Current Events > More stories of minorities missing is being reported now

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Zikten
09/23/21 9:35:02 PM
#1:


People realized it's a problem after the Gabby case. Here is a lady missing from an area I used to live in. Native American of the Tulalip Tribe in Washington state

https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/23/us/mary-johnson-missing-indigenous-women-crisis-cec/index.html
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008Zulu
09/23/21 9:36:51 PM
#2:


I still have no idea who Gabby is, other that she's a white girl.

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Zikten
09/23/21 9:38:40 PM
#3:


008Zulu posted...
I still have no idea who Gabby is, other that she's a white girl.

She was a youtuber that was making videos about living in a van and traveling across the country
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CADE FOSTER
09/23/21 9:59:53 PM
#4:


Gabby was on every news channel i want that same enthusiasm for everybody
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dj1200
09/23/21 10:01:45 PM
#5:


008Zulu posted...
I still have no idea who Gabby is, other that she's a white girl.

She's been all over the news.

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008Zulu
09/23/21 10:05:16 PM
#6:


dj1200 posted...
She's been all over the news.
In America maybe.

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CADE FOSTER
09/23/21 10:06:00 PM
#7:


008Zulu posted...
In America maybe.
not jus america worldwide Canada and Uk have run reports about her Australia aswell
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#8
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#9
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specialkid8
09/23/21 10:27:49 PM
#10:


I imagine reporting missing people on a national level is going to be a hot trend for a few weeks.

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dj1200
09/23/21 10:29:06 PM
#11:


specialkid8 posted...
I imagine reporting missing people on a national level is going to be a hot trend for a few weeks.

probably. Then everyone will forget about it.

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xue1
09/23/21 10:29:12 PM
#12:


Darryl Strawberry's granddaughter is missing in Nevada. Darryl Strawberry is an African-American baseball player
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s0nicfan
09/23/21 10:30:54 PM
#13:


specialkid8 posted...
I imagine reporting missing people on a national level is going to be a hot trend for a few weeks.

Unfortunately a few high profile, highly dramatic news cycles aren't likely to really bring how big of an issue this is to light:
\https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/missing-persons-by-state
According to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons (NamUS) database, which is funded by the U.S. Department of Justice, more than 600,000 persons of all ages go missing every year, and approximately 4,400 unidentified bodies are recovered every year.

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specialkid8
09/23/21 10:32:18 PM
#14:


dj1200 posted...
probably. Then everyone will forget about it.
yep

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PrettyBoyFloyd
09/23/21 10:34:07 PM
#15:


xue1 posted...
Darryl Strawberry's granddaughter is missing in Nevada. Darryl Strawberry is an African-American baseball player

Who...who in the fuck doesn't know that?

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PrettyBoyFloyd
09/23/21 10:46:49 PM
#16:


Anyway a 1977 murder was "sort of" solved.

Even though suspect is dead, family glad police solved Raleigh woman's 1977 rape, murder

Raleigh, N.C. Raleigh police have solved a 44-year-old murder case, but they say the suspect in the crime is already dead.

Alma Jones, 77, was raped and killed on Christmas Day in 1977, but no one was ever charged.

Kenneth Evans said he and his mother found his grandmother dead in the hallway of her southeast Raleigh home.

"It was rough. It's a vision that sticks with you when you walk in the door and see your grandmother stretched out, unclothed," Evans said Thursday.

"It was sad because we all felt like it was someone she knew, because my grandmother was very particular with letting people in her home."

"We knew it was someone she knew.

We just didn't know who," said Jaqueline Watson, Jones' great-granddaughter.

In 2011, police were transferring boxes of evidence from older cases when they came across Jones' case and started looking into it again.

"It was just a brutal crime," Raleigh police Detective Jerry Faulk said. "This case kind of stood out as one we really wanted to work on if we could."

With the help of Houston-based Othram Inc., which can evaluate older, degraded DNA evidence, Faulk and other investigators eventually developed a DNA profile of Jones' killer.

"It's an incredible amount of information that we're gathering from evidence that, even a few years ago, just wasn't really suitable for further analysis," Othram founder and Chief Executive David Mittelman said.

"It's incredibly exciting because we're unlocking information from crime scenes that have, you know, basically been exhausted in the past."

"What we can do today, we couldn't have done 10, 20 years ago, 30, 40 years ago," Faulk agreed.

From the profile, investigators identified Paul Crowder as the suspect.

Crowder, the grandson of one of Jones' neighbors, was interviewed at the time of her death, but police didn't consider him a prime suspect at that time.

He later served 14 years in prison for robbery and died in 2015.

Investigators persuaded one of his relatives to provide a saliva sample for a DNA comparison, which confirmed that he was the person responsible for Jones' death.

"[With] that question mark that had been there for so many years," Faulk said, "it's always a great feeling to be able to know and put a name with that person whose responsible for this crime."

Jones' murder has been a black cloud that has hung over the family for generations, and members said Thursday that they were pleased police have finally answered some of their questions.

"It's been a long time. It's good to have some answers, some closure and a name," Evans said.

"It feels really good to know and to understand our history," said Teia Petrus, Jones' great-great-granddaughter.

The Raleigh Police Department has another 75 or so unsolved homicide cases dating to the mid-1960s.

"As technology continues to change and get better, I think that's there's hope that we can solve many more cases just like this," Faulk said.

"I would love to solve the next one just as much as I loved solving this one, because they're all important."



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