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| 2007 Wasson, Ada 4-19-07; Lebanon 80 YO | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Jun 2 2007, 11:44 PM (222 Views) | |
| burnsjl2003 | Jun 2 2007, 11:44 PM Post #1 |
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http://www.star-telegram.com/238/story/93736.html Few clues found so far in case of missing retired women By DAN SEWELL The Associated Press MARY ELLEN WALTERS LEBANON, Ohio -- Mary Ellen Walters and Ada Wasson set out from their retirement community for a routine day of outlet-store shopping, not telling anyone they planned a long trip or even asking anyone to feed Walters' beloved dog. There hasn't been a trace of them in more than two weeks. Authorities, volunteers and relatives have driven up and down roads covering thousands of square miles of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana and have flown over the region. They've looked for credit-card activity, studied store videotapes, checked under bridges and passed out thousands of fliers. Maj. John Newsom of the Warren County Sheriff's Office said the investigation is one of the broadest ever for the area, which is between Dayton and Cincinnati. Newsom said there's no indication of foul play. "They're out there somewhere. It may be the next square mile we search," said Brad Nixon, Walters' son-in-law. Walter, 68, and Wasson, 80, are believed to have left the closely knit Otterbein Retirement Living Community on April 19, headed to a J.C. Penney outlet store in Columbus or Carrollton, Ky., with Wasson driving her 2000 Chevrolet Impala. They were reported missing three days later, when Walters' daughter came to pick her up for an evening out and found worried neighbors. "That's all we think about," said Dorothy Pfeiffer, Walters' next-door neighbor. There's never been a missing-person case at Otterbein. Walters is a mother of three whose husband was in Florida with his own ailing mother, and Wasson is a widow with no children. They had set out for Carrollton's outlet mall, some 80 miles southwest, earlier that week but got lost. They had lunch in Kentucky, then returned home laughing about it, said Walters' daughter, Cindy Nixon, and neighbors. The two women preferred driving scenic highways rather than Interstate 71. That complicates the search. Authorities know that Wasson filled her car's gas tank the night of April 18, and the women left sometime the next day. There, the trail goes cold. http://www.neighborsearch.info/ NeighborSearch This website is devoted to searching for Mary Ellen Walters and Ada Wasson, two elderly women who failed to return to their homes at Otterbein Lebanon Retirement Community after a planned shopping trip. We encourage your participation in the search and welcome all prayers for the ladies and their families. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Friday, May 4th - The Warren County Sheriff’s office met with the Walters’ family and Otterbein Administration today to discuss the next steps in the investigation and the search for Mary Ellen Walters and Ada Wasson. Members of the Walters family will fly a search over areas of Kentucky this weekend. This is in addition to the completed air search on Monday by the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) in northern Kentucky. CAP will also search Clermont County today, weather permitting. Air searches of Warren County and the I-71 corridor between Columbus and Cincinnati have been completed. Law enforcement agencies in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana are supportive and have provided assistance in following leads and informing local police in their areas. Warren County detectives reviewed video from locations where they were thought to have been. The family is also reviewing the video. A request for help in locating information was presented to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources statewide and fliers were distributed. All tips and leads have been followed to date with the Columbus Police also following up on dozens of sighting in that area. While the FBI does not have jurisdiction since no crime has been committed, they are monitoring the situation and have offered some assistance. The Walters’ family is grateful for the support from all areas of the community and encourages the public to continue to search and be vigilant for the missing women. Please call the hot-line (513) 696-8582 to volunteer or report a search area completed or respond by email to search@neighborsearch.info. See the website for updates www.neighborsearch.info. All tips or possible sightings of the vehicle should be reported to the Warren County Sheriff’s Office at (513) 695-1280. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NeighborSearch will provide updates as they are available on the search for Mary Ellen Walters and Ada Wasson. The following information is currently available: Click to go to Areas Reported As Already Searched Page -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Warren County Sheriff's Office According to the Warren County Sheriff's office, the public's help is needed. If you have any information that may help the women be found, please contact the Sheriff's office at 513 925-1280 during business hours and 513 925-2525 after business hours. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Search Volunteers Needed We are attempting to organize a search for Mary Ellen and Ada. If you have expertise in coordinating and implementing a search of this kind we need your help. Please email search@neighborsearch.info or call 513-696-8582. If you are willing to search an area or have searched a particular area along the I-71 corridor between Cincinnati and Columbus please email or call the locations that have been searched. You may print the poster and place it at the beginning of your search area so that others know the location has been covered. Search Tips: Print a poster from the website and take tape or tacks Call 513 695-1280 if you locate the car Always use caution – be careful when looking into ravines or ditches Place a poster at the entrance of a searched area so others do not retrace that area Always drive/walk to the right when searching an area ending at the starting point. Watch for tire tracks that lead to thick brush or to a ravine or ditch Look for brush that appears to be trampled or crushed Take water, snacks and a first aid kit if possible in your car so that they are available for Ada and Mary Ellen when found. We know that they must be thirsty and hungry by now. Call the search number or email the locations that have been searched as soon as possible. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- An organized search is being developed through the help of The United Methodist Church, Ohio River Valley District. Churches and church members who live or work along I-71 to join in searching the roads off I-71. The initial area of concentration is 50 miles east or west of I-71. In particular we are searching for a silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala, Ohio plates DG 30 LC. If you are able to help search, please call 513-696-8582 with the area you have searched so that we can best deploy volunteer resources. Given the length of time that these women have been missing, the sooner we can begin assisting in the search, the better. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Click to go to Areas Reported As Already Searched Page Also See - Ohio Counties Search Grid the car is pictured below Searches continue for missing women BY JANICE MORSE | JMORSE@ENQUIRER.COM E-mail | Print | digg us! | del.icio.us! A Butler County woman vanished almost a month ago. So did a pair of elderly Warren County women. The cases have little in common -- except their families and friends are worried, investigators are frustrated but determined, and the women’s descriptions sit in computer databases waiting for breakthroughs. “They’ve just fallen off the face of the earth, without a focal point of a crime scene or a criminal incident,” Butler County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Anthony Dwyer said, referring to all three women. The missing women are listed in the Ohio Law Enforcement Automated Data System computer as well as the National Crime Information Center’s missing-persons database. If anything connected to the women is found, police running computer checks would discover the missing-persons reports, officials said. Seeking a “tidbit” Dwyer’s office is investigating the April 14 disappearance of Kiva Gazaway, 38, of Liberty Township, probably a victim of foul play. Investigators have made “significant progress” in the case, Dwyer said. “We’ve eliminated a lot of situations and a lot of potential locations.” Authorities found her car in Fairfield and identified her boyfriend, Harvey "Shawn" Johnson, as a "person of interest.” He is being held in Florida on unrelated charges. But they haven’t said what they think happened to Gazaway. “We’ve not found her – and if foul play has happened, we’ve not found the body,” Dwyer said. He thinks some people still have information that might be helpful. Even just a “tidbit” could be enough to unlock the puzzle, Dwyer said. Longer-term missing-persons cases require interviews and re-interviews. Investigators “spiral out” from what is known and seek more information, then circle back to gather more pieces from earlier sources, Dwyer said. Even though the case has been well-publicized, Dwyer said some people who knew Gazaway and her boyfriend were totally unaware of the events surrounding both. Some people “don’t really look at the news,” Dwyer said. Others were out-of-town on vacation or on business when the initial publicity hit. ‘Frustrating’ search In neighboring Warren County, sheriff’s Maj. John Newsom has tried getting national attention on the case of Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80. The women were last seen April 19 as they left Otterbein Retirement Living Community in Turtlecreek Township, where they lived. They had intended to go shopping, but no trace of them has been found. Newsom persuaded FoxNews.com and America’s Most Wanted to feature the cases on their Internet sites, hoping to generate more information. “There still are leads that are trickling in... we keep following up,” he said Friday. Grasping for anything useful, Newsom finds himself scanning the highway as he goes about his personal business, looking for a glimpse of the missing car. “You don’t realize how many 2000 silver Impalas are out there until you start looking for them. It’s a common, nondescript car,” he said. “It’s both frustrating and disheartening...we’d really like to work this out for the families’ sake.” This case is unusual because there is “no clear-cut starting point.” “Who knows if they made it to their first destination and got lost, or never made it there, or went somewhere else?” Newsom said. “If you’ve got suspicious circumstances, you have a starting point. We don’t even have that.” Anyone with information on the Gazaway case is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 513-352-3040 or the Butler County Sheriff’s Office at 513-785-1000. Anyone with information in the Otterbein women’s case is asked to call the Warren County Sheriff’s Office, 513-695-1280, or county dispatch at 513-925-2525 http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/art...EWS01/305110051 Local news Cincinnati.Com » The Enquirer » Local news » Missing women frustrates cops Last Updated: 5:24 pm | Saturday, May 19, 2007 Missing women frustrates cops No clues a month after disappearance; family losing optimism BY MARGARET A. MCGURK | MMCGURK@ENQUIRER.COM E-mail | Print | digg us! | del.icio.us! A month gone by, and still no trace of Ada Wasson or Mary Ellen Walters. The two retirees - 80 and 68, respectively - left their homes April 19 at Otterbein Retirement Living Community in Turtlecreek Township in Warren County to do some outlet shopping, perhaps in Kentucky, perhaps Columbus. Walters' daughter Cindy Nixon went to her mother's home April 22, discovered that she was gone and called the police. The Warren County sheriff notified neighboring police; then the report went into the Ohio Law Enforcement Automated Data System and the National Crime Information Center database. Friends and family called news outlets, passed out posters and fliers, set up a Web site and recruited volunteers through United Methodist churches, in which Walters served as a minister. Scores of volunteers fanned out to scour highways and back roads. Aircraft owners helped expand the search to almost 8,000 square miles in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. They found nothing. There have been no phone calls, no police reports, no bank or credit-card charges - nothing to hint at the whereabouts of the two women. The mystery has frustrated investigators and battered their families' hopes. "We had a hard Mother's Day," Brad Nixon, Walters' son-in-law, said. "We're hoping they are found, and found soon, for the sake of the family. But our optimism has diminished." Nixon has served as spokesman for the family, which includes Cindy's brother Joe, his wife and children and Walters' husband, who was in Florida caring for his ailing mother April 19. Wasson's sister, Jean Pierce-Jones of Milford, at first held on to the possibility that her sister, a widow who had no children and loved to travel, had talked Walters into going on some kind of adventure. She doesn't believe that any more. "I think everyone has done whatever they could, and they can't expect any more," she said. "I understand it's on a national database of some kind. "If the bodies are found, we'll be called." She has begun emptying out her sister's Otterbein residence. "There are people on the waiting list wanting to go into the home," she said. DEAD-END LEADS Major John Newsom of the Warren County Sheriff's Office said the case is unlike any other he has handled in decades of police work. "Most of the time, you have a clear-cut starting point," Newsom said. "We don't know if they made it to their original destination. It's speculation at best trying to figure out where they went, or even when they left. Everything is a guess." Police know that Wasson filled the gas tank on her silver 2000 Impala April 18 and that both women spoke to relatives and neighbors about their shopping plans, although accounts of where they meant to go are contradictory. Neither woman had a cell phone. Walters is diabetic and moves with difficulty because of knee problems. Wasson has shown signs of confusion, including losing her way while driving, since she survived a serious illness in February. A few leads have come in. All turned out to be vague or simply mistaken. One discounted report said the two women had been seen recently buying lawn cushions at a yard sale in Indiana. "It doesn't seem plausible they could be out shopping three weeks after they disappeared," Nixon said. Another suggested the women may have been seen in Corbin, Ky., Nixon said. "That was followed up by police and air searching, but when it was all said and done, there was no firsthand account that they were there." "We've searched high and low," Nixon said. "We're getting out our maps and marking off every single street and road. We get out and walk where there is a drop-off and you can't see over the side." Throughout, he said, "There was no sign anywhere, and no firsthand accounts. That says to me something happened relatively quickly (after they left home). A sighting five days later, two weeks later, does not to me ring true, because, where would they be in the meantime?" Wasson's sister agrees. "I'm very positive ... that they were going for just the one day. Whatever happened to them happened on Friday or Saturday at the latest." STAYING ON THE CASE Now, she said: "It's just kind of waiting around. Not knowing is bad. They may never find them. There just is not a trace to even follow. We'd like to know what in the world happened to them, but I'm resigned to the fact that whatever will be will be." Walters' family plans to keep searching, Nixon said, despite the strain. "Everyone is hanging in. You have that moment when the exterior kind of falls apart, but people are doing as well as they can." Police also will keep trying to unravel the mystery, Newsom said. "My hope is now with schools being out, people getting more active, hiking and fishing with their families and getting into areas not easily seen by air, that somebody will find them. "I wish I could say more and do more. We still have a detective assigned, and we will. This case won't close until we have some logical answer." Help Still Needed for Search: www.associatedcontant.com Missing from Ohio; Have You Seen Ada Wasson or Mary Ellen Walters? By Ever Odessa Takeaways Ada Wasson is 80 years old Mary Ellen Walters is 68 years old Both missing along with car, Silver 2000 Chevy Impala Ada Wasson and Mary Ellen Walters were last seen April 19, 2007 in Warren County, Ohio where they left their retirement home together to go shopping for the day. According to the Associated Press, the two may have been planning to shop the outlet malls of Columbus, Ohio or Carrollton, Kentucky; and were driving a silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala with Ohio license plate DG30LC. They have been missing ever since. If you live in the Kentucky, Indiana, or Ohio area, help is currently needed with the search for Ada Wasson and Mary Ellen Walters. For more information on this case or how you can help, please visit Neighbor Search. Source: Associated Press, Neighbor Search More resources www.neighborsearch.info www.local12.com Search For Two Missing Women Goes From Land To Water Last Update: May 27, 2007 10:02 AM A water search begins today after a month and a half of searching for two missing women. 68-year-old Mary Ellen Walters and 80-year-old Ada Wasson disappeared April 19 from their Lebanon homes. They haven't been heard from since. This was the first search of Caeser Creek in Warren County. Using Sonar and powerful magnets, searchers hope to find a sign of the woman's car. That's after weeks of searching by ground and air without any success. The family got some new information this week. A witness reports seeing the women leave home at 4:15 p.m. the day they left together. That's later than previously thought. Now the family thinks the women may have stayed in the local area and not gone on an out of town shopping trip. If you have any information that might help investigators find the missing women call the Warren County Sheriff's Office at 695-1280. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:11 PM Post #2 |
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THE ENQUIRER The Warren County Sheriff's Office seeks the public's help in locating two women from Warren County. Mary Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, were last seen April 19 at Otterbein Retirement Living Community in Warren County. The two women live in the Patio Homes section, which is an independent living area. They were thought to be in Walters' silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala with Ohio registration DG 30 LC. The women may have been driving to a JC Penney outlet center either in Columbus, Ohio, or Carrolton, Ky. Rosemary Cicak, spokesperson for Otterbein, said the two women are good friends. "It's not an unusual thing for them to go off and do things together," she said. But said neighbors became concerned when they did not return and alerted sheriff's detectives Sunday. But so far, detectives have had no luck finding them. There has been no activity on any gas or credit cards belonging to the women, said sheriff's spokesman Maj. John Newsom. Detectives searched the women's homes with the permission of their families and did not find anything out of the ordinary. Foul play is not suspected, but police are concerned for the women's safety. "We just need the public's help at this point," Newsom said. If you have information, call (513) 925-1280 during business hours or (513) 925-2525 after business hours. http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/art...0387/1056/COL02 |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:12 PM Post #3 |
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Search Continues For Missing Retirement Community Residents Posted By: Laura Hornsby The search continues for two Tri-state women who have been missing ever since their shopping excursion nearly one week ago. Ada Wasson and Mary Walters left the Otterbein Retirement Community in Warren County on Friday. The women each have patio homes in the independent living section and are free to come and go as they please. The women are driving a Chevy Impala with Ohio plates DG-30-lC. If you have any information about this crime, please call Crime Stoppers at (513) 352-3040. You don't have to give your name and you may be eligible for a reward if your tips lead to an arrest. http://www.wcpo.com/news/local/story.aspx?...ce-3b553513501f |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:12 PM Post #4 |
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Search For 2 Warren Co. Women Intensifies Posted By: Neil Relyea The search for two Warren County women missing from a retirement community has intensified. Friends and church members are searching for the women everywhere from Columbus, Ohio to Carrollton Kentucky. The two women had plans to go shopping one week ago and no one's seen them since. Now the community is rallying together with hopes of finding the women safe. "It's difficult, but we have to keep thinking about them being out there for seven days and we want them home, so we've just got to get these people out to help search in an organized fashion," said Brad Nixon, an organizer of the search. "We're going from Columbus, 50 miles off the road either direction down to Carrollton," said Nixon. Nixon is helping organize the search for his mother-in-law Mary Walters and her friend Ada Wasson. Members of United Methodist churches in the region are also combing their communities. The women each have homes in the independent living section of the Otterbein retirement community in Turtlecreek Township, a community affiliated with the Methodist church. Investigators says the focus should be on finding the car the women took on their shopping trip. They were headed to a J.C. Penney outlet – either in Columbus or Carrollton – in a silver Chevy Impala with Ohio plates DG-30-LC. "The longer the time passes, the more concerned we become of something happening to them," said Chief Larry Sims, of the Warren County sheriff's office, "especially when their normal habits are to stay in contact with friends or family." Detectives from Warren County have been to the Columbus outlet to search the parking lot for the car. State police are doing the same thing at the Carrollton location. Surveillance video is being searched to see if the women ever made it into one of the stores. Back at Otterbein, the retirement community has set up a website about the search. It has also set up a hotline for people who want to help, and residents are signing up for a prayer chain. "We hope we can find them and we hope it will be a good outcome," said Jean Carroll, of Otterbein United Methodist Church. "And we can only pray that they have gotten out of the loop of communication and we can soon find some good news about them." Relatives say the women did get disoriented on a different shopping trip, so they worry that's what happened this time. http://www.wcpo.com/news/local/story.aspx?...89-fb5d1d6dc393 |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:13 PM Post #5 |
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Ohio Women Vanish On Way To Outlet POSTED: 2:12 pm EDT April 28, 2007 UPDATED: 2:20 pm EDT April 28, 2007 LEBANON, Ohio -- A church has asked members to help search for two women missing since they left their retirement community in southwest Ohio more than a week ago for a shopping trip. Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, were thought to be traveling to a JCPenney outlet store in either Columbus or Carrollton, Ky., on April 19, authorities said. Family and friends fear the women might have become confused and gotten lost somewhere along Interstate 71. Carrollton is about 50 miles southwest of Cincinnati. Walters is a retired United Methodist minister. An e-mail from the church's Ohio River Valley District asked ministers Thursday to enlist congregants who live and work along I-71 to help look for the women and their car, Wasson's silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala with Ohio license plate DG3-0LC. The church is seeking volunteers to search roads within five to 10 miles of the highway, said Cindi Dietrich, finance manager of the church district. "Nobody's heard anything from them," Dietrich said. "We pray they are safe." The women are residents of the independent-living section of the Otterbein Retirement Living Community near Lebanon. Friends and family like Wasson's sister, Jean Pierce Jones, expressed their concerns Thursday, NewsChannel5 partner ONN reported. "I think that they more than likely planned on coming home Sunday and something's happened. I really feel like something has happened," Jones said. The Warren County Sheriff's Office alerted police agencies in Ohio and Kentucky about the women. There has been no activity on their credit cards. Walters' son-in-law, Brad Nixon, said neither woman had a cell phone. Walters would not be able to walk far for help, he said, because she has undergone two knee replacements. There was no sign the women did any shopping after leaving home. Anyone seeing the car was being asked to contact local authorities. http://www.newsnet5.com/news/13216232/detail.html |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:13 PM Post #6 |
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http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/art...EWS01/305010056 Sheriff's update on missing women The Warren County Sheriff’s Office issued the following statement this afternoon: Mary Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, were last seen Thursday April 19th at Otterbein Retirement Living Community located at State Routes 741 and 63 in Warren County. They are believed to be in Mrs. Wasson’s 2000 Chevrolet Impala, silver in color bearing Ohio registration DG 30 LC. New information – the vehicle should have a blue handicap placard on the rearview mirror of the car. The women enjoy shopping together. The women may have been traveling to outlet malls in Ohio or Kentucky. The investigation has included consultation with the Cincinnati Office of the FBI and coordinated air and ground searches utilizing the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office helicopter and the Civil Air Patrol. Residents of the Tri-State area are urged to check areas close to their homes and travel routes. River and creek ravines, culverts, ditches are of particular interest because the vegetation overgrowth in those areas may prevent observation from aircraft. Detectives are investigating leads as they are received. There is still no indication of criminal involvement in this case. Otterbein Retirement Community has set up a website with information about the two missing women. Anyone with information is directed to call the Warren County Sheriff’s Office at 513-695-1280, Crime Stoppers at 513-352-3040 or their local authorities. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:14 PM Post #7 |
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http://news.communitypress.com/apps/pbcs.d...0357/1075/Local Elderly Warren County women still missing The Warren County Sheriff's office is asking anyone with information about two missing Otterbein Retirement Living Community residents to call 695-1280 or Crime Stoppers at 352-3040. Mary Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, were last seen April 19 at the retirement home located at state Routes 741 and 63 in Turtlecreek Township. They are believed to be in Wasson's silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala, Ohio license DG 30 LC. The vehicle should have a blue handicap placard on the rearview mirror. The women may have been traveling to outlet malls in Ohio or Kentucky. Searchers for the women have included the Cincinnati office of the FBI and coordinated air and ground searches using the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office helicopter and the Civil Air Patrol. Residents are urged to check areas close to their homes or travel routes. River and creek ravines, culverts and ditches are of particular interest because vegetation in those areas may prevent aerial observation. Police said there is no indication of criminal involvement in the case. Otterbein Retirement Community has set up a Web site with information about the missing women at www.neighborsearch.info. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:14 PM Post #8 |
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http://www.whiotv.com/news/13244071/detail.html Search For Missing Lebanon Women May Be Scaled Back POSTED: 1:49 pm EDT May 2, 2007 LEBANON, Ohio -- Authorities expect the intense search for two missing southwest Ohio women will be pulled back soon. Major John Newsom with the Warren County sheriff's office said efforts to find 68-year-old Mary Ellen Waters and 80-year-old Ada Wasson will be kept up as long as possible. But he said authorities may be running out of time. The women have not been seen since they left their retirement community in Lebanon to go shopping on April 19. Neighbors said the two had mentioned possible destinations in Columbus and Carrollton, Ky. So law enforcement agencies and volunteer searchers have been focusing on a 100-mile area along Interstate 71. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:15 PM Post #9 |
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http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/news/17180817.htm Women went shopping, then went missing more than two weeks ago DAN SEWELL Associated Press LEBANON, Ohio - Thousands of square miles covering a three-state area have been searched in the more than two weeks since two women left their retirement community for a day of outlet-store shopping and never came back, disappearing with scarcely a trace. Authorities, volunteers and family members have driven up and down roads in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana and flown over them in planes and helicopters; they've studied store videotapes, checked under bridges, and passed out thousands of fliers with the women's photos and car information. But the efforts have yielded no successful leads to the whereabouts of Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, in what Warren County Sheriff's Maj. John Newsom calls one of the broadest investigations ever in this area about midway between Dayton and Cincinnati. "They're out there somewhere. It may be the next square mile we search," said Brad Nixon, Walters' son-in-law. He planned to look by air Saturday with a pilot from nearby Blue Ash who's donating his time and plane. "The optimism is reduced ... but how do you stop?" The women are believed to have left the closely knit Otterbein Retirement Living Community here April 19 for a J.C. Penney outlet store in either Columbus or Carrollton, Ky., with Wasson driving her 2000 Chevrolet Impala. They were reported missing three days later, when Walters' daughter came to pick her up for an evening out and found worried neighbors. Concern has spread through Otterbein, where most of the 800 residents live independently in the not-for-profit community tied to the United Methodist Church and dating to 1912. "That's all we think about," said Dorothy Pfeiffer, Walters' next-door neighbor. "We're kind of like zombies now." Cindy Nixon last saw her mother April 18, when she took her to watch her 5-year-old grandson swim. Walters, a mother of three whose husband was in Florida with his own ailing mother, and Wasson, a widow with no children, had set out for Carrollton's outlet mall, some 80 miles to the southwest, earlier in the week but got lost. They had lunch at a restaurant along the Ohio River in Kentucky, then came back home, laughing about it, Cindy Nixon and neighbors said. Shopping was a favorite activity of the two. They preferred driving scenic highways rather than Interstate 71. That complicates the search, because there are multiple ways to get to Carrollton, including via Indiana, or to Columbus, 90 miles to the north. Authorities know Wasson filled her car with gas the night of April 18, and they left some time the next day. There the trail goes cold. _ There has been no activity on the women's credit or bank cards, police say. _ There were no signs of any plans for an extended trip, no luggage gone or indications of planning. _ Walters left her beloved Schnauzer mix Suzie alone; she normally asks neighbors to watch the dog if she will be away long. _ Neighbors saw nothing out of the ordinary at their homes. Pfeiffer said the retirees keep an eye on neighbors' property. "Not much gets missed here," she said. _ Reported sightings by employees at the outlet mall in Carrollton haven't panned out. Police and family members spent hours studying parking lot and store videotapes, and checkout register records that retain zip code information were reviewed. "We've looked at this from every angle we can think of," said Newsom, who noted there has been no indication of foul play. Police have been meeting every morning to discuss the investigation and have consulted with FBI experts. Alerts have also been sent to police nationally. The Alzheimer's Association has a national "Safe Return" identification and alert program that patients prone to wandering off can be enrolled in and claims a nearly 99 percent success rate for safe recovery. Monica Moreno of the Chicago-based group said there were more than 1,600 reported instances last year of people with Alzheimer's or other dementia going missing nationally. Neither of the women was enrolled in the program. Wasson at times became confused, while Walters was limited physically by knee problems, neighbors said. But a community where people enjoy living on their own hasn't had such a missing person case before, said Bob Benson, chief executive of the Otterbein community. Cindy Nixon, who remains optimistic the women will be found safely, said family members hope to help others by compiling a database of contacts and things they've learned in the search - such as making sure neighbors know how to contact children and also faxing information to people regularly on the roads such as truckers and rural-route postal carriers. Hope is fading for some. "At first the phone lines buzzed, 'Have you heard anything? Have you heard anything?'" said the Rev. Ronald Payne, who succeeded Walters as pastor of the Milford Center United Methodist Church in northwest Ohio when she retired three years ago. "Now people are afraid the worst has happened." Newsom said police are still making daily efforts, but will soon have to begin scaling back the search. "We all have mothers and grandmothers. We're saddened we can't find them," he said Friday. "We always want to be able to fix things for people. We haven't been able to fix this." ON THE NET Special web site: http://www.neighborsearch.info |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:15 PM Post #10 |
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http://news.cincypost.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ar...EWS01/705050348 Women went shopping, then missing By Dan Sewell Associated Press LEBANON, Ohio - Thousands of square miles covering a three-state area have been searched in the more than two weeks since two women left their retirement community for a day of outlet-store shopping and never came back, disappearing with scarcely a trace. Authorities, volunteers and family members have driven up and down roads in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana and flown over them in planes and helicopters; they've studied store videotapes, checked under bridges, and passed out thousands of fliers with the women's photos and car information. But the efforts have yielded no successful leads to the whereabouts of Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, in what Warren County Sheriff's Maj. John Newsom calls one of the broadest investigations ever in this area about midway between Dayton and Cincinnati. "They're out there somewhere. It may be the next square mile we search," said Brad Nixon, Walters' son-in-law. He planned to look by air Saturday with a pilot from nearby Blue Ash who's donating his time and plane. "The optimism is reduced ... but how do you stop?" The women are believed to have left the closely knit Otterbein Retirement Living Community here April 19 for a J.C. Penney outlet store in either Columbus or Carrollton, Ky., with Wasson driving her 2000 Chevrolet Impala. They were reported missing three days later, when Walters' daughter came to pick her up for an evening out and found worried neighbors. Concern has spread through Otterbein, where most of the 800 residents live independently in the not-for-profit community tied to the United Methodist Church and dating to 1912. "That's all we think about," said Dorothy Pfeiffer, Walters' next-door neighbor. "We're kind of like zombies now." Cindy Nixon last saw her mother April 18, when she took her to watch her 5-year-old grandson swim. Walters, a mother of three whose husband was in Florida with his own ailing mother, and Wasson, a widow with no children, had set out for Carrollton's outlet mall, some 80 miles to the southwest, earlier in the week but got lost. They had lunch at a restaurant along the Ohio River in Kentucky, then came back home, laughing about it, Cindy Nixon and neighbors said. Shopping was a favorite activity of the two. They preferred driving scenic highways rather than Interstate 71. That complicates the search, because there are multiple ways to get to Carrollton, including via Indiana, or to Columbus, 90 miles to the north. Authorities know Wasson filled her car with gas the night of April 18, and they left some time the next day. There the trail goes cold. There has been no activity on the women's credit or bank cards, police say. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:16 PM Post #11 |
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Husband agonizes as wife, friend remain missing Walters and Wasson are among 1,500 from Ohio that are in the National Crime Information Center database By Tiffany Y. Latta Staff Writer Sunday, May 06, 2007 LEBANON — On a table in Joe Walters' sun room sits a green prayer book that he reads daily. In the last 17 days, the support he gets from the prayers has never meant more. But it's getting tougher each day he doesn't hear from his wife of 46 years, Mary E. Walters, and her friend, Ada L. Wasson. "It's unlike her to just take off like that without somebody knowing where she was going," said Joe Walters of Turtlecreek Twp., who was in Florida with his mother when the women disappeared. Mary Walters, 68, and Wasson, 80, disappeared from Otterbein Retirement Living Community in Turtlecreek Twp. April 19. They were headed on a shopping trip to a JCPenney outlet store in either Columbus or Carrollton, Ky., but they haven't been heard from since. The women are now among more than 51,000 active missing adults nationwide and 1,500 in Ohio in the National Crime Information Center database as of Jan. 31. Pending legislation could make searches for missing adults simpler. "The actual number of missing adults is probably double or triple that, but we don't know because not all cases are entered," said Kelly Bennett of the National Center for Missing Adults in Phoenix, Ariz. Entering the names into the database ensures that if agencies find missing adults like Wasson or Walters, they know that Warren County Sheriff's officials are looking for them. Law enforcement officials nationwide are required to enter the names of missing children into the database. But most states don't require officials to report missing adults, Bennett said. Warren County Sheriff Tom Ariss said officials hope to find them soon. "It hits home because we all have parents," Ariss said. "Our hopes are up that we will find these ladies. We hope they're just lost or somewhere enjoying life." Bennett also said while there are dozens agencies that support families of missing children, her office is the only national clearinghouse for missing adults. And her office is on the verge of closing because of lack of funding. "Adult cases just aren't looked at the some way," Bennett said. "Unless you're a Laci Peterson or someone gets national media attention, there's just not that sense of urgency from law enforcement." A law passed in December will soon change that in Ohio. Law enforcement officials will be required to report "high risk" missing adults in seven days and "low risk" missing adults in 30 days, said Brent Currence, director of the Ohio Missing Children Clearinghouse in Columbus. Currence said the Ohio Attorney General's Office is drafting policies and procedures for the law and police agencies should get the information in a couple of months. Family members and friends have searched via land and air for Wasson and Walters and are hoping for a break soon. "I just want her back. Not just me. We all want her back. We love her and miss her," Joe Walters said. http://www.daytondailynews.com/n/content/o...607missing.html |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:16 PM Post #12 |
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http://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_5833689 Cold trail stymies search for seniors By Dan Sewell The Associated Press Article Last Updated: 05/06/2007 11:04:20 PM MDT (The Denver Post)Lebanon, Ohio - Mary Ellen Walters and Ada Wasson set out from their retirement community for a routine day of outlet- store shopping, not telling anyone they planned a long trip or asking anyone to feed Walters' beloved dog. There hasn't been a trace of them in more than two weeks. Authorities, volunteers and relatives have driven up and down roads covering thousands of square miles of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana and flown over the region. They've looked for credit card activity, studied store videotapes, checked under bridges and passed out thousands of fliers. Warren County sheriff's Maj. John Newsom said there has been no indication of foul play. "They're out there somewhere. It may be Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson (pictured), 80, have been missing for more than two weeks. Officials know the pair gassed up Wasson's car April 18 but have no idea where they went the next day. (The Denver Post)the next square mile we search," said Brad Nixon, Walters' son-in-law. "The optimism is reduced ... but how do you stop?" Walters, 68, and Wasson, 80, are believed to have left Otterbein Retirement Living Community here on April 19 in Wasson's 2000 Chevrolet Impala. They were reported missing three days later, when Walters' daughter came to pick her up for an evening out and found worried neighbors. Walters is a mother of three whose husband was in Florida with his own ailing mother, and Wasson is a widow with no children. They had set out for a Carrollton, Ky., outlet mall, some 80 miles to the southwest, earlier that week but got lost. They came back home, laughing about it, said Walters' daughter, Cindy Nixon, and neighbors. There has been no activity on their credit or bank cards, police say. Neighbors said Walters normally would ask them to watch her Schnauzer mix, Suzie, if she planned to be away for long. Police and family members spent hours studying parking lot and store videotapes at the mall in Carrollton without success. "We've looked at this from every angle we can think of," Newsom said. He said police are still making daily efforts but soon will have to begin scaling back the search. "We always want to be able to fix things for people," he said Friday. "We haven't been able to fix this." |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:17 PM Post #13 |
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http://www.wlwt.com/news/13272970/detail.html Missing Women Get National Attention POSTED: 6:09 pm EDT May 7, 2007 UPDATED: 6:29 pm EDT May 7, 2007 LEBANON, Ohio -- More than two weeks after their disappearance, two missing Warren County women are drawing national attention. News outlets such as MSNBC broadcast stories Monday about Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, who left their retirement home April 19 to go on a shopping trip. Family members have searched thousands of square miles between Columbus and Carrollton, Ky., where the two women liked to shop at outlet malls. The scope of their search has expanded to cover more ground, as tips are reported and leads tracked down. A waitress in Vevay, Ind., said she saw the pair several days after their families last heard from them, and Walters’ son-in-law said he plans to ask someone at every business in the target area. “It’s been 17 days now and the family is still determined to bring them home,” said Brad Nixon. Nixon said the family has asked utility workers to look alongside roadways for the women or the Chevy Impala they drove, and they’ve also used the Internet to search for the pair. “It’s really reassuring that the community has come out, volunteered or provided ideas (because) we can use all the ideas we can get right now,” Nixon said. To volunteer in the search effort, visit this Web site. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:17 PM Post #14 |
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http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/art...EWS01/305110051 Searches continue for missing women BY JANICE MORSE | JMORSE@ENQUIRER.COM A Butler County woman vanished almost a month ago. So did a pair of elderly Warren County women. The cases have little in common -- except their families and friends are worried, investigators are frustrated but determined, and the women’s descriptions sit in computer databases waiting for breakthroughs. “They’ve just fallen off the face of the earth, without a focal point of a crime scene or a criminal incident,” Butler County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Anthony Dwyer said, referring to all three women. The missing women are listed in the Ohio Law Enforcement Automated Data System computer as well as the National Crime Information Center’s missing-persons database. If anything connected to the women is found, police running computer checks would discover the missing-persons reports, officials said. Seeking a “tidbit” Dwyer’s office is investigating the April 14 disappearance of Kiva Gazaway, 38, of Liberty Township, probably a victim of foul play. Investigators have made “significant progress” in the case, Dwyer said. “We’ve eliminated a lot of situations and a lot of potential locations.” Authorities found her car in Fairfield and identified her boyfriend, Harvey "Shawn" Johnson, as a "person of interest.” He is being held in Florida on unrelated charges. But they haven’t said what they think happened to Gazaway. “We’ve not found her – and if foul play has happened, we’ve not found the body,” Dwyer said. He thinks some people still have information that might be helpful. Even just a “tidbit” could be enough to unlock the puzzle, Dwyer said. Longer-term missing-persons cases require interviews and re-interviews. Investigators “spiral out” from what is known and seek more information, then circle back to gather more pieces from earlier sources, Dwyer said. Even though the case has been well-publicized, Dwyer said some people who knew Gazaway and her boyfriend were totally unaware of the events surrounding both. Some people “don’t really look at the news,” Dwyer said. Others were out-of-town on vacation or on business when the initial publicity hit. ‘Frustrating’ search In neighboring Warren County, sheriff’s Maj. John Newsom has tried getting national attention on the case of Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80. The women were last seen April 19 as they left Otterbein Retirement Living Community in Turtlecreek Township, where they lived. They had intended to go shopping, but no trace of them has been found. Newsom persuaded FoxNews.com and America’s Most Wanted to feature the cases on their Internet sites, hoping to generate more information. “There still are leads that are trickling in... we keep following up,” he said Friday. Grasping for anything useful, Newsom finds himself scanning the highway as he goes about his personal business, looking for a glimpse of the missing car. “You don’t realize how many 2000 silver Impalas are out there until you start looking for them. It’s a common, nondescript car,” he said. “It’s both frustrating and disheartening...we’d really like to work this out for the families’ sake.” This case is unusual because there is “no clear-cut starting point.” “Who knows if they made it to their first destination and got lost, or never made it there, or went somewhere else?” Newsom said. “If you’ve got suspicious circumstances, you have a starting point. We don’t even have that.” Anyone with information on the Gazaway case is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 513-352-3040 or the Butler County Sheriff’s Office at 513-785-1000. Anyone with information in the Otterbein women’s case is asked to call the Warren County Sheriff’s Office, 513-695-1280, or county dispatch at 513-925-2525. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:18 PM Post #15 |
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Since You Asked: Vanished without a trace May 13, 2007 I recently read a story about two elderly women who had gone shopping to a mall in the Kentucky area and were never heard from again. Do you have any updates on this story? Thanks. — Terry W., via e-mail There has been no progress, Terry, except increasing frustration that the pair appear to have simply vanished without a trace. Authorities fear their vehicle may have plunged into a ravine or is submerged and not visible to search efforts. Mary Ellen Walters, 68, and Ada Wasson, 80, failed to return to their homes at Otterbein Lebanon Retirement Community after a planned shopping trip to an outlet mall in Carrollton, Ky., or Columbus, Ohio, on April 19. They had reportedly attempted the trip the week before only to return home, after having dinner, when they got lost. According to an Associated Press story from May 7 — the last news coverage we could find — the two women preferred driving scenic highways rather than Interstate 71, complicating the search. Authorities know Wasson filled her car's gas tank the night of April 18, and they left the next day. Walters reportedly had knee problems, while Wasson was prone to becoming confused. There has been no activity on their credit or bank cards, police say. They didn't take any luggage or give any other signs of planning for a long trip. Neighbors said Walters normally would ask them to watch her dog, a Schnauzer mix named Suzie, if she planned to be away for long. Police and family have spent hours studying parking lot and store videotapes at the mall in Carrollton without success. Friends in the United Methodist Church's Ohio River Valley District — Walters retired as a Methodist minister in the district three years ago — have set up a Web site at www.neighborsearch.info to keep the public informed of search efforts. Unfortunately after scouring 8,000 square miles, they've turned up absolutely nothing. They are looking for the pair and the car they were believed to be driving, a silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala, Ohio plates DG 30 LC. http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/a...5130319/-1/NEWS |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:18 PM Post #16 |
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http://www.middletownjournal.com/hp/conten...ssingwomen.html Search goes on with few tips about 2 missing women Click-2-Listen By Daniel Wells Staff Writer Wednesday, May 23, 2007 TURTLECREEK TWP. — It's been more than a month since Ada Wasson and Mary Ellen Walters disappeared form their homes at Ottterbein Retirement Living Community. Although countless volunteers are still scanning the sides of roads from Columbus to Kentucky, family members of both women said their hopes are dwindling. "It's hard not knowing where she's at," Wasson's sister Jean Pierce-Jones said. "I don't know why, with all the prayers being said, they're not being answered. I think she's in the Lord's hands." Wasson, 80, and Walters, 68, left April 19 from the independent living area of Otterbein on Ohio 741 without changes of clothes, toiletries, or the medication Walters took for her diabetes. Neighbors said they believed the friends were headed on a shopping trip to either Carrollton, Ky. or Columbus. Walters' daughter Cindy Nixon reported her mother missing three days later when Mary Ellen wasn't home for a planned lunch date. Leads flooded into the Warren County Sheriff's Office in the days after the disappearance was announced. Employees at a Kentucky outlet mall reported seeing Wasson's vehicle but surveillance cameras didn't record either woman or the car they drove, a silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala with a handicapped parking card hanging from the rear-view mirror and license plate DG30LC. Mary Ellen's son Steve said he still takes four days a week to search for his mother. He's focusing closer to home now, after another neighbor recently said the women may have still been at Otterbein late in the afternoon April 19. "Everybody's got to recognize that even the smallest piece of information helps complete the picture," Walters said. "We're just looking for some kind of evidence that leads to closure." |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:19 PM Post #17 |
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http://www.whiotv.com/news/13396950/detail.html Search Continues For Missing Women The search continued Saturday afternoon at Caesar Creek State Park for the two missing women from Warren County. Ada Wasson, 80, and Mary Ellen Walters, 68, have been missing since early April. Many crews have searched by air and land. On Saturday, they searched the water to try to find them. The search crew had a digital underwater camera, just in case they needed to use it. The search turned up no new information on the women. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:20 PM Post #18 |
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/wlwt/20070525/lo_wlwt/13393233 Psychic Redirects Search For Missing Women A new search begins this weekend for Ada Wasson and Mary Ellen Walters, two Warren County women who have been missing for more than a month. They left the Otterbein retirement community on April 19 to go shopping and have not been seen since. Family members and volunteers will spend the weekend in Gallatin County, searching the waters of the Ohio River, after a psychic directed them to return to Kentucky. "It's really secluded, and if they stopped to take a little break there or made a wrong turn thinking they were turning onto 127, they could've turned onto that ramp and gone into the water," said Brad Nixon, Walters' son-in-law. Nixon said he has had a strange sense about a boat ramp along the Ohio, east of Warsaw, even before family members got two numbers to consider: 42 and 27. "We had looked at that area and sat at that boat ramp with some thoughts about it for some time before the psychic could come up with the numbers that give us that feeling again," said Nixon. Nixon has walked the area right where Routes 42 and 127 intersect. There are no tire marks, no ruts, and no obvious indication of a car going off the road and into the water, but Nixon said he had considered that the two missing women might have confused the ramp for road and driven into the water. Volunteers will search the area beginning on Saturday and will also go out on nine Warren and Clinton County lakes. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:20 PM Post #19 |
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http://www.wcpo.com/news/local/story.aspx?...73-99cd7f6ffe02 Jun 1, 2007 8:21 PM Search For Missing Warren County Shoppers Continues After 6 Weeks Posted By: Bill Price The families of two women missing from a Warren County retirement home say they're not giving up. The women left home to go shopping six weeks ago, and haven't been heard from since. For the last few weeks, the families of Ada Wasson and Mary Ellen Walters have used planes, boats and helicopters to search from Carrollton, Kentucky in the south, to Columbus, Ohio in the north. Their website lists six pages of searched locations. Now the families are focusing their search efforts closer to the women's homes, rather than farther away. After searching up and down Interstate 71 through two states for 80-year old Ada Wasson and her friend, 68-year old Mary Ellen Walters, for 6 weeks – Mary Ellen's son-in- law, Brad Nixon – says the families have almost nothing to show for it. Nixon told 9News, "The police have provided no new leads for this situation. There are no firsthand accounts of them having been anywhere. So we think they may have been close by." The women's silver 2000 Chevrolet Impala hasn't even been found yet. Nixon says he has high hopes of finding the car first, and having that lead police and the family to the missing women. Nixon adds, "We certainly hope they're found with the car, at this point. If they are not found with the car, that could mean something else entirely." Nixon says the next big step is searching Caesar's Creek Lake in Warren County for that car. Sometime next week, when the lake is not busy with boaters, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources will bring in site scanning sonar to search the lake. Nixon is also considering searching in Mansfield, Ohio as well as Richmond, Indiana and Covington, all because of what was recently found. Nixon told 9News, "We've recently come across a list of places that Mary Ellen and Ada had wanted to go to. We're not sure they were actually using that list before their disappearance, but it's something to follow up on. After six weeks, Nixon says he and other family members refuse to give up looking for Ada and Mary Ellen. "We just know we want to bring them home," said Nixon. "We're not going to do memorial services – we're not going to do any kind of memorial service for them now, until we bring them home." Nixon says his family can still use volunteers to help with individual searches, most likely along I-71 from Mason, north up through Warren County. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 6 2007, 08:24 PM Post #20 |
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http://z13.invisionfree.com/PorchlightUSA/...pic=10996&st=0& |
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