Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
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Offline Denise

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Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« on: May 20, 2007, 11:51:31 AM »


Name: Sherrill Levitt

Classification: Endangered Missing Adult
Date of Birth: 1944-11-01
Date Missing: 1992-06-07
From City/State: Springfield, MO
Missing From (Country): USA
Age at Time of Disappearance: 47
Gender: Female
Race: White
Height: 60 inches
Weight: 110 pounds
Hair Color: Blonde
Hair (Other): Naturally curly
Eye Color: Brown
Complexion: Light
Identifying Characteristics: Freckles on neck and chest.
Clothing: Floral print dress.

Circumstances of Disappearance: Unknown.

Stacy McCall and her friend, Suzanne Streeter, had graduated from high school the day before and after leaving a party at approx. 2:15am, it appears that Stacy went to stay the night at Suzanne's house where she resided with her mother, Sherrill near Glenstone and Delmar St. Their vehicles and all personal belongings were found at the residence. All three women are missing.

[align=center]Investigative Agency: Springfield Police Department
Phone: (417) 864-1810
Investigative Case #: 92-40169 [/align]


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: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #1 on: May 20, 2007, 11:51:51 AM »
Three Missing Women




On June 7, 1992, the Springfield, Missouri Police Department was notified of the disappearance of three women from a residence in central Springfield.

The parents of Stacy McCall, one of the missing women, contacted the police department in reference to their daughter's disappearance from the home of Sherrill Levitt and Suzanne Streeter, the other two missing women. Upon officers' arrival, the house bore no signs of a struggle, but rather the appearance of the missing women being abducted. All personal property was left behind including purses, money, clothing, cars, keys, cigarettes, and the family dog.


Click on the link provided above to read the complete news article.

Offline Denise

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #2 on: May 20, 2007, 11:52:07 AM »
amw.com | Sherrill Levitt - Missing Person

Slumber Party After Graduation

Sherrill's daughter, Suzanne, also vanished.

On June 7, 1992 Sherrill Levitt was hosting a slumber party for her daughter, Suzanne's graduation. Cops say they arrived at Sherrill's home at 3am and prepared for bed. Suzanne and her best friend Stacy had plans to go to an amusement park the next day with their friends. But they never made it.

Cops say the house bore no signs of a struggle, but rather the appearance of the women being "captured."

Left In A Hurry

Suzanne's best friend, Stacy McCall, was sleeping over when she vanished from the home. That night, all three women disappeared without a trace from the Springfield, Missouri home. Levitt's car, purse and keys were left at the house and it was apparent her bed had been slept in. The family dog was waiting for police and friends when they arrived to check out the girls absence from their big date.

Sherrill Levitt was last heard from at approximately 11:15pm on June 6. Cops say the house bore no signs of a struggle, but rather the appearance of the women being "captured."


Hope
There has been no trace of the women since their mysterious disappearance. Like the families, investigators will not rule out the possibility the women could still be alive.

Offline Denise

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #3 on: May 20, 2007, 11:52:26 AM »
KY3 - News - Investigator thinks missing women's bodies are in concrete



Investigator thinks missing women's bodies are in concrete.

SPRINGFIELD -- This city’s most infamous unsolved crime is the disappearance of three women in June 1992. Two teenagers and one mother vanished shortly after the students’ high school graduation.

There were no signs of a struggle and no clues as to what happened to Sherill Levitt, her daughter Suzie Streeter, and Suzie’s friend, Stacy McCall. Springfield police have researched and followed up on more than 5,000 leads in the case.

A woman from Springfield says she's done her own independent investigation and knows where the women are. Police have doubts about her research and have spent nearly a year trying to verify her claim.

For nearly 15 years, Janis McCall has been waiting for her daughter, Stacy, to come home.

"I do believe Stacy still has a chance of being found. They have not found any body. They didn't find any remains for three women and, if they haven't found them in 14 and a half years, chances are they're still around,” she said.

Still, faith that her daughter is alive can't overcome the dread she feels every time police find the body of an unidentified person.

“For many times, every time a body was found around this area, my heart just stopped," said McCall.

And it’s happened dozens of times.

Investigator Kathee Baird wishes she could give McCall the happy ending she hopes for. Last spring, Baird says she found evidence the women are buried under a parking garage near Cox South Hospital. Psychics and tipsters kept telling Baird to look for the women in concrete.

"I went back and researched projects that were going on in and around that time and kept coming back to the parking garage on Bradford Parkway,” said Baird.

Baird provided KY3 News with video of a ground penetrating radar scan of the parking garage. The man ran the radar, Rick Norland, is a consulting engineer who worked at Ground Zero in New York City and on the Panama Canal. Norland says his machine picked up three distinct objects below the concrete.

"It’s very similar to what we see when we're over old graves," said Norland.

Baird took the video to investigators.

We were told, on this lead, there was technology in use that had shown bodies underground,” said Springfield Police Sgt. Mike Owen.

Baird also told Janis McCall.

"It hurts, it really hurts, to be told that Suzie, Stacy and Sherill are buried certain places. That's not something that's a positive for me. It's a very negative feeling and I'd much rather be positive,” said McCall.

Owen has been on the case since the day it happened. With all the leads the case has generated, Owen was skeptical about the tip but, in such a high profile case, police say they have no choice but to follow every lead.

"We could be embarrassed, we could miss something that could bring closure to the families, or we have to withstand public scrutiny,” said Owen.

Acting on past tips over the years, police dug in two different places in Webster County and a place in Barry County. Until they dig in the parking garage, Baird says she won't be satisfied.

"We do know they dug in Barry County, and there was nothing there, on a tip. Did it take a year to dig? I don't think so," she said.

Police say they've spent months on this lead. They've met with the Greene County prosecuting attorney’s office and CoxHealth officials. They even got an opinion from an expert on ground penetrating radar.

"It would be impossible to see what this man claims he has seen,” said Owen.

Police say they've followed the lead as far as they can and have no plans to dig at the parking garage but Baird isn't giving up.

"The only way I think I'm going to get anything done is to go public. I've played by their rules for a long time,” said Baird.

If police don't think a dig is necessary, McCall says she agrees. She's spent the last 15 years listening to theories and tips that don't pan out. More than 100 psychics have contacted her.

“They say they're either alive or dead. Well, yeah, they're going to be one of those things,” she said.

But the Janis and Stu McCall don't think their daughter is dead. Janis McCall has a faith that's unwavering and says, until there is definitive proof, she won't give up on Stacy.

"They can say that they're dead, they can say that they're gone, but we always have hope. One day, maybe, I'll know what happened to Stacy. But, in the meantime, I can hope she is still alive,” said McCall.

Offline Denise

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #4 on: May 20, 2007, 11:52:54 AM »
Good News!

Jefferson City is starting to listen! There’s another bill that will help the missing; HB 757 which will provide guidelines for Law Enforcement so they will be better able to investigate and process evidence in a missing person’s case. Thank you Brandy and "friends of Summer" for your hard work. This bill along with SB 67 (endangered/elderly alert) will make a huge difference. It can save lives and stop criminals.

Missouri, especially rural Missouri has way too many missing persons cases. It’s time something is done about it! Contact your senators and representatives and ask them to support HB 757 & SB 67. Remember they are starting to listen.


HB 757 Establishes the Summer Shipp Act which specifies that law enforcement officers cannot refuse a written report of a missing person


HB 757 - SUMMER SHIPP ACT - Pratt, Bryan

Summary of the Introduced Bill

HB 757 -- Summer Shipp Act

Sponsor: Pratt

This bill establishes the Summer Shipp Act which specifies that
law enforcement officers cannot refuse a written report of a
missing person. In accepting a written report of a missing
person, the law enforcement agency must attempt to gather
relevant information regarding the disappearance and reasonably
respond to inquiries from the person making the report, a family
member, or any other person in a position to assist the agency in
locating the missing person. The agency must determine whether
the person missing is a high-risk missing person and, if so, to
immediately notify the State Highway Patrol.

If the person is missing for a period of 30 days, the agency must attempt to obtain DNA samples from family members, an
authorization to release dental or skeletal x-rays, additional
photographs, dental information, and x-rays or fingerprints of
the missing person.

Offline Denise

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #5 on: June 07, 2007, 09:07:39 AM »
http://www.news-leader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070607/NEWS01/706070377

Missing women case timeline

-- 1992 --
   
June 6: Suzie Streeter and Stacie McCall graduate from Kickapoo High School, later attending two graduation parties together. The pair wind up at Streeter's house at 1717 E. Delmar St. about 2 a.m. June 7.

June 7 - A friend calls the house at 8 or 9 a.m. and gets no answer. She stops by a little after noon, but there is no sign of the the girls or Suzie's mother, Sherrill Levitt. Police are called late that evening.

June 8 - Police begin investigating the case. The unlocked house appears as if the women simply vanished while getting ready for bed.

June 9 - The FBI is called in.

June 14 - Pictures of the women air on "America's Most Wanted."
   
Authorities begin a sweep of wooded areas and streams in the Springfield area and search an apartment building after a letter containing a rough drawing of the apartment complex and the phrase, "use Ruse of Gas Man checking for Leak," is found in a News-Leader rack at a grocery store.

June 15 - Police begin working a fresh tip about a transient who neighbors reported seeing near the home in the days before the women disappeared. A sketch is released, showing a man with long hair and a full beard.

June 16 - Police release a photo of a retouched Dodge van, similar to one seen near Sherrill and Suzie's home early on June 7.

June 24 - Police work on a new tip. A waitress at George's Steakhouse, one of Levitt's favorite restaurants, says she saw the three women at the diner between 1 and 3 a.m. June 7. The women arrived and left together. The waitress said Suzie appeared giddy, perhaps intoxicated, and her mom tried to calm her down.

June 28 - Police end their 24-hour command post at Levitt's home.

-- 1993 --

Jan. 2 - An anonymous New Year's Eve caller to a switchboard operator of "America's Most Wanted" is cut off when the operator tries to link up with Springfield investigators. Police still seek contact with the man, whom they consider to have prime knowledge of the abductions.

Feb. 14 - For the first time, police announce that they are considering the possibility that the disappearances are the work of one or more serial killers.

Aug. 28 - Information from an informant leads police to search farmland in Webster County looking for bodies. Police say they find items at the scene, but will not elaborate. The results of the search warrant were sealed.

�1994 --

A lead prompts authorities to search a section of Bull Shoals Lake, where they find animal remains and pieces of clothing. The clothing did not match the description of what the women were wearing.

�1995 --

A grand jury disbands in January without handing up indictments. Robert Craig Cox, whose name came up early in the investigation, is arrested in Texas for aggravated robbery. After information on Cox is presented to a grand jury, investigators interview him in a Texas prison. In the grand jury, Cox's ex-girlfriend tells jurors that she lied when she told police Cox was with her at church the morning of June 7, 1992.

�1996 --

Former News-Leader reporter Robert Keyes interviews Cox from prison. The inmate tells Keyes he knows the women were killed and buried somewhere in Springfield or close by. "And they'll never be found."

�1997 --

The family of Sherrill Levitt and Suzie Streeter go through court proceedings to declare the two women dead. Stacy's parents vow that they will not declare their daughter dead until her body is found.

�2001 --

Maj. Steve Ijames takes command of the Criminal Investigations Section and reopens several cold cases, including that of the three missing women.

�2002 --

Springfield police write Cox a letter, requesting an interview. He declines.

August: Webster County authorities dig near an abandoned slaughterhouse south of Marshfield. They find teeth and bone fragments estimated to be about 100 years old.

-- 2003 --

April: Following new tips, investigators check an old farm about five miles south of Cassville. Cadaver-seeking dogs show interest in various areas. Tires, trash, a motorcycle and sections of a green vehicle are dug up from the surrounding farmland. DNA samples taken from an abandoned house on the property is sent to a lab for testing, but no match is found.

-- 2006 --

A group of amateur detectives go to Springfield police and Greene County Prosecutor Darrell Moore with their theory that the three women are buried under a parking garage near Cox South hospital. Authorities decide not to dig under the garage, saying there isn't enough evidence to warrant the cost of digging.

Offline LoriDavis

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #6 on: May 25, 2008, 11:49:30 PM »
http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/l/levitt_sherrill.html

Sherill Elizabeth Levitt

Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance

Missing Since: June 7, 1992 from Springfield, Missouri
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date Of Birth: November 1, 1944
Age at time of disappearance: 47 years old
Height and Weight: 5'0, 110 pounds

Distinguishing Characteristics: Caucasian female. Bleached blonde hair, brown eyes. Sherrill has a thin build. She has freckles on her neck and on her upper chest. Sherrill's ears are pierced. Her maiden name is Williams. Sherrill was a cigarette smoker at the time of her 1992 disappearance. She wears eyeglasses, but her pair was located inside of her residence.

Clothing/Jewelry Description: A floral-print dress.

Details of Disappearance
Sherrill and her daughter, Suzanne Streeter, resided in the 1700 block of East Delmar Street in Springfield, Missouri in 1992. Suzanne graduated from Kickapoo High School during the evening of June 6, 1992. She spent the early part of the evening having dinner at home with her mother. Suzanne and her friend Stacy McCall planned to spend the night at a hotel in Branson, Missouri. They decided to stay at another friend's home in Battlefield, Missouri instead; Suzanne called Sherrill at approximately 10:30 p.m. to discuss their plans.

Sherrill telephoned a friend at approximately 11:15 p.m. that evening. She was painting a chest of drawers at the time and gave no indication that anything was amiss inside her residence. Suzanne and McCall returned to Sherrill's residence at approximately 2:15 a.m. on June 7 after deciding that their friend's home was too crowded. They planned to meet other friends at White Water amusement park in Branson later in the day. The girls drove their separate vehicles to Sherrill's house. Neither they nor Sherrill have been heard from again. Neighbors did not hear any suspicious activity near Sherrill's home during the overnight hours.

One of the girls' friends phoned and visited Sherrill's residence several times during the day in an attempt to locate the three women. McCall's family alerted authorities about the disappearances during the evening of June 7. All of the women's personal belongings were discovered inside the house; their vehicles were also parked at the home. Sherrill's bed appeared to have been slept in during the previous night. Her eyeglasses were beside her bed and a book had been turned over, indicating that Sherrill may have been interrupted while reading. The family's Yorkshire Terrier, Cinnamon, was still inside the house and appeared to be anxious. All of Sherrill's personal belongings were untouched and the television was turned on. There was no sign of a struggle at the residence, but the porch light had been shattered. No additional physical evidence was discovered at the scene. Authorities now believe that the broken glass from the porch light may have provided clues about the disappearances. A friend of the girls swept the shards into the garbage, unaware that he was discarding possible evidence at the time.

Investigators noted that Sherrill and Suzanne's cigarettes and lighters were still inside the house. The three women's purses were placed together on the stairs. The blinds in Suzanne's room were pulled apart, as if someone had been looking outside. Authorities later admitted that the crime scene had possibly been tainted by the twenty or so loved ones who visited Sherrill's house after their disappearances were reported. No one realized the seriousness of the situation until nearly 24 hours had passed. Officers left a note on Sherrill's door, asking her to call the police department and cancel the missing persons' reports when she and the girls returned home.

An extensive search of the surrounding areas produced no clues as to the women's whereabouts. Robert Craig Cox, a convicted robber serving time on unrelated charges in a Texas prison, was identified as a possible suspect in the case. Cox initially told investigators that he was not in the Springfield area on June 7, but later recanted his statement. Cox also told a journalist that he knew the women had been murdered and buried near Levitt's home, but he claimed that their remains would never be discovered. Authorities are uncertain if Cox was involved in the case or if he is seeking attention by issuing false statements. Cox has never been charged in connection with the women's disappearances.

A witness reported observing a woman matching Suzanne's description driving an older model moss green Dodge van later during the day on June 7. The witness claimed that the woman appeared terrified as an unseen male voice told her "Don't do anything stupid." The witness did not contact investigators with her account until several days had passed. Additional witnesses reported seeing the Dodge van in different areas of Springfield after the women's disappearances. A man told authorities that he saw the blonde female sitting in the driver's seat of a similar vehicle in the parking lot of a local grocery store. The individual said that he wrote the van's license plate number on a newspaper, as the vehicle seemed suspicious. The man threw the paper away before contacting investigators. Law enforcement officials agreed to hypnotize the man, but he was only able to provide the plate's first three digits. Authorities have been unable to determine if a van was involved in the women's cases. A photo of a similar vehicle is posted below this case summary.

A server at George's Steakhouse, one of Sherrill's favorite Springfield restaurants, reported seeing the women in the establishment between 1:00 and 3:00 a.m. on June 7. The employee claimed that Sherrill, Suzanne and McCall arrived and departed together. She said that Suzanne appeared to be intoxicated as the group left the restaurant and Sherrill was attempting to calm her down. Investigators have never confirmed the possible sighting and it is not clear if the women visited the eatery before their disappearances.

Other witnesses reported hearing a woman's screams and the squeal of tires in eastern Greene County, Missouri during the early hours of June 7. Officials searched the area, but no evidence related to the case was located. A composite sketch of an unidentified transient man was released in the days proceeding the disappearances. The individual was allegedly spotted near Sherrill and Suzanne's residence in early June 1992. Authorities do not know if the man was involved in the case. Sherrill's son and Suzanne's older brother, Bartt Streeter, and one of Suzanne's former boyfriends were ruled out as suspects in the case early in the investigation.

An anonymous caller phoned America's Most Wanted's hotline after the program profiled the women's case in late December 1992. The caller was disconnected before he could speak to Springfield investigators. Authorities believe that the person held vital information connected to the disappearances. Despite public pleas for assistance, the individual never contacted authorities again.

Investigators searched an area of land in Webster County, Missouri in August 1993. Authorities refused to announce what was located at the site and if anything pertained to the disappearances. Investigators received a tip from two women in 2002 that led officials back to the same county for an additional search. The women said that two men were employed at the local concrete company that once owned the site near Marshfield, Missouri. The tipsters said that the individuals drove a van similar to the vehicle that may have been used in the missing women's cases. The informants claimed that the men departed Springfield shortly after Sherrill, Suzanne and McCall vanished. Investigators determined that two men did work at the company in 1992, but they were unable to identify the individuals or confirm that they drove a van. Cadaver dogs located two possible areas of interest at the site in late July 2002. Authorities cautioned that the dogs' indications did not prove human remains were buried in the area. Investigators also stated that it was unlikely the sites were related to the women's disappearances.

Several officials charged the former chief of police of impeding their investigation into the case in the late 1990s. Others dispute that contention and said that little evidence was available in the case from its onset. One of the original investigators theorized that the women's assailant(s) took Cinnamon out of Sherrill's yard during the overnight hours of June 7 in an effort to gain access to the residence. The officer speculated that the attacker(s) knocked on the door, pretending to have rescued the dog after he wandered away from the home. The investigator theorized that one of the women may have opened the door to retrieve Cinnamon and was overpowered by the assailant(s).

Sherrill's background was investigated as other leads proved futile. She and Suzanne moved to the Springfield area in 1980 from Seattle, Washington. Sherrill divorced her first husband, Brentt Streeter, shortly after Suzanne's birth. She told friends that Brentt believed they should divorce and continue living together. His plan would allow Sherrill to qualify for welfare assistance. Sherrill decided to end the relationship instead. She moved into an apartment complex in Seattle and stayed home with Suzanne and Bartt for six months after Suzanne's birth. Sherrill received free rent while performing repair work around the complex.

Sherrill and Suzanne moved into their home on East Delmar Street in April 1992, two months before their disappearances. Sherrill's 1989 divorce from her second husband, Don Levitt, impacted her finances and she elected to relocate to the smaller residence with her daughter. Don's creditors began asking Sherrill to pay his debts after their divorce. She hired an attorney to locate him without success.

Sherrill was employed at New Attitudes Hair Salon on West Sunshine Street in Springfield in 1992. She had 250 clients at the time of her disappearance and was considered a model employee. Her family members describe her as a private person who had a close relationship with Streeter in 1992. Their relatives had them both declared legally deceased in 1997, five years after their disappearances. A bench was dedicated to the women in Victims Memorial Garden in Springfield's Phelps Grove Park the same year. Their cases remain unsolved.


Above: Van similar to the vehicle possibly involved in the case

Investigating Agency
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:
Springfield Police Department
417-864-1810
OR
Springfield CrimeStoppers
417-869-TIPS
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
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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.

Linda

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #7 on: June 07, 2008, 04:20:52 AM »
http://www.news-leader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080607/OPINIONS02/806070309

Cox South site should be dug up in search of missing women

June 7, 2008

With today's advances in both technology and the art of detection, it is somewhat mind boggling to see a crime go unsolved for so many years. Yet, it happens time and time again. Tammy Lynn Smith... Jackie Johns... at least these cases finally came to justice and a semblance of closure, even if it took 20 years or so. For Sherrill Levitt, Suzi Streeter and Stacy McCall, justice and closure have yet to be found. The renowned "Three Missing Women" case is still open and seemingly ice cold.

Or is it?

There is a large group of people, myself included, who are passionate about this case. We are adamant about seeing it solved and finding the answers and justice these women deserve. At the very least, if they are in fact deceased (which is probably fair to say at this point), it would be nice to see them brought home and properly laid to rest.

Kathee Baird, the hero of this revolution, has been instrumental in keeping this case alive in the hearts and minds of many people. Her perseverance has led to the discovery of what is believed a burial site containing three bodies located in a parking garage at Cox South. This is a good lead. Yet it is being met with resistance by the police, county officials and others. For nearly two years, no one has bothered to follow up on this lead. Why? Why not dig up this site and see where this lead goes?

Excuses being given range from budget to fear of public scrutiny (the police and officials looking foolish) to inconvenience and embarrassment for the hospital to a select few viewing this as another frivolous lead. I'm not buying any of it.

I was an 11-year-old child when Sherrill, Suzi and Stacy vanished. Even then, I knew enough that three beautiful, vibrant women could not have fallen off the face of the Earth with nary a clue as to what occurred. This case has haunted me for years. I am of the opinion that there is no such thing as a "perfect crime" and people do not just disappear "without a trace." Rather, I believe the answer is there; clues are simply missed.

I also do not believe the investigators in this case to be incompetent. Truth be told, I believe they have been vigilant and have made a painstaking effort on a very difficult case. Nevertheless, human beings are not infallible and mistakes are often made. It also isn't difficult to see how even the most seasoned investigators might become disillusioned at this point. Disillusionment, negativity and countless excuses will not solve this case. The only way anyone involved will end up looking foolish is by ignoring any leads by passing it off as frivolous. Crimes are not solved by worrying over petty things like budgets or being made to look a fool. Rather, the outrage over the crime itself should fuel a "no stone unturned" mentality, which is what is needed to solve this case.

There's absolutely no harm in following up to see if there is indeed a burial site at Cox South. Either it is Sherrill, Suzi and Stacy and we're brought one step closer to a resolution, or it's possibly the answer to another crime. The point is, nothing's being done. I'm sure I'm not alone in saying that it is extremely weird to think there might be three bodies buried out there and it seems the people who should do something about it could care less.

There is a vital need for a public voice in this matter. Put yourself in Sherrill, Suzi and Stacy's shoes. ...Should you ever go missing "without a trace," wouldn't you hope the police would follow every lead, no matter how big, small, or fruitless, whatever the cost?

I urge everyone who cares about this case to contact Sgt. Mike Owen at the Springfield Police Department and Greene County Prosecutor Darrell Moore and encourage them to do the right thing.

And, on a final note, if anyone out there has information to solve this case, you should do the right thing, too. Commit a selfless act and speak up, no matter what the cost to yourself or others involved. It's been long enough. It's time for closure.

Linda

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #8 on: September 16, 2008, 10:28:21 AM »
http://ozarksfirst.com/content/fulltext/?cid=60081

Horse Lovers Take to the Trail for One Missing Link

Sep 16, 2008

(Springfield, MO) --Ozarks horse lovers will be heading toward Hulston Mill in Dade County this weekend to help out with a good cause: raising money to find missing children.

The 14th One Missing Link trail ride takes place this weekend near the town of Greenfield, about fifty minutes north of Springfield.

But dozens of riders can't just show up -- some planning has to be done first.

We met up on horseback with some of the organizers as they prepare for the event.

Kathy Wade and Sandy Goss are saddling up to hit the trails at Hulston Mill.

 "To make sure that they're clear so we don't have any hazardous riding for anybody," Wade says.

Their horses J.R. and Traveler are here to make sure the severe weather we've been having won't spoil the fun for people or for horses.

 "To make sure that we don't go into the bottom where there's rushing water," Wade says. "We're not going to be able to go through all the ways."

This hoof-work comes a week ahead of the One Missing Link trail ride, the annual fundraiser for the organization that helps authorities and families search for missing people.

 "We've even gone out on horseback to help search for people," Goss says.

And Goss knows what it's like to search wooded areas. This former officer worked missing persons cases for Springfield police.

Some of the kids One Missing Link has helped find will be at the trail ride this weekend. The organization says this helps with the rehabilitation process.

 "Children love horses and it is therapeutic and we do let them ride," Goss says.

Safety comes first though, especially when kids who may not have grown up around horses are involved.

"We'll saddle our horses and we will let the kids ride the horses," Wade says. "We will walk them around so that they can have some time to get on the horses because they just love the horses."

But there's more work to do before that horseplay.

 "We put signs, our One Missing Link signs, for the trail ride with arrows to let the riders and the people know how to get here once they get off the main road," Wade says.

And it's work that relates to an important lesson when it comes to finding someone who has disappeared.

 "If you know the timeframe of when children or adults go missing, there's that little timeframe so the quicker that you can get posters out and distributed," Goss says. "That is just one little thing."



One Missing Link was founded after the disappearance of Springfield's three missing women, Sherill Levitt, Suzie Streeter and Stacy McCall.

The mission of the group is to make sure seconds count when someone disappears, and word gets out.

The trail rides take place Saturday, September 20 and Sunday, September 21 at Hulston Mill located near the intersection of Highway 160 and EE.

Adult riders will pay a donation of $20, and children riders will donate $10. You must bring your own horse as well as a Coggins Paper for each horse.

Non-riders can participate by donating $5 each.

There will be a lot for kids and adults to take in this weekend. Kids will be fingerprinted so in case the worst should happen, there is a record of their identifying marks.

But there will also be a band and food so even non-riders can join in the fun and learn something while they're at it.

One little thing to make it possible for a loved one to ride another day.


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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #9 on: March 23, 2009, 08:58:03 AM »
http://www.kspr.com/news/local/41661252.html

Missing In The Ozarks: Part 1

 Mar 22, 2009

"I thought, just because she graduated from high school, doesn't give her the right to just take off and disappear if she wants," said Janis McCall.

Nearly 17 years ago anger turned to fear for McCall when she realized her 18 year old daughter Stacy, her daughter's friend Suzy Streeter, and Streeter's mother Sherrill Levitt were missing without a trace.

"To have three individuals all come up missing during the same night is significant to say the least," said Major Kevin Routh with the Springfield Police Department.

Even Springfield Police were baffled by the disappearance. Inside the Levitt home the three women's belonging were left untouched.

In video from 1992 you can see detectives taking inventory of the house at 1717 East Delmar. Evidence bags held purses and other personal belongings of the three.

"I thought, she couldn't do this.  She needs this.  She needs her medicine.  She doesn't have a toothbrush.  It's raining outside.  She's going to get cold and wet.  Your mind just thinks of everything, and you just completely go nuts," said McCall.

McCall's feelings are echoed by thousands of other parents across the country in similar situations.

Just up the road in Holts Summit, Marianne Chapman, the mother of Angie Yarnell who was missing for five years talks of the pain of losing a loved one to the unknown.

"We families, we just live a lifetime of agony.  We're frantic.  We would do anything...anything to find our child," said Chapman.

In December of 2008, police say Angie Yarnell's husband told them he killed her by accident, and then dumped her body in nearby Lake of the Ozarks. After several extensive searches, there's still no closure for Chapman.

"I want to bury my daughter.  I just want to bury my daughter," said Chapman.

Even that is an option that some parents do not have. In the case of the Springfield three missing women, whether they are alive or not is still a complete mystery.

"There's nothing that really tells us where they were.  Nothing.  No signs.  No calls.  Nothing," said McCall.

As with any missing persons case, often time can change a lot.  In fact, if you walk along Delmar Street today without seeing crime tape or police cars, it's hard to imagine that nearly 17 years ago three women went missing from the area.

"We expected Stacy to be home that day.  Then that week.  You go on, and then it turned out to be, we want her home this year.  Then it was, we want her home in five years," said McCall.

And when minutes turn to days, months, and years, the parents of missing people often wonder if enough was ever done in the first place.

"Missing persons cases get the least amount of attention of anything in the police department," said McCall.

"We need legislation.  We need to change this, that when an adult goes missing, automatically it's handled as a crime," said Chapman.

But until then these families will continue to live one day at a time, hoping for the best, but knowing the worst could be just around the corner.

"I will continue looking for her, and continue hoping that we have some sign.  Until her remains are found, or until she is found, one way or the other, I'm going to assume she's still alive," said McCall.

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #10 on: August 21, 2009, 02:13:20 AM »
https://www.findthemissing.org/cases/345

NamUs - National Missing Persons Data System-Sherrill Levitt # 345


http://www.doenetwork.org/

The Doe Network: Case File 618DFMO-Sherrill Elizabeth Levitt

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #11 on: April 27, 2010, 11:45:11 PM »
http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/sleuth-wont-give-up-on-missouri-mom-teens-missing-for-17-years/19432471


Sleuth Won't Give Up on Women Missing for 17 Years


David Lohr Contributor
AOL News

(April 10) -- Two teens and a mother disappeared in Springfield, Mo., almost 18 years ago. Their bodies have not been found, the case has not been solved. Police say there is no evidence to determine what happened to Sherrill Levitt, Suzie Streeter and Stacy McCall, the "Springfield Three," as the case has been called.

But the former lead investigator and a local journalist refuse to let it go. They believe that finding the answers has been hindered by a mismanaged investigation and the refusal to follow leads provided by new technologies that indicate where the remains of the women might be buried.

"I had never worked a case like it before then and have not worked one like it since," former Springfield police Sgt. Mark Webb told AOL News. At the time of the women's disappearance, Webb worked as the lead investigator in the case. He is no longer with the Springfield Police Department but remains in law enforcement as the chief of police in nearby Marionville.

Local reporter and independent investigator Kathee Baird, who has been following the case since 2005, is also critical of the investigation.

"We have evidence suggesting where these women could be, and they are ignoring it," Baird told AOL News. "It makes no sense. I don't know what's wrong with this department."


Disappearance of the 'Springfield Three'


On June 6, 1992, McCall, 18, and Streeter, 19, attended a party after their graduation from Kickapoo High School, according to Webb. The women originally intended to stay at a hotel, but throughout the night their plans changed several times. They finally decided to spend the night at Streeter's house with her mother, 47-year-old Levitt. The teens arrived at Levitt's East Delmar Street home at about 2:15 a.m.

McCall and Streeter had planned a trip to an amusement park on the afternoon of June 7, Webb says, but when their friends arrived to meet them at Streeter's house, no one was home.

The women's vehicles were parked in the driveway. The friends also observed a broken porch light. They cleaned up the broken glass and went inside the unlocked house, thinking the women might have gone for a walk. When they still didn't show up, the friends called the police, Webb says.

He got the case the next day.

Webb says all of the women's personal belongings, including their purses and clothing, were discovered inside the house. Levitt's Yorkshire terrier, Cinnamon, was also there. Investigators found no sign of a struggle or evidence of foul play, other than the broken porch light.

One of the few leads investigators had was the sighting of a green Dodge van in the area at the time the women went missing, but they had no way of knowing who owned it.

"We interviewed friends, ex-boyfriends, relatives and people that were at the parties," Webb said.

The police conducted several searches in the area but found nothing of interest.

By September 1992, Fox's "America's Most Wanted," NBC's "Unsolved Mysteries" and CBS's "48 Hours" all had run feature stories on the case.

One of the tips authorities received as a result of the publicity indicated the women's bodies were on a farm in Webster County. A search warrant was obtained, but authorities found no evidence of value.

Leads continued to trickle in, but Webb says there were other things going on that hindered the investigation.


Investigator: Case Was an 'Emotional Ride'


Former Police Chief Terry Knowles micromanaged the case and questioned possible suspects himself. Information obtained was not properly shared among the investigators, Webb says.

"The whole case was so unusual in the way it was conducted," he said. "It became a very politically charged environment, and people started taking sides. [It] was not only an emotional ride for the family but [also] for the investigators. It was also a career-ender for some of the officers, and I was one.

"I didn't quit or get fired, [but] I ended up getting reassigned because of disagreements over the way the case was going."

Webb is not the only person connected to the case who has spoken about problems in the investigation. In 2002, George Larbey, former president of the Springfield Police Officers Association, told the Springfield News-Leader that detectives did not think Knowles had confidence in them.

"If your highest command tells you how it's going to be, simply put, that's how it's going to be," Larbey said. "Detectives felt powerless. ... The newer guys wouldn't have any idea what was going on, that this wasn't normally the way we did business."

Knowles, who is retired, could not be reached for comment. But he gave an interview to the same reporter for a story about the 10th anniversary of the disappearance. He acknowledged being heavily involved in the case.

"I don't recall that being an issue back then," he said then about the criticism. "What anyone wants to say 10 years later -- I can't control that. It's certainly disappointing, and it's frustrating at the time to be doing everything you possibly can.''

Despite all the in-fighting, the case went to a federal grand jury in August 1994. At the time, authorities allegedly had three suspects on their radar. One of them was Robert Craig Cox.

Cox had served time on death row in Florida for the 1978 beating death of 19-year-old Sharon Zellers. That conviction was later thrown out by the Florida Supreme Court, which ruled that there was not enough evidence to tie him to the crime. After his release, he was taken into custody in California in connection with a 1985 kidnapping. He moved back to his hometown, Springfield, after serving that sentence.

"He was working outside Sherrill and Suzie's house at the time, doing underground cable work," Stacy McCall's mother, Janis McCall, told AOL News.

Cox was questioned about the women's disappearance, but police were unable to find enough evidence to link him to the case. In 1995, Texas police questioned Cox about an abduction in Plano. He was later arrested in Decatur for holding a gun on a child during a robbery. He is behind bars and is not eligible for parole until 2025. He has not been contacted.

Springfield police Lt. David Millsap has confirmed that Cox was questioned in regard to the case.

"He was interviewed several years ago," Millsap said, adding, "I would not classify that he has been ruled out. Nobody at this point has been ruled out as a suspect."

Tips Kept Coming In

Not long after the five-year anniversary of the women's disappearance, Streeter's and Levitt's relatives had them officially declared dead. McCall's parents refused to take the same action.

"We chose not to because my feeling is if Stacy ever comes back, she'll say, 'You didn't have any faith that I'd ever be back,'" said Janis McCall. "I want her to know that she's not declared dead."

In the wake of her daughter's disappearance, McCall founded One Missing Link, an organization that helps families of missing people.

"When a person goes missing, we will help them, and if they are in the immediate area, we will go out, at the request of law enforcement, and help them with a search," McCall said.

During the summer of 2002, authorities received another tip. The tipster told police that two men who worked for a local concrete company and drove a green van had placed the women's bodies on land in Webster County. A two-week search of the property again yielded nothing. The following year, a similar search, with the same results, was conducted south of Cassville.

Five years ago, reporter and independent investigator Baird took an interest in the case.

"I was visiting my mother, and my son looked at me and said, 'Mom, you have to help find out what happened to those ladies. You are supposed to be safe in your house.' Out of the mouth of a 10-year-old. That always stuck with me," Baird said.

From that point on, Baird immersed herself in the case, conducting her own investigation. As news of her work spread, she began receiving her own tips, many of which directed her to the same location.

"It kept leading me to a parking garage at Cox South Hospital," Baird said. "Some of the original suspects allegedly had connections to the location, and it was under construction at the time the girls went missing. Several tipsters felt the girls had been buried there prior to the cement being poured."

Parking Garage May Be Burial Site

Authorities were hesitant to look at the parking garage. They did not think that tips pointing to it were credible and told members of the media that they had come from psychics.

Webb says the Springfield Police Department had received several tips pointing to the location when he was the lead investigator on the case, but not all of them were from crackpots or psychics.

"[The parking garage] was under construction in that area at the time," Webb said. "We heard early on that they were buried under concrete in new construction or they were buried under a parking lot."

Baird asked a man who operates a micropower impulse radar system to examine the cement floor in the parking garage. She was hoping that his experimental equipment might be able to detect dental mercury or precious metals or stones, suggesting the presence of jewelry.

The results of the scan proved to be interesting; however, Baird realized she would need a more reliable way to examine the area. In June 2006, she asked Rick Norland, a ground-penetrating radar specialist, to conduct a scan of the area.

Norland has experience in locating bodies beneath the earth and has successfully found graves in the past. He was also one of the experts selected to help at ground zero in New York City following the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

"[Baird] did not give me any details or indication of how many bodies might be there," Norland told AOL news.

Soon after beginning the scan, Norland says he discovered three anomalies roughly 3 feet below the surface of the cement. Two were side by side; the third was by itself. The anomalies were about 2 feet wide, and the soil changes were between 5 and 7 feet long. The equipment cannot show bones but is capable of showing voids one would expect to see if something is buried underground.

"These anomalies are very consistent with what a gravesite would look like," Norland said. "The next thing would be to come back in and do positive identification by a core sample -- drill down through there and poke a camera or some sort of device in there and examine what is there. That way you can determine what that anomaly is."

Both Baird and Norland took their findings to police.

"We talked to the police a couple times, and they are very skeptical of the equipment and what I did," Norland said. "The detectives said, 'I don't know what it is.' They were very adamant about not proceeding forward."

Questionable Findings

Baird took her findings to the media but Sgt. Mike Owen initially responded that the information was not worth spending "the thousands of dollars" it would take to verify it. After Baird agreed to cover the cost of a core, which was quoted at between $200 and $400, Owen said his department had spoken with its own expert, who discounted Norland's findings.

"It would be impossible to see what this man [Norland] claims he has seen," Owen said in an October 2007 interview with KY3.com.

AOL News provided copies of images that were taken of Norland's scan to two independent experts.

"Even had I not known what the story was about, there is definitely a break in the normal soil layers. This does not mean that there are buried bodies there, but there seem to be anomalies in this screen shot," Bryan Bacheller, manager of Digital Concrete Imaging Inc. in Florida, said in an e-mail.

Sean Henady, founder of the missing-person search and recovery group 3View Search Services, agrees.

"Myself and some experts I work with looked at the images, and we feel the location should be looked at closer and possibly cored," Henady said. "We would only need to do a 2-inch core to qualify the location."

Lt. Millsap said he could not comment on any of the details of the ground-penetrating radar search without reviewing the entire case file.

"That was discussed, but I don't have any knowledge about anything," he said. "I would tell you that all credible leads have been followed up on. I know the incident you're talking about, and I don't know how much involvement the department had."

On Tuesday, Stacy Fender, media relations coordinator at CoxHealth, told AOL News she would check to see if officials at the hospital would allow an independent team, such as 3View Search Services, to re-examine the spot and possibly take a core sample. Fender responded via e-mail Wednesday.

"We consider this to be a matter for the Springfield Police Department and the Greene County Prosecutor's Office and remain willing to cooperate with any investigation they would like to pursue," she wrote.

Questions Remain

It's still unclear why the Springfield Police Department won't take the time to examine the parking garage. Even students at Missouri Southern State University are baffled.

"I don't understand why they won't dig," said Nikki Rush, whose criminal justice group examined the case as part of a class project. "They went to several places on hunches and dug, so what would be wrong with checking this one? That's the big question for everybody right now. Prove them wrong that there are no bodies there or prove there are."

Janis McCall does not believe her daughter is buried beneath the parking garage and says she is not even convinced her daughter is dead.

"I have no reason not to believe she is alive because they have found no sign that she is dead," McCall said. "Realistically, I have to admit there is a good possibility, probably 99 percent, that she is dead, but if there is a possibility, even 1 percent or a half a percent, as her mother, I am going to keep it at the forefront and say she's still alive."

Meanwhile, Baird says she is willing to be proved wrong.

"If I am wrong, they are more than welcome to go on any TV show and say, 'See, we told you so,' " she said.
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 WJHarrison

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #12 on: June 08, 2010, 04:14:19 AM »
http://www.ky3.com/news/local/95814919.html

Case of 3 missing women from 1992 still haunts Springfield MO

Published: Jun 7, 2010 at 6:13 PM CDT
Updated: Jun 7, 2010 at 6:49 PM CDT
by Sara Forhetz, KY3 News

SPRINGFIELD, Mo.-- If you've been in this community for long, you've likely heard of the case of the three missing women. The search has been unending since June 7, 1992.

Stacy McCall was 18 years old; her friend Suzie Streeter was 19; and Suzie's mom, Sherill Levitt, was 47. All three disappeared after Stacy and Suzie graduated from Kickapoo High School, attended a party, and then went back to the home of Suzie and Sherill. No one has reported seeing them since.

"She'd be 36. She's doubled her age since she disappeared," Janis McCall said of her daughter, Stacy.

After 18 years, you might think Janis McCall has given up. However, after a chat with her in the Victim's Garden at Phelps Grove Park, where her daughter is now memorialized, you'd realize quickly that hope is still alive.

"She may be dead but what if there's that one-tenth of 1 percent and that comes true and she comes home and finds out that we gave up on her? Wouldn't that be worse?"

The one constant face in this case has been McCall's. She sprang into action, tirelessly passing out posters at businesses in the days following her daughter's disappearance from the house on East Delmar Street, not far from Phelps Grove Park. Stacy was staying the night with her friend because the teens planned to go to White Water in Branson the day after graduation.

"The cars were there, their purses were there, clothes were there, but Stacy, Suzie and Sherill were all gone."

Law enforcement officers and volunteers searched high and low, and hundreds of miles were covered and uncovered all over the Ozarks. No signs of the women surfaced. Hours turned to days, days turned to weeks, weeks turned to months, and months turned to years.

McCall has that same passion today as she did back then. She hopes everyone else can get on board again, too.

"I do want answers, and I do want to know something."

Her family started a nonprofit organization, One Missing Link, two years after the disappearance, trying to bring awareness to their case, and every case like it since. They also try to help others going through the same experience they had.

"We want to help others. That's why we've done what we've done. That's why we have One Missing Link. Stacy is our link."

Now, the organization is running dry.

"We are down to the bare minimum," said McCall.

She pleads for people to keep on keeping on.

"If she has been killed and if she is buried somewhere, then somehow get us a note or a letter -- anything, but let us know where she is," she said.

One Missing Link is hosting a motorcycle fundraising event this coming Saturday. Registration starts at 8:30 at the Yamaha business on the northeast edge of Springfield at the 84 Mile Marker of Interstate 44. The group will ride to Branson's Alexander Park.

All the money raised will go to the efforts of One Missing Link to help find missing people and comfort their loved ones.

Springfield police say the case is still an open and active case.

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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #13 on: December 02, 2010, 08:02:28 AM »
http://www.ktts.com/news/111164929.html

Authorities Taking New Look At Missing Persons Case


Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Springfield Police Chief Paul Williams says he will take a fresh look at the disappearance of Sheryl Levitt, Suzie Streeter, and Stacy McCall first reported eighteen years ago. He has been talking with Janice McCall ,the mother of Stacy about the case.

Williams says he will bring together investigators and the prosecutor  for a review of the evidence and decide what direction to take in the investigation.

He is not ruling out a look under the parking garage floor at Cox Hospital South but adds the current evidence lacks some credibility.
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Re: Missing Woman: Sherrill Levitt - MO - 06/07/92
« Reply #14 on: December 02, 2010, 08:13:47 AM »
http://articles.ky3.com/2010-12-01/parking-garage_25002820

Springfield police chief mulls search for 3 missing women under hospital garage

December 01, 2010|by Sara Forhetz, KY3 News

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. -- Stacy McCall, Suzie Streeter, and Streeters mother, Sherill Levitt, vanished without a trace after a high school graduation party sometime in the early hours of June 7, 1992.  Now theres some movement on the case from Springfield's new police chief.  He's considering digging at a location where some think those three missing womens bodies might be.

In the days and weeks following their disappearance, investigators looked high and low, poring over miles and miles of land looking for the women.

"I've got a couple different phone calls at the office about it and I know it is at the forefront of people's minds, Williams said in an interview on Wednesday morning.
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Williams, who moved here from Tulsa last summer, is one of countless people who want answers.  He's willing to go to great depths to look for those answers.

"Technology advanced and, if there is a way to basically put those rumors to rest, then we would look at that in a very inexpensive way, said Williams.

Williams is considering a dig under the Cox South Hospital parking garage.  Law enforcement officers have never had any solid ground to believe any clues or bodies would turn up under the garage but it's long been rumored that perhaps under that garage is where the bodies are.

The whole Cox Hospital theory came about in 2007.  An independent investigator in the city, Kathee Baird, says she found evidence that McCall, Streeter and Levitt are buried there.  Her suspicions, she says, came from psychics and tipsters.

"I went back and researched projects that were going on, in and around that time, and kept coming back to the parking garage on Bradford Parkway, Baird said in 2007.

Baird provided reporters with a video of a ground-penetrating radar scan at the parking garage.  The man running the radar, Rick Norland, who is a consulting engineer who worked at Ground Zero and on the Panama Canal, says his machine picked up three distinct objects below the concrete.

"I read through some files and there was a meeting held years ago about that and the decision for all parties involved is it wasn't something worth pursuing at that point, said Williams.

Still, the chief says, there is an element of putting that rumor to rest, especially for family members like McCalls mother, Janis McCall, and other loved ones who still have no closure.

"For Janis, there are some things she'd like for us to resolve for peace-of-mind sake, said Williams.

"That last tip, that last lead, that one missing piece that finally breaks the case -- and that's what we're going to look at in this case: make sure there's not something out there that we've missed and, if something is new, look at that and see if we can't solve it, the chief said.

Williams says he will get all parties -- former and current officers who worked on the case, the prosecuting attorneys office, anyone and everyone involved -- together in the next two weeks to move forward.  He hopes to make some quick progress.

Investigators have followed or considered more than 5,000 leads since 1992.  Some led to property digs.  Investigators say reporters didnt find out about most of them.  In 1993, there was one in Webster County. Another one was in Webster County in 2002.  One was in 2004 in Cassville.  Each turned up nothing.


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