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| NCM980925; Orange County Sept 25 1998 | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Dec 4 2006, 05:55 AM (913 Views) | |
| ELL | Dec 4 2006, 05:55 AM Post #1 |
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Dead child found; caregivers missing Sketch of the boy found along I-85 in the fall of 1998. Thomasi McDonald, Staff Writer HILLSBOROUGH - Orange County Sheriff's investigators have a different kind of missing person case. For more than eight years, they have been trying without success to find the parents and loved ones of a deceased boy. On Sept. 25, 1998, someone cutting grass and underbrush around a billboard near Interstate 85 in Hillsborough discovered the boy's skeletal remains at the edge of a wooded area. Authorities think the child was murdered. "Someone just dumped his body on the side of the road," Orange County Sheriff's deputy Tim Horne said. "They didn't bury the body or even try to cover it up with anything." Deputies think the boy was white or Hispanic and between 8 and 12 years old, Horne said. The brush cutter had last worked in the area in April and had seen nothing unusual. So, investigators think the remains had been in that patch of woods for three to four months. They found a pair of khaki shorts, underwear and white tube socks still inside a pair of black, size three athletic shoes. Medical examiners measured the bones and estimated the child's height at 4 feet 11. The sheriff's office contacted the news media, talked with Hispanic residents and distributed fliers about the boy, but they couldn't identify him. No missing person report that fit the description was filed locally, and no school authorities reported a student who had suddenly vanished. Worse still, no one came forward to claim the remains. In 2001, authorities decided to move the case into the national spotlight by contacting "America's Most Wanted." "It was supposed to air in 2001," Horne said, "but then the terrorist attacks happened, and it got bumped." The sheriff's office did receive assistance from the FBI and the Smithsonian Institution, where a series of facial sketches were created based on the child's skeletal structure and DNA. Sheriff's investigators tried to trace the manufacturer of the child's pants and shoes. They found that the inexpensive 2SX sport shoe is sold at a number of retail outlets. They also learned that the khaki shorts worn by the child appeared to be an Izod knock-off commonly found at the Buckhorn Flea Market, which is near where the child's remains were found. After examining the clothing, Horne came up with a theory: "This child was with someone who was here illegally. Something happened to this child, and they were scared to contact somebody, so they left the remains." A team of sheriff's deputies worked on the case. But Horne, who did the forensics work, has been with it since day one. He keeps a box of evidence related to the case under his desk. Horne wants justice done, if possible, and to help parents who may be out there with no clue about what happened to their son. "Everyone is alarmed when something happens to a child," Horne said. "There's a universal concern to give the parents closure." Anyone with information about the case is urged to call the Orange County Sheriff's Office at (919) 644-3050. Staff writer Thomasi McDonald can be reached at 829-4533 or tmcdonal@newsobserver.com. http://www.newsobserver.com/161/story/517541.html |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jan 14 2007, 11:05 AM Post #2 |
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http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/in...pic=18094&st=0& |
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| PorchlightUSA | May 31 2007, 11:46 PM Post #3 |
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MEBANE NORTH CAROLINA JOHN DOE Case Type: Unidentified DOB: Sex: Male Missing Date: Sep 25, 1998 Race: White Age Now: 10-11 Height: 4'11" (150 cm) Missing City: MEBANE Weight: 50 lbs (23 kg) Missing State : NC Hair Color: Brown Missing Country: United States Eye Color: Unknown Case Number: NCMU400069 Circumstances: The child's body was found along Industrial Drive near Mebane, NC on September 25, 1998. The boy was estimated to be between 10 and 11 years of age. He was wearing "Fox Polo Club" brand khaki shorts, size 3 "2XS Sports" brand black and white athletic shoes, and white tube socks. He had sealant on the surfaces of some of his teeth. The above image is a computer-assisted facial reconstruction done by a forensic artist at the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Items such as eye color and hair style are the artist's estimations to complete the image, and should not be considered as significant markers for identification. http://www.ncmec.org/missingkids/servlet/P...earchLang=en_US |
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| PorchlightUSA | Oct 6 2007, 01:06 PM Post #4 |
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Unidentified White Male The victim was discovered on September 25, 1998 near Mebane, Orange County, North Carolina Skeletal Remains Estimated Date of Death: Up to 4 weeks prior to discovery. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vital Statistics Estimated age: 10 - 11 years old Approximate Height and Weight: 4'11" (150 cm); 50 - 80 lbs Distinguishing Characteristics: Dark brown hair, 3 to 4" in length, straight and fine; unknown eye color. Could be Hispanic Dentals: Available. He had sealants on the surfaces of the following teeth: 3, 4, 13, 14, 19, 29, 30; no cavities; teeth 4, 13, 20 decidious. Clothing: He was wearing "Fox Polo Club" brand, khaki shorts, international size 150 with $50 contained within pockets - 2 $20s, 1 $10; size 3 "2XS Sports" brand black and white athletic shoes, with very little wear noted and white tube socks. No shirt. DNA: Entered into CODIS in December 2004 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Case History The child's body was located along the edge of the woodline of a 1/2 acre semi-wooded lot, approximately 50-75 yards to the edge of the service road, and 500 yards from the nearest residence. This property is on Industrial Drive and runs parallel to Interstate 85/40, although not immediately or easily accessible from the interstate. There were no signs of foul play, no trauma to the body and no blood on the clothing. Cause of death is unknown. He may have been part of a migrant worker group that populates the area every harvest. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Investigators If you have any information about this case please contact: Orange County Sheriff's Office Tim Horne 919-644-3050 You may remain anonymous when submitting information. NCMEC #: NCMU400069 NCIC Number: U-174662253 Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case. Source Information: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children News Observer 12/4/06 Orange County Sheriff's Office News of Orange County NC, Office of the Chief Medical Examiner -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| ELL | Feb 5 2008, 12:04 PM Post #5 |
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ORANGE COUNTY, N.C. -- The Orange County sheriff is turning to the public to try solve a nearly10-year-old mystery by identifying a boy's body found in September 1998 along Interstates 85 / 40. Discuss This Story Sheriff A.L. Pendergrass issued a press release Tuesday that offers a $5,000 from the Carole Sund / Carrington Foundation for information about the death of a 10-year-old boy, whose body was found in western Orange County along the roadway. The Sheriff's Department says it has exhausted all leads in the mystery and would love to find anyone with information. The background of the case is that a worker who was mowing grass along the interstate discovered the skeletal remains of the boy on the morning of Sept. 25, 1998, near exit 157 at I-85 / I-40 at the Buckhorn Road area. The body was located under a billboard, which was visible from the interstate. The body was only about 50 yards from the southbound lanes of the roadway. The boy's body had been placed on his back with his arms slightly above his head. According to investigators, the boy had been partially clothed with boy’s brief-style underwear, Fox Polo name brand tan shorts with rider and horse emblem embroidered on cuff of leg with white socks and black and white tennis shoes. An autopsy revealed that the boy was a white or Hispanic male about 10 years old. The boy had very dark hair of medium length. The report said the boy could have been dead as far back as April 1998. Investigators said the boy's description does not match anyone in a missing person's report and his information has been added to the National Crime Information Center via the State Bureau of Investigation. The Carole Sund / Carrington Foundation have offered the $5,000 reward for information. Anyone with information should call 888-813-8389 or call the sheriff's office at 644-3050 or 942-6300. http://www.nbc17.com/midatlantic/ncn/news....02-05-0007.html |
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| PorchlightUSA | Feb 7 2010, 03:31 PM Post #6 |
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Dying sculptor hopes to learn slain child’s name Sunday, February 7, 2010 (Updated 7:46 am) By Lorraine Ahearn Staff Writer Accompanying Photos [Image accompanying article] Nelson Kepley Photo Caption: Forensic artist Frank Bender studied the skull of John Doe 98-21372 and created a likeness of the boy. Related Links * Gallery: More images of the boy MEBANE — Cases don’t come much colder, in any sense, than John Doe 98-21372. Detective Tim Horne keeps the file he inherited in a box under his desk. Every time he moves his foot, he hits it. “Just so I don’t forget it,” the Orange County Sheriff’s Office investigator said. “I have a small child myself.” On Sept. 25, 1998, a groundskeeper for a billboard company was mowing along the Interstate 85/ Buckhorn Road exit and discovered something in the long summer grass at the edge of the woods. It was the scattered remains of a skeleton, a 10-year-old child, with tube socks and new boy’s sneakers still on the child’s feet. Folded neatly in the pocket of a pair of khaki shorts was $50 — two $20s, one $10. In a macabre jigsaw of a crime scene, half the pieces were missing, the other half were broken. And for 11 years since — until the unveiling Saturday night at N.C. State of a facial reconstruction by one of the world’s leading forensic artists — detectives had no picture to guide them in putting the puzzle together. Not only was there no clue to John Doe’s real name, but detectives couldn’t even describe his face until a North Carolina child advocacy group commissioned renowned Philadelphia artist Frank Bender to create the reconstruction. On Saturday night, in a first glimpse of what probably will be the last such work by Bender, a terminally ill artist with an 85 percent identification rate, detectives were to see art meet science. From what was just a hollowed, mummified skull, Bender produced a lifelike painted sculpture. “This is the last one,” Bender said Friday in a phone interview from his home. “Most people with terminal cancer and eight months to live might not have even attempted this. But I didn’t want to turn this down if I could help identify him.” Bender said the boy, age 10 to 12, had longish brown hair and a severe overbite that may help identify him. He was Caucasian, possibly Hispanic, and Bender has the feeling the boy was killed by someone he knew. “I would say more than likely a caretaker — aunt, uncle, father, stepfather. That’s usually the way it goes,” Bender said. “That’s why they don’t show up (as missing). You’re thinking, 'Oh, the parents are going to be doing everything under the sun to find them.’ ” The people who organized the event believe someone will come forward. “It could be that somebody sees that bust and says, 'Yes, I remember that child, and he disappeared right around then,’ ” said Mike Craig, a former police officer who founded N.C. SMART, the nonprofit missing-and-abducted response team that commissioned Bender. “Then, the investigation starts anew at that point.” Bender, 68, is credited with solving dozens of murders and disappearances for the FBI, Scotland Yard and America’s Most Wanted. Before doing a reconstruction, the former commercial photographer and classical artist studies the autopsy notes and takes a series of minute measurements of the skull’s bone structure. He then calculates the average tissue densities and builds them up with clay. Then comes the mysterious part: Bender’s intuitive ability to sense what a person looked like without a visible clue. Born out in case after case, it is a sixth sense that confounds investigators who have otherwise exhausted their leads. Leslie Denton, who organized Saturday’s event for Guardian Digital Forensics, pointed to the famous Jane Doe homicide victim in Boulder, Colo., who was finally identified in 2009 — 55 years after her remains were found beside a creek. Bender’s facial reconstruction portrayed the unknown victim as blond-haired and blue-eyed. She was later identified as Dorothy Gay Howard of Arizona, who was 18 when she disappeared in 1954. “Frank told us that she would have blue eyes,” Denton said, “and she did. How did he know that?” Bender, describing his process to a USA Today reporter, once said his fingers “take over” when he sculpts a bust, and he essentially “becomes” his subject. He has helped solve numerous murders and serial killings, including a string of women’s deaths in Mexico. Bender has helped nab high-profile fugitives such as John List, Colombian crime kingpin Alphonse Perisco and Warlocks motorcycle chieftain Robert Nauss. Bender began this career through a chance anatomy lesson at the morgue. Now, he is living under hospice care with mesothelioma linked to asbestos exposure, and his wife also has been diagnosed with inoperable cancer. Suffering from a bout of the flu and unable to travel to Raleigh, Bender said the Mebane case likely will be his last reconstruction. Perhaps it is a fitting swan song: Child victims, to him, are always the most compelling. “A child is so innocent. They have a whole life ahead, and it’s taken away,” he said. “It all bothers me, but they bother me the most.” Likewise, the riddle of the remains near I-85 has haunted Craig, who lives a few miles from where the nameless child’s bones were found. Craig’s first and only child was born three weeks before he heard the story on the news. He thinks of the nameless child every day driving by. Sometimes he parks on the service road, cuts his engine and considers the possibilities. “It just doesn’t compute. If you can wrap your head around somebody discarding a child like trash, then you can get your head around the who and what and why and how,” Craig said. Somewhere, he suspects, a parent or grandparent misses this child and grieves for him. “He doesn’t have a home. The family doesn’t know where he is. For me, that’s just not acceptable.” Contact Lorraine Ahearn at 373-7334 or lorraine.ahearn@news-record.com http://www.news-record.com/content/2010/02...rn_child_s_name |
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| PorchlightUSA | Feb 7 2010, 03:31 PM Post #7 |
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There is a special place waiting in heaven for Mr. Frank Bender. |
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| tatertot | Feb 8 2010, 07:48 AM Post #8 |
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http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,585045,00.html Terminally Ill Artist Hopes to Help Solve Missing Boy Case in North Carolina Monday, February 08, 2010 MEBANE, N.C. — A terminally ill artist says he has produced his last painting in hopes that it will help authorities in North Carolina solve the 10-year-old case of a missing boy. The News & Record of Greensboro reported that officials unveiled a facial reconstruction by renowned Philadelphia artist Frank Bender. "This is the last one," Bender said in a telephone interview from his home. "Most people with terminal cancer and eight months to live might not have even attempted this. But I didn't want to turn this down if I could help identify him." On Sept. 25, 1998, a groundskeeper for a billboard company was mowing along the Interstate 85/ Buckhorn Road exit and discovered something in the long summer grass at the edge of the woods. It was the scattered remains of a skeleton, a 10-year-old child, with tube socks and new boy's sneakers still on the child's feet. Folded neatly in the pocket of a pair of khaki shorts was $50 — two $20s, one $10. Before Bender's painting, detectives had no picture to help identify the boy. Not only was there no clue to John Doe's real name, but detectives couldn't even describe his face until a North Carolina child advocacy group commissioned Bender to create the reconstruction. On Saturday night, detectives were able to see art meet science. From what was just a hollowed, mummified skull, Bender produced a lifelike painted sculpture. Bender said the boy, age 10 to 12, had longish brown hair and a severe overbite that may help identify him. He was Caucasian, possibly Hispanic, and Bender has the feeling the boy was killed by someone he knew. "I would say more than likely a caretaker — aunt, uncle, father, stepfather. That's usually the way it goes," Bender said. "That's why they don't show up (as missing). You're thinking, 'Oh, the parents are going to be doing everything under the sun to find them.' " The people who organized the event believe someone will come forward. "It could be that somebody sees that bust and says, 'Yes, I remember that child, and he disappeared right around then,"' said Mike Craig, a former police officer who founded N.C. SMART, the nonprofit missing-and-abducted response team that commissioned Bender. "Then, the investigation starts anew at that point." Bender, 68, is credited with solving dozens of murders and disappearances for the FBI, Scotland Yard and America's Most Wanted. Leslie Denton, who organized Saturday's event for Guardian Digital Forensics, pointed to the famous Jane Doe homicide victim in Boulder, Colo., who was finally identified in 2009 — 55 years after her remains were found beside a creek. Bender's facial reconstruction portrayed the unknown victim as blond-haired and blue-eyed. She was later identified as Dorothy Gay Howard of Arizona, who was 18 when she disappeared in 1954. "Frank told us that she would have blue eyes," Denton said, "and she did. How did he know that?" Bender began this career through a chance anatomy lesson at the morgue. Now, he is living under hospice care with mesothelioma linked to asbestos exposure, and his wife also has been diagnosed with inoperable cancer. Suffering from a bout of the flu and unable to travel to Raleigh, Bender said the Mebane case likely will be his last reconstruction. Perhaps it is a fitting swan song: Child victims, to him, are always the most compelling. "A child is so innocent. They have a whole life ahead, and it's taken away," he said. "It all bothers me, but they bother me the most." |
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| ELL | Feb 11 2010, 03:48 PM Post #9 |
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Sculptor Puts Face to Murdered N.C. Child Frank Bender Fights His Own Cancer, After Helping Prosecute Serial Killers Worldwide By SUSAN DONALDSON JAMES Feb. 11, 2010— Philadelphia forensic sculptor Frank Bender has spent a lifetime helping police solve unspeakable crimes, contouring in clay the faces of murder victims -- those without identities, whose families have never come to claim or weep for them. His meticulously painted busts have led to the prosecution of fugitive killers for the FBI, Scotland Yard and even the television crime show "America's Most Wanted." He helped nail Colombia crime lord Alphonse Perisco and Warlocks motorcycle chieftain Robert Nauss. But to Bender, children "are a different ball game," he told ABCNews.com. He has just unveiled his last sculpture -- a 10-year-old boy whose skeletal remains were found dumped in the tall grass over a North Carolina highway in 1998. "A child is so innocent. They have a whole life ahead, and it's taken away," he told the Greensboro News-Record. "It all bothers me, but they bother me the most." Bender, known for his intuition as much as his forensic skills, has an 85 percent success rate, but he likely won't know the outcome of the case of John Doe 98-21372. After a career launched from the city morgue and 30 years of handling skulls and mummified remains, Bender faces a swift-moving cancer -- pleural mesothelioma linked to asbestos exposure during his days in the Navy. "I am used to being surrounded by death," said Bender, 68, who doesn't expect to live past June. "I have done everything I ever wanted to do. I drove a race car, I have sky-dived and I helped identify a lot of people, including fugitives on the most wanted list." "The only thing I didn't do was make financial gain," said. "I got by." In hospice, Bender now struggles on $2,800 a month on full disability as a veteran. Though he never had wealth, he has earned mountains of respect. Bender was recently honored for a lifetime of good deeds by NC Smart, a nonprofit organization that works to resolve missing person cases. The group raised $1,700 to hire Bender to find out the identity of little John Doe. "There will be a line waiting in heaven -- all the people he has helped," said Leslie Denton, who organized the unveiling of the boy's bust for Guardian Digital Forensics, which works with NC Smart. "They will welcome him with open arms." Bender, who never went to college or studied forensics, says he goes by his gut to give a real face to lost souls. The first child he ever reconstructed -- a Philadelphia girl whose body was found under a bridge -- was an impossible case until, Bender says, the pig-tailed girl came to him in a dream. "She looked at me and smiled," he said. "Five years later her real father saw the flyer. He came to me in court and said, 'I don't know how you did it so accurately. The skin color and details are right.'" Bender said he hopes John Doe's killer can also be apprehended. On Sept. 25, 1998, a groundskeeper mowing the grass found the child's scattered bones and decomposed remains under a billboard in Mebane, N.C. Only a few clues pointed to the identity of the boy: He wore tube socks and new size-three sneakers. Folded inside his pocket were two $20 bills and a $10. Police ruled the death a homicide, and no one ever reported the boy missing. Bender said he believes the boy was from out of state and was killed by a "caretaker" -- a family member or adoptive parent. His detailed sculpture reveals a Caucasian, perhaps Hispanic, boy with "longish" dark hair with a "distinctive" overbite, which may identify him. "He's clearly recognizable as an individual," said Bender. North Carolina Boy Might Be Recognized "The next step is to try to get as much media coverage as we can, hoping that someone out there will recognize him -- a family member, a friend, a dentist, someone who knew him in school," said Denton. "We are hoping someone who remembers the child will come forward." She doesn't dismiss the idea that Bender might live to see the crime solved. "It could happen tomorrow, today or 10 years from now -- you never know," she said. "And Frank's record speaks volumes." Last year Bender helped solve the case of a homicide victim in Boulder, Colo., 55 years after her remains were found beside a creek. Bender sculpted a blond-haired, blue-eyed woman who was later identified as Dorothy Gay Howard of Arizona. She was 18 when she disappeared in 1954. "Frank told us that she would have blue eyes and she did," said Denton. "How did he know that?" "I just know it," said Bender. After looking at photos, Bender takes a series of minute measurements of the skull's bone structure. He then calculates the average tissue densities and builds them up with non-hardening clay. When that's done, he pours reinforced plaster into a synthetic rubber mold, then sands and paints the sculpture. Bender began his career as a commercial photographer. Enrolled at the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts, he couldn't find an evening anatomy class. But his best friend worked at the morgue. "I'd love to come down and watch autopsies," Bender said. There, in 1977, Bender saw a corpse of a woman who had been shot in the head three times. He announced instinctively, "I know what she looks like." The coroner on duty invited Bender to join him on the "graveyard shift" to learn more. Within five months, he helped identify Anna Duval, 62, of Phoenix, and helped police convict her murderer, notorious hit man John Martini. By 1989, "America's Most Wanted" was after Bender. The show asked him to produce a sculpture of John Emil List, an accountant from New Jersey who killed his wife, mother and children in 1971, then parked his car at New York's Kennedy Airport and disappeared. After 18 years, the sculptor used old photos and produced the killer's exact image, complete with receding hairline, wrinkles and a pair of tortoise-shell glasses that he chose from an antique dealer. Two weeks after the show, List was arrested. "It's interesting that I have cancer, because I have always said through the years that catching fugitives and identifying people takes a piece of cancer out of our society," said Bender. His doctors told him last October he had stage-four cancer and eight months to live -- 16 at the outside. Now the disease has invaded his abdomen. Tumors surround his heart and ribs. To ease the pain, Bender relies on the same visualization techniques he uses to conjure up the faces of missing persons. No morphine. "As far as the pain goes, I image it away," he said. He is also the primary caretaker of his wife of 39 years, Jan, who is also fighting her own battle against non-smoker's lung cancer at 61. Her cancer returned just before Bender himself was diagnosed. "I can't believe it, boom, boom," said Bender, of the double whammy that changed a blessed life. "Going through the same thing at the same time as Jan is in some strange, surreal sense, kind of romantic," he said. Exposed to Asbestos in the Navy Bender was exposed to asbestos while serving on two Navy destroyers from 1959 to 1961, making repairs in the engine room and sleeping near the laundry where chemical-laden clothes were strewn. A photo of Bender in the Navy's official magazine, "All Hands," shows him handling asbestos on the steam lines. "All that time I was exposed, for two years solid," he said. "We did more sea time than most sailors who signed up for four years. I wasn't just working around it, I was sleeping with it." His daughter Vanessa, an unemployed graphic artist living in Brooklyn, N.Y., is making plans to move in with her parents. "I talk to Frank on the phone every day," said Vanessa, 37. "He has been a great caretaker for my mother." "He's an incredible guy," she told ABCNews.com. "He does what he does by gut and intuition and some people think he's nuts. He can be very intense to be around sometimes." Bender had his studio at home and growing up among skulls and bone parts wasn't always easy on Vanessa and her older sister Lisa Brawner, who lives in New Jersey. "It didn't give me the creeps at all, but it did my sister," said Vanessa Bender. "It was on the kitchen table when I was a kid and eventually when the tenant moved away, he went upstairs," she said. "Then he bought a studio in the city." "It was easy to explain to the kids," said Bender. "But it was hard for the kids to explain to their friends, except when it was Halloween and they thought it was really cool." Now, he thinks about what's ahead for his daughters. "Vanessa is taking it so hard, losing both her parents," he said. "I am absolutely worried more about my daughter than myself." Bender, who has spent his life with the dead, retains his hearty sense of humor in the face of his own death. "Sh*t happens," he laughs, crediting his upbeat attitude to his upbringing. "My parents raised me that way in North Philly," Bender said. "I played on the railroad, hopping freight trains, playing in old factories." "My whole life has been a constant field trip, a balance of art and science," he said. "I am always learning something through my work." How does he want to be remembered? he was asked. "By what I have done trying to help other people," he answered. http://abcnews.go.com/Health/dying-sculpto...tory?id=9800993 Copyright © 2010 ABC News Internet Ventures |
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| PorchlightUSA | Aug 14 2011, 11:01 AM Post #10 |
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You will always be remembered that way, Mr. Bender. You have more than earned it. RIP |
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| PorchlightUSA | Aug 14 2011, 11:12 AM Post #11 |
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