Project Jason in the News
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Offline Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #180 on: July 28, 2010, 12:39:58 AM »
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

When People Go Missing, Devastated Families are Left Behind
But upcoming weekend in Omaha will bring them a long way toward healing


What: Weekend of learning for families of missing persons who must live in the “not knowing” of where their loved ones are.

Why: This is the only such event in the entire United States (open to families with missing of any age), and it takes place in the Omaha area.

When: August 13-15, 2010

Where: Swanson Retreat Center, .Ashland, Nebraska

Media opportunities:

•   Interviews with relatives of missing persons and photos of their missing family members 4-6 pm August 14.

•   Interviews with Project Jason founder and event host Kelly Jolkowski (mother of missing Jason Jolkowski of Omaha).

•   August 16, 6:30 am – special event (entrance to retreat center).

•   Other times available upon request.


Omaha, Nebraska – (July 27, 2010) – When a child or adult goes missing, we may see media coverage in the day or so following, but when the searches stop and the TV cameras have departed, there is a family left in the wake of the disappearance.

Families of missing persons suddenly find themselves living in a new normal that can last for days, weeks, months, sometimes (and too often) years. They live it in fear, or determination, in heartbreak, numbness, or longing, and often, all of the above. They learn way more about laws as they pertain to missing persons than they ever cared to know. What they often do not do is learn to take care of themselves.

An upcoming weekend gathering, The Project Jason 2010 Keys to Healing Retreat, will offer a number of classes to teach families of the missing ways to take care of themselves emotionally and physically. They will come to understand how feelings of guilt, fear, and anger are normal, and how trauma impacts the body and brain, and how to counteract it.

“Until now, there were no opportunities for family members of both missing children and adults to focus on the emotional and physical trauma that understandably accompanies such an ordeal,” says Kelly Jolkowski, president and founder of Project Jason and host of the event. After Jolkowski’s son, Jason, disappeared in 2001 at age 19, she started the organization to assist other families of the missing, and has since served hundreds with case assessment and tactical and emotional support. She knew such a retreat would be life changing for many of the attendees.
“We want the families who attend Keys to Healing to walk away with better coping skills, self-understanding and renewed hope,” she says.

One trainer is Duane Bowers http://www.duanetbowers.com the foremost expert on the psychology of having an adult or child go missing.

“He understands the missing component,” said one of last year’s attendees, a woman whose husband was missing. “You can’t find that anywhere, I’ve researched, and you can’t find a counselor that knows what the families of the missing go through.

Other sessions focus on tactical and emotional resources available year-round, personal care tips, and eating healthy and exercising to sustain high, positive energy.

A significant aspect of the retreat is the opportunity to spend three days with others who, like them, have someone missing. In many cases, this is the first time they’ve been able to speak face-to-face with others who truly understand what they are going through.

Having someone missing can be a socially awkward situation. Some friends and family say nothing, and some even avoid those with missing loved ones. Some say the wrong thing, and some eventually can’t handle seeing someone in what they assume is a stuck position in their life following the disappearance. http://projectjason.org/forums/index.php?topic=8971.0. Those with missing loved ones do not open up to people they’ve just met because they fear what their reactions may be. So, having a missing loved one is sometimes a silent anguish.

At the retreat, however, attendees openly share their stories with each other in a safe environment.

“In the five years since my daughter went missing, this is the first time I’ve had anyone to talk to,” says a woman with a missing adult daughter and one of last year’s attendees.

At the end of the 2009 Keys to Healing Retreat, nearly all attendees walked away with notable progress toward healing, some remarking that it’s good to laugh again, some relieved of pent-up tension, and all feeling a strong bond with each other. As Jolkowski says, “It is possible to live a life full of joy while continuing our searches.”
“Life is short and it’s full of sadness, so every little bit of happiness you can gain from life you should take it,” says another attendee from last year who has a missing young adult son, “because you know, they don’t want us living a life of sadness.”

The 2010 Keys to Healing Retreat will be The Swanson Retreat Center in nearby Ashland, Nebraska. Project Jason subsidizes a portion of the cost of the weekend, so it is offered at a discount, and anyone with an open police case for their missing loved one is eligible to attend.

More information, and directions, available upon request.
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 Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #181 on: August 10, 2010, 12:23:42 PM »
Project Jason Press Release

Contact:

Denise Harrison
denise.harrison@projectjason.org


America’s Most Wanted ‘My Story’ Submissions Added as New Benefit
at Project Jason 2010 Keys to Healing Retreat[b/]

Omaha, NE – August 10, 2010 – A new benefit -- AMW “My Story” submissions -- was just announced for attendees of the Project Jason 2010 Keys to Healing Retreat.  Professional filming by documentary filmmaker, Christina Fontana, will feature families of the missing discussing their cases, which will be submitted for consideration for the America's Most Wanted "My Story" segments.

“America’s Most Wanted has an enormous reach,” said Project Jason President and Founder, Kelly Jolkowski, in making the announcement. “The ‘My Story’ segment, which gives families a chance to get their stories  in front of millions, is a blessing to all of us searching for our loved ones. It’s our honor to be able to offer this service to attendees at this year’s retreat.”

Although not all submissions are selected by AMW for airing, all will be recorded according to specifications required by the America’s Most Wanted technical department, and all will be submitted for consideration.

Filming will be done free of charge, thanks to the generosity of Christina Fontana, a professional filmmaker who has a number of television, movie, and documentary credits, and who is currently filming “Project Jason: A Voice for the Missing.” The film is expected to be released next year, and is in process of fund procurement for completion and distribution.

About Project Jason

Project Jason, founded in 2003, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to assisting the families of missing persons, and creating and increasing public awareness of missing people through a variety of outreach and educational activities. Project Jason brings hope and assistance to families of the missing by providing resources and support. The organization is based in Omaha, Nebraska.

For more information about Project Jason’s objectives, activities and services, go to http://www.projectjason.org
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 Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #182 on: August 19, 2010, 11:54:16 AM »
http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/report-missing-pregnant-woman-trudie-hall-may-have-2-husbands/19600220

Report: Missing Pregnant Woman May Have 2 Husbands

8/19/2010
By David Lohr

(Aug. 19) -- Police in Massachusetts are investigating the mysterious disappearance of Trudie Hall, a pregnant Nantucket woman who has been missing for almost a month. Media reports  suggest Hall may have been married to two men and leading a double life, but those who know her best say all that matters is getting her home safe.

"It has really been a very treacherous experience for all concerned," the family pastor, the Rev. Donovan Kerr, told AOL News. "We are just waiting right now for the detectives to release whatever their findings are."

Police describe Hall, a 23-year-old native of Jamaica, as black, 5 feet, 4 inches tall, weighing 160 pounds with black hair and brown eyes. She was last seen July 27, when she left her Nantucket home for a doctor's appointment scheduled for the next day on Cape Cod. Hall spent the night at Bayside Resort in West Yarmouth, but vanished sometime before her appointment.

Hall's mother, Vivienne Walker, said it was out of character for her daughter to take off without notifying someone.

"She would never disappear like that," Walker told AOL News. "She was four months pregnant and that's the sad part."

Three days later, the 2009 Toyota Avalon rental car Hall was driving was found abandoned in West Barnstable, roughly three miles from the facility where she had scheduled her appointment.

The Cape Cod Times, citing police sources, reported that blood and bullet casings were found inside the vehicle; however, officials will neither confirm nor deny those reports.

"I don't confirm anything that's in any newspapers," Cape & Islands District Attorney Michael O'Keefe told AOL News.

Upon finding the vehicle, investigators launched an extensive ground and air search for Hall, but were unable to locate her.

Walker said her daughter came to the U.S. from Jamaica when she was 12. She attended high school in Nantucket, was very active in church and worked for a local bank.

"She's a very nice person," Walker said. "Very helpful, very thoughtful and is always running around trying to help in areas that she can. She's a bright young lady and whatever she puts her hand to, she always comes out well."

In the weeks that followed Hall's disappearance, The Times uncovered probate records from Barnstable and Plymouth counties, which allegedly show Hall was married to two men. She reportedly married Doucet McDowe, 31, of Jamaica in April 2009 and Ram Rimal, 41, of Nepal, roughly six months later.

Hall had scheduled an appointment with a divorce attorney, but she disappeared two days before the appointment, the newspaper reported. It remains unclear which of the men she was planning to divorce.

A roommate of Hall's, who did not wish to be identified, told The Nantucket Inquirer and Mirror that she believed Hall was also married to a third man.

Hall's mother declined to comment on her daughter's alleged marriages, but in an interview with Boston news station WBZ, she said she was unaware of either marriage.

"I know my child, she's very secretive. And I'm just sorry that I didn't get deeper into her secrets even more. I have to live with that regret," Walker said.

Walker also told the news station that another woman had been threatening her daughter because of her pregnancy. "Get rid of the baby or you'll get a gunshot," is one of the threats Walker claims her daughter received.

In yet another twist to the bizarre case, WBZ reported that police believe the father of Hall's unborn child is a Centreville, Mass., man named Quiozel Wilson. The CBS affiliate also reported that police recently conducted a search of Wilson's home, during which they seized several items, including a car and motorcycle.

Attempts by AOL News to reach McDowe, Rimal and Wilson were unsuccessful.

Earlier this month, Rimal's attorney, Michael Wilson, told the Boston Herald that his client was with Hall at the Bayside Resort in West Yarmouth on July 27.

"The last time he saw her was when he went to sleep at night," Wilson told the newspaper. "He didn't see her the next day, and doesn't know where she went."

Wilson said Rimal was not aware his wife might be married to another man, but did acknowledge that the child she was carrying was not his. "She told him she was pregnant with someone else's child," Wilson said.

O'Keefe declined to comment on any aspect of the investigation and won't say if investigators have identified a person of interest in the case.

"I'm not commenting on any of the events in the case," O'Keefe said. "All I've said throughout this matter is that we are investigating the disappearance of [Trudie Hall] and will continue to do that until we resolve the case."

Walker says she is anxious for answers and hopes the case will be solved soon. "We want people to come forward with anything they know that is related to her disappearance," she said.

Meanwhile, The Jersey Journal of Jersey City, N.J., picked up on the case Wednesday and highlighted the lack of national media attention it is getting, pointing to what it called the "missing white woman syndrome." "This 'missing white woman syndrome' might explain why the case of Trudie Hall is so underreported," wrote Earl Morgan, a columnist for the newspaper.

According to Kelly Jolkowski, founder of the the Omaha, Neb.-based nonprofit missing person organization Project Jason, the theory is that attractive, middle- to upper-class white women are considered "more newsworthy" than a missing black person.

"The conclusion is that major media deem this is what the general public wants and this is what will sell news," Jolkowski said. "You typically don't see women of race or males featured. If someone doesn't fit the criteria of the general public version of what is good-looking, those cases can be ignored not just by the media but also by people on social networks and websites."

Jolkowski added: "Everyone deserves a chance to be found."


Anyone with information on the case is asked to contact the Barnstable Police Department at 508-771-6237.
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 Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #183 on: October 18, 2010, 08:56:44 AM »
http://www.marshallindependent.com/page/content.detail/id/524345/Still-searching.html?nav=5015

Still searching
Search teams are still looking for evidence of Brandon Swanson, who disappeared in 2008. Volunteers at a search in the Porter area this weekend say a mix of determination and hope keeps them going.


October 18, 2010 - By Deb Gau

PORTER - It's been more than two years since Brandon Swanson went missing somewhere between Canby and Marshall. But the search is far from over, say the men and women who gathered in Porter to keep looking for signs of Brandon.

"We keep getting clues," in the form of responses from dogs trained to detect human remains, said search manager Jeff Hasse. Search teams won't quit before they follow those clues.

More than 20 people, including some local volunteers, dog handlers, and volunteers from Search, Rescue and Recovery Resources of Minnesota, a non-profit organization, went over an area near Mud Creek northwest of Porter Saturday and Sunday. Although no physical evidence was found, Hasse said search dogs indicated the presence of human remains somewhere in the area.

Swanson, a Marshall resident, was 19 when a cell phone call to his parents ended abruptly on May 14, 2008. Swanson's car was found in a ditch along the Lincoln and Lyon County line road near Taunton. However, multiple searches in Lyon, Lincoln and Yellow Medicine County near the Yellow Medicine River and the towns of Taunton and Porter turned up no other evidence of him.

Hasse said searchers are trying to systematically eliminate areas where it is unlikely Swanson will be found. Team leaders are equipped with GPS units, and Hasse collects the information along with the search teams' reports during debriefing sessions at the Porter fire hall. The fire hall served as search headquarters, where radio communications among the search teams were coordinated, Hasse turned search data into detailed maps, and volunteers returned for rest and food.

Conditions in southwest Minnesota present many challenges for the search, especially for dogs, said Hasse and Deb Doering of SRRRMN. The winds make it hard to pinpoint the source of a scent, and planted fields are off-limits for search teams. Thick vegetation is a problem for both canine and human searchers. Early Saturday morning, volunteers with machetes and brush trimmers waded knee-deep into portions of Mud Creek to cut down thick clumps of cattails.

The cattails had to go before search dogs could check parts of the creek, Doering said.

"It's just like with people. If you come up to some really thick brush, you're going to go around it, not through it," she said.

The pheasant season opener posed a potential risk to search teams, Hasse said, but there were no hunters in the search area Saturday.

Many of this weekend's volunteers had been part of multiple searches for Swanson. Allan Hoseck and Larry Schaffran of Marshall said they had volunteered with past with search efforts, Schaffran since last year and Hoseck since 2008. Hope, and knowing the Swanson family, kept them coming back.

"It would help find an end to this," Hoseck said.

Michael Davis, a search volunteer from Clearbrook, said his decision to volunteer was a matter of, "Do unto others as you'd have done unto you."

"I know if I was the one who was lost, I would want people to look for me," Davis said.

Brandon Swanson's parents, Brian and Annette Swanson of Marshall, were present for this weekend's search. Brian Swanson said the family appreciated all of the volunteers' efforts with the search.

Search teams weren't alone in the field over the weekend. A cameraman followed volunteers as part of a documentary project. Hasse said the search for Brandon Swanson will be one of the stories featured in a film, "Project Jason: A Voice For the Missing." Project Jason is a non-profit organization founded by Kelly Jolkowski, a Nebraska mother whose son Jason has been missing since 2001. One of the group's missions is the passing of state legislation that would improve the response to reports of missing adults.

Brian and Annette Swanson have worked to help create similar legislation for Minnesota. Brandon's Law, which speeds up the investigation process for missing adults, and calls for the release of information that could help find them, was passed in 2009.

Hasse said it's unusual for a search mission to continue as long as the search for Brandon Swanson has. But, he said, the scent clues keep coming, and search teams have to keep following them. There are two possible reasons Swanson hasn't been found yet, Hasse said.

"Either we haven't found the right areas yet, or we have found the right areas and we missed him," he said.

"I think we will be looking at coming back at least one more time this fall," Hasse said. "We'll wait until the crops are out of the fields."
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 Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #184 on: November 03, 2010, 01:18:54 PM »
http://www.thesfnews.com/artman2/publish/local/SAN_FRANCISCO_Missing_Person_at_Risk-the_lost_victims_of_Alzheimer_s_10_30.shtml

Missing Persons At Risk

By Shawn Lehman
Oct 31, 2010 - 10:13:14 PM



SAN FRANCISCO—Spattered throughout the San Francisco Police Department’s homepage are notifications titled “Missing Person at Risk.” Some of these individuals are described as “suffering from Alzheimer’s ... missing may be disoriented or confused.”

According to ProjectJason.org, “6 out of 10 people with Alzheimer’s will wander.” Many of these individuals have trouble remembering their address or even their name at times, which is a challenge when these individuals are approached by concerned citizens.

 When asked what the general protocol is for locating these types of missing persons, Sgt. Troy Dangerfield from the San Francisco Police Department Media Relations Unit stated, “We continue searching until we find them.” The SFPD utilizes national and state resources, as well as media tools to notify the public of the missing person in an effort to obtain community assistance.

There are other groups who seek to assist local authorities in their search efforts, as well as provide support to the families whose loved ones have gone missing. Kelly Jolkowski, president and founder of ProjectJason.org, stated, “Since Alzheimer’s and dementia have no boundaries and anyone can suffer, all communities should have at least a basic best-practice search policy in place with volunteers ready to aid the professionals.” Jolkowski helped start Project Jason after her own 19-year-old son, Jason Jolkowski, went missing. The organization serves as an assistance guide to those who have a missing loved one and provides emotional support. “Peer-to-peer support is also helpful, as only someone who has experienced this type of trauma can truly understand.”

In regards to search efforts, Jolkowski embodies the SFPD’s efforts stating, “In cases like this, depending on where the last person was last seen and other circumstances, it is best to immediately make sure the public is aware through media and other means. Also, professional searchers, along with law enforcement personnel, should be dispatched to search from the last place seen, and going outward. Depending upon the case and locale, search dogs could also be used.”

Other organizations have focused on making the search process more effective by implementing the use of items, such as ID bracelets and tracking devices. According to ProjectJason.org, by utilizing ID bracelets that contain tracking devices, Project Lifesaver has “reduced search times from days to a matter of minutes by assigned safety agencies.” A similar program, the Alzheimer’s Association’s Safe Return, has proven to be extremely successful as well in reducing the amount of search time required to return loved ones back home to their families.

Because wanderers tend to “go until they get stuck,” finding these individuals as soon as possible is imperative. With the efforts of local authorities and organizations like ProjectJason.org, Project Lifesaver and Safe Return, the hopes of helping these lost individuals find their way home are much more attainable.
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 Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #185 on: November 19, 2010, 09:06:30 AM »
http://blogs.kansascity.com/crime_scene/2010/11/opiefest-to-shine-light-on-jesse-ross-other-missing-person-cases.html

Friday, November 19, 2010

'OpieFest' to shine light on Jesse Ross, other missing-person cases

Tonight is OpieFest, an annual event named for Jesse Ross, a UMKC student who disappeared in 2006, just a few days before Thanksgiving. ("Opie" is Ross' nickname.) Ross was on a school trip to Chicago at the time, and there's been no sign of him since. You can learn more about Jesse and his disappearance at findjesseross.com.

OpieFest organizers are trying to raise awareness of missing-person cases, and besides live music and food, Kelly Jolkowski of Project Jason will speak. (Project Jason is a story unto itself and well worth looking into, if you have a moment.)

OpieFest will run from 6 to 10 p.m. at St. Regis Church, 8941 James A. Reed Road.
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 Kelly

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #186 on: November 20, 2010, 09:51:54 AM »
http://www.kmbc.com/r-video/25859012/detail.html

Remembered At 'Opie Fest'
Jesse Ross Vanished In Chicago 4 Years Ago


POSTED: 10:24 pm CST November 19, 2010
UPDATED: 10:36 pm CST November 19, 2010

An annual festival serves to remind the public about a missing UMKC student and radio personality who vanished during a trip to Chicago in 2006.

(video only)

Note: Project Jason's Kelly Jolkowski is interviewed in the video.
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 Harrison

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #187 on: December 06, 2010, 06:26:01 PM »
Project Jason Second Life in Top Three Among Best Nonprofit Designs

http://sebastianstudy.wordpress.com/2010/10/28/second-life-a-first-glance-at-nonprofit-graphics/

The power of first impressions is either ignored or overlooked. Perhaps the poor state of design in Second Life is due to myopia—no one can see his or her own face objectively. A stroll around the Aloft group in Nonprofit Commons is a lesson in visual frustration. (Because the 30 organizations there comprise about 1/3 of all nonprofit residents, I hope the other groups fair better in my upcoming analysis.)  Many have beautiful architecture and interior design. But the signage, the information, and the communicative power of graphic presentation is virtually ignored! This is so surprising when the resources for space and furnishing is a major effort (albeit a cheap one). Here is what I found so far:

Preliminary Evaluation of Graphics
30 Nonprofit Commons Aloft organizations:

Placement of signs is better than the average Second Life presentations. For 23 out of 20, isn’t too difficult to tell who is who, though camera work is necessary when the signs are placed too high. The most legible use several sign positions—outside of building, near the entrance, just inside, and prominent in every room. Redundancy is important. The most astute also place a sign on the roof of their buildings so that it can be found from the air. [photo of sign on roof]

Legibility is poor. Fully 1/2 of all the signs are difficult to read. Because the point of a sign is to be read, such oversight is hard to understand. Editing can be difficult for anyone wishing to tell a story. But the rules of visual seduction, brevity, and even composition are still necessary. Residents put hours of work into avatars to represent them with sophistication, yet make presentations that are difficult to comprehend! It makes me wonder both why they are there and what kinds of responses they have garnered. This is not to say that compelling signs will guarantee that marketing goals will be met, but there is a certainty that meeting them will be more difficult if communications are unsatisfying.

Images are crude. 3/4 use images from logos to illustrations to photographs. But unfortunately, less than half of those look amateurish. (If I investigate the websites of the same organizations, I wonder if I will find the same thing?) The best use the organizational logo, furthering identity recognition.

Poor informations signs. Those groups that have signs inside their spaces either overwhelm the visitor with too much or underwhelm with vague content. Most have publication offerings, links to websites and blogs, and videos of activities. How these are presented seems more of an after-thought rather than as strategic tools.

The honeymoon is over. Two organizations are gone. The others discuss concerns in the Friday morning conference. Having attended, it is a challenge are to be taken seriously in the business community. The novelty has worn off and expectations altered. Second Life’s role is now being defined for fundraising, presentations, education, and publications. It is a more direct form of communication with members that the belief in its future holds strong. But the idea of foot traffic is dashed. Instead, being event driven, what you put in is what you get out; it is no panacea.

Three are the best. They are worth visiting as examples of what to do right. I will review these three in more depth and investigate the components. For now, effective graphics are most used by:

American Association of University Women

AAUW displays corporate approach to signage. AAUW (American Association of University Women) hits all the bases with outside and inside signage. Although not very imaginative, their communication is clear, crisp, identifiable and inspiring.

KIVA loan organization. Kiva.org has signs that always provide orientation.
 

PROJECT JASON: Assistance for Families of the Missing has a mysterious name so graphics become even more important to communicate mission. Very compelling in their portrayal of finding missing children, the visitor gets swept into awareness.

The more a viewer becomes engaged during a visit, the more inclined he or she is to drop a donation in the tip jar on the way out. The fundraising aspect of Second Life has only begun to be tapped. A much wider-reaching audience can augment the real life performance of these organizations. Graphics have a major role to play in compelling that audience to action.

Denise Harrison
http://www.projectjason.org
http://www.denise.harrison.com

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: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #188 on: December 08, 2010, 07:17:23 PM »
http://www.aolnews.com/crime/article/arkansas-police-reopen-search-for-jeffrey-lynn-smith-girl-missing-25-years/19752613


Arkansas Police Resume Search for Girl Missing 25 Years


Updated: 1 hour 3 minutes ago 12/8/2010
David Lohr Contributor
AOL News

(Dec. 8 ) -- Authorities in Arkansas have resumed the search for a teenage girl who disappeared 25 years ago this month, police said.

Jeffrey Lynn Smith, 16, was last seen on Dec. 4, 1985, walking home from school with her boyfriend. What happened to her during that walk remains a mystery. Police say she never made it to her Hot Springs home.

Since reopening the search Tuesday, authorities have been focusing on three wooded areas in Hot Springs. Authorities are not saying what prompted the new searches, but they did say the areas they are examining are based on interviews they conducted with a potential suspect. Investigators have not said who that person is.

Authorities in Arkansas have resumed the search for Jeffrey Lynn Smith, who disappeared 25 years ago, police said. She was last seen on Dec. 4, 1985.
"We just want to be real careful what we put out," Hot Springs Police Sgt. Jeff Michau told Northwest Arkansas Newspapers.

At the time of Jeffrey Lynn's disappearance, authorities suspected she had run away from home, but later considered the possibility that she had been abducted.

The only clue that has surfaced in the case is a ring Jeffrey had received as a gift from her mother. The gold ring, which was adorned with an opal birthstone, turned up in a local pawn shop not long after she disappeared.

Jeffrey Lynn's older sister, Lisa Murray, was 19 when her sister vanished. Over the years she has reached out to several missing-person organizations, including the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and Project Jason, for assistance in the case. Both groups have made great strides to raise awareness of Jeffrey Lynn's disappearance.


"Older cases like Jeffrey Lynn's are often overlooked by the media and other avenues of support and awareness," Kelly Jolkowski, president and founder of Project Jason, told AOL News. "The pain for families like Lisa's is no less than any other in this situation. It's never too late for answers and justice."


In addition to reaching out to missing-person organizations, Murray has also attempted, unsuccessfully, to reach out to former President Bill Clinton.

"My mother had worked for his mother as her maid and babysitter while she was pregnant with Jeffrey Lynn," Murray said in a statement to ArkansasMatters.com. "She named my sister after his stepfather, Jeffrey Dwire, because my mother admired that family that much. Mrs. Virginia Dwire also served as my mother's anesthesiologist during the delivery."

Clinton's mother, Virginia, was married four times. Jeffrey Dwire was her third husband.

Murray said her family has suffered years of pain and suffering and has struggled to live day to day.

"I surely hope and pray that [none] of us die without the closure we need," she said. "The closure is not only for us but for our children and grandchildren. I don't want to leave a legacy of our descendants wondering what ever happened to that girl with the million-dollar smile. I still have hope that we will find her one day."


Jolkowski added, "Even though Jeffrey Lynn will never again hold a place with her family at Christmas dinner, they should be able to lay her to rest and find some peace."
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.

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #189 on: January 12, 2011, 11:47:10 PM »
Note: This story was not posted online. Thanks to DeDe Keene for getting it to us.

www.beaumontenterprise.com

1/2/2011
By Julia Garcia

Still missing
When loved ones disappear, family, friends create their own channels to continue search for answers

 
It's been more than 11 years since his sister disappeared from a Beaumont parking lot, and each year brings more questions for Norman Langwell.

"It's been a long time, and we don't have a body," said the Beaumont native who now lives in California . "We don't know what happened, and there's no closure until you know."

In the years immediately following Kimberly Langwell's disappearance July 9, 1999, her brother became obsessed with finding answers.

"I set up my own database, collected my own evidence and I looked for any patterns to see if something was missing," recalled the 57-year-old. "I searched and researched anything I could think of."

And while a decade of official investigations has turned up no answers about how or why his sister disappeared, Langwell remains convinced that foul play was involved. The proof, he said, is her daughter.

She raised that little girl on her own from the time she was born," he said of Tiffani Langwell, who was 15 years old when her mother seemingly vanished. "Kim loved her and sacrificed for her, and she wouldn't have left her."

The case file

Kimberly Ann Langwell was 34 when she disappeared from a parking lot on the corner of Dowlen Road and Phelan Boulevard.

The only trace of her found on the property -- that part of which served an Eckerd's Pharmacy there at the time -- was her silver 1994 Nissan Altima. Inside of it, according to reports from the incident, was a cell phone and some other personal items, but no purse, no keys and no substantial clues.

Tiffani was the last to hear from her mother, who had called earlier that evening and confirmed 6:30 p.m. dinner plans, reports also claim. But she never showed and all searches and investigations since have provided no answers.

"Susan was putting stuff out everywhere," Langwell said of his sister, Susan Butts, who also was heavily involved in the search for Kimberly.

Calls made to Butts from The Enterprise were not returned by press time.

"She contacted every missing persons organization. We talked to everybody, we looked everywhere. "It's just hard."

A life of uncertainty

As in the case of the Langwell family, mysterious disappearances often leave a trail of unanswered questions.

For some, like Jim and Kelly Jolkowski of Omaha , Neb. , the inability to provide their own answers turned into a way to provide answers for others.

After the 2001 disappearance of their 19-year-old son Jason, the Jolkowskis founded Project Jason to provide nationwide assistance to families of missing persons.

"Time is really of the essence when someone first goes missing, and we're here to guide the family through the process," Kelly Jolkowski said in a phone interview.
"The police have their duties, which are the investigation, not to comfort families or guide them how to deal with it. Awareness, publicity, posters -- that's where we step in to help with those aspects of the process."

At any given time, Project Jason is working with the families of about 300 missing persons.

But that's only the cases with which Project Jason is directly involved.

According to data released by the FBI's National Crime Information Center , there were 719,558 missing persons reported throughout the United States in 2009. By the last day of the year, 96,192 of those cases still were active.

Of all reports made in 2009, 558,493 involved children.

Ten years prior -- the year Kimberly Langwell disappeared -- there were 867,129 missing persons reported nationally. "Someone goes missing roughly every 30 seconds," Jolkowski said.

When her teenage son disappeared from their Nebraska home in 2001, it was "almost like he vanished," she said. Officials uncovered no leads in the case.

"In his case, there's no evidence that someone took him or harmed him, but there's definitely no evidence that he ran away," Jolkowski said, adding that he had $650 in his savings account that remained untouched.

Jason's cell phone was never used again, and his car was in the shop for repairs.

"All those things don't add up to him running away," she said. "But there's no evidence that something happened to him either. It's a very mysterious case, unfortunately."

Files still open

No matter how long a person has been missing, their case remains open, said Maj. Raymond Clark of the Port Arthur Police Department.

While the numbers fluctuate, he said, two or three missing persons reports generally are filed each week. Most involve children.

"It is very common that a juvenile missing person ends up being a runaway," Clark said.

Often when senior citizens are involved, the person simply gets lost because of age-related illnesses like Alzheimer's or dementia, he said. He remembers a case in particular involving a Port Arthur man who somehow ended up traveling all the way to Corpus Christi alone. He was reunited with his family, Clark said, but that's not always the case.

There are some people on the missing persons lists who want to remain that way, said Sgt. Garrold Keaton, an Orange detective. Some people, he said, set out to disappear.

"Once we find those people, we can't make them go home," Keaton said, citing the more common example of marital disputes where one spouse leaves without any forwarding contact information.

"Technology has made it more difficult to intentionally disappear," Clark said. "In some way or another, you'll show up."

Like homicide, there is no statute of limitations on a missing persons case.

Both Clark and Keaton said that cases are revisited from time to time and the databases are frequently checked by dispatchers for new information.

But as a father and a grandfather, Clark said that he can't imagine what families experience when a loved one disappears.

"If you have a loved one killed, you have some closure. But there's nothing worse than not knowing," Clark said. "You probably wake up every day with a weight on your head and knowing it's not right. "I can't imagine what a parent would feel."

The poster child

Kimberly Langwell literally has become the "poster child" for DeDe Keene.

Just months before Langwell was reported missing, Keene moved to from Central Texas to Vidor to care for sick relatives.

The 62-year-old woman, however, had been working with international missing persons reports since 1999. At the age of 7, she said, she survived a 1955 abduction from an Illinois grocery store.

When she heard about Langwell's disappearance, Keene immediately became involved. To this day, she distributes " Have You Seen Me" type fliers with Langwell's photo and information.

"Praise God for people who look at posters," Keene said while sitting in her Vidor home.

While Langwell's case is a focus for Keene , she works with several missing persons organizations nationwide through the website she founded in 2001 -- America 's Missing Abducted and Lost Persons Ministry.

"This is seven-days-a week for me," Keene said. "Before and after church, I'm looking at the databases and posters and making sure I know as much as I can."

Every July, on the anniversary of Langwell's disappearance, Keene and her husband, Dale, can be seen at the corner of the parking lot where Kimberly was last seen passing out fliers and holding a sign that says "Gone, but Not Forgotten."

Waiting is only answer
   
After providing all the descriptions and related information, the families of missing people are left to wait.

"We had very little support and help," Jolkowski said about the days and months following the disappearance of her son, Jason.

"After I got over the initial shock, I researched on the Internet and found out how many missing people there were," she said. "People get the idea that there's only a few here and there.

"Nobody came along and held our hands or told us what the next steps were or how we should feel," she said. "Things fell between the cracks.

"Nobody told me not throw his toothbrush away or try to get fingerprints. Nobody hands you a manual. That's where we step in."

Project Jason offers services for families dealing with the emotional aspect of the situation. They have a counselor available for emotional support and questions on an online forum. They also sponsor annual retreats for families of the missing.

"For three days, they're enveloped in love and support and in a safe environment," she said. "They learn coping skills and how to go on no matter how long the situation lasts."

One important aspect of the process that is often neglected, Jolkowski said, is "identifiers."

"We teach them about how to get DNA done, about fingerprints and dental records," she said. "We coach them in that respect too, because it's tough. No one wants to think that their loved one is deceased."

As another Christmas rolled past last week, Norman Langwell was reminded of the absence of his sister, Kimberly. The depression is at its worst during the holidays and on the anniversary of her disappearance, he said.

"When you think about it, this is somebody you love, part of your bloodstream," he said. "After this long, it almost feels hopeless."
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.

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #190 on: June 10, 2011, 06:41:40 PM »
http://www.omaha.com/article/20110610/NEWS01/706109951/1009#event-to-mark-sad-milestone

and

http://www.inspiredhomeomaha.com/article/20110610/NEWS01/706109951/1009

Event to mark sad milestone

Published Friday June 10, 2011

Monday will mark the 10th anniversary of the disappearance of Jason Jolkowski.

The 19-year-old was last seen walking on June 13, 2001, when he left his Benson-area home to go to work.

After his disappearance, the Jolkowski family established Project Jason, a nonprofit that helps other families with missing loved ones. Project Jason assists families who have missing adults or missing children.

Project Jason will have a bowling fundraiser from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sunday at Sempeck’s Bowling & Entertainment, 20902 Cumberland Drive, in honor of Jason.

The cost is $17 for adults and $8 for children 12 and younger. The price gives attendees 2½ hours of bowling, shoe rental and, if needed, socks.

Tickets, which are nonrefundable, must be purchased in advance at http://projectjason.org/help.shtml. Click on the “Make a donation through PayPal” button. Fill in the donation form using the ticket prices above to guide you in how much to donate.


— Sue Story Truax
« Last Edit: June 11, 2011, 12:42:55 AM by Kelly »
Denise Harrison
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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #191 on: June 12, 2011, 09:55:34 PM »
http://www.kptm.com/story/14890820/bowling-for-project-jason?redirected=true

Bowling For Project Jason

Posted: Jun 12, 2011 9:32 PM CDT Updated: Jun 12, 2011 9:32 PM CDT
Meghan McRoberts

OMAHA (KPTM)-

Friends, family, and co-workers of Kelly Jolkowski spend Sunday afternoon bowling, to raise money for Project Jason.

Kelly started Project Jason, a non-profit organization, when her son Jason Jolkowski went missing. It gives support to other families who have missing loved ones. Jason has been missing for ten years. He was only 19 years old.

Jolkowski says "even though the core of what Project Jason does has a sadness about it, were going to have fun while were raising money."

Co workers say "It's been a long time, but there has to be someone that knows something that, down the road, can help."

Money raised will go towards making missing persons posters, funding support programs, and funding the annual retreat for affected families.

Jolkowski says her loss is what makes it easy to help other families in similar situations, "even if we don't get the answers, if we can help someone else find their answer that's just a wonderful thing, giving them the guidance to go through what may be their darkest hours in their life, the hardest time that they've ever been through."

Jason's case is especially hard to crack, Jolkowski explains, but hasn't given up hope. "Unfortunately his is one of the most mysterious, there's really not any leads, there's no suspects, so that's why we continue to let the public know, he's still missing, we still need your help."

Jolkowski says even ten years later, she will continue looking for Jason until she finally gets some answers.
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.

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #192 on: June 12, 2011, 09:58:38 PM »
http://www.wowt.com/home/headlines/No_Answers_10_Years_Later_123725644.html

No Answers 10 Years Later
Jason Jolkowski's family continues to search for answers


Their son went missing 10 years ago, and they're no closer to finding Jason Jolkowski now, then they were back then.

Posted: 9:36 PM Jun 12, 2011
Reporter: Jodi Baker

Partly out of frustration, mostly out of empathy, Jim and Kelly Jolkowski began Project Jason, with the hopes of keeping their son’s story alive and helping other families.

“We’ve accomplished a lot,” said Kelly. “We’ve helped pass laws in eight or more states which have successfully helped find missing people and help law enforcement there.” She spoke with Channel 6 News at Sempek Lanes in Elkhorn Sunday, during a fundraiser for Project Jason.

“We’ve established the only retreat in the country and maybe in the world where families of both missing children and adults can attend and they can learn coping skills, how do I get by day-to-day in this horrible mystery that just unfortunately doesn’t go away?”

And it hasn’t gone away for the Jolkowski’s. Their son disappeared at the age of 19, last seen the morning of June 13, 2001, bringing trash cans in from the curb of his home near 48th and Bedford.

Jason had been called in to work early, his mother said, but had no way to get there since his car was in the shop. “They offered to send one of the co-workers to pick him up. They agreed to meet at Benson high school which is seven blocks from our home.”

But Jason never made it to Benson, according to school surveillance cameras. He hasn’t used his cell phone or accessed his bank account since before he went missing. There were no signs he planned to leave, yet no proof he was forcibly taken.

“There’s usually some sort of lead or theories or clues that lead them somewhere, but in our case, there just simply isn’t.”

Time has passed slowly for the Jolkowski’s, but the lack of answers hasn’t stopped their search. “And we know that someday we will know, we just don’t know if it was on this earthly plane or someone else,” Kelly said.

She’s confident somebody has information that will solve the mystery. “We keep going out there and keep the word out to find that person or persons and to ask them please, go to the police, you can go anonymously through 444-7867, and give them the information that will unravel this mystery.” Those calls, she stresses, can remain anonymous.

It’s not closure the Jolkowski’s are seeking. "No matter what happens, it's not a closed door. So we simply want answers as to what happened. And even if those answers are hard to take, it's better than no answers."

Still, the family is holding out hope their son may be alive. He would be 30-years-old on June 24th. "Hope is our right and we will hold onto that right until we know the truth."

Meantime, no matter what happens with their son’s case, she said their work on behalf of other missing adults and children, in Jason’s name, will continue. “Everyone is loved and is somebody's child, and all these families deserve answers.”
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.

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #193 on: June 12, 2011, 11:29:09 PM »
http://omaha.com/article/20110612/NEWS01/706139965/1003#waiting-for-son-10-years-later

Published Sunday June 12, 2011

Waiting for son, 10 years later

By Ellen Jean Hirst
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

June is a tough month for the Jolkowskis.

June 13, 2001, 10:45 a.m., was the last time anybody saw Jason Jolkowski, then 19 years old. His younger brother Michael, 13 at the time, saw him bringing in the garbage cans.

June 17 was Father's Day, and Kelly Jolkowski, Jason's mom, had prayed that would be the day he came home.

“We thought maybe he would just walk in the door and our nightmare would be over then,” Kelly said.

June 22 was Kelly's birthday, and June 24 was Jason's.

This June marks the 10-year anniversary of Jason's disappearance. A bowling fundraiser Sunday at Sempeck's Bowling & Entertainment in the Elkhorn area raised money for the nonprofit Project Jason, which the Jolkowskis started to help reunited missing people with their families. The organization also raises public awareness about missing people and helps educate families about what to do if a family member disappears.

What the Jolkowskis want, more than anything, is to hear Jason laugh again.

When Jason was a baby, he would giggle hysterically when “Rusty the Raccoon” was going to “get him.” He had an uncanny knack for recalling baseball statistics. He loved music and was an enthusiastic DJ for the radio station at Iowa Western Community College.

When he beat his father, Jim Jolkowski, for the first time at basketball, instead of “trash talking,” he beamed a daylong smile.

“I would always make sure to trash talk and everything,” Jim said. “And finally Jason got older and better, and the first time he ever beat me, I figured he was really going to let me have it, but he didn't say a word. All he did was sit there with a great, big old smile on his face.”

Jason's 30th birthday is June 24, and the Jolkowskis think Jason might still be laughing somewhere.

The last day anyone saw Jason, he was called into work at Fazoli's at 80th and Cass Streets in Omaha. His car was in the shop, so a co-worker was going to meet him at Benson High School, eight blocks from where Jason lived. The co-worker never saw him. He wasn't on Benson High's surveillance tapes. It's as if he disappeared into thin air.

But someone has to know something, the Jolkowskis said, which is why they are still hopeful someone will come forward with a tip, a lead, anything.

“We really, truly never have had viable leads,” Kelly said. “Most times in a missing person case, you have an idea, you have a theory. But in our case, we don't have a finger to point at anybody at all. It's just very, very mysterious.”

Jason's credit cards, bank account and cell phone haven't been touched. His car remained in the shop. His last paycheck was left at work.

In the 10 years since Jason's disappearance, a lot has happened. Jason's younger brother, Michael is serving in the National Guard in Afghanistan. Jason's dad, Jim, is still an avid Husker fan, a team that he and Jason both loved.

Jason's mom, Kelly, helped create a legislative bill in Jason's name and relentlessly lobbied for it. On May 25, 2005, the Nebraska Legislature passed LB 111 — Jason's Law — establishing the Nebraska Missing Persons Clearinghouse, an online database for missing people.

And there's Project Jason.

On Sunday, stacks of fliers for 15 missing people, designed by Project Jason, were handed out, along with handouts on child safety and prizes for every strike someone bowled. The Project Jason mascot, “ID Kitty,” the costume Jim wore, even threw a few bowling balls down the lane.

Project Jason has helped reunite some families with loved ones who were missing for as long as 12 years.

And the Jolkowskis still have hope.

“Somebody knows something, and we need them to come forward,” Jim said. “Ten years is long enough to suffer, and we need help.”

Omaha police still have no leads on Jason's still-open case. Anyone who has any information is asked to call the Missing Person Unit at 402-444-5636 or CrimeStoppers at 402-444-STOP.
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.

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Re: Project Jason in the News
« Reply #194 on: June 27, 2011, 09:59:45 PM »
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/27/morgan-m-johnson-missing_n_885328.html

Search Continues For Indiana Man Missing For More Than A Month

First Posted: 06/27/11 06:04 PM ET Updated: 06/27/11 06:05 PM ET
By David Lohr

For more than a month, family, friends and colleagues of Morgan M. Johnson have searched for clues that might lead to the missing Indiana man’s whereabouts. Try as they will, all efforts have fallen short, including attempts, up until now, to get national media outlets involved. "We have been working hard on that but what exposure we have gotten is here locally and in Indianapolis," Johnson's friend, Avery Garrett, told The Huffington Post.

Perhaps, but according to Kelly Jolkowski, founder of the Omaha, Neb.-based nonprofit missing person organization Project Jason, missing women are typically considered more newsworthy than missing men.

"I believe there is a perception that in a missing male case that either no harm can come to them because they are male, therefore stronger, or that they've knowingly placed themselves into a risky situation," Jolkowski told The Huffington Post.

"As we know, neither of those statements is true in all male cases and may hold true in a female case just the same," she continued. "Does more media coverage come as a result of the belief that females need more protection than males, or does this go back to the theory that looks mean everything in media coverage?"

Please read more at the link above.
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.