoAnne might have been the first victim of the Connecticut River Valley Killer due to the geographic proximity to the killer's later crimes.

Sylvia Edwina Waite Gray
Image result for sylvia edwina waite gray Plainfield, New Hampshire
She was born on July 15th, 1905 in Rainy River, Rainy River District, Ontario, Canada to Edward Charles Waite Eunice F. Stickney Waite.

On October 5, 1982, 76-year-old Sylvia was found beaten with a tire iron and stabbed to death in a wooded area, a few hundred yards from her home in Plainfield, New Hampshire, a day after having been reported missing.

Sarah Hunter
Image result for sarah lewis hunter manchester, vermont.
She was a great person and a pioneer in golf. She was happy regardless of where she was or who she was with. People warmed up to her very quickly, even the ones that were old school and skeptical. They became believers, everybody loved Sarah

Sarah was born on April 13th, 1953 in Greenville, Pennsylvania to Albert L. Hunter and Mary J. Hunter. She was the daughter of a doctor and had two sisters and two brothers. Sarah grew up playing golf at a country club, and learned to love and respect the game there. She believed golf courses were places to teach children about life, how to behave around adults and how to learn and enjoy competition. She was passionate about teaching, especially teaching kids.

Sarah graduated from Wilson College in Chambersburg, Pa. She spent her summers in Florida working on the staff of the Ben Sutton Florida Golf School in Sun City Center. She was a member of the Ladies Professional Golf Association.

On Sept. 19th, 1986, when she didn't show up for an 8 a.m. lesson, a co-worker called the cops. Police said they would have to wait 24-48 hours before investigating. 

Sarah's car was discovered parked at a gas station off Route 7A. Her purse was found sitting upright on a rock by two boys a few weeks later. Two months later, her remains were stumbled upon in a brush at the edge of a cornfield in Pawlet, Vermont on Thanksgiving day. She had been strangled. At the time, her death was being reviewed by Vermont and New Hampshire authorities as being possibly connected to other unsolved homicides in the area.

David Alan Morrison worked at a small gas station in Manchester near where Hunter was last seen. He left Vermont in 1988 and was arrested later that year in a separate case on charges of attempted murder, sexual assault and kidnapping in Chula Vista, California. He pleaded guilty in that case and still is serving a sentence of 20 years to life. 

Police linked Morrison to Sarah's murder using DNA evidence and prosecutors felt they had enough evidence to charge him. In 2014, he was was charged with her murder. Forensic evidence, police said, showed strands of hair found in his car were that of Sarah's.

On February 13th, 2015, it was announced that it was discovered that the  hair from the Sarah that was thought to have been found in Morrison's car, and sent to the FBI lab for analysis, was actually found in her car. Due to this error, the  charges were dismissed against Morrison.

Steven Hill
photo of homicide victim Steven Hill.
38-year-old Steven Hill was last seen on June 20th, 1986, retrieving his paycheck from his Lebanon, New Hampshire, employer. On July 15th, Steven's body was found with multiple stab wounds in Hartland, Vermont, across the Connecticut River from where Sylvia Gray's body had been found four years earlier.

On June 24th, 1988, decomposed body parts consisting of arms and legs belonging to a woman were found dumped alongside Massachusetts Route 78 in Warwick, Massachusetts, less than a mile from the New Hampshire border. The entire body was believed to have been dismembered. The head and torso were never found and are believed to have been disposed of elsewhere. Investigators ruled the death a homicide. The victim was described as white, average height, with an athletic type body. The woman's identity is still unknown and the homicide remains unsolved.

Carrie Moss
Image result for Carrie Moss of New Boston, New Hampshire,
She was restless and independent.

Carrie was born on March 13th, 1975 in New Boston, New Hampshire. She was the youngest child born Warren and Sally Moss. When Carrie was two years old, her family moved into her dad's childhood home on Parker Road. Her father worked at Hitchiner's Manufacturing Company in Milford and was also a volunteer member of the New Boston Fire Department. Her mother worked at home raising her children and canning and freezing vegetables from the family's large garden. 

Carrie loved being outdoors and also loved animals. She raised chickens and bunnies as well as taking riding lessons at Betsy Moody's stable.

She attended Goffstown Junior High School. And spend her time running around with older kids.

In June of 1989, 14-year-old Carrie got arrested for possession of marijuana and was scheduled to appear in court on July 26th. On the day before court, she rode her bike to Goffstown to go swimming with friends. When she didn't come home by morning, her parents looked all over for her and ended up going to court and explaining to the judge that she hadn't come home the night before. Because she had been put on house arrest once before after getting in some trouble, they assumed she had ditched the court date and didn't want to get put on house arrest again. The court issued a warrant for her arrest.

Carrie's family never stopped looking for her and doing everything they could to try to find her. They even hired a psychic.

On July 24th, 1991, Carrie's skeletal remains were found in a wooded area in New Boston. While her cause of death could not be determined, she was thought to be the victim of a homicide.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Aniah Blanchard Fought For Her Life.

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According to court records, Aniah Blanchard fought back and went for the gun as Ibraheem Yazeed shot her to death. Yazeed admitted to shooting Aniah. He faces a capital murder charge and also the death penalty.

The last time anyone heard from 19-year-old college student Aniah was just before midnight on October 23rd, 2019 when she spoke to her college roommate. Allegedly, she was on her way home when she disappeared. Earlier that day she had spent time with her family. She was reported missing to Auburn Police the next day.

Auburn Police and Montgomery Police found her black at an apartment complex, 55 miles away from where Aniah was last seen. There was damage to the SUV which occurred between the time it was last seen and when it was recovered in Montgomery on October 25th. There was also blood found in the SUV suggesting that Aniah suffered a life threatening injury.

29-year-old Ibraheem Yazeed, was seen at the same gas station when and where Aniah was last seen. A witness positively identified Yazeed "forcing Blanchard into a vehicle against her will and then leaving with her in the vehicle."

Human remains discovered in a wooded area of Macon County, Alabama were that of Aniah.


His Burnt Out Truck Was Found, But Where Is Marshal Iwaasa? Updated 01/09/2020

Marshal Iwaasa
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He loved the outdoors, was creative and crafty. He was really active in the gym and had a lot of friends from there. Marshal came from a small town and had many childhood friendships that exist to this day. He was kind, thoughtful and loved animals. One of his favorite places to go was the Zoo. 


26-year-old Marshal had on a break from the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Calgary, Alberta, Canada and visiting his family in Lethbridge. On November 17th, he decided to head back to school, or that's what his family thought. Marshal never showed up at school. His family didn't know he was missing until they received a call that his vehicle had been found. 

On November 23rd, hikers who were near the end of a forest service road came upon a burned-out vehicle matching the description of Marshal’s GMC truck. It had likely only been there for a couple of days, meaning there would be nearly one week of time that was unaccounted for.  His belongings were found scattered north of Pemberton, B.C. Among those belongings were  two passports (an expired one belonging to Iwaasa), a Playstation, an Xbox, clothing, toiletries, cell phones that had been destroyed and a laptop that was also destroyed. There was also a path of clothes that were partially burned leading to a nearby creek.

Authorities have exhausted their search in the mountains and in the creek for Marshal. The family needs your help to find Marshal and bring him home. They are asking people in communities between Lethbridge and Pemberton to think back to the period between November 17th and November 22nd, to try and remember if they may have seen Marshal or his truck. They are also urging convenience stores and gas stations to check their surveillance video during that time period.

Marshal's family found out that he wasn't enrolled in Southern Alberta Institute of Technology November of 2019.

Last time Marshal was seen he was 5'11" tall, 170 lbs with brown eyes, curly shoulder-length brown hair (which he usually wears tied back), and a mustache. He was wearing a green hoodie, a grey beanie, red high-top shoes, and black pants.
Marshal Iwaasa's truck
His truck is described as a dark blue 2009 GMC Sierra with Alberta license plate BLL 1099.

Anyone with information about Marshal’s disappearance or whereabouts is asked to contact Pemberton RCMP at (604) 894-6634 or the Calgary Police Service at (403) 266-1234. o report anonymously, contact Calgary Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.


FIND MARSHAL IWAASA

A vigil was held for Marshal on January 3rd of this year, which was his 27th birthday.

What Happened To Heiress Dorothy Arnold?

Dorothy Harriet Camille Arnold
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She was an heiress, a socialite and a inspiring writer. She was intelligent and well-educated and could speak several languages.

Dorothy was born on July 1st, 1885 in New York to Mary Martha Samuels and Francis R. Arnold, a fine goods importer. Dorothy was the the second of four children born to the family. She was a niece of justice of the United States Supreme Court, Rufus Peckham.

She was educated at the Veltin School for Girls in New York City and attended Bryn Mawr College where she majored in literature and language. She graduated in 1905.

In 1910, Dorothy was still living with her family on 108 East 79th Street. That spring, she submitted a short story to McClure's magazine and was rejected. Her family teased her mercilessly. This prompted Dorothy to rent a post office box to receive correspondence from magazines and publishing houses.

At around the same time she was dating George Griscom Jr, a 40-year-old engineer who still lived with his parents. Dorothy allegedly went on a secret trip to Boston with George that summer, whilst telling her parents she was staying with friends. Dorothy's parnets disapproved of the relationship and forbade her to see him.

When Dorothy submitted a second short story, "The Poinsettia and the Flame", in November 1910, she was rejected again.  Dorothy asked her father if she could take an apartment in Greenwich Village in order to write. Her father denied her request and told her that a good writer could write anywhere.

On December 12th, around 11 a.m., 24-year-old Dorothy told her semi invalid mother that she was going to go buy a dress for her younger sister’s debutante party. Mary offered to go with her daughter, but Dorothy said she wanted some time alone. When she left, Dorothy was wearing a tailor-made blue serge suit, a long blue coat, lapis lazuli earrings and a small black velvet hat lined in pale  blue and decorated with two silk roses and a lapis lazuli pin. She had approximately $25–30 cash in her possession (approximately $672 to $807 today). 
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Dorothy left her home and walked to the Park & Tilford store at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 27th Street. The streets were slippery due to the bad weather, but Dorothy made it there unscathed. While at the store, she charged a half pound box of chocolates to her account. She placed the candy in her muff and went on to Brentino’s bookstore. There she purchased Engaged Girl Sketches, numerous and romantic stories by Emily Calvin Blake. Both shop assistants who served her in these two shops said she was courteous, and did not exhibit any unusual behavior.

On leaving the shop Dorothy bumped into an old friend, Gladys King. They briefly about the upcoming debutante party, and then Gladys left for a luncheon appointment with her mother. She claimed that Dorothy seemed cheerful and generally in a good mood. They parted cordially, and went off in separate directions.  Dorothy had told Gladys that she was going to walk home through Central Park. King last saw Arnold on 27th Street shortly before 2 p.m. when she turned to wave goodbye for a second time.

That evening, when Dorothy failed to show up for dinner. It was extremely unlike Dorothy to stay out for so long without alerting her family. Her family was worried, but they hoped she was at a friends house. Just after midnight, Elsie Henry, one of Arnold's friends, called to see if Dorothy had returned. Mary told her that Dorothy had returned home. When Henry asked to speak to Arnold, Mary hesitated and told Henry that Dorothy had gone to bed with a headache.

When the next evening rolled around, they didn’t call the police then either, instead they called in John Keith, the family lawyer. He came over and searched Dorothy’s bedroom. Nothing seemed missing. Letters bearing foreign postmarks, and two folders for transatlantic steamers were found on her desk. There was also some burnt paper, which was assumed as a failed manuscript.


The family hired the Pinkerton Detective Agency to go to different cities and even overseas to question Dorothy's friends and try to find a clue to where she could have been. Meanwhile, John Keith  spent many weeks searching New York’s prisons and hospitals, but to no avail. And after Keith and the Pinkerton detectives could not find any trace of Dorothy, they convinced the family into going public with her disappearance.

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It was six weeks after Dorothy was last seen and the family finally went to the local police. They offered a $1,000 reward(roughly $26,000) today. 
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Dorothy's father brought the press to his home and told them about his theory of what he thought happened to his daughter. He told the them that he was sure that Dorothy was attacked in Central Park. He said that her dead body was probably thrown into the reservoir. 

The police didn't take much credence to his theory, due to the fact the reservoir was frozen due to the cold weather. Regardless, the park was searched and in the spring the reservoir thawed and it was searched.

While Mr. Arnold was talking to the press, Mrs. Arnold was in Italy interrogating Griscom. Griscom was quick to deny any involvement in Dorothy’s disappearance. Mrs. Arnold asked for the letters that Dorothy had sent him. He said that he had burned them, and that they weren't important. But he did say that in the letters he had recently exchanged with her Dorothy talked about the failed short story she had submitted to a magazine. So also said, “All that I can see ahead is a long road with no turning…Mother will always think there was an accident.” 

After returning home from Italy, the family learned from a number of friends that Griscom had refused to marry Dorothy. However when Griscom returned from his vacation, he told the press that he intended to marry Dorothy once she was found and on the condition that her mother approve of the marriage. Griscom Jr. spent thousands of dollars for ads in major newspapers asking her to come home.

Six years after Dorothy’s disappearance, a convict from Rhode Island detailed how someone paid him $150 to dig a grave for a body that fit her description. He gave a description of the man he worked for, which turned out it was strikingly similar to Griscom. The convict also specified that the woman had died after an abortion went wrong and that the person had kept the body in their cellar. Authorities searched cellars all over the East Coast, but couldn’t find a body.

In 1922, her father passed away, followed by her mother six years later. Francis wrote in his will that he would leave nothing from his estate for Dorothy, “for I am satisfied that she is not alive.” Her mother's view differed and she hoped that her daughter was still alive. After Mary passed away John Keith publicly stated he believed that Dorothy had committed suicide because of her failed writing career.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Was A Hit Man Hired To Kill Chelsea Small Or Was She Killed In A Robbery Attempt?

Chelsea Ann Small
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"I Love You To The Moon And Back."

She was a great mom. She loved her babies, they were her life, everything she did was for them. Chelsea was always cheerful and smiling and knew how to brighten up a room. People just flocked to her. She had a good sense of humor. She was vibrant and the life of the party,

Chelsea was born in August 9th, 1983 to Debi Kamin and Norman Small. 

Around 2002, when Chelsea was 19-years-old, she met Rick Farley. They had two children together, a son named Logan and a daughter named Josalynn. Rick and Chelsea separated in 2012. Chelsea and the kids move in with her sister Tiffany in Taylor, Michigan. 

Chelsea was attending Wayne County Community College, where she was on the Dean's List. She was studying to become a physical therapist. She also worked full time at Advance America, a cash advance store located in a strip mall on Telegraph Road.

On November 12, 2013, at around 10:30 a.m., Chelsea briefly talked to her mom as she was running the deposit to the bank for work. Chelsea was suppose to be off that day, but she had switched shifts with a co-worker so she could celebrate her son's birthday 3 days earlier.

At 12:04 p.m., Chelsea was back at the store working alone. The door was kept locked for security purposes. A man wearing a dark black cap buzzed at the door. After Chelsea took a glance at the man and without hesitation, she let him in. Once inside, the man walked up to the counter and produced a gun with silencer or suppressor. He shot Chelsea in the chest as she pushed the silent alarm. The first shot knocked her out of her chair. Then the man walked around the counter and shot Chelsea in the head. After that he calmly rummaged around in the store and then walked out, taking about $200 in cash he had put in a dark nylon backpack with a drawstring. The entire robbery took around 2 minutes.

When police arrived minutes later, they had to use a tool to shatter the glass door. Inside, they found Chelsea's body on the floor behind the counter. Despite Telegraphy road being heavily trafficked, a busy take out pizza place being next door and a cell phone store being two doors away, no one saw her killer.

Investigators believe that the use of the silencer by the robber means that murder was first on his itinerary and that the money was secondary. It is also surmised that he might work at a gun range or at least frequent one and have several weapons in his possession. The suspect is likely between 30-50 years old, 5'10" tall and weighing maybe 200 pounds. He had dark busy hair and was wearing a dark hat with some kind of emblem on the front. It seemed that he was wearing some kind of work uniform and work boots.

It turns out that a robbery at Schupbach’s Sporting Goods in Jackson, Michigan happened six months before Chelsea's murder and it involved taking several suppressors and weapons. One of the suppressors that was stolen from that incident is the same caliber as the gun used in Chelsea's murder. Also, the suspect's build and body language was similar. Investigators haven't said if this is related to Chelsea's murder or not.

Advanced America is offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to Chelsea's killer and Crime Stoppers is offering an additional $2,500 reward. If you have information concerning Chelsea’s murder, please contact the Taylor Police Department (734) 287-6611. You can also call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-SPEAK-UP.