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Date Person(s) Age Country of Disappearance Circumstances Outcome Time spent missing or unconfirmed 1900 Ernst Winter: 19 Germany Ernst Winter was a German man who went missing from Konitz on 11 March 1900 after he had left the house where he was boarding and parts of body were found on March 15, 1900 and April 15, 1900 after being killed and dismembered.
Lyle Stevik (c. 1976 – September 16, 2001) was the alias used by an American man who, in 2001, committed suicide inside a motel room in Amanda Park, Washington.Although his body was quickly discovered, and fingerprints, DNA and dental information collected and recorded, there were no matches in any databases and the man's identity remained unknown until 2018.
After February 10, 2010, Ashraf's body was found in Asker after the police were told the location of it. Murdered 7 days 2010 Mackenzie Cowell: 17 United States Mackenzie Cowell was a high school student who went missing after last being seen leaving the beauty school she attended in Wenatchee, Washington, on February 9, 2010. She had told ...
December 14, 2023 at 1:53 PM. The family of an Alabama inmate who was found dead in his bed filed a federal lawsuit alleging that his heart had been removed before the facility returned the body ...
The sheriff’s office reached out to law enforcement in Santa Barbara, and found an incident report had been filed on May 8, 1997, where 20-year-old Jefferey Kimzy was a possible offender.
Bernard Whitehurst was shot in the back and killed on December 2, 1975, by Donald Foster, a Montgomery, Alabama police officer who mistakenly thought Whitehurst was the suspect in the robbery of a neighborhood grocery store. There was a police cover-up that included police officers planting a gun on him from the police evidence room.
November 10, 2021 at 2:28 PM Tuscaloosa Police Department After several days of searching, authorities have found the body of a missing University of Alabama student, police announced Tuesday ...
Ten-codes, officially known as ten signals, are brevity codes used to represent common phrases in voice communication, particularly by US public safety officials and in citizens band (CB) radio transmissions. The police version of ten-codes is officially known as the APCO Project 14 Aural Brevity Code. [1]