Saturday, September 19, 2015

The Case Of 'Tyrone' Doe - The Little Boy With No Name


Case File 461UMVA

'Tyrone' Doe 
(name given to him by investigators)

Estimated Age: 3 - 6 years old
Approximate Height and Weight: 4'0" (122 cm); 50 lbs (23 kg)
Distinguishing Characteristics: Brown eyes; black hair.
DNA: Mitrochondrial DNA available.

A Little About The 'Tyrone' Doe Case
On June 13, 1972, a 14-year-old boy was pushing his bicycle to a nearby gas station on a country road to put air in his tire when he came across the body of a savagely beaten boy in a creek. Nearly 40 years later, police have yet to identify the dead child or find his killer. But their search continues. "There is always hope," Fairfax County police Officer Shelley Broderick said. Police have taken DNA samples and placed them in the FBI's National Missing Person DNA Database, and recently produced a lifelike photo of the boy in the hopes that someone will recognize his face and come forward with information that could help solve this case. The child was found in Massey Creek on Old Colchester Road just off of Interstate 95 and not far from Fort Belvoir.

Police believe the boy was between 3 and 6 years old. He was about 4 feet tall and 50 pounds.
He had suffered blunt force trauma injuries to the head and abrasions, and was stripped naked, but police found no evidence that he was sexually abused. They did, however, find scars from past physical abuse.

The autopsy found that the boy had a full stomach, indicating that he probably ate breakfast that morning, perhaps at one of the nearby restaurants along I-95, police said. At the time of his death, police checked teletypes for missing children up and down the East Coast, but none matched the description of the boy found in Massey Creek.

About 10 years ago, the Alexandria-based National Center for Missing & Exploited Children created a computer-assisted facial reconstruction of the child, one of the first attempts by the organization to use the new technology.

A forensic artist used pictures taken by police, and knowing the changes that occur immediately after death -- the facial muscles relax, the face flattens out and the eyes go blank -- tried to restore him with "that spark of life," said Jerry Nance, supervisor of the forensic services unit at NCMEC.

"Unfortunately, this is a very old case, one of our oldest, but there's the off chance that a grandmother may remember the face or someone sees his picture and says, 'That's my cousin,' " Nance said. "We still keep looking."

Find A Grave - 'Tyrone' Doe Case
The Doe Network - Case File 461UMVA

If you have any information about this case please contact:
Fairfax County Police 
Cold Case Unit 
800-673-2777 
You may remain anonymous when submitting information.


The Disappearance Of Dana Zelic


Case Number: 99-6261090

Dana Zelic 

Missing Since: August 30, 1999 from Hamilton, Ontario
Classification: Missing
Date Of Birth: November 12, 1972
Age: 26
Height: 5'6"
Weight: 100 lbs.
Hair Color: Dark Brown
Eye Color: Brown
Ethnicity: White
Gender: Female
Distinguishing Characteristics: She has a beauty mark on the left side of her throat approximately the size of a nickel. AKA: Dana has been known to use the first names of "Donna," "Frankie" and "Alex".



A Little Bit About Dana Zelic
Dana Zelic disappeared from her residence on August 30, 1999. She lived with her mother in an east-end Hamilton apartment. Her mother last saw Dana sleeping in her bedroom at 2:30 a.m., August 30, 1999. When her mother woke later that morning, Dana was gone, leaving behind money and all her clothes. She left without any medication, identification or personal belongings.

Dana has had connections to the Greater Toronto and Brooklyn, NY areas and the police were told she might have gone to Brooklyn but they found no proof she crossed the border.

Dana was shown in a September 17, 1999 Spectator photo, walking in a Take Back the Night march. In August 2000 she called a male friend in Hamilton, who had no idea she was missing. She told her friend she was living in Mississauga. In 2002, one of Dana's old girlfriends called police and said she had seen the young woman at Chapters. Despite these sightings, she has not been located.

Dana was born and raised in Hamilton, along with her younger brother, she was a "so-so" student who enjoyed drama, had a good number of friends and a love of books. Dana graduated from Delta Secondary School and took a few years off to travel. Dana did enroll in a tourism program at a downtown vocational school. She lived with a boyfriend for a while, but when that didn't work out, she moved back into her mother's small east-Hamilton apartment. Dana had plans to get her own place, at the time of her disappearance.

Police checks have failed to locate Dana Zelic's whereabouts. Police are concerned for her well being.





Hamilton Police Services - Case Number 99-6261090 - Dana Zelic Case
NAMPN - Dana Zelic Case
The Doe Network - Case File 2687DFON
The Missed Lives Network - Dana Zelic Case

If you have any information concerning this case, please contact: 

Hamilton Police
East End Detectives 
Sgt. Doug Langdon
(905) 546-2907

Friday, September 18, 2015

The Disappearance Of Tara Grinstead


Tara Grinstead

Born: November 14, 1974 in Hawkinsville, Georgia
Disappeared: October 22, 2005 (aged 30)
Status: Missing for 12 Years (as of 2017)
Nationality: American
Known for: Missing person
Height: 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m)
Parent(s): Bill and Faye Bennett Grinstead


A Little About The Tara Grinstead Case
Tara Grinstead (born November 14, 1974) is a beauty queen and high school history teacher who lived in Ocilla, Georgia, USA, and has been missing since October 22, 2005. Neither police nor the Georgia Bureau of Investigation have identified any suspects in the disappearance.

A native of Hawkinsville, Georgia, Grinstead loved beauty pageants. In 1999 she won the title of Miss Tifton and competed in the Miss Georgia pageant. Money from this pageant and many others she had entered had winnings that helped her to attend college. She graduated from Middle Georgia College in Georgia. She earned a master's degree in education at Valdosta State University in 2003. In 1998 she began teaching history at Irwin County High School in Ocilla.

The night before her disappearance, Tara Grinstead visited a beauty pageant (she was active as a coach to young beauty contestants) and attended a barbecue. On October 24, 2005, a Monday morning, Grinstead did not show up for work. Co-workers called police who went to the home where she lived alone. They found her cell phone inside the house. Her car was outside, unlocked. Her purse and keys were gone.

Local police immediately called in the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, feeling that "something was wrong" and the case was beyond the resources of the small town police department. The GBI found no signs of forced entry and no sign of a struggle.

Irwin County High School principal Bobby Conner was quoted by the Atlanta Journal and Constitution as saying, "We're a small community and this has really touched home because it is something you read about happening elsewhere. This is someone with a tremendous, magnetic personality, and the kids just love her."

In February 2009, videos surfaced on the internet featuring a self-proclaimed serial killer. Dubbing himself the "Catch Me Killer," the man in the videos details what he claims are his 16 female victims, and one of these described women is determined by authorities to be Tara Grinstead. Though the man's face and voice are digitally obscured, police eventually determined the videos' source to be 27-year-old Andrew Haley. A police investigation ultimately revealed the videos to be part of a bizarre, elaborate hoax, and Haley was ultimately eliminated as a substantial lead in Grinstead's disappearance.

In 2008 the case received renewed attention with a report on the CBS News show 48 Hours Mystery, which noted the similarity of this case to the disappearance of another young woman in Orlando, Florida, three months later.

In connection with that news story, police revealed that they had found DNA on a latex glove which was found in Grinstead's yard, "just a stone's throw from her front stoop," according to a 2008 interview with Gary Rothwell of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation:

Rothwell did not identify as a suspect the person whose DNA was found in the glove, but he said that person could help lead to a break in the case. "We believe it is a critical element to solving the case," Rothwell said.
Rothwell said the DNA has been analyzed and agents know it's a man's DNA. But they haven't identified the man. Over the course of the investigation, he said, agents have compared the DNA to dozens of men who knew Grinstead or who were associated with her. "None of them matched," Rothwell said. The DNA also has been entered into Georgia and national databases, but still no matches."

In 2011 the chief GBI investigator said "this case has never gone cold," adding that leads still come in on a weekly basis.




Report What You Know!
GBI - (478) 987-4545
Local Tipline - (229) 468-7494
Toll Free - 1-800-597-TIPS (8477)
Email - tips@findtara.com

The 'Boy In The Box' Mystery of Philadelphia




America's Unknown Child


Born: Approx. 1950 - 1953
Status: Unidentified for 60 years (2017)
Died: February 1957
Cause of Death: Homicide
Body Discovered: Fox Chase, Philadelphia
Resting Place: Ivy Hill Cemetery, Cedarbrook, Philadelphia
Names: "America's Unknown Child"; 'Boy In The Box'
Ethnicity: Nordic, Northern Europe
Known for: Unidentified victim of homicide
Height: 3 ft 6 in (1.07 m)
Weight: 30 lb (14 kg)


A Little About The Case
The "Boy in the Box" is the name given to an unidentified murder victim, approximately 4 to 6 years old, whose naked, battered body was found in a cardboard box in the Fox Chase section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on February 25, 1957. He is also commonly called "America's Unknown Child." His identity has never been confirmed and the case remains open.

The boy's body, wrapped in a plaid blanket, was found in the woods off Susquehanna Road in Fox Chase, Philadelphia. He was naked inside a cardboard box that once contained a baby's bassinet from J.C. Penney. The body was first found by a young man checking his muskrat traps. Fearing that the police would confiscate his traps, he did not report the matter. A few days later, a college student spotted a rabbit running into the underbrush. Knowing there were animal traps in the area, he stopped his car to investigate and discovered the body. He too was reluctant to have any contact with the police, but did report his find the following day.

The deceased boy's fingerprints were taken, and police originally were optimistic that his identity would be discovered quickly. However, nobody ever came forward with any useful information.

The case attracted massive media attention in Philadelphia and the Delaware Valley, with pictures of the boy even being placed in every gas bill in Philadelphia. However, despite the huge publicity at the time and sporadic re-interest throughout the years, the case remains unsolved to this day, and the boy's identity is still unknown.

He was initially buried in a potter's field. In 1998, his body was exhumed with the hope of extracting DNA. He was reburied at Ivy Hill Cemetery in Cedarbrook, Philadelphia, which donated a large plot. The coffin, headstone and funeral service were also donated by the son of the man who had originally buried him in 1957. There was significant turnout and media coverage when he was reburied.

He has a large headstone that is simply marked, "America's Unknown Child." City residents keep the grave decorated with flowers and stuffed animals.

Like many unsolved murders, many tips and theories have been advanced toward a solution of the case. Although most have been dismissed, two possible solutions to the case have excited considerable interest among the police and media and have been extensively investigated.

'The Foster Home'

The first theory involves a foster home that was located approximately 1.5 miles from the discovery site. In 1960, Remington Bristow, an employee of the medical examiner's office who doggedly pursued the case until his death in 1993, contacted a New Jersey psychic, who told him to look for a house that seemed to match the foster home. When the psychic was brought to the Philadelphia discovery site, she led Bristow straight to the foster home. Upon attending an estate sale at the foster home, Bristow discovered a bassinet similar to the one sold at J. C. Penney. He also discovered blankets hanging on the clothesline similar to that in which the boy's body had been wrapped. Bristow believed that the child belonged to the stepdaughter of the man who ran the foster home; they disposed of the boy's body so that she wouldn't be exposed as an unwed mother, as in 1957 single motherhood attracted significant social stigma. Bristow theorized that the boy's death was accidental. Despite this circumstantial evidence, the police were unable to find any concrete links between the Boy in the Box and the foster family.

In 1998, Philadelphia police lieutenant Tom Augustine, who is in charge of the investigation, and several members of the Vidocq Society, a group of retired policemen and profilers investigating the crime, interviewed the foster father and the daughter, whom he had married. The interview seemed to confirm to them that the family was not involved in the case, and the foster home investigation is considered closed. According to a DNA test, the stepdaughter was ruled out as the boy's mother.


'"M"'s story'

The second major theory is one brought forward in February 2002 by a woman identified only as "M". She claimed that her abusive mother purchased the unknown boy, named "Jonathan", from his birth parents in the summer of 1954. Subsequently, the youngster was subjected to extreme physical and sexual abuse for two and a half years, then killed in a fit of rage by being slammed to the floor after he vomited in the bathtub. "M"'s mother then cut the boy's long hair (accounting for the unprofessional cut that police noted upon their initial observations of the crime scene and bruises around the victim's hairline), and dumped the boy's body in the then-secluded Fox Chase area. "M" went on to say that as they were preparing to remove the boy's body from the trunk, a passing male motorist pulled alongside to inquire whether they needed assistance. As the pair ignored the would-be Good Samaritan, while being careful to obstruct their own car's license plate from his view, the man eventually drove off. This story corroborated confidential testimony given by a male witness in 1957, which alleged the body was placed in a box previously discarded at the scene. Police considered the story quite plausible, but were troubled by "M"'s testimony, as she had a history of mental illness. When interviewed, neighbors who had access to the house denied that there had been a young boy living in the house, and said that "M"'s claims were "ridiculous."

The story was profiled on the television series America's Most Wanted on October 3, 1998 and on July 12, 2008. The television series Cold Case, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and Law & Order: SVU have all used fictionalized accounts of the story as the basis for episodes.




The 'Delta Dawn' Case


"Delta Dawn" is the nickname of an unidentified decedent found in Moss Point, Mississippi in late 1982. The child was a murder victim, as she had both been smothered and drowned shortly before her body was found in the Escatawpa River.

Born: 1980 - 1981 (approximate)
Status: Unidentified for 32 years, 9 months and 13 days
Died: December 3 or 4, 1982 Moss Point, Jackson County, Mississippi, United States
Cause of Death: Drowning
Body Discovered: December 5, 1982
Resting Place: Jackson County Memorial Park, Moss Point, Mississippi, United States
Height: 2 ft 5 in (0.74 m) - 2 ft 6 in (0.76 m)
Weight: 20 lb (9.1 kg) - 25 lb (11 kg)


A Little Bit About The 'Delta Dawn' Case
It is believed that the girl was seen with an adult female within two days before the body was located in Moss Point, Jackson County, Mississippi. The woman, who was carrying the child, was walking above a bridge near the area. The adult, possibly the girl's mother, was walking between midnight and one o'clock in the morning two days prior, that was acting distressed but would not accept help from passing vehicles. Within two days after the sightings, a man called police to report the discovery of a body in the river, clothed in a blue plaid shirt, which is now presumed to be the adult.Authorities responded and soon arrived at the scene, located along interstate 10, but instead came across the child's body. The sheriff that found the baby's body had initially mistaken the body to have belonged to his daughter, that apparently bore a strong resemblance to Delta Dawn, who was later found to be alive and well at his residence.The adult's corpse was never found and she has never been located alive.

An autopsy performed on the Jane Doe's body concluded that she had been alive when she entered the water, as evidence in her lungs indicated that she drowned, although someone had attempted to smother her before she entered the river. The official cause of her death was concluded to have been due to inhaling the water upon impacting its surface. Delta Dawn was a healthy toddler between the ages of one and two years old, most likely at the age of eighteen months. Twelve of her teeth had erupted at the time of her death, which influenced the age estimation. The girl had curly strawberry-blond hair and was of Caucasian heritage. Because of the amount of time she was in the water, her eyes had clouded to the point where estimating the exact color was very difficult, but it was believed that they were either blue or brown. Despite that her eyes had been damaged by exposure to the elements, her face was still stated to be in a "recognizable" condition. She was around two feet six inches and weighed around twenty-five pounds. The girl wore a pink and white checkered dress or shirt, decorated with three flowers on its front, along with a diaper.

Extensive searches have been conducted in hopes to find the body of the woman that had initially been found prior to Delta Dawn's, which has been fruitless. Several scenarios have been conceived, some believing that, if the woman seen with the baby was indeed her mother, had caused the victim's death and subsequently committed suicide. Another revolves around a woman that had stopped by the sheriffs office, describing that she had "given away" her child to a group of men. Officers speculated that the individual could have been the child's mother, yet it was eventually learned that the subject requesting assistance had a male child.

The victim was adopted posthumously by a police officer and his wife, who funded the victim's funeral and burial. The victim's nickname was coined by his wife. She is buried in the Jackson County Cemetery. In 2007, a graveside memorial service was conducted in memory of the victim.

Since her discovery, the girl was reconstructed forensically in efforts to identify her through recognition. The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children has released two illustrations and other artists have also produced their own renderings.

The Doe Network: Case File: 45UFMS
NCMEC - 'Jane Doe 1982' - Delta Dawn
NamUs - NamUs UP # 12191 - Delta Dawn Case



Thursday, September 17, 2015

The Disappearance Of Susan Yvonne Gourley


Case Number 02-3363300

Susan Yvonne Gourley
Born: 1963
Last Seen: Barton St and Stirton Ave, Hamilton ON in late November 2001.
Physical Description: Female, white, 5'6" tall, 134 lbs, brown eyes, long brown hair.
Distinct Marks: Pierced ears (3 per ear), panther tattoo on left thigh, tiger tattoo on one hip (unknown which side), heart and design tattoo on chest, 10 mm appendectomy scar, 8 mm scar on her forehead.

A Little About Susan
On Aug. 31, 2002, Susan Gourley was reported missing by members of her family. Gourley was known to Hamilton police for both prostitution and drug offences. A friend of hers in the area of Barton Street and Stirton Avenue last saw Gourley in early November 2001. Susan's disappearance has often been linked with a number of assaults and murders in Hamilton between 1999-2002, namely that of Felicia Floriani and Kimlyn Tolgyes. Hamilton Police Services states she was reported missing by friends and family August 30, 2002, though the RCMP states she was reported missing by her mother February 28, 2002.


Please forward all inquiries and information regarding this case to:
Hamilton Police Service
D/Sgt. Victims of Crime Unit at
905-546-4962

The Disappearance of Sheryl Sheppard - Her Family Will Never Give Up Hope





Case number 08-501950
Sheryl Sheppard 
Missing since: January 2, 1998 from Hamilton, Ontario
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date Of Birth: September 29, 1968
Age at Time of Disappearance: 29 years old
Height and Weight at Time of Disappearance: 5'4"-5'6"; 105 lbs.
Distinguishing Characteristics: White female. Blonde hair; blue eyes.
Tattoos: A heart tattoo on her ankle, ankle unknown.
Also Know As: Fisher, maiden name Sweeney
Dentals: Available. Stained teeth.
DNA: Available


A Little About Sheryl Sheppard

Michael Lavoie with Sheryl
Sheryl was born and raised in Hamilton, Ontario and attended Notre Dame High School until grade 10. She married at 21 but the marriage lasted less than six months. A second marriage lasted one year. Sheryl worked at Tim Horton's at Sanford Avenue North and Cannon Street East in Hamilton since it opened September 1997. Her fiance proposed to her live on Hamilton's television station ONtv on New Year's Eve, she accepted a marriage proposal this television appearance is believed to be the last time anyone saw her. Friends say the two had dated for about two years, and he had moved into the apartment with Sheryl and her mother - Odette Fisher - a few months before. Lavoie claimed to have dropped her off at the Concord Hotel in Niagara Falls for a dancing job on January 2, but police say she never arrived at the hotel. The Concord manager said she was never scheduled to work his establishment and he has never seen her. Sheryl had reportedly stopped dancing approximately 6 years before going missing.

Friends and family say she had a stormy and abusive relationship with Michael Lavoie. She was supposed to have picked up her mother at the Pearson Airport January 4, but she never showed up. A check of her apartment turned up her wallet and identification. Foul play is believed to have occurred. Her fiancé, Michael Lavoie was found in a storage locker with his car running. He was treated and released from Henderson Hospital. In 2008 Lavoie was named the person of interest by the head of the Homicide Unit, Staff Sergeant Ian Matthews.

In 2011 the Sheryl Sheppard case also received some publicity for increasing the reward from $10,000 to $50,000 for tips leading to a conviction.

In 2016, Someone Knows Something with David Ridgen did a Podcast series regarding this case. Please give it a listen at http://www.cbc.ca/radio/sks


Hamilton Police Services - Sheryl Sheppard - Case number 08-501950

If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:

Hamilton Police Service 
Detective Peter Thom 
905-546-3843
Agency Case Number: 98-501950



Sheryl Sheppard and Michael Lavoie

Sheryl with her newborn niece Hayley
Sheryl Sheppard (right) and Odette Fisher, her mother
Sheryl Sheppard (left) with a friend in Florida.