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Missing Man: Randy Wayne Leach - KS - 04/15/1988


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#1 Denise

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Posted 19 May 2007 - 06:57 PM

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Age-progressed to 39 years

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Randy Wayne Leach

DOB: Jul 25, 1970
Missing: Apr 15, 1988
Age at time of disappearance: 17
Sex: Male
Race: White
Hair: Brown
Eyes: Blue
Height: 6'3" (191 cm)
Weight: 220 lbs (100 kg)
Missing From:
Linwood, Kansas
United States

Randy's photo is shown age-progressed to 39 years. He was last seen at a party at a friend's house on April 15, 1988. He may have left the party at about 6:30 p.m. driving a gray 1985 Dodge 600 with Kansas plates LVJ8721. He has a mole on his left ear..

Contact Information:
Kansas Bureau of Investigation
1-800-572-7463

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#2 Denise

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Posted 19 May 2007 - 06:57 PM

Timeline of Randy Leach's disappearance | lawrence.com

October 2, 2006


6:45 p.m. April 15, 1988 — The last time Randy Wayne Leach’s parents saw their son. “He was in a good mood. His dad had just bought him a new John Deere lawn tractor the day before,” mother Alberta Leach later told the Journal-World on 6/26. Randy showered and got ready to go out. Father Harold Leach gave him $20 for wax for the mower that Randy was going to pick up at K-Mart. “We don’t think he really planned on going to the party,” his mom said.

7:00 p.m. — Randy stops by his cousin’s house, and then is believed to have driven around Linwood.

8:30 p.m. — Randy and friend drive to DeSoto to a body shop, which was restoring a red 1966 Mustang, his soon-to-be graduation gift.

9:30 p.m. — Randy stops by convenience store to buy 2 candy bars, two bottles of pop, and $3 worth of gas.

10:00 p.m. — Randy seen at a bonfire party in West Bonner Springs. Estimates of the size of the party range from 45 to 150 people. Annie Erwin, the mother of the high school senior hosting the party, reports Randy had trouble walking but didn’t seem drunk, nor was ever seen with a drink in his hand.


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

#3 Denise

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Posted 19 May 2007 - 06:58 PM

Bonner Springs Chieftain: Linwood couple praise cast, author

Linwood couple praise cast, author
KU grad student's play examines 1988 disappearance of her son.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Alberta and Harold Leach saw three performances of the play, "Leaves of Words," last weekend.

But the Linwood couple found no escape from reality in the play.

It was their story.

The play centers on the 1988 disappearance of their son, Randy Leach, a month before he was to have graduated from Linwood High School. Neither Randy Leach's body nor the car he was driving that night have been found.

An actor playing Harold Leach narrates the movie, describing theories and stories he'd heard about Randy's disappearance.

One scenario depicts a satanic sacrificial murder of Randy. Another conjures up his life as a homeless person on the streets of Los Angeles. But, Harold Leach said later, not all of the stories he had heard could be woven into the two-hour play.

Through the course of the play, Harold Leach's character grows increasingly frustrated. All he knows is that his son went to a party and that he never came home. Other than that, there are no facts.

Four actors, portraying Randy Leach's girlfriend and three other friends, are of no help in solving the mystery.


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

#4 Denise

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Posted 19 May 2007 - 06:58 PM

Still searching | LJWorld.com


Renewed investigation on Randy Leach yields few answers

By Mike Belt (Contact)

Monday, May 5, 2003

The waiting goes on for Harold and Alberta Leach.

The Linwood couple have been waiting for 15 years now to find out what happened to their teenage son, Randy Leach, since he was last seen April 15, 1988, at a party.


Despite a renewed, intensive investigation launched a few months ago by state and local law enforcement officers, there were still no answers.

Last December, Harold Leach was cautiously optimistic when he learned the Leavenworth County Sheriff's Office and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation had established a joint team of investigators to work full time on Randy's case. At the end of February, the team was disbanded.

"Oh, yeah, it's frustrating," Harold Leach said about the lingering mystery. "It just doesn't make sense."



More Stories here: LJWorld.com - The Disappearance of Randy Leach

#5 Denise

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Posted 19 May 2007 - 06:59 PM

Randy Wayne Leach

Posted Image Posted Image
Left: Leach, circa 1988;
Right: Age-progression at age 34 (circa 2004) Posted Image

Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance
Missing Since: April 15, 1988 from Linwood, Kansas
Classification: Non-Family Abduction
Date Of Birth: July 25, 1970
Age at time of disappearance: 17 years old
Height and Weight: 6'3, 220 pounds
Distinguishing Characteristics: Caucasian male. Brown hair, blue eyes. Leach has a mole on his left ear.
Clothing/Jewelry Description: A blue pocket t-shirt, blue Levi's jeans, white low-cut tennis shoes and white socks.
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Details of Disappearance
Leach was a senior at Linwood High School in 1988. He left his home at 6:30 p.m. to attend a friend's pre-graduation party in a rural area five miles east of her residence on April 15, 1988. Before arriving at the party, he stopped at Stout's Convenience Store and purchased some candy, soda pop, and gasoline. Then he talked to some friends, then went to De Soto to check on the car he was restoring. As a result of these errands, Leach did not arrive at the party until between 9:30 and 10:00 p.m. There were between 70 and 150 guests at the party and there was considerable drug and alcohol use by the mostly teenaged guests. Witnesses at the party believe Leach departed between 1:15 and 2:00 a.m., but no one actually saw him leave. At the time he was last seen, he was too drunk to walk straight. Leach apparently left driving his mother's gray four-door 1985 Dodge 400 or Dodge 600 sedan with Kansas plates numbered LVJ8721. He never returned home and has not been heard from again. Leach was carrying $50 i n cash at the time of his disappearance. His vehicle has never been located.

Leach was reported missing by his parents on April 16. He had a 12:30 a.m. curfew at the time he vanished, and usually honored it. His parents slept undisturbed through the night and did not realize their son had not come home until 6:00 a.m. on April 16. They first thought he had been in a car accident and called one of his friends, who said she hadn't heard from him. Leach's parents then contacted police. Investigators went to the site of the party Leach had attended, but it had already been cleaned up and there was no evidence to be found.
Authorities do not believe Leach left of his own accord, since he left behind the 1966 Dodge Mustang he was restoring and his friends and family say he had no plans to leave home. He was not sure what he wanted to do after graduating high school, but his father describes him as an entrepeneur and a hard worker. Leach's parents still live in his old house and are hopeful that they will someday get the answers as to his fate.

In December 2002, Leach's case was reclassified from a missing person case to a homicide. A team of twelve detectives made the case the focus of a renewed investigation and are reinterviewing guests at the party Leach attended the night he disappeared. Three men were arrested in the early 1993 on suspicion of Leach's kidnapping and murder, but they were released without charge several days later and investigators admitted they had been mistaken about the men's involvement in Leach's case.
The house where the party was held was destroyed by a fire shortly after Leach's disappearance. Rumors circulate that Leach was abducted and killed by a Satanic cult that was supposedly active in the Linwood area. Later in 1988, a man told police that he had been kidnapped by the cult and held in a cave for two weeks, and had seen a corpse there that might have been Leach's. Police searched the cave and found no indications that a crime had been committed there; they decided that the man had hallucinated the experience while under the influence of drugs.

An adult acquaintance of Leach's, one of the last people to see him, found a severed foot on the banks of the Kansas River in March 1989. The foot was not Leach's. Leach's parents say the man drove past their house, going only about 10 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, on the morning they discovered Leach's disappearance. The individual has since died and it is not known if he had anything to do with Leach's disappearance.

Some reports state that Leach left the party at 6:30 p.m.; in fact, that was when he left home to go to the party. In 2006, his disappearance received some publicity when a University of Kansas Master of Fine Arts (MFA) student wrote a play about his case; the play was titled Leaves of Words and was performed in Lawrence, Kansas. Leach's case remains unsolved.
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Investigating Agency
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:
Leavenworth County Sheriff's Office
800-572-7463

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Source Information
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
Nation's Missing Children Organization
[color=#0000ff]Bonner Springs Chieftain
[color=#0000ff]The Doe Network
[color=#0000ff]The Journal-World
http://www.charleypr...each_randy.html


#6 Linda

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Posted 17 December 2007 - 08:30 PM

http://www.lawrence....ranger_fiction/

Stranger Than Fiction

October 2, 2006

Randy Leach was a happy-go-lucky, all-American, clean cut, normal boy, says his mom choking back tears.

Talking to a Lawrence Journal-World reporter in 1988, weeks after her 17-year-old son disappeared without a trace, Alberta Leach cant believe not a single clue had been found yet.

Eighteen years later, nobody seems to know any more about what happened in Linwood a town 13 miles northeast of Lawrence, pop. 377.

What is known is that the night he disappeared, he went to a bonfire party in Leavenworth County at the Erwins, a family who was new to the area.

Many people saw him there, and they report that he was having trouble walking. Annie Erwin the mother of the high school senior hosting the party saw Randy just after 2 a.m.

The first time I saw him I said Oh my God, whats wrong with him? I said You guys better keep an eye on him, because I didnt like the way he was acting. He was just stumbling. But when you looked at him, he didnt look drunk, Erwin told the Journal-World for a June 26, 1988, article. I never saw Randy with a drink in his hand while he was out here.

Nevertheless, rumors began to circulate about how intoxicated Randy was. There were also rumors about cocaine and crack. Other rumors said he was drugged and later killed by some accounts, from dehydration after being tied to a tree. Some said a breakup with his girlfriend lead him to drive his car into Bear Lake.

Some in the area believe he simply ran away, but anyone who knew Randy rejects that notion.

For a while, investigators asked questions about Dungeons and Dragons and pursued rumors that a satanic cult may have murdered Randy in a deep cave nearby. That lead originated from a man who claimed hed been abducted by satanists and saw Randys body hanging from a cave wall. Investigators eventually dismissed the story as a drug-induced hallucination.

Many bizarre circumstances and events following in the weeks after Randys disappearance, which fueled rumors and compounded the investigation.

Everything makes for a chilling story albeit a story without an ending.

But that isnt stopping Tim Macy, a local playwright, from retelling it.

'Leaves of Words'

Macy, a 27-year-old KU graduate student, labored for over a year to adapt the disappearance of Randy Leach to the stage in his original play, Leaves of Words.

Macy scoured countless articles about the investigation and spent a year interviewing Randys parents, Harold and Alberta Leach.

Its one of those things I probably couldve written in 200 pages, Macy says. Its not your average disappearance.

Leaves of Words is Macys first full-length play, and he says writing it was no easy task.

Its probably harder to write something based in fact than it is in fiction, Macy says, explaining that much of the play is fictionalized.

The plays director, Professor Paul Stephen Lim, mentored Macy through the writing process.

Hes not writing a journalistic account, Lim says. Hes not writing In Cold Blood. He should never allow the facts to get in the way of the truth.

And Macy couldnt anyway, since no one claims to have the definitive answer to what happened to Randy Leach.

Dad

Leaves of Words doesnt have an ending. Or rather, it doesnt have one ending.

The play is an ongoing series of what-ifs and what might-have-beens. Scenarios explaining Randys disappearancehe ran away to California, committed suicide, was sacrificed in a satanic ritualare meshed with an extended monologue by Randys father.

The character known only as Dad was roughly based on Harold Leach. But Jeremy Auman, who was cast as Dad, says he wanted to take the role beyond caricature.

Im not trying to play Harold. Im trying to play Randys father, Auman says. I was more interested in that emotional interpretation.

In the play, Auman paces the stage, moving between scenes and actors as various scenarios unfold. One moment hes screaming at an incompetent police officer, in another hes begging for answers, for any information that could help him find his son. Dad watches as Randy gets drunk near the bonfire. He watches as Randy begs for food on an L.A. street. Hes even watching as Randy is brutally murdered.

The dreamlikeand at times nightmarishfluidity of the play attempts to reflect the real experiences of Harold and Alberta Leach after their sons disappearance.
Harold, Alberta and Randy Leach

We know no more today than we did April 15, 1988, Alberta Leach says.

But it hasnt been for lack of trying. For most of these 18 years, Harold Leach, 65, has made finding his son a fulltime job. He tried to go back to work, he says, but couldnt shake the distraction. He gave up repairing motors after he sunk his fingers into a spinning mower blade.

Since then, the Leaches turned Randys room into an office used for investigating the disappearance. Theres a computer in one corner, and in the closet there are countless cases of videotapes and microcassettes. Harold Leach records most phone calls related to the investigation, then meticulously labels and stores them. He might need them, he says, in case his memory weakens.

A large bulletin board on the wall of this room displays ribbons and medals Randy earned in high school. The Leaches just picked up a stack of Leaves of Words flyers, and two are pinned to the wall.

Randys face is everywhere in the house. A long row of 8x10 photos, taken each year Randy was in school, lines a wall in the living room. The Leaches even frame photos that have been digitally enhanced to show what Randy might look like today, if hes still alive.

Even outside, on the garage, a hand-painted sign reads, Harold, Alberta and Randy Leach.

The Leaches say they were happy to hear about Leaves of Words. In a way, Harold says, they hate to talk about Randy. But they know that any coverage of his disappearance could lead to more information.

The Leaches plan to attend the play, and maybe a rehearsal or two. That makes Macy a little nervous.

Mostly, I just hope Harold and Alberta are happy with it. Its hard to think of them sitting in the front row during the scene when Randy is brutally murdered, which is one of the scenarios.

Garrett Kelly, who plays Randy, admits hes scared to disappoint the Leach family.

Kelly was only six months old when Randy disappeared, so he had no knowledge of the case before accepting the role. But after rehearsal one night, he went home and googled Randys name. Through research, Kelly says he tried to piece together a Randy.

It frightened me dearly, Kelly says. I thought, am I trying to play him or am I playing myself in that situation?

I just lost it

Its hard for Harold Leach to describe his son without choking up.

Leach remembers that when Randy was just 14, he would tear apart mower engines just to see how they fit back together. He was strong, and a star shot-putter. Randy remembered everything, his father says, and breezed through school. They say, sometimes, they wish theyd pushed him to take harder classes, to challenge himself more.

Harold Leach says that he and Randy had talked about opening up a lawn care shop behind the house. They couldve repaired mowers and built a greenhouse, too.

He was a super kid, Leach says. He had his problems, but you couldnt ask for anybody better.

Course we were really prejudiced, Alberta Leach says, wiping tears from her eyes.

The Leaches pain is still raw. Theyve told their story to countless investigators, reporters, psychics and TV producers, but it never gets any easier or becomes any clearer for them.

Once, they were invited to appear on the Jerry Springer Show in the early 90s. A "psychic" from the show called the Leaches to tell them she was sure Randy was alive and that they should come on the show so she could tell them more. They flew to Chicago, and were picked up by a limo at the airport.

But as soon as Harold and Alberta Leach sat down onstage and the cameras began rolling, the psychic changed her tune.

The first thing she said was, I guarantee your son is dead, Harold says.

I just lost it.

Immediately after the show, the Leaches were unceremoniously rushed onto a bus and sent back to the airport.
The unknown

Macy says what drew him to Randys story was the unknown.

How can something that required at least five people, getting rid of a carthe fact that not one of them has ever said anything is unbelievable. Theyre not going to get away from this, ever. Thats the thing that blows me away most, Macy says.

Then there are the other strange detailswhy has no one ever searched the cave, or dredged Bear Lake for Randys car? Why was the field where the party was held freshly cleaned? And why did someone pour gasoline in the house on that property and burn it to the ground just months after Randy disappeared?

Those questions remain unanswered, even after the case was reopened in 2003.

Macy wonders if there is a conspiracy, and that people are afraid to say what they know.

If such a conspiracy does exist, Macy says hes not afraid of it. (Incidentally, his mentor, Lim, received death threats after writing a play in the late 1980s about what was thought to be a murder by satanists).

People cant just shy away from it because of that, Macy says.

They deserve to know.



#7 Linda

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Posted 17 December 2007 - 08:32 PM

http://www.lawrence....rrounding_case/

Bizarre events surrounding the disappearance of Randy Leach

October 2, 2006

Many circumstances relating to the disappearance of Randy Leach in 1988 fueled rumors as to what may have happened to him.

Rumors of satanic cult activity in southern Leavenworth County already were circulating among locals before Randy's disappearance. Word that the party site at the Erwin farm had quickly been cleaned helps fuel such rumors, including speculation that Randy had been ritually slaughtered there by devil worshipers who whisked away the evidence of their mayhem.

The Erwin house burns to the ground not that long after'' Randy disappeared, said Leavenworth County Sheriff Herb Nye.

In 1988, a man told police he had been abducted by satanists and held captive for two weeks in a cave to the east near Kansas City, but not far from Linwood. The man said his abductors threatened to cut off his left arm and had shown him the corpse of a man hanging in the cave. The corpse perhaps was Randy. It was some time before police searched the cave. No bodies were found. They concluded the man was a drug user who hallucinated the experience. The cave has since been bulldozed at the request of the sheriff, says Randy's dad. The sheriff denies this.

Steve Daugherty, one of the last people certainly seen with Randy the night he disappeared, showed police in March of 1989 a severed foot in a tennis shoe on the banks of the Kansas River. He said he found it while strolling. Police searched the area for other remains but couldn't find any. They concluded the foot was not Randy's. Daugherty, in his 30s when Randy disappeared, has since died.

Internal police reports about the Randy Leach case began showing up in the Leaches' mailbox. Harold Leach said he doesn't know the source of the documents but believes they came from sympathetic law officers convinced the investigation was being botched by authorities.

In 1993, a man purporting to be a research journalist offered his assistance to the Leaches and spent several months without pay interviewing party-goers and others who might have known something about the case. The man went by the names of Terry Martin and Lee Harper.

Martin/Harper pooled information with Leavenworth County Sheriff's Detective Dawn Weston, whom Nye had assigned to review the case. Executing warrants issued by the assistant Leavenworth County attorney, Weston arrested three men for the alleged murder and kidnapping of Randy Leach but the men were quickly released. Immediately thereafter, Weston and Martin/Harper left the state together for several days, reportedly fearful of their safety.

A Topeka man who volunteered to help the Leaches search for their son was subsequently found shot to death along with his wife. Topeka police ruled it a murder-suicide.

Leavenworth County officials refuse to launch an inquisition into the Leach case. The Journal-World decries the countys law enforcement in a lengthy editorial (May 10, 1990) listing reasons why an inquisition is justified, then concluding: Something is fishy and officials have not told the complete story.


#8 Linda

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Posted 17 December 2007 - 08:39 PM

http://www.lawrence....rrounding_case/


Letters on the status of the investigation

http://media.ljworld.../09/leach_1.pdf


Incomplete journal by the Leach family about their son Randy

http://media.ljworld.../09/leach_2.pdf





#9 Linda

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Posted 17 December 2007 - 08:42 PM

http://www.accesskan.../mw_leach.shtml

Posted ImagePosted Image

On April 16, 1988, Harold and Alberta Leach of Linwood, Kansas reported the disappearance of their son, Randy Wayne Leach, to the Leavenworth County Sheriff's Department. Subsequent investigation determined that Leach was last seen in the early morning hours of April 16, 1988 at a high school pre-graduation party given by a classmate in rural Leavenworth County, Kansas. Leach had driven to the party in his mother's gray 1985 Dodge 600 4-door sedan. During the course of the investigation, no one was located who saw Leach or his vehicle leave the party. To date, neither Leach or his vehicle have been located. The investigation to date has produced sufficient information to believe that Leach has been the victim of foul play. A Governor's Reward of $5,000 is being offered for information leading to the solving of this case and the arrest and conviction of the person(s) responsible. If you have information on this case call Kansas Bureau of Investigation at 1-800 KS CRIME.


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#10 Linda

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Posted 16 April 2008 - 10:31 AM

http://www2.ljworld....one/?city_local

20 years gone
Mystery, bizarre events surround missing teen case


April 16, 2008

Harold Leach pulls his car to the side of a rock road and points to the farm seven miles east of Linwood where his only son, Randy Wayne Leach, was last seen 20 years ago while attending a bonfire party.

Harold and his wife, Alberta, now in their mid-60s, talk frankly about how the property has changed since they went looking for Randy there on the morning of April 16, 1988.

There used to be white ranch house, but it was destroyed by fire. Now there is a new house, and the shed and pond have been added. Bushes have grown near the driveway where Randy reportedly had parked his mother’s 1985 Dodge 500. The car has never been found.

It has been two decades and still no clues.

“I don’t think we really know anything more than we did the first day, and that’s unfortunate,” Harold said.

Since the 17-year-old Linwood High School senior went missing, the Leaches have endured years of rumors and speculation about what possibly happened to Randy:

• He was murdered after witnessing a drug deal.

• He was sacrificed as part of satanic ritual.

• He died of a drug overdose.

• He drove his car into a lake.

• He died of dehydration after being tied to a tree.

They’ve heard that his body is in this pond or that river or on this farm or in that cave.

And they’ve tried to follow up on each story — no matter how crazy it might be.

Last week, during a drive around the rural areas of Linwood, De Soto and Bonner Springs, the couple pointed out numerous areas, besides the farm where Randy was last seen, that they, family or police have searched. Among them were:

• 12755 Loring Drive near Bonner Springs where semitrailers were parked inside huge underground “caves.” Harold said about 100 yards around the corner was a cave where, according to rumors, Randy was killed in a satanic ritual.

• The intersection of 83rd Street and Kill Creek Road in De Soto where there once was an auto body shop. Randy’s car was rumored to have been dismantled there.

• Lenape Cemetery, just down the road from where Randy was last seen, the subject of a psychic’s reading. The Leaches were told that Randy was buried along a fence there.

“Where was the psychic from?” Harold asked his wife while exiting the cemetery.

“I don’t know, honey. There have been so many,” she said.

In the early 1990s, they were invited to appear on a Jerry Springer show about missing children. Alberta had talked to a psychic before attending the show and sent a shirt tag from one of Randy’s shirts. The psychic told the Leaches that their son “definitely was alive.”

But as soon as the cameras started rolling, the psychic said, “he is dead.”

“We just lost it,” Alberta said.

The disappearance


Back in the kitchen of their rural Linwood home, Harold and Alberta are surrounded by photos of Randy. There are age-progressed photos of what he might look like today and senior-year photos. Time hasn’t made it any easier for them to talk about their son.

Alberta described Randy as a good boy who loved the country.

“He loved to fish,” she said, barely able to get the words out. Alberta then looked into her husband’s eyes, smiled and added, “He liked to help his dad and drive the tractor. He was always out in the yard playing.”

They recalled the last time they saw Randy.

“We bought a new riding lawn mower, so that afternoon he had taken it to mow a yard and brought it back and then mowed our yard,” Harold said. “Then, he cleaned the lawn mower up and came in and got ready to go out that night.”

He talked about driving to Lawrence to purchase some wax to protect the mower’s paint.

About 6:30 p.m., Randy left the family’s driveway and turned east toward Linwood. He had about $50 after his dad gave him $20 for the wax. He was wearing a blue T-shirt, Levi’s and white tennis shoes.

During the course of the evening, Randy picked up Steve Daughtery, an older acquaintance, and drove to De Soto, where his 1966 Mustang was being restored. The car was a graduation gift from his parents. He later stopped at Stout’s Convenience Store in Linwood and purchased two candy bars, two bottles of soda and $3 worth of gasoline.

Randy reportedly arrived at the bonfire about 9:30 p.m. It was a pre-graduation party for schoolmate Kim Erwin and was given by her mother, Annie Erwin. The Erwins had just moved to the area from Kansas City, Kan. About 100 people attended the bash where a punch spiked with grain alcohol reportedly was sold for $3 per cup; refills were free.

By various accounts, Randy, a 6-foot-3, 220-pound teenager, was too intoxicated to walk straight between the time he arrived and the last time he was reported seen between 1:15 a.m. and 2 a.m. No one saw Randy or the Dodge leave.

Meanwhile, Alberta and Harold slept soundly through the night, and Randy missed his 12:30 a.m. curfew, a rarity. About 6 a.m., Alberta woke up, pulled back the curtains and peered out the kitchen window. The car was gone.

“I knew something was really wrong,” she said.

They immediately began making calls and searching for Randy.

“We jumped in the car and went over to where the party was to talk to the people there,” Alberta said. “Of course, they knew nothing.”

An unusual case

That’s what has the Leaches and law enforcement baffled.

Jerry Nance, of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, has been the case manager for about six years. While there are many missing persons cases that go back 20 years, he said this one is unique because it happened in a small town. Linwood, which is 13 miles northeast of Lawrence, has a population of about 300 people.

“Usually when something like this happens, you have a little bit of a we-don’t-know situation as to when they were last seen, but his timeline is pretty tight and that’s unusual,” he said.

Nance’s opinion is that somebody knows something, but has been afraid to come forward.

John Schermbeck, detective lieutenant with the Leavenworth County Sheriff’s office, agrees.

“It’s unusual, I think, that in that kind of community that someone doesn’t know something,” he said. “It’s a mystery to us.”

In 2003, the sheriff’s office and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation reinvestigated the case.

“We spent a winter doing that, and we feel like we have an investment in the case now. We worked pretty hard, and we would like to solve the case,” Schermbeck said. “The leads that come to us, we try to follow up thoroughly, but as far as the case is concerned it’s still an open missing persons case.”

He said they still get some leads about two or three times a year.

“We try to pursue every one seriously and follow it completely,” Schermbeck said.

The last tip came in December when the Leaches received a call while on vacation in Branson, Mo. Someone had received a letter that indicated an inmate in a county jail in Kansas might know something about Randy. Police investigated, and nothing came of it.

“Everything comes to a dead end. You think you are getting somewhere and then all of a sudden it just dead-ends and it’s been that way the whole time,” Alberta said. “You think you have a lead and — pfffttt — it’s gone.”

The Leaches have hired lawyers, detectives, psychics and divers to help locate Randy. They have no idea how much money they’ve spent. They have boxes and files of tape-recorded conversations, documents and pictures. They’ve converted Randy’s bedroom into a study, but haven’t thrown away any of his things.

When asked how much time they had invested in the search, Alberta shook her head and replied, “20 years.”

Search continues

On April 26, the Leaches are going to meet Dan Steele, a Lawrence psychic.

“I am going to try to use energy signals, and I am going to try to pick up on Randy’s energy and just try to find his body or try to find the car,” Steele said. “I’ve got a really good feeling about this.”

Steele, a 1988 graduate of Washington High School in Kansas City, Kan., said he remembers hearing about Randy’s disappearance.

“There were all kinds of rumors surrounding it. There were Satan worshippers involved. There were drugs involved. There was foul play involved,” he said. “The thing is nobody really knows what happened.”

Steele, an assistant manager at Presto in North Lawrence, met the Leaches through a friend, Cindy Hutchison, who plans to publish a book about the search for Randy with her twin sister, Kathy Schott, who lives in Lawrence. The two published a book, “Boys, Let Me Down Easy,” in 2005 about an 1882 Lawrence lynching.

Hutchison, of Belton, Mo., has spent the past two years researching Randy’s case.

“When I first got involved with it, I was absolutely overwhelmed because there was a whole lot more material than what I was expecting. I have reams and reams of documents and police reports and things to go through,” she said. “I live and breathe it, practically.”

Hutchison, who works part time as a pharmacy technician, said she has been doing some of her own investigating.

“I’ve found a few things that don’t quite make sense or don’t quite add up,” she said, without going into specifics.

Hutchison and Schott plan to publish the book within the year. They hope it will help shed light on what happened to Randy and provide some closure for the Leaches.

“It’s been 20 years, and we’ve made it together through this but you can’t move on,” Harold said as he looked at his wife.

“We just exist,” she said, nodding.

“My worst nightmare is something will happen to me and Alberta will have to … ,” Harold couldn’t finish the sentence as his emotions took over. He let out a big sigh and then said, “She will have to go through it on her own.”

______________

Project Jason does NOT recommend the use of psychics in missing persons cases. There is not a single proven case in which a missing person was found using paranormal means. Use of psychics wastes police and other resources, causes prejudice against the case, and emotional harm to the families.

To understand this issue, please see:


http://voice4themiss...ychics-and.html

#11 Linda

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Posted 20 April 2008 - 09:46 PM

http://leavenworthti...news/news01.txt

Leach disappearance still a mystery after 20 years

April 16, 2008

In the early morning hours of April 16, 1988, Randy Wayne Leach was at a party in southeast Leavenworth County.

Then the Linwood area teen vanished.

And 20 years later, authorities still don’t know what happened to him.

“Initially it was investigated as a missing person,” said Sheriff Dave Zoellner.

But owing to the amount of time that has passed since Leach’s disappearance, the case is now treated as a homicide.

“We treat this as an open, ongoing investigation,” Zoellner said.

He said investigators continue to follow up any tips they receive.

Zoellner is the third person to occupy the office of sheriff since Leach’s disappearance.

Zoellner was working for the sheriff’s office at the time of the disappearance, but his initial involvement in the case was limited to helping search areas of southern Leavenworth County. He later was part of a sheriff’s office and Kansas Bureau of Investigation task force that worked on the case.

Leach was 17 at the time of his disappearance. The last time his parents saw him was when he left his house at about 6:30 p.m. April 15, 1988.

In a 2005 interview, Randy Leach’s father, Harold, said his son had left the house that night to visit a relative.

Zoellner said Leach was last seen around 2 a.m. April 16, 1988, at a party on 166th Street south of Loring Road.

Zoellner said no one ever reported seeing Leach leave the party, which was attended by teenagers and adults.

The car Leach drove that night, a gray 1985 Dodge 600 sedan, has never been found.

Leach was the only child of Harold and his wife, Alberta.

In the 2005 interview, Harold described his son as a “super kid, always outgoing.”

“He couldn’t have been better,” Harold said at the time.

Harold said he believed his son was murdered.

The investigation into Leach’s disappearance has been surrounded by its share of bizarre circumstances.

The house where the party was held burned down a week or two after Leach disappeared, Zoellner said.

There was a report of a nude man’s body being seen in connection with a satanic ritual in a cave. Zoellner said the story was checked out as part of the investigation in the Leach case, but it was never substantiated.

In 1992, a National Geographic photograph reportedly pictured someone thought to have resembled Leach. Zoellner said he believes this was investigated but the person in the photograph turned out not to be Leach.

Even a play has been written about the disappearance. It was performed in 2006 in Lawrence.

Zoellner said a portion of Stranger Creek in the south end of the county was searched as part of the case.

“We have gone through that creek with divers,” he said.

A task force of 12 people from the sheriff’s office and KBI was formed in 2002.

Zoellner said the task force worked on the case for about five or six months. He said the group followed up on leads and re-interviewed people. He said some polygraph examinations were performed.

“We really worked hard to try to bring some closure to the family,” he said.

The sheriff said he is always optimistic about a case being solved including the Leach investigation.

“We feel there’s somebody out there that knows something,” he said.

#12 La Vina

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Posted 01 November 2009 - 10:43 AM

The Charley Project: Randy Wayne Leach

Posted Image  Posted Image

#13 Lori Davis

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Posted 24 November 2011 - 09:58 PM

https://findthemissi...g/cases/6284/0/
NamUs profile for Randy Leach - Case 6284

Lori Davis, Project Jason Forum Moderator
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#14 Lori Davis

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Posted 27 January 2012 - 05:06 PM

Missing children remembered

Written by Mary Rupert
Wednesday, 25 May 2011 15:00

Law enforcement and community members gathered Wednesday at City Hall to remember missing children throughout the region and in America.

Names of missing children from the region were read during a ceremony. Commissioner John Mendez read a proclamation designating the day as missing children's day.

The event included a balloon release, with one balloon for each child missing in the region.

[Excerpt..]

Missing children from Kansas:

RANDY LEACH   1988

Read more: http://www.wyandotte...bered?showall=1

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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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.


#15 Lori Davis

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Posted 03 June 2012 - 07:06 AM

http://www2.ljworld....g-wait-answers/

Years later, families of missing wait for answers

By Shaun Hittle
June 2, 2012

People disappear every day.

They’re victims of foul play. They go to a remote location and commit suicide. They have psychotic episodes and wander off, confused and disoriented. They leave their families, escaping from some undesirable circumstance, searching for a new life.

Gone.

Alerts go out, and missing-persons posters get printed. And those people left behind?

They wait. For good news, bad news, any news.

For the friends and family of former Kansas University student Yelekal “Kal” Alemu, 23, of Lawrence, the waiting stretched over three weeks, ending with news Friday that Alemu’s body was discovered in a wooded area in rural Douglas County. Police said they do not suspect foul play, though a cause of death has not been announced.

Alemu disappeared May 12, and his abandoned Toyota Yaris was discovered later that day, after friends and family became concerned when Alemu didn’t show up for a family gathering.

For the Alemu family, the bad news came. For others, the waiting continues.

16 years, no answers

Overbrook man Everett Crist, 91, remembers it was a Tuesday.

He and his son, Elvin E. Crist, then 40, finished work at the family landscaping business in Lawrence on Dec. 11, 1996.

“He told me he’d see me in the morning,” Everett said. “I haven’t seen him since.”

It’s been nearly 16 years since Elvin vanished. He didn’t have a criminal record, didn’t abuse drugs or alcohol, and didn’t have any reason to kill himself, said his younger brother, Arlin Crist.

“Just a regular guy,” Arlin said.

Elvin is one of 37 active missing-persons cases in Kansas, according to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, or NamUs, operated by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Since Elvin’s disappearance, the family has speculated and theorized. Arlin mentions minor details in the case — much discussed since Elvin disappeared — that never led to answers about his brother.

“I never thought you could make someone vanish,” Arlin said.

A store receipt found in his truck later confirmed that after work Elvin went to a J.C. Penney and exchanged a pair of jeans.

No one has reported seeing him since. Weeks later, police discovered Elvin’s truck had been left at a parking lot at KU and eventually towed away.

When the family got the truck back, police had taken inside panels out for evidence testing, Arlin said. Both Arlin and Everett provided DNA samples.

One of the few clues in the case was some of Elvin’s personal checks, which someone tried to cash after his disappearance. The checks bounced, and investigators were unable to find the person who tried to cash them, Arlin said.

The Crist family hired Prairie Village private investigator Gretchen Gerig, who traveled as far as California checking on various leads.

Gerig said she occasionally follows up on the case, even after all these years. She cautiously mentions “persons of interest” but declined to provide more detail, fearing it could hamper the police investigation.

Investigating the missing

There aren’t many possible outcomes for people who disappear, said Thomas Lauth, an investigator with Lauth Missing Persons, who for the past 15 years has been hired by families to find missing loved ones.

There’s murder or suicide. Then there are people who wander off, seemingly victims of some form of medical or psychiatric condition, such as the disappearance of Larry Schnackenberg, 58, of Lenexa, in July 2010.

Schnackenberg was reported missing by his family but was found three weeks later by patrol officers in a Johnson County park. Schnackenberg was dehydrated, shirtless and covered in insect bites when found.

The disappearance hasn’t been explained publicly.

“When I found him, I talked about how happy his family was going to be,” said park officer Rick Reynolds, who discovered Schnackenberg, in a 2010 Shawnee Dispatch article. “What he was doing and what had transpired for the 20 days he was out here, I don’t know.”

Then there’s what Lauth terms “malicious missing-persons” cases, where someone vanishes without notifying friends or family. Lauth cites the disappearance of 19-year-old Aisha Khan, a Johnson County Community College student who disappeared from the KU Edwards campus in December 2011. Khan made a frantic phone call to her sister before her disappearance, indicating she was concerned about an unidentified man who was harassing her. Family members feared the worst.

Khan’s husband of five months went on “Good Morning America” and made a public plea to the kidnappers he believed abducted his wife.

“My message to the kidnapper is, let her go,” Waseem Khan said on the show. “You have the power to let her go, and I will completely forgive you.”

After weeks of national attention, several searches, and the involvement of multiple law enforcement agencies, Khan resurfaced, unharmed. Publicly, little information has been released explaining Khan’s disappearance.

Disappearances like Khan’s and Schnackenberg’s show there’s no uniformity in how missing-persons cases will end, Lauth said.

“There are so many variables that play into missing-persons cases,” he said. “That’s what makes them so fascinating.”

‘We may never know’

The disappearance of Elvin Crist remains an open case, said Lawrence Police Sgt. Trent McKinley, and he encouraged anyone with information to contact police.

“Missing-persons cases are never closed until that person is located,” McKinley said.

Gerig, the private investigator, said she still thinks “something will pop” in the case and provide closure for the Crists.

Arlin and his family, however, are less optimistic about ever getting answers to Elvin’s disappearance.

About a decade after Elvin vanished, the family had him officially declared dead.

“You always remain hopeful something will come up. But as the years go by, it’s less likely,” Arlin said. “We may never know.”

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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