Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
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Offline Shannon

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Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« on: July 14, 2012, 08:33:28 AM »
http://www.ksl.com/?sid=21247260&nid=960&title=police-looking-for-man-who-went-missing-en-route-to-colorado&s_cid=featured-2

Police looking for man who went missing en route to Colorado





July 13th, 2012 @ 11:29pm

SALT LAKE CITY — Salt Lake City police are asking for help in locating a man who went missing on a train from California to Colorado and may be in Utah.

Robin Putnam, 25, was traveling on an Amtrak train from Oakland, Calif. to Grand Junction, Colo. earlier this week, but while his belongings made it to Colorado, Putnam did not, according to a news release from the Salt Lake City Police Department. Family members told police they think the man got off the train in Salt Lake City during a 3 a.m. stop on July 8.

Putnam is 6-foot-1, 140 pounds with blond hair, blue eyes and possibly wearing glasses, police said. The man is considered missing and endangered due to mental health issues.

Those with information about Putnam's whereabouts have been asked to call 801-799-3000. Anonymous tips can be sent by text message to CRIMES (274637), beginning with the keyword TIPSLCPD. Those contacting police about Putnam can reference case number 12-119999.

« Last Edit: July 15, 2012, 12:31:51 PM by Deborah »
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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #1 on: July 16, 2012, 09:14:41 PM »
http://www.abc4.com/content/news/top_stories/story/Search-on-for-missing-train-passenger-in-Utah/jSR_bzzMwkGAH2zarDOo5w.cspx

Search on for missing train passenger in Utah

Updated: 7/13 5:27 pm | Published: 7/13 5:15 pm

Written by: Dan Metcalf Jr.

SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) - Police say a man who was traveling by train from Oakland, California to Grand Junction, Colorado may be missing in Utah.

The Salt Lake City Police Department says 25-year-old Robin Putnam is considered to be a missing and endangered adult.

Police say that according to family members, Putnam was traveling from Oakland to Grand Junction by Amtrak train earlier in the week, and that while his belongings arrived in Colorado, the family believes he got off the train during a stopover in Salt Lake City at 3 a.m. on Sunday.
 
Putnam was described as 6 feet 1 inch tall, 140 lbs., blue eyes, blond hair and possibly wearing glasses.

Police say Putnam is considered a missing and endangered adult due to mental health issues.

Anyone with information as to the whereabouts of Putnam was asked to call (801) 799-3000.
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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2012, 04:14:27 PM »
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/mobile/54513371-68/putnam-train-doug-lake.html.csp

Man possibly missing in Salt Lake could be disoriented

By Aaron Falk; The Salt Lake Tribune

First published Jul 18 2012 01:53PM
Updated Jul 19, 2012 06:24AM

Doug Putnam drove east, away from Salt Lake City on Wednesday morning, sleep deprived and worried.

The tug of reality pulled him back to Colorado; the landscaping business he owns and supports his family with does not run without him.

But he was still missing the thing he came looking for: his son.

"I’ve reached a point where I don’t know what else to do," Putnam said.

Robin Putnam has been missing since July 8. The 25-year-old art student was traveling by train from Oakland, Calif., to Grand Junction, Colo., when his family believes he stepped off an Amtrak train in Salt Lake City about 3 a.m. and never got back on.

His wallet and identification were left on the train and ended up in Chicago. His laptop and journal, where the art student sketched and wrote of his life, were on the train when it arrived in Grand Junction.

"I know he would have never left those belongings on there," Doug Putnam said. "An artist would never leave his journal behind. He’s been working on a story in there for a long, long time. He just would never give that up."

Robin Putnam was attending school in the Bay Area when he began suffering from panic attacks that forced him to quit his job at a Berkeley coffee shop and head for home, his mother, Cindy Putnam said.

As he has begun searching for his son, Doug Putnam has learned that Robin had not slept for several days before he boarded the train for Colorado. He wasn’t eating well. He’d been having nightmares and "when he got up from [a nightmare] it, he couldn’t distinguish between the dream state and the waking state," his father said.

"If I had heard all these things, I wouldn’t have let him get on the train by himself," Doug Putnam said.

A passenger on the train told the Putnams that she sat next to the missing man, that he politely asked for the window seat and that he shared some of his drawings with her during the ride.

The Putnams believe their son may have stepped off the train during a stopover in Salt Lake City and become disoriented. He may have left with a woman.

"I think he just lost himself," his father said.

Since July 9, Doug Putnam has been in Salt Lake City, searching for his son.

Fliers taped to light poles around the city depict a man with clear blue eyes and shaggy blond hair. The hair may be slightly longer now and he could be wearing his glasses, his mother said.

At 6-foot-1, he probably about 140 pounds, she said.

Doug Putnam has suffered ups and downs as he and Salt Lake Police detectives have tracked down leads. He met a man outside the downtown library who knew Robin’s name when his father described him. The man has been reportedly seen at the Volunteers of America office and at a Salt Lake City lighting store asking how he might obtain an ID.

"There have been some tips," Cindy Putnam said. "We feel like we’re getting closer to finding him and getting him the help he needs."

Anyone knowing anything about Robin Putnam’s whereabouts is asked to call 801-799-3000. Anonymous tips can be sent by text message to CRIMES (274637). Police ask that texters start the message with TIPSLCPD and reference case #12-119999.

Doug Putnam said he does not believe his son has been harmed.

"I’m trusting that he shows up," he said. "But we have no idea what’s going on."

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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #3 on: July 27, 2012, 02:16:22 PM »

https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/show/15606
NamUs profile for Robin Putnam - Case 15606
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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #4 on: August 01, 2012, 08:27:53 PM »
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/54600310-78/train-putnam-robin-missing.html.csp

Missing man believed lost in SLC suffered ‘psychotic break’
Missing » 25-year-old Robin Putnam has been missing since July 8.

By Aaron Falk and Jessica miller

First Published Jul 31 2012 03:54 pm • Last Updated Aug 01 2012 09:07 am

Before Robin Putnam stepped off an Amtrak train in Salt Lake City and seemingly disappeared, his California landlady witnessed the young artist having what she called a "psychotic break."

Cindy Putnam, the missing 25-year-old’s mother, said the landlady recently told her family about her son’s deteriorating mental state before he boarded a train headed to family in Colorado.

Robin Putnam’s family is still searching for the man who has been missing since July 8. The art student was attending college in the Bay Area, and was traveling by train from Oakland, Calif., to Grand Junction, Colo. His family believes he got off the train in Salt Lake City, and never got back on.

His wallet and identification were left on the train and ended up in Chicago. His laptop and journal, where the art student sketched and wrote of his life, were on the train when it arrived in Grand Junction.

"I know he would have never left those belongings on there," Doug Putnam said. "An artist would never leave his journal behind. He’s been working on a story in there for a long, long time. He just would never give that up."

Robin Putnam began suffering from panic attacks that forced him to quit his job at a Berkeley coffee shop and head for home, his mother said.

As he has begun searching for his son, Doug Putnam has learned that Robin had not slept for several days before he boarded the train for Colorado. He wasn’t eating well. He’d been having nightmares and "when he got up from [a nightmare] it, he couldn’t distinguish between the dream state and the waking state," his father said.

"If I had heard all these things, I wouldn’t have let him get on the train by himself," Doug Putnam said.

A passenger on the train told the Putnams that she sat next to the missing man, that he politely asked for the window seat and that he shared some of his drawings with her during the ride.

The Putnams believe their son may have stepped off the train during a stopover in Salt Lake City and become disoriented. He may have left with a woman.

"I think he just lost himself," his father said.

Fliers taped to light poles around the city depict a man with clear blue eyes and shaggy blond hair. The hair may be slightly longer now and he could be wearing his glasses, his mother said.

At 6-foot-1, he probably about 140 pounds, she said.

Anyone knowing anything about Robin Putnam’s whereabouts is asked to call 801-799-3000. Anonymous tips can be sent by text message to CRIMES (274637). Police ask that texters start the message with TIPSLCPD and reference case #12-119999.
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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #5 on: August 23, 2012, 02:01:13 AM »
http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=21821221

Parents of missing man plead for help from Utahns

By Shara Park

August 22nd, 2012 @ 2:13pm

A Colorado family is pleading for help finding their missing son that went missing after suffering a psychotic break as a result of stress.
 
Robin Putnam disappeared nearly 7 weeks ago from an Amtrak train in Salt Lake City. The 25-year-old is considered missing and endangered. His parents believe he is in Utah and they fear that if he isn't found soon, they'll never see him again.
 
"If we don't find him soon, we have no idea what could happen," said Doug Patnam, Robin's father. "If he was in his right mind, he would never ever do this to us. There is something going on here that is not right and we know that."
 
Robin is a student at an art school in California and he suffered a psychotic break as a result of stress. His parents weren't aware of the break down before he boarded a train bound for Utah that would eventually lead home to Colorado.

"He told me he felt like he needed to get out of there," said Cindy Putnam, Robin's mother. Robin left all of his stuff on the train when it arrived in Salt Lake City, and his parents are sure this is a sign that he is not in his right state of mind.
 
Since Putnam went missing several people have claimed to see him. There have been sightings in Sandy and most recently in Veteran's memorial Park in West Jordan. It's this most recent sighting that has his parents extremely worried.
 
"We think he could be starving for one thing," Doug said. "I'm quite positive he is from the description. He's so thin and hungry."
 
The Putnams have spent over $10,000 traveling to and from Utah looking for their son. They've handed out fliers across the valley.
 
They fear that because their son is 25, his case isn't a priority with the police. They are doing what they can on their own and are asking the public for help.
 
"I don't care how old they are- if they're 25 or 12, you're not going to give up," Cindy said. "You're going to stay positive and focused until you find them and especially with a child with mental health issues."
 
The Putnams are asking that if anyone sees their son to ask his name and either call them of the local police.

Numbers to Contact if Robin Putnam is found:
 •SLCPD: 801-799-3000

 
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Offline LoriDavis

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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #6 on: August 23, 2012, 04:59:10 PM »
http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/b0f22fec1ffd4136bca2dae9f8ff62e8/UT--Missing-Man-Amtrak

Parents fear for adult son missing after riding Amtrak train to SLC, leaving belongings behind

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
August 23, 2012 - 4:10 pm EDT

SALT LAKE CITY — The parents of Robin Putnam haven't given up hope, even if it's been nearly seven weeks since their 25-year-old son disappeared after boarding a train home to Colorado from art school in California.

All that arrived in Grand Junction, Colo., were his belongings, including identification, laptop and journal.

"Life is basically hell," said mother Cindy Putnam. "Any mother can relate when your child is missing. Your life is over until you find them."

That's why she and her husband, Doug, have taken to the streets in Salt Lake City, where an Amtrak employee, possibly the conductor, reported Robin Putnam exited the train during a stopover without his belongings, said Salt Lake City Police Detective Dennis McGowan.

The Putnams, who live in Telluride, Colo., have gone neighborhood to neighborhood, posting signs, asking anyone if they've seen Robin.

After hearing reports of sightings, they remain convinced he is alive but not in the right state of mind.

"If we don't find him soon, we have no idea what could happen," Doug Putnam said. "If he was in his right mind, he would never ever do this to us. There is something going on here that is not right and we know that."

The Putnams said their son suffers from severe anxiety disorder and was having a lot of panic attacks a week before he got on the train in Emeryville, Calif., near Oakland.

They said Utah business owners have reported seeing a man fitting his description wandering like a homeless person but not panhandling for food or money. His parents are fearful after the most recent reported sighting at Veterans Memorial Park in West Jordan.

"We're worried because it sounds like he's almost starving. The woman who called me said he looked like a UNICEF poster," Doug Putnam said.

They also fear his case isn't a top priority with police because of his age.

"I don't care how old they are — if they're 25 or 12. You're not going to give up," Cindy Putnam said. "You're going to stay positive and focused until you find them and especially with a child with mental health issues."

Detective McGowan said Thursday that the homicide department investigates missing person cases and has been following up on every tip.

He said his office wasn't notified about Putnam until July 13. McGowan said the information he has is that Putnam boarded July 8 in Emeryville.

He said police have printed fliers at the family's request, given them to patrol officers, who in turn have posted them all over town.

Robin Putnam is described as 6-foot-1, 140 pounds, with blue eyes, blond hair and possibly wearing glasses.

The Putnams are asking anyone who sees their son to ask his name and call them or local police.
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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #7 on: August 30, 2012, 05:13:44 PM »
http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/article-77-16404-mom-seeks-missing-son.html

Mom Seeks Missing Son
25-Year-Old Left Train In SLC For Unknown Reason

By Eric S. Peterson
POSTED // AUGUST 29,2012

Robin Putnam, a 25-year-old college student, had a troubled mind as he traveled home to Rico, Colo., from Oakland, Calif., where he was attending art school. Putnam’s mind was likely heavy with college debt, bad job prospects and his anxiety over being unable to find an animation internship for the summer. He had also told his mother that he had been having panic attacks and so had decided to come home early before the start of the fall semester. On July 8, Putnam’s train was ahead of schedule and stopped over in Salt Lake City for a few hours. At 3 a.m., Putnam stepped off the train, leaving behind his laptop, bags, wallet and I.D., and disappeared.

Putnam’s mother, Cindy, is agonized both by her son’s disappearance and word of her son’s fleeting appearances, with multiple accounts indicating to her that her son is alive and has chosen to make the streets of Salt Lake City his new home.

“He just left everything on the train,” Cindy says. “That happened 6 1/2 weeks ago.” Since that time, Cindy and her husband, Doug, have made frequent trips to Salt Lake City, canvassing homeless shelters, mental-health facilities and area hospitals, and following up on tips from people who say they have seen Robin on the streets. Tipsters have described seeing a man fitting his description—thin, disheveled and politely refusing offers of assistance.

Cindy struggles with not knowing whether her son’s disappearance is the result of mental-health issues or a sudden desire to live on the streets for spiritual or personal reasons. A train employee was said to have heard Robin speak of going on a “spiritual journey.” But Robin’s journal, recovered from the train, made no mention of anything like that, and Cindy says Robin mentioned only being eager to return home to Colorado.

Salt Lake City Police Department spokesman Dennis McGowan says that the investigation is ongoing, and patrol officers are now distributing fliers with Robin’s picture on them.

Cindy is concerned that her son’s talk of panic attacks in the months leading up to his disappearance may have manifested into something more serious. She says her son’s landlord told her that a few weeks before Robin’s departure, he had some kind of episode and woke her up in the middle of the night terrified and confused.

“He was definitely struggling to differentiate between his dream state and his waking state,” Cindy says. “[The landlord] described it as a psychotic break.”

Rob Butters, a University of Utah professor of social work and director of the Utah Criminal Justice Center, says runaway youth can often present a challenge for service providers who try to reach out to them, since many avoid homeless resources that would put them in touch with mental-health experts. 

In Robin’s case, he says, it could very well be a case of a youth wanting to live “off the grid” for the experience.

“There’s that idealism of youth that says, ‘Why in the hell do I need resources? Why do I need a home and a car?’ ” Butters says. “Because people can and do live on the fringe of society, and for some folks, that may be the life for them.”

However, that is not the experience of most of the homeless population, who generally suffer substance-abuse and mental-health issues, Butters says. He also says there’s the possibility that Robin could be suffering from a dissociative fugue.

“That’s defined by going somewhere new and just forgetting who you were,” Butters says. “In that case, the person would need some help to make sure they’re coherent and able to function.”

Robin’s parents share that worry, having heard accounts from tipsters that Robin has been seen mumbling to himself.

While Robin had anxiety in high school, Cindy says it was more of shyness in social situations.

“He wasn’t into the chit-chat, party social situation; he would want to sit down and have a deep conversation with you,” Cindy says. She says Robin is intensely cerebral on subjects ranging from ancient history to philosophy and physics.

When the couple cleaned out his Oakland apartment, they found boxes of books, including a copy of Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha, a novel set in India during the same time as the Buddha lived, about a character who finds enlightenment through giving up his belongings and living the ascetic life of a beggar and wanderer.

It’s a story that rings true with the accounts the couple has heard of Robin living on the streets but avoiding soup kitchens and shelters and, for the most part, refusing offers of help.

She says a man fitting Robin’s description was said to have been hanging around Murray City Park, where she suspects he may have been sleeping. 

On Aug. 8, Cindy and Doug came into town after a couple reported noticing a very thin-looking young man outside of Iggy’s Sports Grill in Sandy. Cindy says the couple identified the man as a match to Robin’s picture and told Cindy that he had refused their offers of help. She says the couple had to lie and tell him that they were leaving on a plane and would have to throw away their leftovers in order for him to accept them.

They say this fits the mold of their son, whose life has always focused not on himself but on others. In his room, they also found a note Robin had written that says, “Forget about myself think of others.”

If that is the case, Cindy can’t understand Robin cutting the family out of his decision. She says that if her son rationally explained to her that he wanted to live on the streets, she would respect his decision and try to give him whatever support he wants, but she needs to know.

So far, the couple says, they’ve spent thousands of dollars in their search and lost countless hours of sleep to worry and long commutes between Colorado and Salt Lake City in the six weeks since Robin’s disappearance.

“We’re not even living, we’re just existing,” Cindy says. “All we do all day long is worry.”
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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #8 on: September 08, 2012, 01:56:14 AM »
http://www.ksl.com/?sid=22052420&nid=148

Surveillance video gives family of missing man hope

By Andrew Wittenberg

September 7th, 2012 @ 10:01pm

SALT LAKE CITY — The family of a man who went missing en route to Colorado from California believe they may have evidence he is still in Salt Lake.
 
New surveillance video taken at Mo's Neighborhood Grill on West Temple in Salt Lake less than a week ago shows a man who matches Robin Putnam's description buying a beer with an unidentified woman.
 
Putnam, 25, was traveling by Amtrak from Oakland Calif. to Grand Junction, Colo. in July. His belongings made it to Colorado, but family members believed he only made it as far as Salt Lake City. They also believe he may be suffering from psychological trauma.
 
"We just found out a few days before he got on the train that he had a psychotic break and so from there, we don't know and that explains to us why he's missing," his father, Doug Putnam said.
 
They have been looking for him for nearly two months, which the family describes as two months of torture.
 
"It's excruciating, I mean, it's hell," said mother Cindy Putnam. "There's no other word to describe it."
 
"I feel like I've been waiting to wake up from a nightmare and it's not happening yet," Doug Putnam said.
 
They have been driving from Colorado to Utah to search for him with no results.

"Every day, all day long, all we do is worry and wonder, what happened, where is Robin? Why is it so hard to find him?" Cindy Putnam said.
 
Anyone with information about Robin Putnam is asked to call Salt Lake City Police.
 
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Offline LoriDavis

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Re: Missing Man: Robin Putnam--CA/CO--07/08/2012
« Reply #9 on: September 08, 2012, 08:41:47 AM »
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865561992/Where-is-my-son-Parents-continue-monthslong-search-for-man-gone-missing.html

Where is my son? Parents continue monthslong search for man gone missing

By McKenzie Romero, Deseret News
Published: Friday, Sept. 7 2012 6:05 p.m. MDT

SALT LAKE CITY — Doug and Cindy Putnam walked into the Salt Lake City Police Department Friday morning, a day after making the long and now familiar drive from their home in Colorado the day before.

Would this meeting bring them closer to finding their only son?

"That could be him," Cindy Putnam said, after scrutinizing security tape footage from a local bar. She said this was another solid lead, another possible sighting.

It has been two months since Cindy Putnam fell into "a nightmare you never wake up from," which began when her son, 25-year-old Robin Putnam, disappeared in Salt Lake City. He was traveling by train from Oakland, Calif. to Grand Junction, Colo.

Cindy Putnam said the talented art student at California College of the Arts was looking forward to spending time with his parents and getting help for the increasingly severe mental health concerns that were taxing him physically and emotionally. She is "baffled" her son instead got off the train during a 3 a.m. stop in Salt Lake City and wasn't heard from again.

Fresh fliers are constantly being put up in the area, while advertisements have been running in Salt Lake City newspapers for about a month. Online, Facebook posts and a YouTube video of Cindy Putnam describing her son and his disappearance are passed around.

The campaign to spread the word is working, as many Utahns the family has never met have called asking how they can help or to simply let them know they are looking, Cindy Putnam said.

"It seems crazy that we haven't found him, because it seems like everyone is looking for him," she said.

Debilitating anxiety and panic attacks prompted the decision to bring Robin home, although Cindy Putnam said she doesn't know how severe his possible mental breakdown was.

Before leaving California, her son was having difficulty distinguishing between reality and the nightmares that haunted him, specifically those that his parents had died. Cindy Putnam said perhaps her son believes he is alone. She hopes someone in Utah will recognize him and tell him his parents love him and are searching for him.

"Tell him … 'your parents are desperately trying to find you,' and maybe that would snap him out of it," she said. "We can't imagine why he hasn't contacted us, except maybe he thinks something has happened to us because of that nightmare."

The Putnams, as well as their friends and relatives, have traveled back and forth to Salt Lake City, sometimes staying weeks at a time to follow up on possible sightings. Cindy Putnam said they often receive a tip a day. Recently callers have said a man believed to be Robin has been riding TRAX between downtown Salt Lake and Sandy, possibly spending time with a young woman.

On their trips to Utah, Doug Putnam drives the streets where his son has supposedly been, while Cindy Putnam looks on foot. They were out looking again Friday, starting their search near Jordan Commons in Sandy.

"We focus on the areas where the most substantial tips have come from," she said. "I just put my running shoes on, put a bunch of fliers in a fanny pack with some water and literally run up and down the streets hanging up fliers, handing them out, and looking for him."

Descriptions the family has received match not only Robin Putnam's physical appearance — over 6 feet tall and skinny with blue eyes and shaggy blond hair — but his personality and mannerisms as well. Cindy Putnam called her son shy, intellectual and sweet, and believes he is homeless, living and sleeping on the streets rather than seeking help at food banks or homeless shelters.

Tipsters have said the man believed to be Robin Putnam is polite and reluctant to accept handouts.

Salt Lake City Police said they are actively investigating more than 20 tips, with an officer who specializes in missing persons working on the case. The disappearance is a priority for the department because of the abnormalities in the case and Robin Putnam's mental health needs.

"We probably never would have generated nearly as many tips without their help," Sgt. Josh Ashdown of the Salt Lake City Police Dept. said of the parents efforts.

The two-month search has exhausted the Putnams financially as well as physically, as they leave their small businesses to search in Utah. Donations from Colorado neighbors have helped them keep looking while they try to keep their businesses afloat. Doug Putnam is a landscape contractor in Telluride, while his wife works in property management.

"We're just middle-class people, we don't have a lot of money," she said. "We have to try to keep our business together enough that when we find him, he has a place to come home to."

Cindy Putnam said the family of three has a close relationship. They enjoy hiking together, and Robin Putnam especially enjoys sharing music and discussing philosophy with his father. She is confident they will be reunited.

"I know we're going to find him," she said. "All of our focus is on finding him, and keeping ourselves together."

The Putnams are asking anyone who sees Robin Putnam to contact police, ask him his name or take a cell phone picture they can use to identify him.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
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