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Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
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Posted 07 April 2009 - 02:44 AM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
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Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
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.
Posted 04 September 2011 - 05:23 PM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
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.
Posted 28 November 2014 - 11:54 AM
http://www.sj-r.com/.../News/307079939
Cleveland case gives police, families of missing persons hope
The disappearance of Michelle Bianco five years ago is one of a number of cases in Sangamon County that have puzzled investigators. But in the wake of what happened in Cleveland — where three women allegedly abducted 10 years ago were found alive — advocates say there is a renewed sense of optimism that missing people, like Bianco, eventually will turn up.
By Jason Nevel
Posted Jul. 7, 2013 @ 12:01 am
Updated Jul 7, 2013 at 6:03 AM
Not a week has gone by in the past five years that Butch Miles hasn’t thought about his missing sister, Michelle Bianco.
The last time anybody heard from the Springfield woman was about 7:30 p.m. on April 5, 2008. Bianco called her boyfriend and told him she was going to call her son for a ride home from her cousin’s house near Wheeler and South Grand avenues.
More than five years later, nobody has heard from Bianco, who was 43 years old when she went missing.
“It gets harder as each year goes by, but I still have hope,” Miles, 64, says. “You just keep wondering what could have happened.”
Bianco’s disappearance is one of a number of cases in Sangamon County that have puzzled investigators for years.
Officials with both the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office and Springfield Police Department say leads on all their old, adult missing-person cases have gone cold.
But in the wake of what happened recently in Cleveland — where three women allegedly abducted 10 years ago were found alive — advocates say there is a renewed sense of optimism that missing people, like Bianco, eventually will turn up.
“After Cleveland, people started to think, just because they went missing, they’re not automatically dead,” said Jerrie Dean, founder of the website www.missingpersonsofamerica.com.
‘Worked the leads’
Bianco is one of seven missing-adult cases the sheriff’s office has dating back to 1981, records show.
The others are:
* Harold Buecker, 1981;
* Cynthia Atterberry, 1981;
* Brenda Bottoms, 1987;
* Patricia Abu-Tayeh, 1989;
* William Chastain, 1999; and
* Duane Grant, 2002.
Undersheriff Jack Campbell said all seven cases remain open, but detectives have stopped working them because there haven’t been any new leads.
“They worked the leads until there was nothing left to work,” Campbell said. “But we’re always looking for more leads if anyone has any new information.”
The same goes for the Springfield Police Department. Deputy Chief Cliff Buscher said the number of missing-person cases varies, but city officers mostly deal with juvenile runaways.
Each agency doesn’t have anyone dedicated full time to missing persons, with investigations handled through the detective division.
In Springfield, an overall number of disappearances wasn’t available, but the National Missing and Unidentified Persons database lists three people with Springfield ties who are missing, including Bianco.
Jeffrey Clinton, 61, vanished in February 2012. The website says his family lost contact with him, but he may have moved to Kansas City, Mo.
The disappearance of Keith W. Ryan, who would be 30 Sunday, is more baffling.
Ryan, a former bartender in Springfield, went missing in Peoria in April 2005 while having a night out on the town. Ryan told his friends he was going outside for some fresh air and was never seen again.
Ryan’s dad, a retired Decatur police detective, told the Peoria Journal Star in July 2008 he suspected his son was dead, possibly at the hand of a serial killer or an organized group of killers. There also were concerns he drowned in the Illinois River.
Who is missing?
Authorities say there isn’t a strict set of rules for how a person can be declared missing.
Campbell said police take into account a number of factors before ever going public with the information.
For example, if a husband got into a fight with his wife the night before and walked out, the sheriff’s office probably wouldn’t issue any alerts. However, if the husband is a suicide threat, authorities may be more inclined to do so, he said.
Earlier this month, the sheriff’s office opted to notify the media when Timothy Ryan, 57, suddenly disappeared. Ryan’s body was found two weeks later in a wooded area on Springfield’s south side. He died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot.
When a person is declared missing, Campbell said, his or her information is put into a state and national database.
Buscher said age is a huge factor in determining how authorities react. If a child under the age of 12 is reported missing, it’s considered critical, meaning officers will converge on an area and begin a search. If that’s unsuccessful, he said, the department may alert the media or issue an Amber Alert. Illinois State Police also can become involved.
However, a report of a missing teenager may be taken over the phone and include issuance of an “attempt to locate” over police radios, which isn’t as intense a search, Buscher said.
If the teen is still missing after 30 days, which is rare, the case is forwarded to a detective, he said.
“It all depends on the circumstances,” Buscher said.
Searching for answers
Dean, a San Diego-based author and advocate for the missing, said the majority of people who disappear never intended to do so.
On her website, she tracks missing-person cases across the country. Often, she said, she’s noticed many cases turn out to be accidental deaths.
The person may have gone hiking, ice fishing, swimming or rafting and never returned. She’s also seen cases where the person’s vehicle went off the side of a cliff.
Generally, she said, 75 percent of the people who go missing show up in a couple of days, and 90 percent within a week. It’s that remaining 10 percent who leave her scratching her head. They’re why she became interested in missing-person cases.
“I needed answers because I just couldn’t understand where these people were going,” Dean said.
In Sangamon County, Campbell said the sheriff’s office’s cases vary, but authorities suspect some could be homicides, possibly with roots in prostitution, domestic violence or illegal drug activity.
In the case of Bianco, Miles said, each family member has his or her own suspicions about what happened, but most believe foul play was involved.
Over the years, he said, there have been numerous searches, and the family even hired a private investigator. Nothing came of that.
The Cleveland case didn’t move the dial for him, but Miles said the family takes note any time a body is discovered, just in case.
“We’re going to keep trying to find her,” he said.
More awareness
The Cleveland case could force authorities nationwide to be more receptive to potential clues, according to Dean.
Cleveland police were criticized after neighbors claimed they reported seeing disturbing things coming from alleged kidnapper Ariel Castro’s home over the past decade, but nothing was done.
Dean said Cleveland police simply checked the ramshackle property, but never tried to go inside the home or became suspicious of boarded-up windows in the garage.
“I think now police may decide to look at things a little more closely,” she said.
There also have been encouraging signs recently that the number of missing-person cases nationwide could dwindle, Dean said.
She said DNA testing is helping solve cold cases, but more people need to submit samples. Family members of missing persons also should consider hiring a private investigator and need to take advantage of different websites dedicated to helping find missing people, she noted.
“These families are just going to keep holding on to that little bit of hope that their child someday is going to come through that door,” Dean said. “They’ll never be able to have that closure until they know for sure.”
***
Missing persons on file locally
Dennis Reynolds, 1978
Reynolds, 24, left his mother and stepfather’s home in Litchfield on Feb. 10, 1978, without saying where he was going. Two days later, his car was found abandoned with his jacket inside.
Harold Buecker, 1981
Buecker, 63, was to attend a meeting to discuss a business deal Nov. 18, 1981, but never got there. His unlocked truck was found empty, parked in front of his office at Loami Lake Estates mobile home park.
Cynthia Atterberry, 1981
Atterberry’s family last heard from her when she and her boyfriend moved from Springfield to Colorado in May 1981. Four years later, investigators got a tip from a prison inmate, saying he helped bury the couple’s bodies in encased steel drums near the Pike National Forest in Colorado. A search was conducted. No bodies were found. Atterbery was 25.
Brenda Bottoms, 1987
Bottoms, 23, left her Auburn home for a nearby tavern and never came back June 29, 1987. One of the best leads the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office had was from a witness who said he saw her get into a brown car with two men that night.
Patricia Danner Abu-Tayeh, 1989
The last time anyone saw her alive was Jan. 7, 1989. Patricia, 34, took her husband, Abed, to his parents’ house in Springfield and left to run some errands. She stopped back by his parents’ house and returned home to Glenarm. Abed got a ride home later from a friend. He said she was gone when he arrived. Authorities said at the time Abed did not “fully cooperate” in the attempts to locate his wife.
William Chastain, 1999
Chastain, 62, was reported missing to Rochester police on June 11, 1999. Three days later, a resident called authorities to report a Ford pickup had been parked in the Buckhart river bottoms. Rescue crews searched the Sangamon River but never found a body. Police think he may have drowned.
Duane Grant, 2002
Grant’s family said they last saw him Nov. 30, 2002, at Big R, 2804 N. Dirksen Parkway. His sister gave him a ride to a cafe on North Grand Avenue, where he was supposed to have a job interview that day. He was 28.
Keith Ryan, 2005
Ryan, a 22-year-old former Springfield bartender, went missing in Peoria in April 13, 2005, while having a night out on the town. He told his friends he was going outside for some fresh air and was never seen again.
Michelle Bianco, 2008
Bianco, 43, lived in the Lincoln Place Mobile Home Park off Old Route 36 and last was heard from April 5, 2008, while she was at her cousin’s home on South Grand Avenue East.
Jeffrey Clinton, 2012
Clinton, 60, vanished in February 2012. The National Missing and Unidentified Persons database said the family lost contact with him, but he may have moved to Kansas City, Mo.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
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.
Posted 16 December 2015 - 10:23 PM
Posted 16 July 2016 - 06:56 PM
http://foxillinois.c...ing-person-case
Crimestoppers Offers $5,000 in Missing Person Case
BY BRENDAN CULLERTON THURSDAY, JULY 14TH 2016
Sangamon - Menard County Crime stoppers is now offering $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest in the disappearance of a woman who went missing years ago.
43-year-old Michelle Bianco was last seen near her cousins house on the corner of Wheeler Avenue and South Grand in 2008.
She willingly accepted a ride home from a white male in a black Pontiac with faded paint and was never seen again. She had blonde hair and blue eyes. She was 5'7'' and 112 lbs. The sheriff's office says it will be a tough case to solve with so little information.
"It's hard to build anything until you know if she is deceased, or where she is," Capt. Gerry Felts said. "What's the cause. Because obviously we cant, we don't know those things."
Law enforcement believes Bianco is deceased because there has been no financial activity on her accounts or communication since that night, but Officer Mike Badger says there is still hope.
"There's always a possibility and a hope that we could find somebody that's missing and they could still be alive. Around the country they've found some people that have been missing for years and years being held in homes and so forth."
The increased $5,000 reward counts for any tips leading to finding Bianco's potential killer.
Any tips leading to local homicide arrests will be worth the extra reward money through September.
Anyone with information can call investigators at the sheriff's office at 217-753-6840 or can anonymously call Crime Stoppers at 217-788-8427.
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
Help us for free when you shop online or do a websearch:
http://www.goodsearc...harityid=857029
Please help us in our mission as a 501 c 3 nonprofit: http://projectjason....y-campaign.html
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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