Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
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Offline Kelly

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Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« on: November 26, 2007, 01:12:35 AM »






Missing Person: Diana Lynn Harris
 
Date of Birth: 10-06-1953
Missing Since: July 15, 1981
Missing City: No Name Key, Monroe County
Missing State: Florida
Age at time of disappearance: 27
Gender: Female
Race: White
Height: 5ft 6in
Weight: 125 lbs
Hair Color: Strawberry blonde
Hair (other): short, natural curl
Eye Color: Blue
Complexion: light

Characteristics: sometimes wore glasses, had full dentures on top or bottom and partials on opposite side, manicured nails-usually painted

Clothing: no pinks usually, usually blue jeans, sometimes wore turquoise strapless halter top and cut off shorts, dress shirts and t-shirts

Jewelry: turquoise jewelry, silver

Circumstances: Diana's daughter last saw her on June 7, 1981 at the Miami airport. Her children were leaving to visit their father. She was last known to live at the end of Tortuga Ln. on No Name Key, Florida, although some sources say she lived at Big Pine Key. The 1995 case files state No Name Key. 1981 case files were destroyed by the Sheriff who held office at that time as told by the the Sheriff in Monroe County today and indicated in the 1995 case files. It is unknown who Diana was last seen with. The family believes her disappearance is linked to Missing Person Tom Stump's case since the same people were questioned in both cases and the same person lived with each when Diana and Tom disappeared even though it the disappearances were 14 years apart.

Agency Name: Monroe County Sheriff\'s Office
Agency Phone: 305-289-2410
Case Number: 95-1-04235

Family web site: www.myspace.com/justiceformom81

Print a poster: http://www.projectjason.org/aan/AAN_DianaHarris.pdf 
« Last Edit: July 15, 2012, 10:58:32 AM by Kelly »
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

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #1 on: July 03, 2008, 01:43:40 PM »
Name: Diana Lynn Harris

Place: Big Pine Key, Monroe County, Florida
Date of Birth: October 6, 1953, 27 years old at time of disappearance
Description: White Female
5' 6" Tall
125 lbs.
Short auburn hair
Blue eyes
Distinguishing Marks: Noticeable freckles on her arms and pierced ears
She occasionally wore glasses and wore her nails long and well manicured
It is not known what Diana was last wearing but her favorite clothing items were either blue jeans or cut off shorts with a Turquoise halter-top.

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Diana Lynn Harris, 27 years old, was originally from Owosso, Michigan and lived there until February of 1981 when Diana and her two children moved to Florida. Diana's two children last saw her on June 7, 1981 when they were at the airport to return to Michigan to spend the summer with their father. Both children expected to return to Florida when school started.

At the time of Diana's disappearance, Diana was working two jobs from February 1981 until she went missing, at the "No-Name Pub" in Big Pine Key and another job at the "Sugar Loaf Key Lodge", both in Florida.

In the first week of July, 1981 Diana phoned a friend who lived in Michigan, from a house on Iris Drive in Big Pine Key, Florida. Diana stated to her friend in MI, that she could only speak briefly because she was worried about something illegal and dangerous happening at the "party house". Diana called her mother to discuss her trip to Michigan scheduled for August 15, 1981 to attend her sister's wedding and that was the last time anyone heard from Diana.

In 1981, the house on Iris Drive was a known "party house" and it was reported to law enforcement that Diana lived there for awhile with her boyfriend Gary, before she disappeared.

On August 4, 1981 Diana's mother reported Diana missing. Law enforcement suspects foul play was involved and they are investigating her disappearance as a possible homicide.

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If you have any information about this case, please contact:

Monroe County Sheriff's Office (305)296-2424 or Agent billings of the FBI in Sarasota (941)955-3325.

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Related Web Site:

There is also a possibility that Diana’s case is connected to the disappearance of Tom Stump in 1995. For more information on Tom Stump’s case go to: www.realcrimes.com

Offline Denise

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #2 on: July 03, 2008, 01:45:38 PM »
http://www.realcrimes.com/Harris/Index.htm

Diana Lynn Harris

My mother, Diana Lynn Harris, 27, disappeared from Big Pine Key, Florida, in October 1981.  I was ten years old at the time.  My brother and I were in Michigan, visiting our father.  After our mother’s disappearance, our grandmother raised us.

When I turned 17, I returned to Florida to begin my personal investigation of Mom’s disappearance.  I’ve been at it ever since.  Information I’ve recently uncovered leads me to suspect that my mother may have become a threat to an ongoing, major drug operation and that she might not have been the only person to lose her life for that reason.
 
I recently ran names connected to Mom’s disappearance through a search engine.  When I ran the name “Mark Ripin” – an ex-convict, who was questioned in regard to my mom’s case -- I landed on the Real Crimes web site.  My heart dropped into my shoes when I discovered that Mark Ripin was also questioned as a possible suspect in the “Tom Stump Missing Persons Case,” and that several other individuals linked to my mother’s case are also linked to Tom Stump’s case.

On the web site I learned that Tom Stump disappeared from Sugarloaf Key, Florida, in 1995.  Like my mom, his body was never found.  At the time of his disappearance, Tom was married to Mark Ripin’s ex-wife, Bernie Ripin/Stump.  A few days prior to vanishing, Tom was telling people that he suspected Bernie of having an affair with radio talk show host Bill Becker. As soon as she was legally able to do so, Bernie married Becker.

I recognized some of the names on the web site and on the message board as people my mom knew back in 1981.  Mark Ripin, the ex-con; Mark’s then-wife Bernie; and their attorney friend, Mitchell Denker, were part of a tight knit group of friends who partied together -- and some of whom actually lived together -- during that time period.  My mom was introduced to that group by a new boyfriend, Gary Vincente Argenzio, who, I’ve now found out, was another ex-convict and a close friend of Mark Ripin.  Mark Ripen was then, and still is, a close friend of Bernie’s fourth and current husband, Bill Becker, who was Bernie’s live-in boyfriend in 1980 and again began living with her after Tom Stump vanished in 1995.

In October 1981, Mom phoned a friend in Michigan from a hot tub at attorney Mitchell Denker’s “party house” on Big Pine Key and told her that a big drug drop-off was scheduled and she was afraid the phone might be tapped.  She also mentioned guard dogs. That’s the last anybody ever heard from her.  I’ve since been told by someone in law enforcement that certain police officers attended functions at that party house and that some lost their jobs because of the activities there.   

My grandmother filed missing person’s reports in both Michigan and Monroe County, Florida.  Nobody at the party house reported Mom missing.

One week after Mom vanished, Gary Argenzio stole a boat that belonged to a man named Robert Thompson.  Mitchell Denker told me that Gary also stole two motorcycles from him and possibly a gun.  Mark Ripin has since told me that he and Denker owned a boat together, and Denker once allowed Gary to take this boat out and Gary ran it with no oil and blew the motor.  Is that why Gary took Robert Thompson’s boat instead of Denker’s?

Another vehicle that was missing was a car that belonged to Mom’s friend Donna.   Donna thought it was taken by a man named “Mark” who lived on No Name Key, which is where Mark Ripin and his wife Bernie lived at that time.  However, she also added that she believed that man was Mitchell Denker’s cousin, who worked at Denker’s law office.  It’s possible she may have confused Mark Ripin with Mitchell Denker’s cousin, Michael Gilbert, who died of a drug overdose in the ‘80s.  Which one was it?

After Argenzio ran off to Mexico, Denker allegedly found Donna’s car on a side road.  He has stated that he believes Gary Argenzio took the car, perhaps to transport Mom’s body, and claims to have checked it for forensic evidence and found none.  Denker is an attorney, not a forensic expert.  Why didn’t he turn the car over to the authorities for a professional work-up?

Detective Richard Conrady and Detective Lynn McNeil of the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department were originally the lead detectives in Mom’s case.  In June 1995, when Mom’s case was being re-investigated as a possible homicide, Detective Phil Harrold questioned Mitchell Denker.  Denker told Detective Harrold that Mom was murdered and suggested that she speak with Argenzio’s friend Mark Ripin.  Ripin told him he believed Argenzio killed Mom and dumped her body in the ocean.

In July 1982, Gary Argenzio was arrested in Mexico, but he wasn’t charged with Mom’s murder.  Instead, (under the name “Gary Vincento”), he was charged and found guilty of stealing Robert Thompson’s boat.  Mitchell Denker’s cousin, Michael Gilbert, a member of Denker's law firm, defended Gary Argenzio pro bono.  Argenzio was found guilty and sentenced to five years in prison. 

In May 1990, I contacted Mitchell Denker by phone, and he informed me that he’d sold the party house in 1984.  He said he was going to Turkey on business for two weeks and to call him when he got back.  When I called him again, he acted like he’d never before talked to me.   

In 1992, Gary Argenzio was convicted of another felony.  Five days later, he died in his Broward County home in Dania, Florida, allegedly of pneumonia.   

But I wasn’t going to give up.  Approximately January 1995, I again contacted Mitchell Denker.  This time he told me that he thought Gary Argenzio might have buried my mother in Denker’s back yard.  As a result of Denker’s new statement, I was able to convince the Sheriff’s Department to reactivate my mother’s case.  When questioned in June 1995 by Detective Harrald, Denker said it would have been impossible to bury a body in his yard because of the guard dogs and the coral.  Detective Harrald told me the yard had been cemented over so it could not be searched or dug up.

Mitchell Denker asked Harrold if his original statement from 1981 still existed.  When Det. Harrold assured him it did not, Denker and Mark Ripin informed him that Argenzio had admitted to smashing Mom’s head into the wall of Denker’s house.  Both men stated that they saw the hole in the wall with blood spatters, but Denker described the hole as being in his bedroom and Ripin described it as being by the back door.  Detective Lynn McNeil, who investigated the case in 1981, recalled no such damage.  She also told me that she and Det. Conrady had checked the woods in the yard for any evidence and had found none.  How could the back yard have had woods on it, when Denker said it was solid coral? 

In July 1995 – at approximately the same time my mother’s case was reactivated – Tom Stump disappeared from his home on Sugarloaf Key.  The Monroe County Sheriff’s Department was investigating both the Stump case and Mom’s case simultaneously and was interrogating Mark Ripin in regard to both missing persons cases.  Yet apparently nobody found anything the slightest bit suspicious about the fact that the same man was linked to both cases.

In the summer of 2003, Mitchell Denker was convicted of two felonies --  Transporting Monetary Instruments and perjury.  He was sentenced to five months in prison and disbarred in the state of Florida.  This proof that Denker was as much of a crook as Mark Ripin and Gary Argenzio caused me to start wondering if all three men might have been involved in my mother’s disappearance.  I immediately requested that Detective James Norman of the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department provide me with reports from their 1981 and 1995 investigations.  Det. Norman informed me that the files from 1981 did not exist.  I was not surprised to hear this, because my Grandma had been trying to get those files for years and had been told they didn’t exist.  I was stunned, however, to be told now that former Sheriff William Freeman had deliberately destroyed all case files from the years 1981-1983 and some from 1984.  Det. Norman said he couldn’t say why for sure, but had heard a rumor about a big drug bust called the “Big Pine 29” that occurred on Big Pine Key during that time period.  Mitchell Denker was the defense attorney for one of the suspected drug smugglers. 

I contacted Sheriff Richard Roth to ask him about Mom’s files.  Sheriff Roth told me that, in 1981, he was a detective and remembers this incident.  He said it wasn’t an uncommon thing back then for the Sheriff to get rid of old case files.  However, when Mom’s files were destroyed they were not old at all!  My Grandma was still communicating with detectives about the case.

But I did receive the reports from the 1995 investigation, which is how I got the names to run through the search engine.  When Mark Ripin’s name took me to the Tom Stump case, I posted a question on the message board, asking if anyone had heard of  “Mitchell Denker.” 

Someone responded by quoting a post by Mark Ripin in which he cryptically asked:  "What’s the connection? Manny the shark hunter, Mitchell Denker, the lawyer?" (I’ve since found out that Manilito “Manny” Pluig, a shark hunter who swims with the sharks, was hired by Bernie Ripin/Stump/Becker to aid in the search for Tom.  The answer to Ripin’s question could well be:  “Both men swim with the sharks,” one literally, one figuratively.) 

Someone else posted a quote from Bernie’s deposition in which she admitted to living in Mitchell Denker’s house.  Since Bernie was married to Mark Ripin at that time, that would seem to suggest that they both were on the premises when Mom vanished.  Bernie has since told me she knew my mom and my mom showed her photos of my brother and me.  Yet, Bernie didn't bother to report Mom missing, even though Bernie's own husband said he saw a hole in the wall that was made by Mom's head.

Another thing I find bewildering is that, when requestioned by police in 1995, Mitchell Denker -- a practicing attorney who should know the law -- stated that in his opinion there was more than enough evidence to indict Gary Argenzio for my mom's murder, but the Sheriff’s Department hadn’t seemed interested in pursuing it.  He specifically cited Mom's disappearance and missing body and Argenzio's flight with Robert Thompson’s boat.  Yet, back in 1982, when Argenzio was tried for stealing that boat, Mitchell Denker’s cousin, a member of his own law firm, defended Argenzio for free, and nobody even mentioned my missing mother.  In fact, Mark Ripin testified in Argenzio's behalf.

My mom was a wonderful mother, and I loved her dearly, but she led a difficult life.  After an abusive marriage that ended in divorced, she witnessed her brother shoot himself in the mouth.  She attempted to self-medicate by smoking marijuana, but that did little to erase the gristly vision.  She relocated to Florida in an effort to escape that awful memory, and continued to smoke marijuana.  But she never used hard drugs until she met Gary Argenzio, and I doubt that she had any idea what she was getting into when she started her association with that group of people.

I had my mother for only ten years, but I thank God for every one of them.  I have beautiful memories of my life with her. She worked hard, cooked wonderful food, and was never too busy to play with my brother and me.  She was a very affectionate mother and, no matter how tired she was or how weighed down by worries, she gave us unstinting love and attention. 

My mom was my world.  For 25 years I’ve been trying to find out what happened to her, and I will not stop until I get an answer that makes sense.
 

Christine Hill (Diana Harris’s daughter) 


Offline Denise

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #3 on: July 03, 2008, 01:48:41 PM »
http://kidnappingmurderandmayhem.blogspot.com/2008/06/paradise-defiled.html


Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Paradise Defiled

How does a young child cope when her mother vanishes into thin air? It has long been known that the effects of violent crime spread like a circle of water when a stone is thrown into a pond because those closest to the victim have to live with the memories and consequences. When Diana Lynn Harris [pictured] disappeared in 1981, her daughter Christine was ten-years-old. This is her story.

Key West has a history. From wreckers to rum-runners to drug smugglers to official corruption, life in America’s southern-most city has always seethed with crime and violence. By the early 1980s, slimy drug runners had infested paradise. It was into this culture that Diana Lynn Harris moved.

Diana left Michigan and came south for a new start. She brought along her two children, Chrissy, 10, and Mikey, 8. And she brought a new boyfriend. The group settled into an old hotel that had been converted into efficiency apartments on Big Pine Key. Diana wasn’t afraid of hard work. She quickly landed two jobs, at the No Name Pub and Sugarloaf Lodge. Life for the children was idyllic. They’d escaped the winters of Michigan for palm trees and sun and surf. Chrissy and Mikey loved the beach and hanging out with their mom.

Unfortunately, many of the friends that Diana made were shady at best.

In fact, she landed in a nest of drug smugglers. Diana’s boyfriend didn’t like Florida and moved on. Soon she began dating Gary Argenzio. He conveniently forgot to tell her that he had once been charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment, lewdness, and rape.

After having spent three months in paradise, Chrissy and Mikey were sent back to Michigan. They flew out of Miami on June 7. Diana was scheduled to pick them up on August 15 when they would all attend her sister’s wedding.

She never made it.

One of Argenzio’s friends was Mitchell Denker, an attorney who owned what locals called a “party house.” Argenzio and Diana Lynn Harris moved into that house. Denker was known as a “drug lawyer.” In late 1980, the “Big Pine 29” drug bust occurred. Twenty-nine people were arrested as they attempted to off-load a boat filled with marijuana. Federal officers seized more than fifteen tons of the stuff from a fenced lot near Denker’s house. The lawyer was quick to represent the smugglers.

After an investigation by the Feds, the Key West Police Department was declared a “criminal enterprise” under the RICO statute. Many of the KWPD officers partied at Denker’s house. Several were later fired for their ties with drug smugglers.

Diana’s mother last spoke with her on July 15. After being unable to contact her daughter, her mother reported Diana missing. A week later, Argenzio stole a boat and fled the country. He was later arrested in Mexico and charged with stealing the boat. His attorney was a cousin of Mitchell Denker. Argenzio was found guilty and sentenced to five years in prison.

Chrissy’s life changed after her mother disappeared. She became restless, moving with the winds, and living with relatives and friends in Michigan and Texas. At 16, she was drawn back to south Florida. She ran away to Miami and began searching for her mother. Chrissy, who now goes by Christine, learned that three years after her mother vanished, KWPD had purged the files concerning the investigation of Diana’s disappearance. “There are no documents whatsoever,” Christine said. “All of the 1981 records were destroyed in 1984.”

Since buying a computer, Christine has been able to contact others who research missing persons on the Internet. One such site is the Doe Network. In a recent email, she wrote: “I had stopped eating because I spent all my time searching for info online. I still feel like the information I need is right under my nose. It deeply frustrates me that I can’t find it. I feel Mom’s killer is running free today, living a good life and many in the Florida Keys know about the person, knows who murdered her and how she died and will never tell.”

Over the years, Christine has entertained several theories about what happened to her mother. The most obvious is that Diana was murdered in the “party house” and her body dumped at sea.

At Christine’s urging, the case was reinvestigated in 1995. At that time, police claimed that Diana disappeared from another house, this one also owned by Mitchell Denker. Police interviewed a friend of Denker named Mark Ripin. According to a police report dated August 15, 1995, “Ripin said that he and Mitch Denker arrived at the residence one Sunday evening and found a hole in the wall. They asked Argenzio about the hole and he made some comment about assaulting his girlfriend, Diane Harris. Harris was not at the residence and never showed back up after the incident...It is the opinion of Ripin that Argenzio killed Harris, took the body out on the boat and dumped it in the ocean.” Since Argenzio died after being released from prison, he makes a convenient scapegoat. The original investigators dispute Ripin’s 1995 claims about there being a “hole in the wall” at the residence. They are adamant that there was no such hole.

A friend of Diana’s reported that she got a phone call from Diana the day before she disappeared. Diana confided in her friend that a big shipment of drugs was coming in and she feared the phones might be tapped. Did someone murder her because she had knowledge she shouldn’t have had or because she informed an outsider about the shipment?

Another theory is that Diana was sold into “white slavery” in Turkey or Asia. Although it seems far-fetched, Mark Ripin was known to have made many trips to Asia.

Many of those connected with the party house have been convicted of various crimes. Mitchell Denker was convicted of two felonies, sentenced to prison, and disbarred from practicing law in the state of Florida. Mark Ripin spent time in prison for armed robbery. Many others were convicted of drug offenses.

In August, 1981, shortly after Diana’s disappearance, Gerald Douglas Oxby dispappeared from Key West. He has never been heard from. In 1995, a man named Tom Stump also disappeared from the same area as Diana. He was an associate of many of the players in Diana’s disappearance. No arrest has ever been made in any of those cases.

“I’ll never let go of my mom,” Christine wrote. “I talk about her so I don’t forget the little things about her that I loved so much. She loved the beach and always took us there in Michigan and in Florida. [In Michigan] we used to go to a beach called Sleepy Hollow. In Florida we went every time she wasn’t at work to Bahia Honda Beach. We went to the zoo often, too.”

What happened to Diana Lynn Harris? Someone knows.

Print a poster: http://www.projectjason.org/aan/AAN_DianaHarris.pdf 

« Last Edit: October 22, 2008, 08:55:23 AM by Jenn »

Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #4 on: January 02, 2009, 02:42:13 PM »
AAN Poster Notify Sent to AAN Subscribers   Code 57

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Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
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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 Kelly

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #5 on: July 03, 2009, 02:25:23 PM »
AAN Poster Annual Notify Sent to AAN Subscribers   Code 71

Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member and receive notifications about missing persons via email.

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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 Kelly

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #6 on: December 02, 2009, 10:56:47 AM »
http://www.wzzm13.com/news/story.aspx?storyid=114854&catid=205

"A Daughter's Hope": The Search For A Missing Mother

Stephanie Webb
Updated:10/20/2009


Grand Rapids, Mich. - Grand Rapids-based Brandella Films has announced plans for a benefit concert to be held December 2, 2009, to benefit their production of the feature film, "A Daughter's Hope."

The concert, dubbed "The Always Have Hope Benefit Concert," will be held at Billy's Lounge, located at 1437 Wealthy St. SE, and will feature Muskegon-based Holloway as the headliner. Grand Rapids-based Night Toucher will open the show. Doors open at 8:30pm and the bands hit the stage at 9pm.

"A Daughter's Hope" is the fictional telling of the true life events of Michigan resident Christine Hill as she struggles to overcome an extraordinarily difficult and abusive life, the most painful part of which was the unexplained disappearance of her mother from the Florida Keys in 1981. While the case is still unresolved, this particular story focuses on Hill as she fights with setback after setback, only to become a stronger wife and mother to her own family.

Tickets for the concert will be $10 at the door, and proceeds will go towards the production of the film. A portion of the film's ultimate profits will go to charities that deal with domestic violence and missing loved ones.

Brandella Films, LLC, based in Grand Rapids, produced their first project in 2008; a short film entitled Respect for the Dead, which was an official selection to the 2009 Muskegon Film Festival. They hope to begin shooting on A Daughter's Hope sometime in 2010 in Michigan. Donations to the production of the film can also be made in lieu of the benefit concert at:

http://www.brandellafilms.com/daughtersHope.html

You can find more information about the case of Diana Harris online at:

http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=70566698&blogId=490508653#

http://www.unsolved-crimes.com/harris.html
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 Jenn

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #7 on: March 18, 2010, 11:05:51 AM »
Jennifer, Project Jason Forum Moderator
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Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearch.com/?charityid=857029

Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member
http://www.projectjason.org/awareness.shtml

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 Kelly

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Re: Missing Woman: Diana Harris--FL--7/1981
« Reply #8 on: September 05, 2010, 04:16:03 PM »
Along with the Featured Missing Adult and Featured Missing Child section on our main site front page, we added a section called "Always Remembered". Just as with the other featured persons, those in "Always Remembered" will remain on the main page for one month. Diana Harris is the September 2010 Always Remembered featured missing person.

The section was created to renew awareness for the long-term missing, and we encourage our readers to take another look at the case, and place posters where appropriate. It also reflects the Project Jason motto: "All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance."

Please see http://www.projectjason.org/ to view the Always Remembered case.
« Last Edit: November 14, 2010, 08:29:25 PM by Kelly »
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.