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Original Article As It Appeared In BBC News:
AMATEUR SLEUTHS KEEP COLD CASES ALIVE
Courtesy of BBC News














There are 100,000 missing people in the United States alone and at least 6,000 unidentified bodies. With the authorities struggling to solve so many cases, thousands of volunteers are using the internet to try to match the missing with the unidentified. Internet sleuth Todd Mathews reports.

It all started for me with the "Tent Girl", so called because her body was found wrapped up in a canvas tent bag. I heard about the case when I first met my future wife Lori at school.

She had come to Tennessee from Kentucky and told me how her father Wilbur had found a murdered girl in a field near Georgetown in the 1960s.

Her name, Tent Girl struck my soul. It was as if it were almost familiar. As Lori and her family became part of my own family, so did the Tent Girl. Two of my siblings died of natural causes as infants early in my life. She was no different to them in my mind.

I had a place to visit my siblings, but Tent Girl didn't have any family. So she became part of my own family. And I became determined to find out who she was.














Search

I went to her grave many miles away in Kentucky. I visited newspapers in the area to look through hard-copy archives, searching both for stories about the Tent Girl, as well as any accounts detailing a missing person that matched her description.

For 10 years that is how I conducted the search. I spoke to investigators and journalists by phone or in person, looking for any shred of data. I felt so close yet so far, as if the information was just outside my field of view.

As I worked, I also learned many things about how to search for information.

When the internet arrived, the main thing it changed was communication. In the early days the vast online resources available today did not exist. But I could do my searches by e-mail, and information about how to contact government and media offices was easier to find.

Research was much easier, more affordable and realistic. Distance was no longer an obstacle.

But perhaps more important was that it ended the isolation of individual investigators. Once the World Wide Web connected the planet, a natural gathering took place. I found other like-minded people doing the same kind of work.













Websites

The internet gave us an opportunity to gather and share information, to work on a common cause. We could cross the globe in seconds with a click of a computer mouse.

Yahoo-based Cold Cases group was one of the first of these such "virtual" gathering places and out of it grew organizations such as the Doe Network, so called because John or Jane Doe is the name used by the FBI for the unidentified.

Over the past decade, an increasing number of websites devoted to particular cases of missing persons have been created. One of the first was my own for the Tent Girl.

There were more people coming online daily with missing pieces in their lives. Message boards intended for other uses were being used to post about missing persons and lost loved ones.

It was a night like a thousand nights before, when I found what I was looking for at last. I had found a posting by a woman looking for her sister last seen in Lexington, Kentucky. I read on.

The description was matching the description etched onto the Tent Girl's headstone. The feeling in my heart was greater than the evidence I was reading on the screen. A decade of burden was lifting away and I knew deep inside this was her at last.








Rules and methods

Tent Girl finally had a name. She was Barbara Taylor, a wife and mother when she died. By now, she would have been a grandmother.

It was one of the most profound and fulfilling moments in my life. And, I was soon to find, it would have a deep impact on others as well. Already the discovery of her remains in 1968 had led to the establishment of the Kentucky State Medical Examiners Office. Then, 30 years later, the discovery of her identity in 1998 led to the creation of a state-based website by the Kentucky Medical Examiners office, called UnidentifiedRemains.net.

The websites work by gathering the information on missing and unidentified cases. A review process then begins. Researchers begin combing the web for any shred of missing information in the news media or public databases or websites.

Rules and methods have evolved to make the process work better. Data must be validated for accuracy by communicating with law enforcement authorities, and the Doe Network has a protocol which volunteers must follow to prevent them jeopardizing cases or putting themselves in danger.

Case files are in a constant state of review and cross-referenced by members, law enforcement and the public.

The Doe Network alone has helped bring closure to 38 cases of missing or unidentified people. They have also helped gather data to keep thousands of other similar cases in the public eye in the hope of resolution.


'Techni-criminologists'

Often people involved in using the Internet to help resolve crimes are called amateur sleuths. I think the amateur effort is becoming an actual science. Those of us who seek the technology of the Internet, but not only the Internet, to find resolve in cold cases have found a niche that truly deserves a name. I suggest the term techni-criminologist after which I have named my website,
TechniCriminology.info.

My colleagues and I get hundreds of e-mails a day from people searching for their missing loved ones. This is a new age where the ordinary man can step up and make a difference. It doesn't matter your sex, age, race or physical disability.

There are no boundaries to the level of involvement you choose to take - and for those cold cases that have been filed away by hard-pressed law enforcement, a Doe Network volunteer spending hours on a computer in their back room, may be the only chance of keeping a case alive.


Todd Matthews presents Internet Sleuths, a Falling Tree production, on Radio 4 on Tuesday 24 April at 1100BST then for 7 days at Radio 4's Listen again page.






Text Version:




Internet Sleuths
BBC Radio4

Documentary examining the growing use of the worldwide web by amateur detectives seeking to shed light on cases of murder and missing persons that the police have given up on. Todd Matthews from Tennessee is just one of a network of amateurs trying to help the authorities solve these cold cases.

Announcer: Internet Sleuth's - In the USA it is thought that there are over 100,000 missing persons and at least 6,000 unidentified bodies. With the authorities unable to resource investigations into them all, amateur detectives have turned to web-sites, pod casts, databases, and even e-mail to assist police and medical examiners solve cold cases. This is the story of Internet Sleuths.

Presented by Todd Matthews

--- Typing sounds in background - ding of an incoming e-mail ---

Todd Matthews: Ok - I just got an e-mail from a gentleman in New York...his daughter has been missing for 30 years....

(Introduction): Hi, I'm Todd Matthews. Using the Internet I try to match the missing with the unidentified.

Todd: ...This is a good example. This is the Los Angeles County Coroner site. They have a disclaimer that some of the photos and information might be disturbing to some viewers.  This is just exactly like if you walked into a morgue and they pulled out the drawer, throw back the sheet to view a body. That is exactly what you are going to see on the web site. Can you imagine standing there if they pulled back the sheet on your child? This is what you're getting, but you're getting it through the Internet.

--- Police radio and sounds of a busy police station ---

(Introduction): I'm John York, Sheriff of Livingston County, New York.

Sheriff York: We're upstate, about 300 miles north of New York City, 70 miles east of Buffalo and Niagara Falls. Very unfortunate on this particular case that we are talking about on November 9th of 1979, we had a young girl who was shot once over the right eye, dragged into a corn field, shot through the back, stripped of identification and 27 years later we are still trying to who this child is...she is somebody's child and somebody has a right to know what happened to her. And she has the right to the justice of identifying her killers.

--- Typing sounds in background ---

Todd: Over 100,000 missing persons in the United States alone...and globally...think of the anguish of the parents and all of the siblings...the people that love these people. I think it is sort of a quite tragedy...the 9-11 tragedy was huge...a lot of people died at the same time. But there are far more missing that died at the 9-11 attack. And there are, officially listed, over 6,000 unidentified bodies. That's the ones listed with the FBI-NCIC, but we know that is only 10-50% of the actual numbers. There are groups that have done studies, and are confident that there are probably 40,000 - 50,000 unidentified in the USA alone.

--- Musical score ---

Sheriff York: We are in route back to route 5 and the town of Caledonia, which is about 25 miles from the office, we are going to the scene where Jane Doe was found.

I have always been perplexed and amazed that somebody could kill somebody, dump them and then drive on a kill somebody else with no remorse.

We have done everything humanly possible, run down over 10,000 leads on this case.

--- Typing sounds in background ---

Todd: The Doe Network is a group of volunteers that have come together to try to pull together the world of the missing with the world of the unidentified. Hopefully to match a few of them up and put them back to where they belong.

Called Doe Network because of the moniker that the unidentified bodies have are John and Jane Doe. We have been able to help identify more than thirty. Thirty bodies that we actually have been able to match to the missing. To me that almost seems like a low number thinking at all the hours we have out in on it. A lot of the time we have taken a case out of the basement, all but forgotten, brought it back to the surface with an actual police report filed so that it actually once again and active case.

--- Police radio sounds --

Sheriff York: I think the Internet is one of the main potentials for the resolve of the whole case. Because you can get to such a large targeted audience, and more and more people become interested in difficult crime cases.

--- Musical score ---

--- Excerpts from Missing Pieces ---

Tracie Fleischhut (Missing Pieces, Episode 4 Guest): It's nice to know your making a difference, there are 2 families now, that I know I have been able to help...and that makes me feel great

Jill Bennett (Missing Pieces, Episode 3 Guest): ...just to bring her home and give her the proper Christian burial that she deserves.

Wayne Leng (Missing Pieces, Episode 7 Guest): 69 missing east side women...women who were drug addicted and involved in prostitution. The reports weren't taken seriously.

Tracie Fleischhut: The Internet is the greatest tool, simply because you can get so much information to so many people so quickly.

Eric Meadows (Missing Pieces Co-host): I want to say welcome to all of our listeners out there this Tuesday evening. You’ve joined us for yet another episode of Missing Pieces hosted by Todd Matthews and myself, Eric Meadows. And, I want to welcome everybody to the station tonight. How are, how is everyone?

Todd Matthews (Missing Pieces Host): I’m good.

Tracie Fleischhut (Guest): I’m good, too.

Eric: Great, great. Todd, you have a guest with you tonight, don’t you?

Todd: Yes, Ms Tracie Fleischhut, an old friend of mine. And, I think she’s got a lot to tell us now. She’s with New York Missing and the Center for Hope. And, I’m hoping she'll tell us a little about that. Welcome, Tracie.

Tracie: Thank you for having me.

--- Fade to musical score ---

Todd: ...let’s see, where did we first meet? Now, it was on the Cold Case discussion group, and you were, what brought you into this world?

Tracie: I was actually researching a cousin that our family had lost contact with. And, I found an unidentified woman that actually fit her description. It turned out not to be her, but that’s how I sort of got drawn into it.

---Fade to musical score ---

Sheriff York: Leaving route 5 and entering route 20, and where she was shot and dumped roadside is about 500 yards down the road form here. It's actually an open field right now, it's been plowed and the corn turned up, where we are going to stop is exactly the area that was all full of high corn at the time. It was where there was a small road side pull off...where this tree is one the right.

Tracie: I want to find answers, this is someone's daughter, and they deserve to know what happened to her. She's a teenager, she looked like the girl next door, no one has a clue who is still. She's kind of like Internet folklore when it comes to this type of thing, because she is one of the oldest cases. It's become a case that I obsess over...

Sheriff York: Since we have arrived that the scene here, we have went out into the field. There's now snow on the ground, but in that November there was not...it was very cold and drear day, it rained for about 11 hours prior to finding her here, it obliterated almost any physical evidence. We dug up the ground where she was laying and we checked every inch of this area, we recovered any physical evidence that we could, part of which is still part of the case. We actually recovered the spent bullet that had gone through her body and we able to do ballistic analysis.

Todd: A lot of people will same "amateur detective....amateur sleuth"...but you know after almost 20 years of working on something like this you would think there would have to be some type of profession, because people are coming to me and people like me for help.

Sheriff York: The man who first found her owned this land, still owns it, and is still a very active farmer in the community. They planted corn in it long before and they still plant corn now and I'm sure they'll still plant corn long after.

--- Musical score ---

Todd: This all started, for me, back in 1987 when I met my future wife Lori. Her family came here (to Tennessee) from northern Kentucky. At my school, she just appeared one day in the cafeteria one day. I remember seeing her across the room and she just caught my eye instantly, I really want to talk to that girl. I think I had already fallen in love with Lori.

Lori Riddle Matthews: I was 16 years old when I met Todd, he still spends all of his spare time doing this work, and it does get overwhelming. He spends every waking hour...it's his life.

Todd: ...Lori mentioned "Tent Girl", she was called the Tent Girl because she was wrapped in a canvas tent tube. I think this gave her an identity without and identity. Lori said that it was her dad that had found the body of the Tent Girl. He was about the start a job, he was a well driller. He saw something in this wrapper, and thought that maybe it was an animal. He kicked it with his foot, it rolled down the hill and he saw that it had a human form. He actually went down and stuck his knife into the bag, and the odor that came out was overwhelming. Murdered, blunt force trauma to the skull, put inside this tent tube. I wonder after all of this time still if she might have still been alive, because her fingernails had been broken off...and I wonder if she had tried to scratch her way out of that bag.

Lori: Todd was determined that he was going to find out who she was. We went to libraries and we spent every weekend going through newspaper articles, trying to get everything we could get --- and this was before the Internet. When he got the Internet, there was no stopping him.

Todd: A lot of us feel that we are advocates for the dead. The missing usually have the family advocating for the missing.

(Introduction): I am Rosemary Westbrook, my sister was missing, I thought maybe that she had found another family. When you are 10 years old you can imagine anything. I really, really did not take it to heart until I had my own son. I thought..."What if something happened to Brian?" -- What would I do...how far would I go to try and find him? I thought if I was that determined thinking of my own child, I should be that determined with my sister.

Todd: You know about 10 years ago, before having the Internet; the World simply did not exist beyond the community in which I grew up, beyond the rim of the mountain. For me, outside of television, there was no knowledge of the outside World. This was a very isolated area. And I think this is the reason the Tent Girl was taken into the heart of the community where she was found.

Rosemary: So in 1995, the one reason why my husband let me get onto the Internet was so that I could look and see. It was like the song..."You can find anything you want at Alice's restaurant". Getting on the Internet was kind like that, you could find anything and look anywhere in the world. So than I had a very small computer, very slow. I started going to missing person's message boards where you could post a missing person.

Todd: There were message boards where people would sell thing and there was "lost and found". Then people started looking for missing brothers and sisters. I thought that maybe I should post about the Tent Girl, created a web-site. It was January...and I saw a message that said..."sister missing...last seen in the Lexington area in December of 1967. Then a description, so I e-mailed Rosemary.

Rosemary: So I called him and he said, "I think I know where your sister is." I though that this was the first person who had ever told me anything like this. He asked me some questions and he said that his father in law had found a body in 1968 and this might be your sister. He said that "I don't want your money, I'm not an investigator, I just want you to call the Scott County Sheriff's Office and tell them that you want to talk to them about the Tent Girl."

(Introduction): I am Bobby Hammons of Scott County, Kentucky.

Sheriff Hammons: You get a lot of call in this business, tips and things...normally we check them all out, but this one...a 30 year old body laying up here that no one knew. Now he's been on the Internet and thinking that he came up with something.  It was a cold case and still an open murder case right today.

Rosemary: He gave me a web-site to look at, and when I read what was on the tombstone, it was like looking into a mirror. I remember that she had long brown hair, always had real pretty nails. She was always smiling and would take me to get ice cream. I remember the kid things...picnic's and her spending the night, us dancing on the front porch to the beat of a little Panasonic record player with a 45 going round.

I remember a red painted front porch and we had a squiggly sidewalk, daddy always planted white mums up and down the side walk and the front porch was painted red. I remember her and I...and you look up to your big sister...standing there both holding hands, dancing back and fourth. I remember that and that is all I've got.

I sent picture of her and they sent them to the Medical Examiner's Office, there was enough evidence that they exhumed her. You talk about something that was tough...wondering..."Oh my God, what if this isn't her? I will have disturbed the dead, something that God had planted right there."

Sheriff Hammons: We dug the grave up until we hit white plastic, when we touched that, they stopped digging. Dr Craig, she gets down in there and starts digging the rest by hand.

(Introduction): My name is Emily Craig, and I am the Kentucky State Forensic Anthropologist. Basically I am responsible for decomposed bodies and associated body parts, charred and skeletal remains that are found anywhere in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

We had a photograph of the smiling victim, and we also had a photograph of the teeth at autopsy, and they were an identical match but that still wasn't quite enough. So we did the exhumation, and we got DNA from a sister of the victim, and that gave us the positive ID that we needed from DNA.

Sheriff Hammons: It was snowing that afternoon. It was a nice day them all of a sudden it started clouding up and started snowing and was real cold. She was standing there, and found a hip bone; it had little grooves in the joint. She said to look at the grooves and that when they get 21 or 22 years old they start filling in and these had already started filling in. She said that she was going to say that this body was from a person that was 23-25 years old.

--- Todd & Rosemary together at Tent Girl / Barbara "Bobbie" Taylor grave / emotional moments ---

Todd: There's and etching of the Tent Girl there, etched into the head stone. Not meant to be a portrait but a representation, it was taken from the autopsy.

Looking at this, I can almost say that I am looking at a picture of Rosemary on that stone, just like her now that I know....now that I know what I know.

Rosemary: That's my sister...this is Bobbie.... (Chokes up)

Todd: Bobbie was her nickname...Barbara is Bobbie.

Todd & Rosemary: (Reading headstone) Barbara Ann Hackmann

Rosemary: September 12, 1943 to December 6th of  1967. 

Todd: This is the first time we have been here together in 10 years...so it is kind of hard...

Rosemary: ...brings back a lot of memories.

Todd: I come here by myself a lot alone, but now with her (Rosemary) here it is a little different....(Chokes)

Rosemary: This is a good thing you have done Todd....

Todd:  There the pool behind the grave, kids splayed there in the pool. They could see the grave from the pool. I think that is what made her not so scary to a lot of kids because she was here and not forgotten. I am glad she was buried near where children played....

I tool a real pretty picture up here last time I was up here...it had snowed.

Rosemary: I have that picture on my laptop.

Todd: I try to pull the weed around the grave....

--- Typing sounds ---

Dr Craig: I think these people that handle these web sites, especially those from the missing and the volunteers that try to match both sides of the equation are ABSOLUTELY AMAZING. They have done more than government agencies have over the decades. I think it is a common condition that government agencies and medical examiners offices are just absolutely overwhelmed. These cold cases, once they grow cold need something to keep them alive.

(Introduction): My name is Investigator Gloria Coppola; I'm in the bureau of criminal investigation with the New York State Police. Most of our current cases are homicides and in between current cases we will work cold cases. Every so often I'll do these searches on the unidentifieds...living and deceased. Every body has computers and everybody is on the Internet.

One of my missing persons cases a young man who went missing from Albany County, I got a tip from somebody who was looking at the websites, they had found an unidentified and the photo were almost identical. The teeth were similar; we actually had to compare fingerprints before finding that it was not a match, that's how close it was.

Todd: There is a protocol; it is required in the case of the missing that it has a police report before we work on it. One should never publish data without the permission of law enforcement, without their knowledge. It could jeopardize a case, so in your attempt to help a case you could actually destroy an effort. You might be following a tip that the Sheriff knows well already, but he has chosen to be silent and waiting for an opportunity.

Investigator Gloria Coppola: I don't have the time to be cruising databases all day; I can do the federal and state ones. But I'm not always on the Doe Network...I will use it and I think it is invaluable. I love it when we get these crime tips from people, I think that is great. Obviously there are down sides to some of it.

Todd: You often have very over zealous people that have wild fantasies, or fascinated with serial killers.

Investigator Gloria Coppola: I'm probably the most suspicious person out there, that's been my life for 27 years. Trying to determine if a person is lying or are they telling the truth. However it isn't like we are getting thousands of hits every day, and yes it could waste your time if it is something so far fetched. But after a while you get know if something is worth following up on or not. And I have to tell you if a case becomes cold after a while, that far fetched tip might be the most current lead that you have, so you might want to see what they are offering.

Todd: As far as the Doe network is concerned we try to use our regional people in their particular states where they are posted. You try to use the relationship that they are building with law enforcement. It's not always easy to find the right person to put there that can do that and follow the guidelines.

--- Excerpt from Missing Pieces ---

Todd: Tonight we have Jill Bennett, Jill has been into a little bit of everything in the missing person category. She's been a friend for a long time; she's a little more southern than I am as she is in Georgia. Tell us what it is that you do Jill...

Jill: Basically whenever I get online, every day, I’m doing something that pertains to somebody that is missing or murdered, because that is my main focus. My screen saver is a collage of faces of missing and murdered people...because these faces are just a part of my everyday life. 2002, I started working with the Carrie Culberson (Featured on Missing Pieces, Episode 3)  case. Her case was my first; she disappeared on August 28, 1996. The boyfriend is serving life without parole. It’s kind of controversial because of the fact there was a conviction without the body.

We have never wanted anything except just to bring her home and give her a proper Christian burial that she deserves.

Todd: It's addictive, because you sitting here and you think..."I'm going to quit and go to bed"...then you see that 30 minutes has passed...then another 40 minutes has past...then you get the final call from your wife letting you know that it is time to go to bed. I get up at 3:30 in the morning and sometimes your here up past 12:00 at night. You can't just stop because there no real place to stop, the e-mails keep coming.

Dr. Emily Craig: I think it is important to caution the amateur sleuths to the fact that they are amateurs. And sometimes they will want to push in a direction that we know that we just can't go. We can accept the information and the tips from the amateurs, but we simply can't reciprocate and give them information about the investigation.

--- Musical score ---

Todd: Leoma Patterson now that case is an interesting case (Case Featured on Missing Pieces, Episode 10 ). She has been missing since the late 1970's, and her family was given a body, but they didn't feel like the body was hers. The clothing didn't match, the jewelry...they didn't feel like was her jewelry.

Barbara Adkins (Introduction): I am Barbara Adkins.

Pearl Smith (Introduction): I'm her sister Pearl.

Barbara Adkins: It happened back in 1978, she got missing...my mother, Leoma Patterson.

Todd: People like me help untie the knots and take it back to law enforcement. Trying to take away all the discrepancies and that type of thing. That's the way I approached this case, we had to look at..."What do we know and what do we not know?"

Barbara Adkins: We reported her missing and they told the family to look for her, so we got out in the snow and ice and we looked for her ourselves.

Pearl Smith: Three months after she got missing, the skull and a few bones...that's all they said they found.

Barbara Adkins: They released these remains to the family, after the held it for seven years, they released it to the family on a boy's confession of killing her. He's in prison now in the state of Georgia; he committed two more murders there. Ever since then we have been trying to find out the truth.

Pearl Smith: As far as getting anything done, I wrote letters to everyone in the country because none of us had any money to do anything with. I wrote to the Governor, I wrote to the State's Attorney here. I even wrote a letter to the President.

Barbara Adkins: We kind of put our money back through the years me and my sister and our brother Ronnie Patterson. We saved our money and hired a lawyer and we got the body exhumed. We never really thought it was her, back then they didn't have DNA.

Todd: At this point in time it appears that this body that they have had buried in their mother's grave is not their mother...according to the initial DNA test. Even though the state of the remains often cause a little controversy in the validity of a DNA test.

--- Typing sounds ---

Todd: Now so many people expect you to just reach into the Internet and pull out the answer to their problems, and you can't...it's not that easy. It wasn't like I entered in Tent Girl and out popped Barbara Hackmann Taylor. You can't just catalogue though it and pull it out like a bar code, it's not like that. Even with the Internet, even though it was the tool, it still took a lot of work to use that tool to find what we were looking for.

--- Typing sounds ---

Barbara Adkins: We hope to get this person identified. Maybe somebody will come fourth after seeing all this in the media and might be able to tell us something about our mother. She would be 82...if she were alive.

Pearl Smith: I want to know what happened to her and where's she's at...and I want to know who we buried. Because whoever was in that grave has got a family too.

--- Musical score ---

Todd: There are a lot of people on the Cold cases group that are people that are actually really working in law enforcement. Retired people some of them, there are medical examiner's there, a lot of professionals that are looking into this new world of doing things on the Internet. Rather than the world where a group of detectives meet in a room...this is the whole planet. There are people from everywhere. If a child were to go missing in Australia...we can know about it within seconds here in the USA.

We can criss-cross the globe in minutes.

--- Musical score ---

Investigator Coppola: There are obviously thousands of police agencies, and as Ted Bundy the serial killer said..."Police don't talk...that's how you get away with it, police do not communicate." Unfortunately that's true, I'm a big proponent of talking and sharing information but unfortunately that doesn't happen all the time. We have to communicate more; we have to have shared databases...to me that is a key. Central repositories where information comes in...missing persons, unidentifieds, homicides are there trends? Are there patterns?  Geographic patterns?

Sheriff York: If you saw the file cabinets, there are drawers and drawers and drawers...and over 10,000 leads that we have run down on this case. You can see from her necklace here that she was wearing...a turquoise necklace with three little birds on it. She also had two key chains...and one key chain said, "He who holds the key can open my heart," and the other was a key that fit in to that corresponding slot. Our hope is that someday, on the Internet, someone will look at that and say... "I know that child." It's one of our best chances. Some day...we are going to solve this.


Internet Sleuths was produced by Sara Parker / Falling Tree Productions for BBC Radio 4




Resources:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6583129.stm
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/223254/internet_sleuths_.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/factual/pip/gfn0n/



A body in Tennessee is exhumed for a new autopsy.
Host of Missing Pieces,
Todd Matthews
Joins BBC news for special interview.
Missing Pieces would like to thank the following for their support:
Pastor Wayne Fitzpatrick and Eric Meadows with
WCAN Radio.com
Aired: April 24, 2007
34
Amateur Sleuths Keep Cold Cases Alive
After lying unnamed for 30 years, Tent Girl's name was added to her grave.
Todd with his father-in-law Wilbur Riddle, on location for the film "Resurrection"
"My colleagues and I get hundreds of e-mails a day
from people searching for their missing loved ones"
The BBC was delighted with the programme which got on
Pick of the Week
and also with your article which received
100,000 hits
almost unprecedented for a feature on the news website - Sara