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Tag: Missing persons

  • Human remains found in Snohomish County, WA identified as missing Tulalip woman

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    A set of human remains found in a remote area of north Snohomish County earlier this year belonged to a missing Tulalip woman, according to the FBI.

    The DNA of the remains matched that of Mary Johnson (Davis), who disappeared from the Tulalip Reservation back on November 25, 2020.

    Johnson was last seen walking on Firetrail Road, traveling to a friend’s house, but never arrived.

    What they’re saying:

    “With deep respect for the family and Tulalip community, the Tulalip Police Department is heartbroken to confirm that human remains have been positively identified as Mary Johnson-Davis, a member of the Tulalip Tribes of Washington,” said Shawn V. Ledford, Chief of the Tulalip Police Department. “Identification was confirmed through DNA analysis conducted by a forensic laboratory, and next of kin have been notified. This case remains an active and ongoing investigation, and the Tulalip Police Department will continue to work in partnership with the family and the FBI. Mary’s family would like to extend their heartfelt thanks to the community for their assistance and compassion throughout the past five years of searching for Mary, which ultimately led to her being found. We extend our prayers, strength, and healing to Mary’s family, loved ones, and the entire Tulalip community during this difficult time.”

    The Tulalip Tribes and FBI are offering a reward of up to $60,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of person(s) responsible for Mary Johnson’s disappearance. Anyone with information is asked to contact the FBI’s Seattle Field Office at 206-622-0460, 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324), or tips.fbi.gov.

    “When the FBI is called to investigate a missing indigenous person, we understand the importance of the case for the victim’s loved ones and communities,” said W. Mike Herrington, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Seattle field office. “Every victim leaves a space in that community which cannot be filled. We recognize the process can be lengthy and frustrating, but we assure everyone the FBI and our partners are doing everything we can. FBI Seattle is committed to our relationships with all of Washington’s communities, including our state’s 29 federally recognized tribes, and we will never stop pursuing justice for victims, no matter how long it takes.”

    The investigation is ongoing.

    “We recognize that the past five years have been incredibly difficult and painful for Mary’s family as well as our neighbors and partners at the Tulalip Police Department, the entire community, and the staff who have worked tirelessly to find her,” said Snohomish County Sheriff Susanna Johnson. “We hope the recovery brings us one step closer to finding the truth about what happened to Mary. I want to extend my personal condolences to Mary’s entire family and to the Tulalip Tribes, and express our deep appreciation to community members whose initial reporting led to the discovery and identification of her remains.”

    “The Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s Office plays an important role in helping identify unknown remains and hopefully provide some small measure of closure for grieving families and communities,” said SCMEO Operations Manager Nicole Krueger. “It has taken five challenging years to reach this point in the investigation. More than four months ago, when unknown human skeletal remains were recovered, our office provided a sample to the University of North Texas Health Sciences Center to obtain a DNA profile. We were recently notified of a positive CODIS match to the Tulalip Tribes Missing Person Mary Ellen Johnson (Davis) of Tulalip, WA. The cause and manner of death are undetermined pending further investigation.”

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    The Source: Information in this story came from the FBI, Tulalip Police Department, Snohomish County Sheriff, Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s Office and previous FOX 13 Seattle reporting.

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    Will.Wixey@fox.com (Will Wixey)

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  • SILVER Alert activated for missing Shoreline woman

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    The Washington State Patrol has activated a SILVER Alert for a missing 69-year-old woman last seen in the Shoreline area.

    Joan Harrison, an Alzheimer’s patient, was last seen Thursday afternoon near Shoreview Park at 10th avenue NW and NW 175th Street.

    Harrison is described as 5’7″, 132 pounds with gray hair and green eyes. She was last seen wearing a dark blue parka and blue fleece hat.

    If you see Joan, please call 911.

    The Source: Information in this story came from Washington State Patrol and the King County Sheriff’s Office.

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    Will.Wixey@fox.com (Will Wixey)

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  • Missing Colorado woman’s remains found at her Lochbuie home after 7 years

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    Lochbuie Police Department via Facebook

    An undated photo of Terri Ann Ackerman, who was reported missing on Aug. 24, 2018, from her home in Lochbuie.

    Lochbuie police this week confirmed the remains of 56-year-old Terri Ann Ackerman were found at her northern Colorado home, more than seven years after she was reported missing in the Weld County town of Lochbuie.

    The Weld County Coroner’s Office announced Wednesday that Ackerman’s remains were found at a home in the 100 block of Poplar Street on Sept. 10 — the same area where she was reported missing from her home in August 2018, according to the Greeley Tribune. 

    Lochbuie police officials this week confirmed Ackerman’s remains were discovered at her home, but did not say where they were found or why they were not discovered for more than seven years.

    The cause and manner of her death are also under investigation.

    Officials with the police department and Weld County Sheriff’s Office could not immediately be reached for comment.

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  • Missing transgender college student Lia Smith died by suicide: M.E.

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    A transgender Middlebury College student reported missing on October 19 died by suicide, authorities in Vermont said.

    An autopsy conducted by the Vermont Chief Medical Examiner’s Office in Burlington identified the body discovered Thursday during a search for Lia Smith as the 21-year-old transgender former student-athlete, Vermont State Police announced late Friday. The medical examiner on Friday determined that the student died by suicide.

    “No additional details are available about this case,” the state police said in a statement.

    Smith, who previously lived in Woodside, California, was reported missing on Sunday—two days after she was last seen on campus. Authorities found a body Thursday in a field west of Middlebury in Cornwall near The Knoll, the college’s organic farm, state police said.

    Officials at the college of roughly 2,800 undergraduates initially notified students on Sunday about Smith, whose disappearance was reported to Middlebury police earlier that afternoon.

    “This is incredibly saddening news, and we are working to support our community in every way we can at this difficult time,” Middlebury College President Ian Baucom said in a statement Thursday after authorities found the unidentified body near the western edge of campus.

    “I know that this is extraordinarily difficult news to receive as we continue to hold Lia and all her family and friends tight in our hearts,” Baucom’s statement continued. “As ever, please care for yourselves and one another.”

    Counseling services had been available to Middlebury students beginning on Monday, Baucom said.

    “We will do everything we can to find Lia,” university officials said in a statement earlier this week. “She is a beloved member of our Middlebury family and there is nothing more important than the health, safety, and wellbeing of our students and of our entire community.”

    Smith’s father contacted police after not being able to reach her and connecting with friends, according to The Middlebury Campus, the school’s student newspaper.

    Smith, who double majored in statistics and computer science, previously competed on the women’s swimming and diving team. She also participated in chess and women in computer science clubs at Middlebury, the newspaper reported.

    In February, Smith spoke at a panel at the college hosted by student group Queers & Allies to discuss the politicization of transgender health care, The Middlebury Campus reported.

    Smith cited a strong support network for transgender students on campus during her appearance.

    “Know that there are people in your community that are here for you and care about you,” she said.

    Searches conducted this week near the campus by Middlebury police, Vermont State Police and other law enforcement agencies included K-9 teams and drones. Staff at the liberal arts college scoured all campus facilities as well, Baucom said.

    More than 600 Middlebury students had also joined an online group to share updates of the extensive effort to find Smith, WPTZ reported.

    “We’re a really small community,” senior Lucy Schembre told the station. “Even if you don’t know someone personally, you definitely know somebody who knows them, and you’ve definitely seen them around. It’s very jarring for somebody who’s supposed to be here to not be here.”

    Middlebury police declined to comment on inquiries by Newsweek on whether Smith’s gender identity played a role in her disappearance.

    A study conducted in 2023 revealed that 42 percent of transgender adults in the United States have attempted suicide and 81 percent have thought about ending their own lives.

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  • Kada Scott: Police find human remains in search for missing woman

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    Police have found human remains while searching for Kada Scott, a missing woman from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

    John Stanford, the deputy commissioner of the Philadelphia Police Department told reporters at a press conference, shared by NBC Philadelphia, that investigators had found remains that were around a week old in a shallow grave in a wooded area behind the abandoned Ada H. Lewis Middle School near the Awbury Arboretum following an anonymous tip.

    They have not yet been identified but a spokesperson for the department told ABC News that they believed they belonged to Scott.

    Newsweek reached out to the Philadelphia Police Department for comment on this story.

    This is a developing story. More to follow.

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  • Search for missing Mount Airy woman now includes homicide detectives, police say

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    Homicide detectives are now assisting in the search for Kada Scott, the Mount Airy woman who went missing earlier this month, Philadelphia police said Tuesday. 

    Scott, 23, was last seen leaving her home near Rodney Street and East Mount Airy Avenue around 9:45 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 4. She was on her way to work her overnight shift at The Terrace, an assisted living facility in Chestnut Hill. Though her car was found in the parking lot, Scott did not show up for work.


    MORE: Man accused of firebombing Gov. Shapiro’s residence to appear in court Tuesday


    Investigators initially had been treating Scott’s disappearance as a missing person’s case. Police were expected to provide an update on the case Tuesday afternoon, but canceled the press conference. They did not give a reason for the cancellation.

    Police said Scott was typically a frequent social media user, but her cell phone and social media accounts have not shown any activity since she went missing. Her phone is no longer in operation. Last week, a co-worker reportedly revealed that someone had been harassing Scott in the time leading up to her disappearance, but police said they were unsure who the harasser was.

    On Friday, police searched a section of Awbury Arboretum in Germantown, north of Washington Lane, after “some evidence” led them to the area. Police deployed K-9 units and cadets from the Police Academy to aid the search, but they only found a few clothing items. Investigators were unsure if the clothes were related to the case. 

    Deputy Commissioner Frank Vanore said Friday that detectives saw some signs that Scott might not have been missing voluntarily, including her lack of phone activity. 

    “It’s concerning, many young people today, they can’t live without having a phone in their hand,” Vanore said in a press update. “So that’s a concern. She left her car behind, it’s certainly something that’s not usual of someone who’s missing voluntarily.” 

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  • Oakley Carlson declared ‘legally dead’ 4 years after reported missing

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    It’s been almost four years since five-year-old Oakley Carlson was reported missing from Grays Harbor County.

    Now, Pacific County Judge Donald Richter has declared her legally dead.

    The change in status came after attorneys filed the petition on behalf of Oakley’s three siblings and their guardians.

    Oakley Carlson declared dead years after going missing

    The backstory:

    Oakley’s foster mother, Jamie Jo Hiles, raised Oakley until she was forced by the State Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF) to give her to biological parents, Jordan Bowers and Andrew Carlson, according to the Seattle law firm that reached out to her months ago.

    She says they are preparing to file a lawsuit against DCYF — but she has declined to participate, saying she wants the focus to remain on honoring Oakley’s life and on hold Bowers and Carlson accountable.

    Neither has cooperated with detectives in the search for their missing daughter.

    What they’re saying:

    Hiles did not know until recently that the petition had been signed on July 11.

    On Monday, she shared her reaction on the Where is Oakley Carlson Facebook page, saying:

    “Imagine being a parent and finding out from someone else that your child has been declared dead. The pain and shock of that moment are indescribable. No parent should ever have to experience that kind of disregard. This effort has been described as a way to hold dcyf accountable, but from where I stand it looks more like a pursuit of financial gain than a pursuit of justice.”

    Meanwhile, Grays Harbor County Sheriff’s detectives say that declaring Oakley dead does not change their investigation.

    What’s next:

    They are working with the prosecutor’s office and considering charging Bowers and Carlson in a no-body homicide case.

    No decisions have been made, but they are discussing it.

    Bowers was released from prison on September 23 after serving time for fraud and identity theft.

    Both she and andrew carlson served time for exposing oakley’s siblings to meth.

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    David.Rose@fox.com (David Rose)

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  • Philly police seek public’s help in finding missing 65-year-old man

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    Philadelphia police are seeking the public’s help in finding 65-year-old Robert Gomola, who has been missing for more than a week, police said.

    Gomola was reported missing from the 2900 block of North 17th Street and was last seen on Friday, Sept. 19, 2025, at around 6:12 p.m., police said.

    Gomola is described by police as a White male who is around 5 feet 8 inches tall and 145 pounds.

    Robert Gomola ()

    Anyone who has seen Gomola or has information on his whereabouts is urged to contact the Northwest Detective Division at 215-686-3353 or dial 911.

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  • SILVER Alert activated for Bremerton woman, suspect identified

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    The Washington State Patrol has activated a SILVER Alert for a missing Bremerton woman, and also identified a suspect.

    Troopers are looking for 79-year-old Linda Evans, who was last seen leaving her home on Russell Road in Bremerton at around 10:30 a.m. Thursday.

    WSP also identified 48-year-old Donovan Foshay as a suspect in Evans’ disappearance.

    Linda Evans and Donovan Foshay (via WSP)

    Evans is 5’0″, 127 pounds with white hair and green eyes. She was last seen wearing a red jacket, red pants, red hat and black sandals.

    Foshay is described as 5’8″, 160 pounds, brown hair, blue eyes and is wearing unknown clothing. Details regarding Foshay’s involvement were not provided.

    It’s unknown which direction of travel Evans was headed. WSP says she is unable to return home without assistance.

    If you see Evans or Foshay, please call 911.

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    The Source: Information in this story came from the Washington State Patrol.

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    Will.Wixey@fox.com (Will Wixey)

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  • Missing man who left Seattle VA Hospital located

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    The Washington State Patrol has canceled a SILVER Alert for a missing man who was last seen leaving the VA Hospital in Seattle.

    WSP said the 76-year-old man was located Friday night.

    The Source: Information in this story came from the Washington State Patrol.

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  • Police say missing South LA brothers have been located

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    Two missing young brothers who left their foster parents’ Westlake District apartment and were believed to have been abducted by their biological mother were located Sunday.

    The Los Angeles Police Department announced at about 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24, that the 2-year-old and 10-year-old were no longer missing.

    “The children have been located and will soon be reunited with their foster parents,” police said. “(The) children are in good health.”

    NBC4, citing police, reported that they were located in Las Vegas.

    The brothers were the subject of an Amber Alert issued by the California Highway Patrol mid-morning Thursday, after they were reported missing at 1:30 a.m. They were previously last seen in the area of West 52nd Street and Halldale Avenue in South Los Angeles, according to Officer Rosario Cervantes of the LAPD.

    “It is believed their biological mother … took them from Virgil Avenue to the area of the 1500 block of East 52nd Street,” the LAPD said last week.

    No further information was immediately available.

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  • Elderly woman with Alzheimer’s missing from Bellevue, WA

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    An 81-year-old woman has been reported missing. She was last seen in the Bellevue area and has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease.

    The elderly woman, Tong Chen, is described by police as 90 pounds and five feet tall.  She was reportedly last seen wearing the following:

    • An orange and white striped sweater
    • Black pants
    • Green tennis shoes

    As of Sunday afternoon, police say Chen is not in any immediate danger.

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    The Source: Information in this story came from the Bellevue Police Department.

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  • California woman found dead in national forest, husband seen dragging something in large tarp

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    A California woman was found dead in a national forest just a day after her husband was captured on video dragging something large wrapped in what appeared to be a tarp or sheet away from his home.

    The body of Sheylla Cabrera, 33, was found on Aug. 13 in Angeles National Forest wrapped in a tarp or sheet similar to the one her husband, 36-year-old Jossimar Cabrera, was seen pulling the day before on Ring camera footage, according to KTTV and KTLA.

    Search and rescue teams from the Montrose Mountain Search and Rescue team reported finding something suspicious in the Angeles National Forest that matched the material seen in the Ring video, the outlets reported.

    MAN ARRESTED ON SUSPICION OF MURDER AFTER WOMAN’S BODY FOUND AT REMOTE CALIFORNIA CAMPSITE

    The body of Sheylla Cabrera, 33, was found on Aug. 13 in Angeles National Forest wrapped in a tarp or sheet. (Don Luis Meza)

    Homicide detectives responded to the scene and confirmed that Mrs. Cabrera’s body was wrapped inside the material, according to the reports.

    Mr. Cabrera was immediately identified as a person of interest in the investigation. The couple’s three children were also reported as missing.

    MOTHER’S STORY QUESTIONED BY AUTHORITIES AS 7-MONTH-OLD REMAINS MISSING AFTER ALLEGED KIDNAPPING

    Jossimar Cabrera dragging a tarp believed to be containing his wife

    Jossimar Cabrera was identified as a person of interest in the investigation. (Don Luis Meza)

    He fled to Peru before the discovery of his wife’s body, and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is currently working with local authorities to extradite him to California.

    Officials are expected to charge him with murder if he is sent back to California.

    Jossimar Cabrera

    Jossimar Cabrera fled to Peru before the discovery of his wife’s body. (Don Luis Meza)

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    The three children were also found safe in Peru and taken into protective custody.

    Mrs. Cabrera’s cause of death is being evaluated by the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s Office.

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  • It’s been a decade since 43 students disappeared in Mexico. Their parents still fight for answers

    It’s been a decade since 43 students disappeared in Mexico. Their parents still fight for answers

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    Clemente Rodríguez has been documenting the long search for his missing son with tattoos. First, it was an ink drawing of a turtle — a symbol of 19-year-old Christian Rodríguez’s school — with a smaller turtle on its shell. Then, an image of Mexico’s patron saint, the Virgin of Guadalupe, accompanied by the number 43. Later, a tiger for strength and a dove for hope.”How else is my son going to know that I have been looking for him?” asked Rodríguez. To the heartbroken father, the body art is evidence that he never stopped searching — proof he could perhaps one day show to his boy.On Sept. 26, 2014, Christian Rodríguez, a tall boy who loved to folk dance and had just enrolled in a teachers college in the southern state of Guerrero, disappeared along with 42 classmates. Every year since, on the 26th of each month, Clemente Rodríguez, his wife, Luz María Telumbre, and other families meet at the Rural Normal School at Ayotzinapa and take a long bus ride to the capital, Mexico City, to demand answers.They will do so again next week, on the 10th anniversary of their sons’ disappearance.”It is hard, very hard,” Clemente Rodríguez said.Rodríguez and the other parents are not alone. The 43 students are among more than 115,000 people still reported as missing in Mexico, a reflection of numerous unresolved crimes in a country where human rights activists say violence, corruption and impunity have long been the norm.Over the years, authorities have offered different explanations. The previous administration of President Enrique Peña Nieto said that the students were attacked by security forces linked to a local drug cartel, and that the bodies were then turned over to organized crime figures, who burned their bodies in a dump and threw their ashes in a river. A bone fragment of one of the students was later found in the river.President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s administration confirmed the source of the attack. But the current justice department — along with the Interamerican Commission on Human Rights and a Truth Commission formed specifically to investigate the students’ disappearance — refuted the story about the incineration of the bodies in a dump. They accused top former officials of planting the bone fragment in the river to suit their narrative. They also unearthed clues in a different location, including bone fragments from one of Christian’s feet.But the families still don’t have any solid answers about what happened to the students. For his part, Clemente Rodríguez is far from convinced that his son is dead. Not long after the students disappeared, parents took matters into their own hands, charging into remote, often gang-controlled mountain towns to search for their children. They encountered others who had been displaced by violence. Fear was everywhere.”When I left the house, I never knew if I would come back alive,” Rodríguez said.During the search, Christina Bautista, the 49-year-old mother of missing student Benjamin Ascencio, says strangers told her they’d been searching for a son for three years or a daughter for five. She had thought it would be a matter of weeks.”I couldn’t take it, I took off running,” she said. “How could there be so many disappeared?”Dozens of bodies were found, but not those of their children. A decade of fighting to keep the case alive has turned the parents’ lives inside out. Before his son’s disappearance, Rodríguez sold jugs of water from the back of his pickup and tended a small menagerie of animals in the town of Tixtla, not far from the school. Telumbre sold handmade tortillas cooked over a wood fire. When the students vanished, however, they dropped everything. Parents sold or abandoned their animals, left fields untended and entrusted grandparents with the care of other children.Rodríguez, 56, has since managed to partially reassemble his clutch of livestock and has planted some corn on the family’s plot of land. The family’s main income, however, comes from homemade crafts sold on trips to Mexico City: mats woven from reeds; bottles of an uncle’s locally brewed mezcal decorated with twine and colorful tiger faces; and cloth napkins embroidered by Telumbre.Sometimes the stocky, soft-spoken Rodríguez visits his land to think or to release his anger and sadness. “I start to cry, let it all go,” he said.Parents also find solace at the Rural Normal School at Ayotzinapa. The school, which trains students to teach in poor remote villages, is part of a network of rural educational facilities with a long history of radical activism. School walls painted with slogans demanding justice for the missing students also display murals honoring Che Guevara and Karl Marx. For the poorest families, Ayotzinapa offers a way out: Students receive free room, board and an education. In exchange, they work. The atmosphere has militaristic undertones: New students’ heads are shaved and the first year is about discipline and survival. They are tasked with tending cattle, planting fields and commandeering buses to drive to protests in the capital. The students who disappeared in 2014 were abducted from five buses they had taken over in the city of Iguala, 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of the school.Parents arrived at Ayotzinapa little by little from villages deep in the mountains. They gathered on the school’s basketball court, a concrete pad under a pavilion where 43 chairs still hold photos of each of the missing students. In the years since, a certain codependency has developed. The school’s fight for justice is fueled by the parents’ grief and anger. The school’s students, meanwhile, “are our strong arm,” Bautista says. “Here is where the movement started.”Students treat the parents respectfully and affectionately, greeting them as “aunt” or “uncle” as they pass through the guarded gates.In late August, Rodríguez and other parents met for the last time with López Obrador, who leaves office at the end of this month.The exchange was a grave disappointment.”Right now, this administration is just like that of Enrique Peña Nieto,” Rodríguez said. “He’s tried to mock us” by hiding information, protecting the Army and insulting the families’ lawyers, he said. López Obrador continues to insist that his government has done its best to find answers. He cites dozens of arrests, including that of a former attorney general charged with obstructing justice. He has downplayed the role of the military, however. Years ago, López Obrador declared the students’ abduction a “state crime,” pointing to the involvement of local, state and federal authorities, including the Army.The families met in July with López Obrador’s successor, Claudia Sheinbaum, who will take office Oct. 1, but she made no promises or commitments. After the August meeting, Rodríguez posed for a portrait in the National Palace, his gaze firm and his fist raised.Like other parents, he vows to keep fighting. “During these 10 years, we have learned a lot about obfuscation … lies,” Rodríguez said. Top military and government authorities “have the answers,” he added. “They can reveal them.”

    Clemente Rodríguez has been documenting the long search for his missing son with tattoos.

    First, it was an ink drawing of a turtle — a symbol of 19-year-old Christian Rodríguez’s school — with a smaller turtle on its shell. Then, an image of Mexico’s patron saint, the Virgin of Guadalupe, accompanied by the number 43. Later, a tiger for strength and a dove for hope.

    “How else is my son going to know that I have been looking for him?” asked Rodríguez. To the heartbroken father, the body art is evidence that he never stopped searching — proof he could perhaps one day show to his boy.

    On Sept. 26, 2014, Christian Rodríguez, a tall boy who loved to folk dance and had just enrolled in a teachers college in the southern state of Guerrero, disappeared along with 42 classmates. Every year since, on the 26th of each month, Clemente Rodríguez, his wife, Luz María Telumbre, and other families meet at the Rural Normal School at Ayotzinapa and take a long bus ride to the capital, Mexico City, to demand answers.

    They will do so again next week, on the 10th anniversary of their sons’ disappearance.

    “It is hard, very hard,” Clemente Rodríguez said.

    Rodríguez and the other parents are not alone. The 43 students are among more than 115,000 people still reported as missing in Mexico, a reflection of numerous unresolved crimes in a country where human rights activists say violence, corruption and impunity have long been the norm.

    Over the years, authorities have offered different explanations. The previous administration of President Enrique Peña Nieto said that the students were attacked by security forces linked to a local drug cartel, and that the bodies were then turned over to organized crime figures, who burned their bodies in a dump and threw their ashes in a river. A bone fragment of one of the students was later found in the river.

    President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s administration confirmed the source of the attack. But the current justice department — along with the Interamerican Commission on Human Rights and a Truth Commission formed specifically to investigate the students’ disappearance — refuted the story about the incineration of the bodies in a dump. They accused top former officials of planting the bone fragment in the river to suit their narrative. They also unearthed clues in a different location, including bone fragments from one of Christian’s feet.

    But the families still don’t have any solid answers about what happened to the students. For his part, Clemente Rodríguez is far from convinced that his son is dead.

    Not long after the students disappeared, parents took matters into their own hands, charging into remote, often gang-controlled mountain towns to search for their children. They encountered others who had been displaced by violence. Fear was everywhere.

    “When I left the house, I never knew if I would come back alive,” Rodríguez said.

    During the search, Christina Bautista, the 49-year-old mother of missing student Benjamin Ascencio, says strangers told her they’d been searching for a son for three years or a daughter for five. She had thought it would be a matter of weeks.

    “I couldn’t take it, I took off running,” she said. “How could there be so many disappeared?”

    Dozens of bodies were found, but not those of their children.

    A decade of fighting to keep the case alive has turned the parents’ lives inside out. Before his son’s disappearance, Rodríguez sold jugs of water from the back of his pickup and tended a small menagerie of animals in the town of Tixtla, not far from the school. Telumbre sold handmade tortillas cooked over a wood fire.

    When the students vanished, however, they dropped everything. Parents sold or abandoned their animals, left fields untended and entrusted grandparents with the care of other children.

    Rodríguez, 56, has since managed to partially reassemble his clutch of livestock and has planted some corn on the family’s plot of land. The family’s main income, however, comes from homemade crafts sold on trips to Mexico City: mats woven from reeds; bottles of an uncle’s locally brewed mezcal decorated with twine and colorful tiger faces; and cloth napkins embroidered by Telumbre.

    Sometimes the stocky, soft-spoken Rodríguez visits his land to think or to release his anger and sadness. “I start to cry, let it all go,” he said.

    Parents also find solace at the Rural Normal School at Ayotzinapa.

    The school, which trains students to teach in poor remote villages, is part of a network of rural educational facilities with a long history of radical activism. School walls painted with slogans demanding justice for the missing students also display murals honoring Che Guevara and Karl Marx.

    For the poorest families, Ayotzinapa offers a way out: Students receive free room, board and an education. In exchange, they work.

    The atmosphere has militaristic undertones: New students’ heads are shaved and the first year is about discipline and survival. They are tasked with tending cattle, planting fields and commandeering buses to drive to protests in the capital. The students who disappeared in 2014 were abducted from five buses they had taken over in the city of Iguala, 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of the school.

    Parents arrived at Ayotzinapa little by little from villages deep in the mountains. They gathered on the school’s basketball court, a concrete pad under a pavilion where 43 chairs still hold photos of each of the missing students.

    In the years since, a certain codependency has developed. The school’s fight for justice is fueled by the parents’ grief and anger. The school’s students, meanwhile, “are our strong arm,” Bautista says. “Here is where the movement started.”

    Students treat the parents respectfully and affectionately, greeting them as “aunt” or “uncle” as they pass through the guarded gates.

    In late August, Rodríguez and other parents met for the last time with López Obrador, who leaves office at the end of this month.

    The exchange was a grave disappointment.

    “Right now, this administration is just like that of Enrique Peña Nieto,” Rodríguez said. “He’s tried to mock us” by hiding information, protecting the Army and insulting the families’ lawyers, he said.

    López Obrador continues to insist that his government has done its best to find answers. He cites dozens of arrests, including that of a former attorney general charged with obstructing justice. He has downplayed the role of the military, however. Years ago, López Obrador declared the students’ abduction a “state crime,” pointing to the involvement of local, state and federal authorities, including the Army.

    The families met in July with López Obrador’s successor, Claudia Sheinbaum, who will take office Oct. 1, but she made no promises or commitments.

    After the August meeting, Rodríguez posed for a portrait in the National Palace, his gaze firm and his fist raised.

    Like other parents, he vows to keep fighting.

    “During these 10 years, we have learned a lot about obfuscation … lies,” Rodríguez said. Top military and government authorities “have the answers,” he added.

    “They can reveal them.”

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  • Man charged with murder in connection with the deaths of a couple at a nudist resort

    Man charged with murder in connection with the deaths of a couple at a nudist resort

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    A man was charged with murder on suspicion of killing his neighbors at a California nudist resort, San Bernardino County District Attorney Jason Anderson announced Tuesday afternoon in a news conference.Michael Royce Sparks, 62, is facing two counts of murder in connection with the deaths of missing couple Daniel and Stephanie Menard, who are 79 and 73, authorities said.The couple was last seen on Aug. 24 at their home in the Olive Dell Ranch resort in San Bernardino County. Human remains were found underneath Sparks’ home after he was arrested last week, following a tense and lengthy standoff.Police have said they believe the remains are those of the Menards, who lived next door.“We know they’re dead, and we know there’s two victims,” Anderson said about the reasoning for the charges.Sparks is set to appear in court Wednesday and is ineligible for bail, jail records show. CNN has been unable to identify an attorney for Sparks or locate family members.Redlands Police Chief Rachel Tolber said one of Sparks’ relatives led them to him. Hours prior to his arrest last week, a family member called police saying he was involved in the Menards’ disappearance.He “had admitted to killing two people and was threatening suicide,” Tolber said about Sparks.“I believe that there may have been other people that were texted, but the initial call that started our focus on him was from the family,” Tolber added.Officials couldn’t discuss a potential motive for the killings and Anderson said it did not appear to be planned.A couple vanishesPolice had been looking for the couple in the hills and canyon area around Olive Dell Ranch. The resort is between the southern California cities of Redlands and Colton, about 65 miles east of Los Angeles.The search began after a friend who lives in the resort became worried for the Menards when they didn’t attend Sunday church service as usual. Their dog Cuddles, a white shih tzu, remains missing, police said on Tuesday.Irene Engkraf, who identified herself as the person who contacted police about the Menards, told reporters last week that she saw the their car sitting “abandoned” down the road from their home.When she entered the couple’s home using a spare key, Engkraf said she saw Stephanie’s purse and both of the Menards’ phones. Then she called 911 and hospitals in the area, searching for news of her friends.A tip led to suspect’s arrestAfter receiving a tip from Sparks’ family, police locked down the resort because they learned that he could be armed and barricaded, Tolber said.Officers had been looking for him for several hours when they used a battering ram and a drone to search Sparks’ home, police said. They located him with a camera used to evaluate sewer blockages, Redlands Police Department spokesman Carl Baker said Friday.He had been hiding inside a 5-foot deep concrete space under the home, which forced officers to remove the front wall of the house, Baker said.Anderson, the district attorney, described the space as similar to a “homemade basement” area underneath the mobile home.When officers discovered him, Sparks, who was armed and barricaded, attempted to shoot himself but his weapon misfired, police said. After “lengthy negotiations” with officers, Sparks surrendered voluntarily, Baker said.A day after Sparks was arrested, firefighters and cadaver dogs found human remains under his home and spent several days searching the site, police said.The search took days because of the state of the property, its potential collapse and the need to remove debris with heavy equipment.Tolber declined to discuss more details about the remains and noted that police don’t have a reason to believe there are other victims.

    A man was charged with murder on suspicion of killing his neighbors at a California nudist resort, San Bernardino County District Attorney Jason Anderson announced Tuesday afternoon in a news conference.

    Michael Royce Sparks, 62, is facing two counts of murder in connection with the deaths of missing couple Daniel and Stephanie Menard, who are 79 and 73, authorities said.

    The couple was last seen on Aug. 24 at their home in the Olive Dell Ranch resort in San Bernardino County. Human remains were found underneath Sparks’ home after he was arrested last week, following a tense and lengthy standoff.

    Police have said they believe the remains are those of the Menards, who lived next door.

    “We know they’re dead, and we know there’s two victims,” Anderson said about the reasoning for the charges.

    Sparks is set to appear in court Wednesday and is ineligible for bail, jail records show. CNN has been unable to identify an attorney for Sparks or locate family members.

    Redlands Police Chief Rachel Tolber said one of Sparks’ relatives led them to him. Hours prior to his arrest last week, a family member called police saying he was involved in the Menards’ disappearance.

    He “had admitted to killing two people and was threatening suicide,” Tolber said about Sparks.

    “I believe that there may have been other people that were texted, but the initial call that started our focus on him was from the family,” Tolber added.

    Officials couldn’t discuss a potential motive for the killings and Anderson said it did not appear to be planned.

    A couple vanishes

    Police had been looking for the couple in the hills and canyon area around Olive Dell Ranch. The resort is between the southern California cities of Redlands and Colton, about 65 miles east of Los Angeles.

    Redlands Police Department via CNN Newsource

    Dan and Stephanie Menard were reported missing on August 25.

    The search began after a friend who lives in the resort became worried for the Menards when they didn’t attend Sunday church service as usual. Their dog Cuddles, a white shih tzu, remains missing, police said on Tuesday.

    Irene Engkraf, who identified herself as the person who contacted police about the Menards, told reporters last week that she saw the their car sitting “abandoned” down the road from their home.

    When she entered the couple’s home using a spare key, Engkraf said she saw Stephanie’s purse and both of the Menards’ phones. Then she called 911 and hospitals in the area, searching for news of her friends.

    A tip led to suspect’s arrest

    After receiving a tip from Sparks’ family, police locked down the resort because they learned that he could be armed and barricaded, Tolber said.

    Officers had been looking for him for several hours when they used a battering ram and a drone to search Sparks’ home, police said. They located him with a camera used to evaluate sewer blockages, Redlands Police Department spokesman Carl Baker said Friday.

    He had been hiding inside a 5-foot deep concrete space under the home, which forced officers to remove the front wall of the house, Baker said.

    Anderson, the district attorney, described the space as similar to a “homemade basement” area underneath the mobile home.

    When officers discovered him, Sparks, who was armed and barricaded, attempted to shoot himself but his weapon misfired, police said. After “lengthy negotiations” with officers, Sparks surrendered voluntarily, Baker said.

    A day after Sparks was arrested, firefighters and cadaver dogs found human remains under his home and spent several days searching the site, police said.

    The search took days because of the state of the property, its potential collapse and the need to remove debris with heavy equipment.

    Tolber declined to discuss more details about the remains and noted that police don’t have a reason to believe there are other victims.

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  • Husband of missing Manassas Park woman to head to trial in early 2025 – WTOP News

    Husband of missing Manassas Park woman to head to trial in early 2025 – WTOP News

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    When Mamta Kafle Bhatt disappeared in late July, members of her local community in northern Virginia and her family in her native Nepal banded together to try to figure out what happened.

    Police in Manassas Park, Virginia, searched wooded areas for evidence in the case of a Mamta Kafle Bhatt, who went missing more than a month ago. (Courtesy 7News/Manassas Park Police Department)

    MANASSAS, Virginia (AP) — When Mamta Kafle Bhatt disappeared in late July, members of her local community in northern Virginia and her family in her native Nepal banded together to try to figure out what happened to her.

    They posted on social media, hosted community events and held a rally for the 28-year-old mother and pediatric nurse. Within days of her disappearance, community members began to apply public pressure on her husband, Naresh Bhatt.

    “My friend called me and said, ‘What do you think?’ and I said, ‘Let’s talk about it,’ so we initiated a group chat and then the movement was started,” said Bina Khadkalama, a member of the local Nepali community in northern Virginia.

    Bhatt was arrested about three weeks after his wife disappeared and charged with concealing a dead body. A prosecutor later said in court that the amount of blood found in Bhatt’s home indicated injuries that were not survivable.

    Though his wife’s body remains missing, Naresh Bhatt waived his right to grand jury proceedings on Thursday, paving the way for him to head to trial by early 2025. The trial date is expected to be set during Bhatt’s next hearing in Prince William Circuit Court on Sept. 16.

    Prince William Deputy Commonwealth’s Attorney Matthew Sweet described the waiver as a tactical move by Bhatt’s attorneys that limits prosecutors’ time to build their murder case — a process that typically takes longer than six months.

    “We have multiple agencies, multiple witnesses who are out of the state — out of the country — that we have to prepare for,” Sweet said in court.

    Chief Public Defender Tracey Lenox argued that Bhatt was still entitled to a speedy trial, despite prosecutors’ wish for more time, adding that his defense couldn’t control whether the arrest was premature.

    “They chose to charge in this,” Lenox said, adding: “I understand the inconvenience to the Commonwealth, but this is where we are.”

    On Thursday, Manassas Park police said they were searching for evidence in the investigation at a nearby school, multiple parks and other community areas.

    The investigation has drawn international attention to the small northern Virginia community, where homicide cases are rare. In the courtroom, more than a dozen community members sat among the benches, wearing pink pins printed with Bhatt’s face.

    “We’re always thinking about her, we’re doing so much here,” Khadkalama said. “The case is a 24-hour topic for us … I go to work, I drive home, I think about Mamta.”

    Holly Wirth, a nurse who used to work with Mamta Bhatt, has been vocal in the case, hoping to gain accountability for her friend. She described Naresh Bhatt’s waiver of grand jury proceedings to be “legal gymnastics,” but said she believed prosecutors would still have ample time to prepare this case or other charges that they could be pursuing.

    “Mr. Bhatt thinks he is smart, but I guarantee you, the weight of justice is leaning hard on him, and we are going to see this come to fruition,” Wirth said.

    ___

    Olivia Diaz is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

    Copyright
    © 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • Muddled mystery of Karlie Gusé who went missing near California desert

    Muddled mystery of Karlie Gusé who went missing near California desert

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    It’s been over 5 years since Karlie Gusé disappeared from her home in Chalfant Valley, California. She was 16 at the time. Karlie was born on May 13th, 2002 which would make her 22 years old today. Her story is one of mystery and intrigue that has left her family and police dumbfounded.

    By all accounts, Karlie was your everyday teenager. She had a boyfriend. She had plenty of friends. People knew who she was at school, and she was well-liked. However, things got murky during the weeks leading up to her disappearance.

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    Zach

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  • Authorities find

    Authorities find

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    Mexican authorities said Thursday they have found tents and questioned three people in the case of two Australians and an American who went missing over the weekend in the Pacific coast state of Baja California, a popular tourist destination that is also plagued by cartel violence.

    Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend have not been seen since April 27, officials said.

    María Elena Andrade Ramírez, the state’s chief prosecutor, would not say whether the three people questioned were considered possible suspects or witnesses in the case. She said only that some were tied directly to the case, and others indirectly.

    But Andrade Ramírez said evidence found along with the abandoned tents was somehow linked to the three. The three foreigners were believed to have been surfing and camping along the Baja coast near the coastal city of Ensenada, but did not show up at their planned accommodations over the weekend.

    Mexico Missing Foreigners
    In this image made from video, Mexican security forces frisk men at a checkpoint in Ensenada, Mexico, Thursday, May 2, 2024. Mexican authorities said Thursday they have found tents and questioned a few people in the case of two Australians and an American who went missing over the weekend.

    / AP


    “A working team (of investigators) is at the site where they were last seen, where tents and other evidence was found that could be linked to these three people we have under investigation,” Andrade Ramírez said. “There is a lot of important information that we can’t make public.”

    “We do not know what condition they are in,” she added. While drug cartels are active in the area, she said “all lines of investigation are open at this time. We cannot rule anything out until we find them.”

    On Wednesday, the missing Australians’ mother, Debra Robinson, posted on a local community Facebook page an appeal for helping in finding her sons. Robinson said her son had not been heard from since Saturday April 27. They had booked accommodations in the nearby city of Rosarito, Baja California.

    Robinson said one of her sons, Callum, is diabetic. She also mentioned that the American who was with them was named Jack Carter Rhoad, but the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City did not immediately confirm that. The U.S. State Department said it was aware of reports a U.S. citizen missing in Baja, but gave no further details.

    Andrade Ramírez said her office was in contact with Australian and U.S. officials. But she suggested that the time that had passed might make it harder to find them.

    “Unfortunately, it wasn’t until the last few days that they were reported missing. So, that meant that important hours or time was lost,” she said.

    The investigation was being coordinated with the FBI and the Australian and U.S. consulates, the prosecutor’s office added.

    Baja California, known for its inviting beaches, is also one of Mexico’s most violent states thanks to organized crime groups.

    In December, cartel leaders went on a killing rampage to hunt down corrupt police officers who stole a drug shipment in Tijuana, which is located in Baja California.

    In 2015, two Australian surfers, Adam Coleman and Dean Lucas, were killed in western Sinaloa state, across the Gulf of California – also known as the Sea of Cortez- from the Baja peninsula. Authorities say they were victims of highway bandits. Three suspects were arrested in that case.

    AFP contributed to this report.

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  • Missing 16-year-old child of Slack co-founder located, reunited with family

    Missing 16-year-old child of Slack co-founder located, reunited with family

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    PIX Now morning edition 4-28-24


    PIX Now morning edition 4-28-24

    12:52

    SAN FRANCISCO — Mint Butterfield, the 16-year-old child of the co-founder of the messaging app Slack, was located Saturday and reunited safely with their family after running away from home April 21, the Marin County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday.

    The Bolinas resident, who uses they/them pronouns, was located in San Francisco shortly before midnight Saturday, according to a statement from Sgt. Adam Schermerhorn of the Sheriff’s Office. The child was found uninjured by San Francisco police in a white van associated with Christopher “Kio” Dizefalo, a 26-year-old San Francisco resident, Schermerhorn said.

    Mint Butterfield
    Mint Butterfield

    Marin County Sheriff’s Office


    Dizefalo was interviewed by sheriff’s office detectives and arrested on suspicion of multiple criminal violations and was booked in the Marin County Jail, where his bail was set at $50,000, according to Schermerhorn.

    “They have been reunited as a family,” Schermerhorn said in an email message Saturday. Slack co-founder Stewart Butterfield is the child’s father, according to multiple sources.

    The Marin County Sheriff’s Office thanked the San Francisco Police Department, the Oakland Police Department and the FBI for their efforts in helping locate Mint.

    The sheriff’s office also thanked other governmental and non-governmental agencies. Thanks were also extended to the public for “providing tips that ultimately led to their safe return.”

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    CBS San Francisco

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  • Missing Renton woman found dead in Mexico, suspect in custody

    Missing Renton woman found dead in Mexico, suspect in custody

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    The body of a missing Renton woman was found in Mexico last week, authorities confirmed Monday, and a suspect is already in custody across the border.

    Renton Police say 54-year-old Reyna Hernandez, who went missing from her home in South Renton on Feb. 26, was found dead near Mexicali on March 8. Mexicali is the capital of Baja California, and is situated east of Tijuana, right across the U.S.-Mexico border.

    According to Renton Police, detectives were directed to a news article from Mexicali, reporting an unidentified body found in a cemetery on the Tijuana Highway. They reached out to Mexican authorities and were able to identify the body as that of Hernandez.

    RELATED: Renton Police searching for a hair salon owner possibly taken against her will

    A 61-year-old man from Renton was arrested in Mexicali unrelated charges. Renton Police say he is a suspect in this case.

    Family told FOX 13 that the man arrested was Hernandez’s partner. 

    Authorities confirmed there were signs of torture, saying Hernandez was bound at the hands and feet, shot in the head and wrapped in a blanket.

    “This is the worst possible outcome, and our hearts go out to Reyna’s family and friends,” said Investigations Commander Chandler Swain. “We are working closely with Mexicali police and our U.S. Federal partners to determine when and where Reyna was killed.”

    Hernandez has not been seen since Feb. 26, and her friends reported her missing on Feb. 28 when she did not return home from running errands.

    Her sister, 47-year-old Sara Carillo, last spoke to Hernandez on Feb. 24. She said her sister sounded happy and had gone dancing that night. 

    Clients told family members that Hernandez experienced domestic violence, and said that she had a black eye at her salon before she went missing. 

    Carillo says Hernandez was a dreamer, a hardworking and emphatic person with a lot of love to give.

    “I walk into the salon and I smell her perfume, sense her joy, and hear all the stories that people share when they come,” Carillo told FOX 13 in Spanish. 

    PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Police looking for missing Renton woman

    Authorities say once Hernandez’s time and manner of death are confirmed, they can determine where she was killed. If evidence shows she was killed in the U.S., Renton Police say they will ask for the suspect to be extradited for trial in the States.

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    Alejandra.Guzman@fox.com (Alejandra Guzman)

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