



Posted 30 November 2008 - 03:47 PM
Pamela Kay Golden
Classification: Endangered Missing Adult
Alias / Nickname: Pam
Date of Birth: 1949-09-22
Date Missing: 1993-07-22
From City/State: Little Rock, AR
Age at Time of Disappearance: 43
Gender: Female
Race: White
Height: 62 inches
Weight: 120 pounds
Hair Color: Blonde
Eye Color: Hazel
Complexion: Medium
Identifying Characteristics: Ears pierced, burn scars on both feet.
Clothing: Shorts set with small light colored flower pattern.
Jewelry: White gold cluster ring, wide gold band with holes in it and diamond missing.
Circumstances of Disappearance: Unknown. Pam left Cloverdale Florist at approximately 4:00pm and turned onto Baseline Rd. Her truck was found a few days later in a parking lot on the next block from florist on Baseline Rd., in Little Rock, AR.
Investigative Agency: Pulaski County Sheriff's Office
Phone: (501) 340-6620
Investigative Case #: 93-16154
NCIC #: M-6618871584
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Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
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Posted 30 November 2008 - 03:50 PM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
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Posted 30 November 2008 - 03:51 PM
Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
www.projectjason.org
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Posted 11 June 2009 - 07:30 PM
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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Posted 07 October 2009 - 06:01 PM
http://www.todaysthv...d=92184&catid=2
Cold Case: Woman Vanishes, No Clues Left Behind
Pamela Kay Golden
October 07th,2009
Ashley Blackstone
Imagine one of your loved ones disappearing. Not for a week, a month or even a year, but well over a decade, 16 years. That's what happened to Pamela Golden, a mother of two. Her family and sheriff's deputies are working with Today's THV to help bring renewed hope to this case.
It's the simplicity of life, an exquisite beauty. It's the sweetness of a rose, felt in everything she touched.
"She could just take anything and make it beautiful," says her sister Rita Hall.
It's heartbreaking though, how a bloom of joy, can change in an instant.
Hall says, "I think she was murdered."
There was something about Pamela Golden. It was a passion that could ignite a room.
"Anything that she was determined to do, she did," explains Hall.
That drive and ambition stretched back to her teen years when she learned to drive a tractor.
Hall laughs, "She was actually my idol. She's 10 years older than me and whatever she did I had to do."
And as an adult, some of her drive was crafting the art of arrangements at Rita's shop, Cloverdale Florist.
Hall says Pam's compassion was likely her best quality. It was felt even in that last day.
She explains, "She was going to help a friend of her's move and she wanted to know where to get boxes."
Hall gave Pam directions to a nearby liquor store.
"But when she pulled out of the parking lot she took a right, and I was thinking to myself that is not the way that I told you to go. That was the last anybody ever saw of her," says Hall.
Hours passed, days. A missing persons report was filed and concern grew darker.
"We spent days on four wheelers going through the woods," tells Hall.
But there was nothing. No trace. Where was Pamela?
"She just wouldn't do it. She would not leave her children. She would not put us through this. She just wouldn't do it," says Hall.
A few days after her disappearance came a possible clue for the family. Her truck was found abandoned at a shopping center less than a quarter of a mile from the florist. But there were no sign of a struggle.
Sgt. Mike Blain explains, "We don't have a body. We don't have a victim."
Blain is in charge of the cold case division at the Pulaski County Sheriff's Office.
He says, "Our worst case scenario with working with these missing person's cases is that they succumb to foul play and that is our fear that that has happened."
Blain says Pam's truck was searched. Hair follicles were recovered. However, the family thinks deputies could have done more at the beginning and now they fears it's too late.
"You know looking back, probably things should have been done, could have done differently, witnesses talked to in a different way. However, they did cover some crucial steps from the get go and did not let things sit stagnant," says Blain.
With the advancements of technology, deputies recently took her family's DNA to see if it matches any unidentified remains found in Arkansas. They're also testing those hair follicles to determine who they belong to. While they wait, Blain says they continue to review the case.
"Some times it takes a program like this to poke someone and say hey you knew Pam. You know a little something, why don't you come tell us," says Blain.
"Not a day goes by that I don't think about her," cries Hall.
Rita Hall's flower shop is a constant reminder of July 22, 1993.
"I know exactly what she had on that day. If I saw it today, I would know,"she explains.
Her art, once Pam's as well, is so beautiful, but filled with such pain.
"We would love closure I guess. It's the not knowing," says Hall.
If you have any information on this case, you're asked to call the Sheriff's Office at (501) 340-6620. Callers can remain anonymous.
Pamela Golden is one of five missing persons in Pulaski County. The sheriff's office currently has 24 unsloved murders.
Posted 15 November 2014 - 12:14 PM
http://www.thv11.com...d-ones/9742265/
Never Forgotten program links families to missing loved ones
Dustin Wilson 7:19 p.m. CDT May 29, 2014
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (KTHV) - Collaboration meets closure. With different agencies working together more than 80 Arkansas families have found resolutions for their missing loved ones. Thursday the Attorney General held an event to continue the effort.
"She just disappeared…I mean we have our theories," said Rita Hall.
Hall continues to search for answers even though two decades have passed since her sister's disappearance.
"I actually believe she was murdered," said Hall.
Pamela Golden was last seen in July of 1993 leaving Cloverdale Florist in Little Rock. Hall and Golden's son Chad came to "Never forgotten – Arkansas Takes Action" to submit their DNA and hopefully speak again with authorities. The event happened at the Clear Channel Metroplex.
"Basically to get somebody to listen. We're going to give DNA in case anything is ever found.>
Attorney General Dustin McDaniel says the office resolved a number of cases since starting a collaboration between law enforcement agencies.
"Since we've been working on trying to draw attention to Arkansas' missing adults we've helped clear more than 80 cases of adults who were lost from, separated from, missing or even deceased and their family had no idea where they were," said McDaniel.
Hall says it's been about five years since she's heard from authorities about the case. She says even though some speculated Golden ran away she's convinced her sister wouldn't leave her family.
"She's got these beautiful grand babies and I just don't think she would run off and leave that," said Hall.
The Attorney General's Office estimates about twenty families took part in the event. If you have any information into the disappearance of Pamela Golden you're urged to contact the Pulaski County Sheriff's Office at (501) 340-6620.
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 22 February 2015 - 11:15 AM
http://www.thv11.com...o-see/23128431/
THV11 Working For You: Only 38 of 450 missing Arkansans listed for public to see
Ashley Blackstone, THV11 9:15 a.m. CST February 10, 2015
(KTHV) -- Over the years, THV11 has received countless calls from viewers wondering where they can find a list of missing people in Arkansas.
For Rita Hall, memories are all she has left of her big sister Pam Golden.
"This is the last picture that was taken of all of us together," explains Hall while looking at the photograph. "I treasure it. I really do…She was really the best sister ever."
Golden disappeared in 1993. She was last seen leaving Cloverdale Florist in Little Rock. She's never been found and detectives have few clues.
"I think she was killed," continued Hall. "I think about her every day. She was my hero."
When you search for Golden on the Arkansas Crime Information Center's missing person web page, she doesn't come up. In fact, only 38 of the 450 people missing in the state are listed for the public to see. That's a mere eight percent.
"These police agencies, what if one of their family members disappeared? What would happen then? Would their name go up?," Hall inquired.
ACIC told THV 11 that while they provide the service, it's up to individual law enforcement agencies to provide them the information so it can be posted online for the public, but it's not required.
THV 11 took what we found to Arkansas' new Attorney General Leslie Rutledge. Her office works to raise awareness of missing persons.
"I will do my part," said Rutledge. "I will certainly be encouraging local law enforcement agencies to submit that information to the crime information center."
Joey Kampbell said he's known about the problem for years.
"Every second is critical and crucial when they go missing," Kampbell emphasized.
He started the 'Missing Persons of Arkansas' Facebook page in 201. It has just over 8,500 followers.
"We receive between 50 to 100 emails per month asking us that question," he said. "Is there a website we can go to, and why isn't there a website we can go to where everyone is listed?"
Anytime Kampbell gets a break from his job as a full time computer repair specialist, he runs the page. Between posting pictures, replying to messages, and monitoring comments, he says he spends about 40 hours a week on it. He believes the state is behind when it comes to keeping up with technology.
"Maybe it is time to step up the game and pass a law saying police agencies need to directly report the police report to ACIC. That way it gets uploaded on to the website."
Back with Hall, she'll keep hoping and praying Pam is found. Her sister today would be 65. She has four grand-children she's never met.
"It hurts right here," says Hall as she clutches her heart. "Like I said, every day. Every day."
Hall explained that having her picture on the state's website would serve as a symbol that Pam Golden is not forgotten.
"We need to put her to rest," concluded Golden.
THV 11 contacted the Pulaski County Sheriff's Department. They're the investigating agency on the Golden case. Deputies said when they submit missing persons cases into ACIC, they believed they were then automatically put into the public database. Since bringing it to their attention, PCSO is now working to get all 12 of their missing person's cases on the public list.
If you have a loved one that's missing and they are not on the ACIC webpage for the public to see, contact the investigating agency and ask they be posted. See the ACIC site here.
Additional Information:
According to statistics maintained by the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC), there are nearly 5,000 reported unidentified persons in the United States. For information on DNA submission, visit the National Unidentified Persons System: https://identifyus.org/en
Arkansas Missing Children Services Program: http://on.kthv.com/1CMgzEV
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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