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Missing Woman: Paige Marie Renkoski - MI - 05/25/1990


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#1 Lori Davis

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Posted 01 November 2011 - 02:41 PM

https://www.findthem...g.org/cases/835

MISSING PERSON
Paige Marie Renkoski


MISSING SINCE: May 24, 1990
LAST SEEN: Fowlerville, Michigan
SEX: Female
HEIGHT: 66.0 in
WEIGHT: 125.0 lbs
EYES: Blue
HAIR: Blond/Strawberry
SCARS/MARKS: Long surgical scar on inside of right arm, surgical scar on right leg from knee replacement.
PROSTHETICS: Right knee replacement, 2 Screws in left knee

Contact Livingston County Sheriff's Office at (517) 546-2440 with information.Case #: 147-4661-90 NamUs MP #: 835


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#2 Lori Davis

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Posted 01 November 2011 - 02:42 PM

http://www.charleypr...oski_paige.html
Charley Project profile for Paige Marie Renkoski

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#3 Lori Davis

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Posted 01 November 2011 - 02:43 PM

New Tip Sparks Search For Missing Okemos Woman

November 1, 2011

11/1/11 - Investigators will continue their search this week for an Okemos woman who disappeared decades ago in Livingston County. Paige Renkoski went missing on May 24th, 1990 and her car was found along westbound I-96 near the Fowlerville exit with its engine still running. Cold Case Team Investigator Bill Lenaghan tells WHMI that they will continue their search for Renkoski Friday and will be aided by cadaver dogs. Investigators will be meeting in Delta Township and plan to search a location near Interstates 496, 96 and 69 in Lansing.

Read more: http://whmi.com/news/article/13339

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#4 Lori Davis

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Posted 04 November 2011 - 03:30 PM

Investigators Conduct Search In 21-Year-Old Cold Case

Posted: Updated: Nov 4, 2011 05:29 PM EDT

The search for a missing mid-Michigan woman is moving to Eaton County. A cold case is heating up.

Paige Renkoski was last seen more than 21 years ago near her car on the side of I-96 near Fowlerville.

Friday, detectives brought cadaver dogs to search an over-grown area, some twenty miles from where she was last seen. It's in Eaton County's Delta Township, where I-496 ends and I-96 and 69 joins it.

Read more: http://www.wlns.com/...r-old-cold-case

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#5 Lori Davis

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Posted 12 November 2011 - 05:40 AM

Dig in search of missing woman's remains is delayed

Nov. 12, 2011 
LIVINGSTON DAILY PRESS & ARGUS

An expected dig in Livingston County's Conway Township was delayed Friday, a day after cadaver dogs indicated the possible presence of human remains.

Sheriff Bob Bezotte said investigators will seek a search warrant for the property and that digging isn't expected to begin until next week.

The Sheriff's Department's cold case team and cadaver dogs were looking for clues Thursday into the 1990 disappearance of Okemos resident Paige Renkoski when the dogs indicated they'd found something.

Investigators said the dogs hit on "four very positive strong" locations on the property.

Read more: http://www.freep.com...remains-delayed

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#6 Lori Davis

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Posted 18 November 2011 - 09:05 AM

Search for Okemos woman missing since 1990 continues

Last Updated: November 18. 2011 10:27AM .
Mike Martindale/ The Detroit News

Conway Township— FBI investigators, along with deputies from the Livingston County Sheriff's Department, have gathered in a frost-covered field Friday morning, hoping to discovered the remains of a woman who has been missing for 21 years.

Earth-moving equipment stands ready to dig in four taped off locations in an effort to find Paige Renkoski, a Lansing-area woman who vanished in 1990 while driving home from Detroit Metropolitan Airport. Her vehicle was found unlocked, with the engine running and headlights on, with her shoes and purse still inside the vehicle.

Renkoski was 30 years old and lived in Okemos.

Read more: http://www.detnews.c...-1990-continues

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#7 Lori Davis

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Posted 18 November 2011 - 12:50 PM

Search for missing woman's remains comes up empty

Last Updated: November 18. 2011 3:37PM
Mike Martindale/ The Detroit News

Conway Township— Authorities called off the dig Friday afternoon at a remote Livingston County site where they had hoped to find the remains of a Lansing-area woman who's been missing for 21 years.

Detective Lt. Scott Domine of the Livingston County Sheriff's Department said shortly after 3 p.m. that the search for Paige Renkoski in the area off Sober Road was being called off.

"We are going to stop excavating," Domine told reporters. "Unfortunately, we have found no sign of Paige."

Read more: http://www.detnews.c...-comes-up-empty

Domine asked anyone with tips to call the sheriff's department at (517) 546-2440.

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#8 Lori Davis

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Posted 19 November 2011 - 06:00 AM

No remains at Renkoski dig site
Investigators still committed to case, they say


12:41 AM, Nov. 19, 2011

Investigators concluded a dig Friday in the investigation of the disappearance of Paige Renkoski 21 years ago, without finding any remains.

The FBI, Michigan State University anthropologists and the Livingston County Sheriff's Department conducted the dig in four spots at a location of Sober Road in Conway Township after cadaver dogs indicated they had found the possible scent of human remains.

The investigative team expressed disappointment, but said they are still dedicated to the case, and will continue to follow up on leads.

For example, detectives received a new tip Saturday which Livingston County Sheriff Bob Bezotte described Friday as "very encouraging."

Read more: http://www.lansingst...|text|FRONTPAGE

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#9 Lori Davis

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Posted 17 November 2012 - 06:45 PM

http://www.detroitne...1#ixzz2CXRTtuwr

Missing woman's mother refuses to give up hope
22 years later, she urges use of national database to solve such cases


November 14, 2012 at 10:15 am
Marney Rich Keenan

Experts at the National Institute of Justice have called it "the nation's silent mass disaster." Ardis Renkoski calls it a national tragedy.

"The fact that there are as many as 100,000 active missing persons cases in our country and another 40,000 human remains that are unidentified is tragic," Renkoski said recently.

Renkoski is the mother of Paige Renkoski, 30, who vanished 22 years ago after dropping her mother off at the airport. Her 1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass was found along westbound I-96 near the Fowlerville exit, the engine left idling, her purse and shoes inside. Police ruled the case a homicide, even though her body has never been found.

A year ago, just before Thanksgiving, Ardis Renkoski had high hopes investigators might finally have located her daughter. Acting on one of the most promising leads in decades, law enforcement searched in a frost-covered field near where she disappeared. But extensive digging turned up nothing. The renewed grief was like losing her daughter all over again.

Still, as sad as that event was, Renkoski has never given up searching for her daughter, and as long as there is the possibility she might find the answer to what happened to Paige, there's no way she won't turn over every rock.

To that end, Renkoski has been working on proposed state legislation that would promote and encourage the use of NamUs, the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, a federal program and database that aims to match missing persons cases with unidentified decedents.

"I'd like it to be called Paige's law," Renkoski said. "But it really doesn't matter what it's called, just so long as the protocol is in place and followed."

The NamUs database provides side-by-side comparisons of missing persons and unidentified remains such as fingerprints, dental records, eye color, height, weight. To be sure, the most expedient matches are those where DNA samples of both the missing person and unidentified remains are on file. But the database is only as good as the information it collects.

While cost is not prohibitive — the NamUs Center for Human Identification in Fort Worth Texas is fully funded to help all states identify their missing and unidentified deceased at no cost — state and local police agencies are not required by law to file missing persons reports with NamUs. Nor do medical examiners or coroners routinely collect DNA samples before disposing of or burying unidentified remains.

So, while the science is there, ready and waiting to solve many of these cases, not enough agencies across the country are putting it to good use.

"The problem is that sharing information and gathering evidence has never been a coordinated effort before," says Renkoski. "So, it's frustrating. You just want to yell: 'Just put it into the system GUYS!!' But, of course, nothing is that simple."

While decidedly humble, ("My friends think it is odd that I continue to pursue this," Renkoski says. "Still, it's my mission.") Renkoski is no lightweight. As the president for 12 years of her local chapter of Parents of Murdered Children Inc., Renkoski was tapped to serve as a victim advocate advisor to the NIJ's multiyear initiative aimed at maximizing the use of forensic DNA in solving missing person crimes.

Last week, for example, she spoke at the National Medical Examiner's 2012 Conference in Mount Pleasant.

Says George Adams, national director of operations for NamUs: "I first started working with Mrs. Renkoski several years ago and she is a passionate and unselfish advocate for the victims and families in the state of Michigan."

Modeled after similar laws now on the books in a handful of states, (California, Kansas, Nevada, New Mexico, and Texas) Renkoski's proposed model legislation for Michigan would prohibit the cremation of unidentified remains, require DNA testing of both missing persons and unidentified remains, and mandate the profiles be added to the NamUs database.

To date, the NamUs project, which launched in January 2009, has been responsible for resolving 340 of the missing and unidentified person cases in its databases.

It's hardly a dent in the overwhelmingly large number of families over the course of decades who are still searching for loved ones who seemingly vanished off the face of the Earth.

But for Ardis Renkoski, as long as there are unidentified remains out there, there is hope.

"Not just because one of them could be Paige," she said. "Frankly, I just don't feel that's very likely. But because one of them is somebody's loved one. We all deserve to find them and bring them home."

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#10 Lori Davis

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Posted 25 May 2013 - 01:50 PM

http://www.monroenew...n-missing-1990/

Billboards To Feature Mich. Woman Missing Since 1990

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As of Friday, May 24, 2013, 02:07 p.m.

FOWLERVILLE, Mich. (AP) — Livingston County authorities plan to put up billboards featuring a Lansing-area woman who disappeared in 1990 and two other cold cases.

WHMI-FM reports that Friday is the 23rd anniversary of Paige Renkoski's disappearance. She was driving west on Interstate 96 from Detroit Metropolitan Airport near Fowlerville when she disappeared, and her car was unlocked with the engine running and headlights on.

Renkoski of Okemos was 30.

The sheriff's department will erect the billboards in the next few weeks. They also will feature Kimberly Louiselle and Christina Castiglione. Louiselle was a Green Oak Township teen who disappeared in 1982 and her body was found in Island Lake Recreation Area. Castiglione was a 19-year-old Redford Township woman whose body was found in 1983 in the Oak Grove State Game Area.

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#11 Lori Davis

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Posted 24 May 2015 - 01:24 PM

http://www.lansingst...years/27845269/

 

Paige Renkoski search hits 25 years

Lisa Roose-Church 6:03 a.m. EDT May 24, 2015

 

There are many tips and leads into the disappearance — and likely murder — of an Okemos woman last seen 25 years ago today on the shoulder of a Livingston County expressway.

 

While none of those estimated 1,200 tips have led to a suspect, a three-member cold-case team investigating the disappearance of Paige Marie Renkoski remains optimistic that her case can be solved. The team plans to use ground-penetrating radar to search undisclosed locations in Livingston County in its ongoing effort to find the missing 30-year-old woman.

 

“We believe there’s someone out there who does know,” Mike Frayer, a member of the Livingston County Sheriff’s Department Cold Case Team that is re-examining the Renkoski case files, said in a recent interview with the Livingston Daily.

 

“It’s time for them to do the right thing, and it’s time to come forth and tell what they know,” he said. “This family and this young lady deserve justice.”

 

Renkoski was last seen May 24, 1990, on westbound Interstate 96, about one-quarter of a mile east of the Fowlerville exit or mile marker 129, talking to a man standing next to a maroon-colored minivan. Her car, which belonged to her mother’s employer, was found hours later, still running with the lights on and her shoes and purse inside.

 

Frayer, a retired police chief from Westland, and his cold-case team members, William Lenaghan and Joe Morrow, say they have no doubt the 5-foot, 7-inch-tall, 125-pound blond-haired woman is dead, but investigators have been unable to answer what happened to her as well as where, when and why.

 

“That’s the great mystery,” Frayer said. “If we can find her, I think the dominoes will start falling. … Most of these cases, if you can find where, you’ve got a good shot of finding who did it.”

 

From friendly visit to vanished

 

The cold-case team has created a time line of Renkoski’s whereabouts that day in an effort to narrow the time frame she went missing.

 

Based on witness accounts, Renkoski drove her mother to Detroit Metropolitan Airport at around 11:30 a.m. May 24, 1990.

 

She then went to visit a friend in Canton, where they went to a park before returning to the friend’s home.

 

Renkoski was seen at around 2:30 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. at a now-defunct party store at Ford Road, west of Interstate 275 in Canton, where she purchased a beer, which was found in the car. The clerk from the store has a vivid memory of Renkoski because she wore distinctive multi-colored, loose-fitting, flower-patterned pants and a distinctive necklace, the latter of which the clerk asked Renkoski about, Frayer said.

 

Various witnesses reported seeing Renkoski driving west on I-96, including one woman who claimed she might have seen the missing woman at a rest-stop kiosk. However, Frayer and Morrow are quick to point out the witness has Alzheimer’s today, and they have not been able to confirm her report.

 

A couple of long-haul semi drivers reported seeing an attractive blond fitting Renkoski’s description as they drove alongside or passed her vehicle on I-96.

 

“From their description, we believe they saw her,” Morrow said.

 

The first motorist known to notice Renkoski told the original investigators that he saw the 1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais on the side of the road “several times” that day as he traveled back and forth to Lansing, but what he remembers today is “different” than what investigators have been able to confirm, Morrow said.

 

“After 20-plus years, we’re getting variances” in people’s stories, he noted.

 

The majority of the reports, the cold-case team agreed, has placed Renkoski’s appearance on the shoulder of I-96 in Livingston County between 3:15 p.m. and 4:30 p.m., when she was possibly seen with a man in a burgundy or maroon-colored minivan.

 

Some reports indicated the second vehicle was parked in front of Renkoski’s; however, the majority of witnesses reported seeing the second vehicle behind

Renkoski’s car. Those witnesses reported that Renkoski and an unidentified male were seen standing and talking between the two vehicles.

 

Morrow said that throughout the years they’ve had people describe at least five different vehicles, including one that was seen “further west” than Renkoski’s car. Investigators believe people are confusing broken-down cars over the years with Renkoski’s scene that day, he said.

 

The other vehicles included a white pickup truck, red cargo van and a blue truck that had an emblem. The majority, however, clearly described a burgundy or maroon minivan stopped by Renkoski’s car.

 

There also have been reports of Renkoski driving fast on I-96 and “a vehicle that tried to catch up with her,” Frayer said.

 

At least one witness reported seeing a man holding Renkoski’s elbow and guiding her.

 

Retired Detective Lt. Todd Luzod of the Livingston County Sheriff’s Department said in previous interviews that witnesses indicated that Renkoski was talking to a man and gesturing with her hands up in the air while the man put a hand on her shoulder.

 

Today, Luzod, who has been retired for five years, said he believes the case is solvable as long as evidence is preserved. He still listens for reports of skeletal remains being found.

 

“Every time I see that, I wonder if it’s Renkoski,” he said.

 

Throughout the years, witnesses’ descriptions have been put to paper by a police sketch artist. One sketch from 1999 shows a smaller man, while nearly 800 tips later, a taller man is described.

 

Eighty percent or more of the tips received indicated the man near Renkoski was black, but some have reported a Hispanic man as well.

 

The cold-case team believes Renkoski vanished at around 4 p.m. May 24, 1990.

 

The evidence, the theories

 

Today’s investigators are quick to note that the original investigators did what they could with the information they had available. However, there were setbacks from the beginning.

 

First, Frayer said, the spot where investigators found the 1986 silver Calais Renkoski was driving was not processed as a crime scene because at the time it was merely considered an abandoned car and had been tagged as such by an officer.

 

“They towed it,” he said. “We’ve got a general idea of where the exact scene was, but we’re not exactly sure. They didn’t photograph the scene or do a crime-scene sketch because, at the time, it was an abandoned car, and that’s how it was treated. … It wasn’t until later they knew what they had.”

 

Luzod, who worked on an earlier task force assigned to the case, said an officer responding to the calls about an abandoned car turned the vehicle off, locked it up and tagged it as abandoned because it was initially believed the car had broken down and the driver walked to the Fowlerville exit, which was about one-quarter mile west of the car, for help.

 

Frayer said a witness returned to the area to help investigators identify the general location of the car, which was a company-owned car belonging to Renkoski’s mother.

 

Police found several fingerprints on the car, but they have yet to find a match through the law enforcement databases. They also have palm prints, but again,

have found no match.

 

“We do have a pretty good set of palm prints that could be left like someone is leaning on the car, and we have some witnesses who said they might have seen someone actually doing that,” Frayer said. “That’s one of our better pieces of physical evidence. The problem then is some places didn’t take palm prints when someone was arrested.”

 

A witness reported seeing Renkoski near the car in the 3 o’clock hour, and officers responded to the scene after 6 p.m. upon learning Renkoski was missing and the car hadn’t been abandoned.

 

Investigators also found Renkoski’s shoes lying on the floor near the driver’s seat and her purse with her wallet with money inside was in the car as were personal items, including papers.

 

“People driving without their shoes is not uncommon, but a woman leaving a car and leaving her shoes?” Frayer asked. “On a gravel shoulder of a road? That’s unusual, and it’s painful, too.”

 

Frayer and Morrow said investigators have three working theories: Was it someone she knew? Was it a staged accident? Did someone impersonate an officer to get her to stop?

 

Frayer said a huge question for investigators is why Renkoski stopped on the shoulder of a busy interstate when she was within sight of the Fowlerville exit where help could be found if needed.

 

“The odds are long that she’d be driving along I-96 at 70 mph and see someone she knew who had evil intentions,” Frayer acknowledged. “That doesn’t seem so. It’s also a long shot to follow her from Okemos to the airport, to a girlfriend’s and back to Lansing.”

 

Frayer said a staged accident “has some validity,” but the physical evidence does not support that theory entirely. He said there was some damage to the front-end, but nothing “overly glaring.”

 

Also, Frayer noted, when someone stages an accident it’s typically to get money — and although Renkoski had a “significant amount of money in an investment account,” it had not been touched.

 

He said it is possible that Renkoski would have stopped if another motorist flashed a police badge or gave any indication he was an officer and needed her to stop because her father had law enforcement experience and she most likely would have respected the badge.

 

In May 2002, The Associated Press reported that police “identified two suspects” in connection with Renkoski’s disappearance. One of those suspects was in prison at the time. The other, 17 at the time the Okemos woman went missing, “flunked a polygraph exam,” according to reports quoting then-investigator Luzod.

 

“There have been some persons of interests we’ve developed in years past, and I think half of them are dead,” Frayer said. “One was shot and one died in prison, and we haven’t ruled them out. The fingerprints were not able to rule them out.”

 

The search continues

 

In August 1990, a United Press International report speculated that a body found floating 500 feet north of the Kewaunee harbor in Wisconsin was Renkoski, but that turned out to be untrue.

 

Investigators continue to look for Renkoski.

 

In summer 2011, the local cold-case team used a fairly precisely drawn map from 1999 and ground-penetrating radar from PM Environmental Inc. to search three Livingston County areas, including a Handy Township pond that a bank teller told one of the investigators she recalled seeing boots in the area 20 years earlier as well as property in Conway and Cohoctah townships.

 

A search at the pond found bones that turned out to be from an animal and a dive team found nothing in the pond, which had been receding in recent years.

Investigators dug four holes in one spot in the 7700 block of Sober Road in Conway Township where cadaver dogs indicated a possible presence of human remains, but that also was unsuccessful.

 

Frayer, Lenaghan and Morrow, however, said they are not giving up and their search for Renkoski continues.

 

“Cold cases are very challenging,” Frayer said. “It’s a challenge, and we believe in justice. I do it particularly for Paige’s family, who has carried the burden for 25 years.

 

“The more information we gather, the closer it brings us to a resolution,” he added. “There’s people out there who know.”

 

Lisa Roose-Church writes for the Daily Press & Argus in Livingston County.

 

About Paige Renkoski

 

Born: Feb. 2, 1960, in Lansing

 

Height, weight: 5-foot, 6 inches tall; 125 pounds

 

Hair, eyes: Blond hair and blue eyes

 

Scars/marks: Long surgical scar on inside of right arm; surgical scar on right leg from knee replacement; two surgical screws in her left knee

 

Last seen wearing: White silk shirt, multi-colored loose-fitting pants and a long beaded necklace


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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.





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