Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
May 20, 2013, 04:58:57 PM

   

Author Topic: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007  (Read 23887 times)

Linda

  • Guest
Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« on: October 27, 2007, 10:06:12 PM »
Print a poster: http://www.projectjason.org/aan/AAN_LeeCutler.pdf

http://www.abcnews.go.com/US/Story?id=3765472&page=1



Teen's Car, Pack Found in Wisconsin Cornfield

Clues in Weekend Disappearance of Lee Cutler, 18, Discovered 175 Miles From Home


Oct. 23, 2007


Yesterday, it was his car. Today, it was a backpack and blankets.

Authorities hope that the two discoveries in less than two days will help lead to 18-year-old Lee Cutler, an Illinois high school senior last seen leaving a friend's house Saturday morning.

Cutler, who attended a party Friday night, never showed up at work Saturday, and neither friends nor family have heard from him since.

Sheriff's deputies in Sauk County, Wis., found Cutler's 2007 Toyota Corolla off the road near a cornfield. The car was locked and unoccupied, according to police in Buffalo Grove, Ill., Cutler's hometown some 170 miles away.

An initial foot search of the area turned up no signs of the teen, and deputies failed to locate tracks leading away from the car. The foot search, as well as an aerial search, broadened today, while deputies combed the banks of the Baraboo River.

"There were a couple of blankets found and a backpack that were clearly identified as Lee's," Dan de Grazia, a longtime friend of Cutler's family who has served as its spokesman during the search, told ABC News.

De Grazia described Cutler as a good student at Adlai E. Stevenson high school, with a reputation for making others laugh. He also said that Cutler, while facing some personal stresses -- such as a sick grandmother -- is not a teen with a history of erratic behavior, running away or abusing drugs and alcohol.

De Grazia also called the possibility the teen committed suicide "farfetched," explaining that dozens of Cutler's friends have been spoken to and no one has given any indication that the teen had suicidal intentions.

Cutler's parents, Beth and Barry Frazin, are at the scene of the search along the Baraboo River banks, a rugged landscape flanking fast-moving water. For now, authorities have waved off civilian help, but a search team has already come forward on a Facebook Web page -- called "Let's Find Lee!"-- created since Cutler's disappearance. Already, almost 900 people have joined the group.

"They're figuring out what they can do to help, they're staying out of the way and they're communicating with each other," said De Grazia, who praised the online efforts of Cutler's friends.

While the focus of the search is the Baraboo River, De Grazia said there's also a possibility that Cutler hitched a ride in an effort to see a friend who lives far away.

Whatever the case, Cutler's mother just wants her son to return home.

"Grandma says, 'PLEASE, PLEASE COME HOME,'" Beth Frazin wrote on the Web site dedicated to her son's search. "No questions asked, I just want to know that you are safe."


Print a poster: http://www.projectjason.org/aan/AAN_LeeCutler.pdf
« Last Edit: October 01, 2012, 07:36:06 PM by Kelly »

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #1 on: October 27, 2007, 10:08:45 PM »

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,304316,00.html

Wisconsin Search Teams Find Blankets, Backpack Belonging to Missing Illinois Teen

October 23, 2007

BARABOO, Wis.   The parents of a missing Illinois teen hope for more clues in the disappearance of their son after Wisconsin authorities found his blankets and a backpack near the area where his car was found.

The Sauk County Sheriff's Office will search the area along the Baraboo River Tuesday.

Lee Cutler, 18, of Buffalo Grove, Ill., went to a birthday party Friday night and stayed over at a friend's house. Cutler's 2007 Toyota Corolla was found parked at a rest stop after he was reported missing two days earlier.

Beth and Barry Frazin, Cutler's parents, traveled to Sauk County, Wis., from their suburban Chicago home as soon as they learned the car was found.

Cutler's cell phone indicated the last time it was used was at 12:30 am. Saturday.

Barry Frazin said authorities planned to conduct a dive search in the Baraboo River Tuesday as a precautionary measure.

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #2 on: October 27, 2007, 10:13:02 PM »
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/northwest/chi-missing_26_bothoct26,1,5910146.story


Friends start Web page as search continues for Buffalo Grove teen

 October 26, 2007

A Buffalo Grove teenager missing since the weekend has a zest for life, said a family friend whose suburban home has been turned into a sort of command center for classmates monitoring the search.

Authorities in southern Wisconsin continued Thursday to scour an area near the Baraboo River, where a 2007 Toyota Corolla, a backpack and clothing belonging to Lee Cutler have been found.

Family friend Dan de Grazia said searchers also found Cutler's favorite yarmulke.

"It's not something you would lose and not go after," said de Grazia, whose home in Long Grove has been hosting nightly gatherings of friends and peers who started a page on Facebook.com called "Let's Find Lee."

"These young men and women are tracking information, squashing rumors, getting information to police," he said.

Cutler, 18, is "an eclectic guy" who had not yet decided what he would do after graduating from Stevenson High School, he said. Going to college overseas or moving to Israel, where he has relatives, were among the options, de Grazia said.

"He has a zest for life, a zest for making things interesting."

He said Cutler earned A's and B's in his classes and had founded a Buffalo Grove chapter of Jewish B'Nai B'rith Youth Organization, or BBYO. He has a stepsister and an older brother, de Grazia said.

Cutler was reported missing after he failed to show up for work Saturday at his part-time job in Hawthorn Center Mall in Vernon Hills.

He was last seen about 9:50 a.m. Saturday when he drove home a neighborhood friend, Buffalo Grove Police Cmdr. Steve Husak said.

The friend told police Cutler recently broke up with his girlfriend and described him as being quiet during the ride to his house. He also said Cutler was quiet the night before, when both of them stayed at another friend's house where there was a small gathering, Husak said.

On Saturday, Cutler is believed to have driven to a state park near Milwaukee and then into Wisconsin to the Baraboo area, where his car was found about 3:45 a.m. Monday at a rest stop in Sauk County, friends and family members said.

Authorities found the backpack and a blanket near the banks of the Baraboo River 75 to 100 yards from the car.

De Grazia, who has received regular updates from authorities, said Cutler's clothing was found inside the car. Inside the backpack were notebooks and notes from his ex-girlfriend. Also found was a note Cutler wrote to his mother that may have been done for his creative writing class, de Grazia said.

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #3 on: October 27, 2007, 10:19:47 PM »
http://www.pioneerlocal.com/buffalogrove/news/618814,bg-wedmissing-102407-s1.article

Letters, clothing found in search for teen



October 24, 2007

Sauk County, Wis., sheriff's officials said Wednesday afternoon that clothing, an empty Advil PM bottle and letters written to and from Lee S. Cutler's loved ones were found near the Baraboo River.

Wednesday's search was aided by a helicopter team and a canine unit from Dane County, Wis. The search for Cutler, a Buffalo Grove resident and Stevenson High School senior, is ongoing in the Baraboo River in case Cutler jumped or fell into the river, the Sauk County Sheriff's Department said in a release issued late Wednesday afternoon.

Blankets and a backpack belonging to the missing teenager were found Tuesday.

"He never seemed upset," said Danny Servi, Cutler's co-worker for nearly two months. "He was kind, very funny and definitely a hard worker."

Servi said the last time they worked together, at Rock America in Vernon Hills, was Oct. 12, and Cutler talked about his recent visit to the University of Illinois.

Friends and classmates of Cutler, 18, have created a group on Facebook.com called "lets find lee!!" to spread information and put together a search team.

As of 5 p.m. Wednesday, there were 1,580 members of the group.

However, the sheriff's department said investigators are not requesting additional help in the search at this time.

The sheriff's department located Cutler's possessions during two days searching by air, ground and water following the discovery of Cutler's vehicle, a gray 2007 Toyota Corolla, at 3:45 a.m. Monday off a road near a cornfield in Fairfield Township, according to Sauk County Sheriff Randy M. Stammen and Buffalo Grove police. The vehicle was unoccupied and locked.

Cutler was reported missing Saturday to the Buffalo Grove Police Department, Buffalo Grove police said.

Cutler was last seen dropping someone off at a friend's home in Buffalo Grove at 9:50 a.m. Saturday, Buffalo Grove police Cmdr. Steve Husak said.

Husak said that Cutler failed to show up for work where he was scheduled to begin at noon Saturday.

According to Buffalo Grove police, Cutler has not been seen or heard from by his friends or family, who said that his being out of contact is out of character for him.

Police stated that Cutler's family members do not know of any family or friends in the Sauk County area, about a three-hour drive from Buffalo Grove. Family members and friends have been interviewed, and police have distributed bulletins to law enforcement agencies in the Chicago area and in Wisconsin.

The Buffalo Grove Police Department is asking the public's help in locating Cutler. Anyone with information on his whereabouts is asked to contact police at (847) 459-2560.

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2007, 07:05:45 AM »
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-missing_28_bothoct28,1,3151758.story


Missing Buffalo Grove teen's slacks found in Baraboo River

 October 28, 2007

Sauk County sheriff's police in Wisconsin confirmed Saturday that searchers have found a missing Buffalo Grove teenager's slacks, containing a wallet and keys, clinging to a partially submerged tree branch in the Baraboo River.

Lee S. Cutler, 18, a senior at Stevenson High School, was reported missing the night of Oct. 20 after he failed to show up around noon at a part-time job in the Hawthorn Center mall in Vernon Hills.

About 2:40 p.m. Friday, divers searching for Cutler found the items about 300 yards downstream from where his backpack and blankets were found Monday, police said.

The pair of tan slacks contained a wallet that had Cutler's identification and a small amount of cash. The keys fit the ignition of his Toyota Corolla found parked and locked at a rest stop next to the river, off Wisconsin Highway 33.

Before driving to Baraboo, a time-stamped receipt found in his car showed, he first stopped at Kettle Moraine State Forest in Campbellsport, Wis., near Milwaukee, a family spokesman said. Police have said there appears to be no foul play in Cutler's disappearance.

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #5 on: October 29, 2007, 09:13:26 PM »
http://www.wiscnews.com/bnr/news/253746

18-year-old missing a week

Today marks one week since the car of Lee S. Cutler, Buffalo Grove, Ill., was found at a wayside east of Baraboo. No one has seen the 18-year-old since Oct. 20.

Authorities plan to keep searching the Baraboo River today, but no new evidence or leads were found over the weekend, Sauk County Sheriff Randy Stammen said in a news release.

After searching the river for the fifth straight day Saturday, the Sauk County Sheriff's Department Dive and Rescue Team took Sunday off.

The team located Cutler's pants, wallet and keys Friday.

Cutler's father, Daniel Cutler, was waiting at the wayside Saturday afternoon as the dive team searched a portion of the west bank of the Baraboo River about 50 yards north of the Highway 33 bridge.

Cutler and Barry Frazin, Lee Cutler's stepfather, came back to Baraboo Friday to get the teen's car and see how the search was going.

Daniel Cutler said he was grateful for the efforts of search teams, including divers, some who continued to work through sickness.

He said he planned to go back to Illinois Sunday.

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #6 on: October 30, 2007, 12:16:21 PM »
http://www.madison.com/tct/news/police/253841

Illinois teen still missing

10/30/2007

No new evidence or leads were found Saturday in the search for a missing Illinois teen whose car was found in Baraboo last week, according to the Sauk County Sheriff's Office.

According to a release by the Sheriff's Office, an additional 300 yards of the Baraboo River will be searched today for Lee Cutler, 18, of Buffalo Grove, Ill.

Some of Cutler's belongings, including a pair of pants with his ID and keys, were found last week in the area.

Linda

  • Guest
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #7 on: October 31, 2007, 03:49:08 PM »
http://www.wandtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=7291161

Efforts to find missing Illinois teen continue

October 31, 2007

BARABOO, Wis. (AP) - Sheriff's department officials in Sauk County, Wisconsin, will continue to patrol the Baraboo River for clues in the disappearance of a suburban Chicago man.

Sheriff Randy Stammen says department officials met yesterday with investigators from Illinois to discuss the disappearance of 18-year-old Lee Cutler of Buffalo Grove (Illinois).

Cutler was last seen October 20th, and his car was found two days later at a wayside on Highway 33 near the bridge that crosses the Baraboo River.

Some of his personal items were later found near the river.

Offline Kelly

  • Project Jason President and Founder
  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6956
    • View Profile
    • http://www.projectjason.org
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #8 on: November 02, 2007, 11:39:24 AM »
http://www.wbbm780.com/Police-Ending-Search-For-Missing-Buffalo-Grove-Tee/1167403

Posted: Friday, 02 November 2007 10:44AM

Police Ending Search For Missing Buffalo Grove Teen
 
BARABOO, WIS. (STNG)  -- The Sauk County (Wis.) Sheriff's Department has concluded the majority of the search effort for Buffalo Grove teen after more than week scouring the Baraboo River and surrounding area, a family spokesman said Wednesday.

Investigators found Lee S. Cutler's gray 2007 Toyota Corolla, a backpack, clothing and other personal belongings in Fairfield Township, Wis., but have not located Cutler, a Stevenson High School senior.

Dan De Grazia said Buffalo Grove police will take the lead in the investigation because Wisconsin officials are confident Cutler is not in the area along the river.

The search effort employed foot patrols, ATVs, planes and helicopters equipped with infrared scanners, sonar and cameras in addition to dive teams in the river.

"The family is having a hard time adjusting to the news," De Grazia said.

Cutler was last seen dropping off a friend at 9:50 a.m. Oct. 20 after attending a party the previous night. He failed to show up to his part-time job at Rock America in Vernon Hills, where he was scheduled to work at noon.

He also failed to show up for work at a Vernon Hills clothing store and his locked car was found at a rest stop near Baraboo on Sunday morning, Oct. 21. A search of the nearby rugged countryside uncovered the backpack and blankets, and Sauk County Sheriffs police also announced the discovery of an empty Advil bottle and letters on Oct. 24. 
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Denise

  • Project Jason Volunteer Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5185
    • View Profile
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #9 on: November 04, 2007, 04:44:13 PM »
Buffalo Grove Police take lead in search for missing teen

November 2, 2007 - Buffalo Grove Police are now taking the lead in the search for a missing teenager from the northern suburb.

Wisconsin police have ended their search near the town of Baraboo because they are confident Lee Cutler is not there.

The 18-year-old Stevenson High School student was last seen October 20. Investigators found his car, clothing and other belongings near the Baraboo river in Sauk County. Wisconsin. But the Sauk County Sheriff's Department is certain he is not there after spending more than a week scouring the river and surrounding area.

http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=l...&id=5740048

Offline Denise

  • Project Jason Volunteer Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5185
    • View Profile
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #10 on: November 04, 2007, 04:46:19 PM »
http://www.journal-topics.com/topics/07/top071101.1.html

Search Called Off
Police Find Missing BG Teen's Belongings, But That's It


By RICHARD MAYER

Journal Reporter

The Sauk County Sheriff's Dept. has called off its search for 18-year-old Lee S. Cutler of Buffalo Grove, but Buffalo Grove Police Cmdr. Steve Husak said the Sheriff's Dept. will continue patrolling the area.

"The authorities up there are confident they have done everything that could have done," said Husak.

This past week, police found Cutler's backpack, pants, keys, wallet, and a belt, but not his body.

"Investigators and police searched the Baraboo River stretching a mile for the missing teen," said Husak.

He was last seen at a friend's house in Buffalo Grove on the morning of Saturday, Oct. 20, police said.

According to police, Lee failed to show up for work in Vernon Hills later that day. Lee has not been seen or heard from by his family or friends, who state that his being out of contact is out of character for him, police said.

On Monday, Oct. 22, the Sauk County Sheriff's Dept. in Wisconsin advised Buffalo Grove Police they had located Lee's vehicle, a gray 2007 Toyota Corolla, off the road near a corn field along Highway 33 near Baraboo.

According to Husak, Lee's vehicle was unoccupied and locked. Deputies did not locate Lee in the area and did not observe any tracks in the corn field. His family did not know of any family or friends in the Sauk County area.

Police have interviewed family members and friends, distributed bulletins to area law enforcement agencies locally and in Wisconsin, and checked locations where Lee has been known to frequent in the past.

Husak said Cutler possessed a cell phone but there has been no contact with that phone since his last usage, which was before he was considered missing.

The Buffalo Grove police Dept. is asking the public's help in locating Cutler. Anyone with information as to his whereabouts is asked to contact the Buffalo Grove Police.

Offline Denise

  • Project Jason Volunteer Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5185
    • View Profile
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #11 on: November 27, 2007, 09:27:36 AM »
http://www.wiscnews.com/pdr/news/258928

Family clings to hope for missing Illinois teen

By Tim Damos

An investigator is looking at new leads in the disappearance of an Illinois teen whose possessions were found in and around the Baraboo River last month. Friends and family of the high school senior cling to hope that he is still alive, and some are speculating he may have faked his own death.

"It doesn't appear that he's in the river," said Penni Clobridge, director of investigations with ETS Investigative Services in Wilmette, Ill.

Though she is still waiting for details from police documents, Clobridge said local authorities told her they received tips from two people who think they saw 18-year-old Lee Cutler while driving by the Highway 33 wayside east of Baraboo on the weekend of his disappearance.

Clobridge said one person reported seeing a light brown Pontiac Bonneville parked at the wayside with Cutler's gray Toyota Corolla. That person said Cutler might have been speaking on a cell phone, Clobridge said.

But Cutler's family says his cell phone was last used the night before he disappeared. If Cutler borrowed someone else's phone at the wayside, the number he dialed could provide a valuable lead, Clobridge said.

Cutler was seen in his hometown of Buffalo Grove, Ill., after dropping a friend off the morning of Oct. 20. He had been at a birthday party the previous night.

Sauk County authorities found his car in the early morning hours of Oct. 23, and later found his personal possessions in and around the Baraboo River near the wayside. They also found letters to and from loved ones and an empty bottle of Advil PM. A dive team search of the river turned up his pants, wallet and keys but was unsuccessful in locating Cutler.

"I'm contacting people that know him and getting to know Lee through other peoples' eyes," said Clobridge, who is friends with Cutler's mother and working on the case for free.

She said Cutler's three favorite books, "The Catcher in the Rye," "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," and "Into the Wild," all involve characters who leave their everyday life and seek isolation.

"(Cutler) is kind of hippie-ish," Clobridge said. "He's his own thinker and he's very introspective."

She said authorities conducted a basic search of Cutler's personal computer. But she plans on doing a thorough forensic search of his hard drive.

Clobridge said it's too soon to say what happened to Cutler, but there are many questions left unanswered.

Friends and family will hold a candlelight ceremony in his honor Sunday in Buffalo Grove.

Diane Smolensky, who has a daughter who attends Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Lincolnshire, where Cutler went to school, is helping organize the event.

"If, God forbid, it were my child, I would hope people would show me the same support," she said.

Smolensky said Cutler's mother, Beth Frazin, believes her son is alive. A statement from Frazin on a Web site set up to help find Cutler says, "Thank you everyone for your thoughts and prayers concerning Lee. I truly believe that Lee is alive."

Smolensky raised the possibility that Cutler wanted people to think he was in the river.

"It looks like he was setting all this up," she said.

But Daniel De Grazia, a longtime family friend, said he's not ready to go that far, though he doesn't want to dispute anyone else's position.

He said the notes found by authorities did not specifically mention suicide. And if Cutler was trying to make people think he killed himself, he would have spelled it out in plain language.

Offline Kelly

  • Project Jason President and Founder
  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6956
    • View Profile
    • http://www.projectjason.org
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #12 on: December 06, 2007, 12:44:00 PM »
http://www.wiscnews.com/pdr/news/260609

Mother of missing teen sets up reward

BARABOO  The mother of a missing Illinois teen whose car was found in Sauk County in October has set up a reward fund for anyone offering information that leads to her son.

Beth Frazin, mother of 18-year-old Lee S. Cutler of Buffalo Grove, Ill., has set up the "Find Lee" fund at Buffalo Grove Harris Bank, she said.

A recent candlelight vigil organized by family and friends of Cutler in Buffalo Grove raised more than $300 for the fund, Frazin said.

Though she said she is unsure of the exact amount in the fund, Frazin said donations are welcome.

"We all believe that he's out there still," she said.

The money would go to anyone offering information leading to the whereabouts of Cutler, who was last seen the morning of Oct. 20 after dropping his friend off in his hometown after a birthday party the night before.

His car was found along Highway 33 east of Baraboo two days later. A search by the Sauk County Sheriff's Department turned up personal possessions, letters, an empty pill bottle and clothes in and around the nearby Baraboo River.

An investigator hired by Frazin to look into Cutler's disappearance said she has been getting information from interviews with Cutler's friends. But Penni Clobridge, director of investigations with ETS Investigative Services in Wilmette, Ill., said she couldn't provide that information for publication.

Frazin said she may work with a group of supporters to establish a group that would work to prevent teens from running away, or provide shelter for teen runaways.

To donate to the fund, contact Harris Bank, 500 Half Day Road, Buffalo Grove, IL 60089 or call Valbona Ceci at (847) 876-8408.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Denise

  • Project Jason Volunteer Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5185
    • View Profile
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #13 on: December 25, 2007, 08:07:38 PM »
http://www.dailyherald.com/story/?id=92750

Mom: The holidays are not the same without Lee

By Burt Constable | Daily Herald Columnist
Contact writerPublished: 12/11/2007 12:18 AMSend To:

The little silver engine pulls two miniature railroad cars, the golden candle holders on the roofs serving as smokestacks.

"The train is Lee's menorah," says mother Beth Frazin, crying as she grieves the disappearance of her 18-year-old son, and smiling an instant later as she speaks of the miracle of Hanukkah, which climaxes with the lighting of all eight candles at tonight, and the hope for his miraculous return.

"He used to be," she pauses, "it just seems that the holidays are not the same without Lee."

Frazin's voice breaks. She speaks hesitantly, rocking slightly on the couch, her knees tucked up near her chest.

"My birthday was Thanksgiving. I cry every day. It's like a piece of your heart is ripped out and you don't know where it is or how to get it back. It's heartbreaking for all of us. The holidays weren't -- well, some days we didn't light candles because we were so down."

Her son, Lee S. Cutler, a bright, popular senior at Stevenson High School was reported missing Oct. 20 after he failed to show up for his part-time job at a mall. A police officer discovered his car two days later near a river outside Baraboo, Wis. His backpack, containing personal letters, and his favorite yarmulke were found on the bank. Divers found his pants, with his wallet and car keys, in the river, but an exhaustive search of the water and nearby fields and forests turned up no sign of the missing teen.

"He was really thin," his mom says. "I hope that he's eating and he's warm."

One of the leaders of a Jewish youth group and active in many Jewish activities, Cutler got a laptop computer at the climax of last year's Hanukkah "because he was a real good student," his mom recalls. His mysterious disappearance has fueled a network of concerned friends and loved ones who have met, conducted a candlelight service and communicate daily through phones, text messages and a group site on www.facebook.com.

As divers searched the murky waters for a body, thoughts about suicide and death were understandable.

"But I've never given up hope that he's alive," Frazin says. "The sheriff said if his body was in the river, they'd find it -- and they didn't."

The family has hired a private investigator and wants people to send tips by e-mail to finding_lee@comcast.net. While it may seem as if officials have investigated every bit of evidence, "people don't realize how much information they might have," says Penni Clobridge of ETS Investigative Services. A Find Lee Fund -- at Harris Bank, 500 Half Day Road, Buffalo Grove, IL 60089, Attn: Valbona Ceci (847) 876-8408 --offers a reward for information about Cutler.

Frazin said she understands if Lee isn't ready to come home yet.

"I just want to know he's OK," she says.

While she refuses to think her son might be dead, the burden of not knowing never leaves. Her wilted birthday roses, given by her 21-year-old son on Thanksgiving, rot in a vase. She stays at her mother's place in Glenview.

"There are days I don't get out of bed," she says. "I went to the beauty parlor and the lady asked how many kids I have, and I started crying."

When she was recuperating after a recent shoulder surgery, Frazin dreamed of her son.

"I felt like someone was touching my big toe, and I heard him say, 'Hi, Mom,' and I woke up," she says, "and he wasn't there."

She recalls Lee saying "I don't want to grow up" and yet talking about joining the Israeli army after graduation.. She remembers him holding the hand of a friend's little boy, and skipping. She remembers how he had the pressures of school, family and simply being a teen. She says sleeping problems drove him to see a therapist, and how he was thinking about being a social worker because he was so good at helping his friends with their problems. She says no one drove him away.

"Nobody did anything. They were there for him. He just didn't know how to open up," she says.

In the writings found in his backpack, Cutler wrote "something like 'I'm too quiet for this world,' " and "Mom, be happy. I love you," Frazin says.

"He was kind of like a clown," she says, smiling at the way he used to make his friends and family laugh. "Maybe he was happy on the outside and sad on the inside."

Her husband, older son and younger step-daughter, even the cat (which still sleeps in Cutler's bed) and dog are hurting, as well.

"We don't really talk about Lee, and I want to. We're numb," the mom says. "I feel like we're robots going through life and not feeling. The way our family deals with it is we haven't given up hope."

She works with www.teamhope.org, a support network for families with missing children, to help others avoid this nightmare. Friends of Frazin and of her son call and send text messages to her phone a half-dozen times in two hours.

"I text-message him pretty much every day," the mom says, thumbing back to her most recent message: "I miss you so much, Lee. Please be with me. I love you."

"I know he doesn't get them," she adds, "but it's what I do."

She didn't hang Hanukkah decorations or make latkes. She doesn't feel like celebrating, but her family will light the candles for this holiday.

"Mom, remember that Hanukkah is supposed to be about miracles," her older son told her. "We have to believe."

Frazin rocks again on her couch, her chin held high.

"When he comes back," she says, "it will be the greatest gift."


Offline Denise

  • Project Jason Volunteer Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5185
    • View Profile
RE: Missing Man: Lee Cutler--IL--10/20/2007
« Reply #14 on: January 04, 2008, 09:59:51 PM »
Book on living in the wild found in missing teen's car
By Nadia Malik | Daily Herald Staff
Published: 1/4/2008 12:25 AM

Police on Thursday said Lee Cutler, the missing 18-year-old from Buffalo Grove, had a copy of "Into the Wild" in his car when it was found abandoned in October.

The book chronicles the story of Christopher McCandless, a 24-year-old who was found dead in the wilderness of Alaska in 1992.

McCandless had shed most of his personal belongings and his previous life -- cutting off ties with his family -- in an endeavor to survive on his own in the wild.

Author Jon Krakauer posits that McCandless died either of starvation or from moldy seeds he had been eating. A movie based on the book was recently released.

Buffalo Grove police Cmdr. Steve Husak said investigators found the book in Cutler's abandoned Toyota Corolla in Sauk County, Wis.

"That was part of the investigation throughout," he said. "Some friends had said he had read the book."

That book was a reason the Sauk County sheriff's police thoroughly checked the nearby Baraboo River and surrounding area. They recovered his pants, wallet and car keys in the water. Police had also found a backpack with personal letters and a yarmulke near the river.

Husak said Cutler didn't seem to prepare himself in any way to survive in the wild, however, and the book was just one of the leads police followed.

Husak said he recently talked to investigators in Sauk County, who said no new information has come forward in the Cutler case.

Sauk County sheriff's police "are confident that he's not in the river, so he might be out on his own," he said.

The family clings to the hope that Cutler is still alive.