ReportWire

Tag: 1999

  • 25 years after Raleigh teen’s body was found in Wendell creek, case remains an unsolved murder

    25 years after Raleigh teen’s body was found in Wendell creek, case remains an unsolved murder

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    WENDELL, N.C. (WTVD) — The family of 16-year-old Vebecca Jones is speaking out for the first time in decades after Jones’ body was found in a creek off a dirt road in Wendell back in 1999.

    The case has received minimal coverage in the past two-and-a-half decades. Vebecca’s older brother, Lorenzo Jones, spoke to ABC11 about his baby sister the night before the 25th anniversary.

    “I miss her, we all miss her,” Lorenzo said. “We called her Ve. She was named after my grandmother, Rebecca, so my mom named her Vebecca.”

    Vebecca Jones was 16 when she disappeared in 1999 (File Photo)

    Lorenzo said there isn’t a day that goes by that he doesn’t think about Ve. He misses her smile and her big, brown, pretty eyes.

    He said he was very similar to his sister: They were both curious, sometimes hot-headed, and very independent.

    “That girl was tough, boy I’m telling you,” Lorenzo said. “She wasn’t waiting on nobody to do nothing for her. She was just different.”

    He’s six years older than Ve. He remembers her auntie bought her a pair of high heels when she was little, and she wore them until they broke. He reluctantly recalled that his baby sister learned to drive a stick before he did. He remembers that she had dreams of being a cosmetologist.

    Enough is enough, let my mom have some peace, let us live a somewhat normal life. Before it’s all said and done, it’s going to come to light, I truly believe it will.

    – Lorenzo Jones, brother of victim

    He said she was stubborn and fiercely loyal. And he misses her every day.

    A family’s worst nightmare

    When she was just 16 years old, Ve went missing. Her age was a concern, but something that made this news even more difficult for her family was that she was three months pregnant at the time.

    While he waited for Ve to come home, Lorenzo said his life stopped.

    “I didn’t do nothing. I didn’t go to family functions, I stayed home for Christmas and Thanksgiving,” Lorenzo said. “I didn’t go nowhere.”

    Six months later, right around the time Ve would’ve been due, his family happened to be watching TV.

    “They said they found a body between the ages of 15 and 17 years old,” Lorenzo said. He didn’t want to believe it was his sister.

    Eventually, dental records confirmed his worst nightmare. The moment he found out is a little fuzzy 25 years later.

    “I don’t really remember, I just know my hands went numb,” he said.

    Ve’s body was found in a creek bed just off Old Tarboro Road in Wendell, 17 miles from her home.

    Ve’s body was found in a creek bed just off Old Tarboro Road in Wendell, 17 miles from her home.

    File photo

    Men picking up cans in the area found her body and called it in. Lorenzo said he found out who the man was and went to his house, hoping to thank him. He never came to the door, but all these years later, he’s still so grateful for him.

    “She could still be laying there, you know?” He said. “He could’ve just said nothing and left her there, so I appreciate him, and my family does, too.”

    Scant evidence, few leads

    Detective Brian Gay with the Wake County Sheriff’s Office is assigned to Ve’s case now. He grew up in the area and knows it well. He walked the area with ABC11, telling us the old dirt road hasn’t changed much since 1999. The creek bed where she was found is under construction now though, as a new neighborhood is being built.

    The creek, and the amount of time she spent there, made some evidence difficult to recover 25 years ago.

    “She was in a state of advanced decomposition that some of her clothing was still with her, some of the other items were close by, but she was in partially mummified skeletal state,” Gay said.

    Because of the condition her body was found in, the medical examiner could not confirm whether she was pregnant at the time of her death. However, Lorenzo is positive that she was expecting when she disappeared.

    Her autopsy report lists her manner of death as homicide and her cause of death as asphyxiation. The cause of death is especially difficult for Lorenzo to process; he’s worried she cried out for help or suffered in her last moments.

    A grocery bag was also found with her body. Investigators in 1999 showed pictures of the bag to the media, hoping someone might recognize it and it could help crack the case.

    The grocery bag that was recovered at the scene.

    File photo

    Gay said they eventually discovered that the bag was manufactured for a major grocery chain between 1997 and 1998. It didn’t lead to any big new revelations for investigators.

    While the sheriff’s office has never publicly named any suspects, Lorenzo said he’s heard a few names during the past 25 years.

    He also remembers that when she was 15, he found her “somewhere she wasn’t supposed to be,” and he remembers getting her out of the situation and driving her home.

    “I sat on the steps and I cried. At the time Ve got killed, there were a lot of women in Raleigh popping up dead, and I told her, ‘You see these women popping up every day missing? Dead? This ain’t no place for you.’”

    A year later, she vanished.

    “I couldn’t think of it in a million years why someone would take her life,” Lorenzo said. “I can’t think of nothing she could have done, she wasn’t a bad person … You could ask a thousand people that knew her, and I bet not one could tell you why somebody would want to do that to her.”

    ‘Just let me know who did this’

    During the last 25 years, it’s hard to put into words what Ve’s murder has done to his family.

    “There’s a lot of stuff that goes on that people just don’t know, they don’t know what it did to us. They don’t know what it did to my momma,” Lorenzo said. “I ain’t seen my momma smile in so long.”

    At this point, Lorenzo said he isn’t even concerned with justice, he just wants to know what happened.

    “I don’t care if they got away with it, just let me find out. I don’t care if they prosecute, Just let me know who did this to my sister,” he said. “That’s it.”

    Gay said he believes someone out there knows what happened to Vebecca and has been sitting on the secret all these years. He’s asking anyone with information to come forward to finally give some peace and answers to the Jones family.

    He said this case is personal to him now, and it will stick with him until it’s solved.

    “Enough is enough, let my mom have some peace, let us live a somewhat normal life,” Lorenzo pleaded. “Before it’s all said and done, it’s going to come to light, I truly believe it will, and I’m talking about real soon.”

    If you know anything about this case that could bring answers to the Jones family, you are urged to please contact the Wake County Sheriff’s Office at (919) 856-6800.

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Sydnee Scofield

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Newly Named Petco Love Invests in Lifesaving…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Newly Named Petco Love Invests in Lifesaving…

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    May 12, 2021

    AUSTIN, TX (May 12, 2021) – Austin Pets Alive! announced today a $60,000 grant investment from the newly named Petco Love to support their lifesaving work for animals in Austin.

    Petco Love is a nonprofit leading change for pets nationally by harnessing the power of love to make communities and pet families closer, stronger, and healthier. Since their founding in 1999 as the Petco Foundation, they’ve empowered organizations with $300 million invested to date in adoption and other lifesaving efforts. And, they’ve helped find loving homes for more than 6.5 million pets in partnership with Petco and more than 4,000 organizations, like ours, nationwide.

    “Today Petco Love announces an investment in Austin Pets Alive! and hundreds of other organizations as part of our commitment to create a future in which no pet is unnecessarily euthanized,” said Susanne Kogut, President of Petco Love. “Our local investments are only one component. This month, we also launched the first of our national tools to empower all animal lovers to drive lifesaving change right alongside us.”

    “We’re overjoyed to be a Petco Love partner this year. Because of Petco Love’s support, Austin Pets Alive! will be able to provide immediate lifesaving care to every pet that comes to our doors from the tiniest lives like our neonatal kittens to our long-stay dogs completing innovative behavior training. Thank you to our friends at Petco Love for helping us on our journey to save 12,000 lives this year,” said Kelly Rowley, Director of Philanthropy at Austin Pets Alive!.

    Austin Pets Alive! is a nonprofit organization serving Austin to provide the resources, programs and education needed to eliminate the unnecessary euthanasia of animal companions. Not only has Austin Pets Alive! pioneered the way by converting Austin into a no-kill shelter state, but since 2008, Austin Pets Alive! has saved over 90,000 vulnerable animals at risk of euthanasia at their original shelters.

    For more information about Austin Pets Alive!, visit austinpetsalive.org. To learn more about Petco Love, visit petcolove.org.

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    About Austin Pets Alive!

    Austin Pets Alive! (APA!) is a nonprofit animal shelter and rescue organization pioneering comprehensive, innovative programs designed to save the most at-risk homeless companion animals and educate others to do the same through its American Pets Alive! nationwide education and outreach division. A leader in No Kill sheltering in America’s largest No Kill city, APA! helps more than 10,000 dogs and cats annually in Central Texas and beyond get a chance at the life they deserve. To learn more about APA!, visit austinpetsalive.org.

    About Petco Love (Formerly Petco Foundation)

    Petco Love is a nonprofit changing lives by making communities and pet families closer, stronger, and healthier. Since our founding in 1999 as the Petco Foundation, we’ve empowered animal welfare organizations by investing $300 million in adoption and other lifesaving efforts. We’ve helped find loving homes for more than 6.5 million pets in partnership with Petco and organizations nationwide. Today, our love for pets drives us to lead with innovation, creating tools animal lovers need to reunite lost pets, and lead with passion, inspiring and mobilizing communities and our more than 4,000 animal welfare partners to drive lifesaving change alongside us. Is love calling you? Visit petcolove.org or follow at Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and LinkedIn to be part of the lifesaving work we’re leading every day.

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