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| 1991 Little, Linda L. October 11,1991; Daytona Beach 43 YO | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Nov 23 2006, 12:13 AM (745 Views) | |
| PorchlightUSA | Nov 23 2006, 12:13 AM Post #1 |
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http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/l/little_linda.html Linda Lois Little Above Images: Little, circa 1991 Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance Missing Since: October 11, 1991 from Daytona Beach, Florida Classification: Endangered Missing Date Of Birth: October 29, 1947 Age: 43 years old Height and Weight: 5'10 - 5'11, 180 pounds Distinguishing Characteristics: Reddish-brown hair, blue eyes. Clothing/Jewelry Description: Black slacks and a white blouse. Details of Disappearance Little was last seen leaving a 7-11 convenience store near the beachfront in Daytona Beach, Florida in the early morning hours of October 11, 1991. She was riding blue and rust-painted Murray beach cruiser bicycle, and was carrying a backpack. Little is believed to have been on her way to her beachside apartment. She has never been heard from again. Little worked as a waitress at the Chart House when she went missing. She is from North Carolina and had lived in Florida for two years prior to 1991. Her disappearance is considered suspicious and it remains unsolved. Investigating Agency If you have any information concerning this case, please contact: Daytona Beach Police Department 386-671-5100 Source Information Daytona Beach Police Department Project Jason The Daytona Beach News-Journal Updated 1 time since October 12, 2004. Last updated September 9, 2005; Clothing/Jewelry Description and alternate height added, details of disappearance updated. Charley Project Home |
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| PorchlightUSA | Nov 23 2006, 12:15 AM Post #2 |
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| PorchlightUSA | Nov 23 2006, 12:16 AM Post #3 |
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http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/in...opic=9337&st=0& |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jan 27 2007, 06:52 PM Post #4 |
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Linda Lois Little THE CRIME Suspicious disappearance Date of crime: Last seen Oct. 11, 1991 Location: Daytona Beach Little, 43, finished her waitress shift at the Chart House restaurant in Daytona Beach and rode off on her bicycle about 1 a.m. Oct. 11, 1991. She stopped at Matey's Brig bar on Broadway and two hours later was spotted riding toward the Broadway bridge, heading to her beachside apartment. But she didn't report for work the next day and was never seen again. THE INVESTIGATION THE SURVIVORS THE UPDATE In 1996 someone called a relative to say he had met Little in North Carolina and she had told him to reach her at that number; he hung up after refusing to give his name. Police have attempted to match Little's description to unidentified bodies over the years, without success. http://www.news-journalonline.com/N...AST08082905.htm |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jan 27 2007, 06:53 PM Post #5 |
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Linda is loved and missed by her family. Linda Lois Little was last seen in Daytona Beach, Florida on October 11, 1991. She was spotted leaving a 7-11 convenience store near the beach and riding a blue and rust-colored Murray beach cruiser. Height: 5’ 11” Weight: 180 lbs DOB: 10/29/47 Hair: reddish Brown Eyes: blue Case: 91027584 If you have any information concerning Little's whereabouts, please contact: Daytona Beach Police Department 904-255-1431 or 904-254-1596. All information may be submitted anonymously. NCIC Number: M-522587051 A printable poster can be found here: http://members.cox.net/kelly_projectjason/ |
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| oldies4mari2004 | Jul 20 2008, 08:10 AM Post #6 |
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Linda Lois Little Missing since October 11, 1991 from Daytona Beach, Volusia County, Florida. Classification: Endangered Missing -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vital Statistics Date Of Birth: October 29, 1947 Age at Time of Disappearance: 43 years old Height and Weight at Time of Disappearance: 5'10-5'11; 180 pounds Distinguishing Characteristics: White female. Reddish, wavy, light brown hair; blue eyes. Clothing: Black slacks, a white blouse, and carrying a backpack. DNA: Available in CODIS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Circumstances of Disappearance Little, an avid biker, was last seen in Daytona Beach, Florida on October 11, 1991. She finished her waitress shift at the "Chart House Restaurant" and rode off on her bicycle about 1 a.m. She stopped "Matey's Brig" bar on Broadway to hang out with some of her friends from work. She showed them a map of Florida and pointed out some of the places she was planning on going with her boyfriend that weekend. She stayed at the bar until about 2 o'clock in the morning and then rode to a neighborhood "Seven Eleven" store, where she bought a doughnut and chocolate milk. Afterwards, she was seen riding her bike toward the Broadway Bridge, which is in the direction of her apartment. She was riding a blue and rust-colored "Murray beach cruiser". Little didn't report for work the next day, it was unlike her to miss a day, especially without calling in. When she did not show up for work the following day, Linda's coworkers called her sister and told her that she had not been coming in to work. By the next day Linda's landlord, who by now was also concerned, called police and reported her missing. In 1996 someone called a relative to say he had met Little in North Carolina and she had told him to reach her at that number; he hung up after refusing to give his name. Little was a native of North Carolina who had lived in the area for two years. Investigators found no evidence of foul play. Her family is certain Little would not have left without notifying them. The police brought in search dogs and questioned people in the neighborhood, but they found no evidence suggesting what might have happened to her. Her bicycle has never been found and neither has the contents of the duffel bag she was carrying with her. Linda was very meticulous about her appearance and always carried her makeup and a change of clothes. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Investigators If you have any information concerning Little's whereabouts, please contact: Daytona Beach Police Department Det. Stephen Grant 386-671-5263 All information may be submitted anonymously. Agency Case Number: 91027584 NCIC Number: M-522587051 Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case. Source Information: Daytona Beach Police Department Project Jason -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| oldies4mari2004 | Jul 20 2008, 08:11 AM Post #7 |
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http://z10.invisionfree.com/usedtobedoe/in...opic=9337&st=0& |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jan 17 2009, 11:34 AM Post #8 |
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Linda Lois Little was last seen in Daytona Beach, Florida on October 11, 1991. She was spotted leaving a 7-11 convenience store near the beach and riding a blue and rust-colored Murray beach cruiser. Height: 5’ 11” Weight: 180 lbs DOB: 10/29/47 Hair: reddish Brown Eyes: blue Case: 91027584 If you have any information concerning Little's whereabouts, please contact: Daytona Beach Police Department 904-255-1431 or 904-254-1596. All information may be submitted anonymously. NCIC Number: M-522587051 A printable poster can be found here: http://members.cox.net/kelly_projectjason/ |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jan 17 2009, 11:35 AM Post #9 |
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June 2, 2008 http://investigation.discovery.com/blogs/c...ois_little.html The Missing -- A Weekly Exposé of Lost Souls -- Issue #16 In this week's edition of "The Missing," we revisit the mysterious disappearance of Linda Lois Little, a 43-year-old resident of Daytona Beach, Florida, who went missing in October 1991. "Linda is my older sister. She basically vanished without a trace on October 11, 1991," Linda's sister, Joy Little, said in a telephone interview with Investigation Discovery. "She was last seen in the vicinity of where she lived in Daytona Beach." According to Joy, Linda was employed as a waitress at the Chart House restaurant, which was located approximately one mile from her beachside apartment. Linda was an avid biker and would always ride her aqua-colored Murray touring bike to and from work. On the night of her disappearance, Linda completed her shift at the restaurant and rode her bike to Matey's Brig bar on Broadway Avenue. "She stopped in to hang out with some of her friends from work," Joy said. "She showed them a map of Florida and pointed out some of the places she was planning on going with her boyfriend that weekend. She stayed at the bar until about 2 o'clock in the morning and then rode to a neighborhood Seven Eleven store, where she bought a doughnut and chocolate milk. Afterwards, she was seen riding her bike toward the Broadway Bridge, which is in the direction of her apartment. We don't know what happened next, but she never made it home and no one has seen her since that night." The people who first noticed something awry were Linda's coworkers. When she failed to come in to work the next day they found it odd; it was unlike her to miss a day, especially without calling in. When the same thing happened the following day, Linda's coworkers called her sister Wanda and told her that she had not been coming in to work. By the next day Linda's landlord, who by now was also concerned, called police and reported her missing. "The police brought in search dogs and questioned people in the neighborhood, but they found no evidence suggesting what might have happened to her," Joy said. "Her bicycle has never been found and neither has the contents of the duffel bag she was carrying with her – Linda was very meticulous about her appearance and always carried her makeup and a change of clothes." In the days following Linda's reported disappearance, her family learned something they had been unaware of until that point. "We found out that her boyfriend, Kirk Conrow, was married," Joy said. "It came as a surprise because she was not the type that would be dating a married man. She would have thought that was a waste of her time and she wasn't going to fool around with it." According to Joy, Linda and Kirk had been planning a weekend getaway to celebrate their one-year anniversary. His wife was out of town at a conference in New Orleans, so they were going to head to Jacksonville and then across to Tampa. "When the police questioned him he told them he had not seen Linda and that he had last spoke with her at about 4 o'clock on the day she disappeared," Linda said. "He told them that during his conversation with Linda he had broken off their weekend plans and that instead he had gone deep-sea fishing with a college friend." It remains unclear why, if the plans were canceled, Linda would have been so excited about them when she later spoke with her friends at Matey's Brig. Nonetheless, Kirk has never been named a suspect or person of interest in Linda's disappearance. Another avenue police have looked at, according to Joy, is whether convicted serial killer Oba Chandler might have been responsible for her sister's disappearance. "Chandler lived in the Tampa area and he also traveled to Daytona Beach. On the night that Linda disappeared he was known to be in the area. So there is the possibility that maybe he had something to do with it. But he's not talking and they don't think he is going to confess to any more crimes." A cold case unit is currently handling Linda's case. Joy tries to keep in regular contact with the investigators and continues to hope for a break in the case. "My mother and I have both submitted DNA swabs to the police department and those have recently been submitted to the FBI and added to their database. Other than that there have not been any new developments that I am aware of. My mother is getting up there in age, so we hope to have some answers soon." Linda Lois Little is described as a white female, 5'11" tall, 150 lbs., with reddish brown hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing a white t-shirt or blouse style top and black leotards. Anyone with information is asked to call the Daytona Beach Police Department at 386-671-5100 or Crime Stoppers toll-free at 1-888-277-TIPS. You could be eligible for a reward of up to $1,000. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jan 17 2009, 11:36 AM Post #10 |
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/articl...EWS02/312299904 Still searching December 29. 2008 ALBION -- In the photos, one woman is wearing a floral blouse. Another has blue eyes that sparkle. A third, his red hair cut short, is wearing a suit and tie for his class photo. They're all smiling. They're all missing. "They've all got a heartbreaking story," said David Lohr, 34, who is surrounded by posters of missing people at his office in Albion. Lohr writes from his office about the missing and the dead on a blog called "Criminal Report Daily" for ID: Investigation Discovery, a 1-year-old digital cable channel that features true crime programs. He spends his day researching and investigating unsolved cases. Many of the stories catch at his heart. Which is why he's taken his interest in writing and researching crime a step further to involvement with the group Texas EquuSearch, a team that has aided in high-profile searches for missing teen Natalee Holloway and, more recently, for toddler Caylee Anthony, whose remains were recovered this month in Florida. Lohr traveled with Texas EquuSearch to Florida to aid in the search for Caylee. He was among the searchers who came close to the little girl's body, only to be turned away by knee-high water that had covered the wooded region. "She was just 300 feet to the left of us," he said. His interest in crime dates back to childhood. "When other friends were buying GI Joe magazines, I was buying True Detective," he said. After graduating from Northwestern High School, Lohr joined the Army. When he was discharged three years later, he returned to Albion and began his own Web site featuring serial killers. In 1999, the Web site caught the eye of Marilyn Bardsley, then the executive director for Court TV's Crime Library. She asked him to write for Court TV's Web site. He worked for the Web site until 2007. "He's a very good researcher," Bardsley said. "He's smart, he's determined, and he's clever. Plus he's good at writing. It's a good combination." On some days, Bardsley said Lohr could ante up 300,000 hits on his blog. "He's just good at getting people engaged," she said. Lohr said some of his favorite subjects are the missing people that don't garner the attention of the likes of Nancy Grace and the morning news shows. "A lot of them don't get the ongoing attention, the publicity that keeps their cases alive," he said. That's why he keeps the pictures of Corrie Anderson, Jesse Ross, Linda Little, Ahren Barnard, Carlos Diaz, Brandy Hanna and Branson Perry posted in his office. They remind him of who is still out there. |
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| PorchlightUSA | Jun 30 2010, 11:25 AM Post #11 |
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| oldies4mari2004 | Jan 9 2012, 08:32 PM Post #12 |
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Missing since October 11, 1991 from Daytona Beach, Volusia County, Florida. Classification: Endangered Missing Date Of Birth: October 29, 1947 Age at Time of Disappearance: 43 years old Height and Weight at Time of Disappearance: 5'10-5'11; 180 pounds Distinguishing Characteristics: White female. Reddish, wavy, light brown, long hair; blue eyes. Clothing: Black stretch pants, a white blouse, and a white bicycle helmet. She was carrying a backpack. Dentals: An upper front dental bridge. DNA: Available in CODIS Little was last seen in Daytona Beach, Florida on October 11, 1991. She finished her waitress shift at the "Chart House Restaurant" and rode off on her bicycle about 01.00 a.m. She stopped at "Matey's Brig" bar on Broadway to hang out with some of her friends from work. She showed them a map of Florida, and pointed out some of the places she was planning on going with her boyfriend that weekend. She stayed at the bar until about 02.00 in the morning and then rode to a neighborhood "Seven Eleven" store, where she bought a doughnut and chocolate milk. Afterward, she was seen riding her bike toward the Broadway Bridge, which is in the direction of her apartment. Linda was an avid biker and would always ride her aqua-colored Murray touring bike to and from work. She was riding a blue and rust-colored "Murray beach cruiser". Little didn't report for work the next day. It was unlike her to miss a day, especially without calling in. When she did not show up for work the following day, Linda's coworkers called her sister and told her that she had not been coming in to work. By the next day Linda's landlord, who by now was also concerned, called police and reported her missing. In 1996 someone called a relative to say he had met Little in North Carolina and she had told him to reach her at that number; he hung up after refusing to give his name. Little was a native of North Carolina who had lived in the area for two years. Investigators found no evidence of foul play. Her family is certain Little would not have left without notifying them. The police brought in search dogs and questioned people in the neighborhood, but they found no evidence suggesting what might have happened to her. Her bicycle has never been found and neither has the contents of the duffel bag she was carrying with her. Linda was very meticulous about her appearance and always carried her makeup and a change of clothes. Linda Little's apartment did not appear to be disturbed and that all her belongings were in it. If you have any information concerning Little's whereabouts, please contact: Daytona Beach Police Department Detective Stephen Grant 386-671-5263 Agency Case Number: 91027584 NCIC Number: M522587051 Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case. Source Information: Daytona Beach Police Department Project Jason |
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| PorchlightUSA | Mar 18 2012, 09:35 PM Post #13 |
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Families fear waning attention in search of missing loved ones By CHRIS GRAHAM, Staff Writer send an email to chris.graham@news-jrnl.com March 5, 2012 1:00 AM Posted in: East Volusia Tagged: Laurel Lea Rogers , Linda Little , Michelle Parker Lauretta Rogers holds a picture of her daughter Laurel, now missing for two years. (N-J | Sean McNeil) Little Parker Missing Mandy Ciehanoski Missing since: Feb. 7, 2011 What happened: A truck she was driving was found abandoned at a park on Fleming Avenue in Ormond Beach. Michael Annicchiarico was indicted on a charge of first-degree murder. Ciehanoski's blood and hair were found in the suspect's trash. Her body has not been found. Anyone with Ciehanoski's whereabouts is urged to contact the Volusia County Sheriff's Office at 386-254-1537. Linda Little Missing since: Oct. 11, 1991 What happened: Little vanished after leaving work at the Chart House restaurant on South Beach Street in Daytona Beach. Executed killer Oba Chandler is suspected by family members to know the 43-year-old's whereabouts. Anyone with information about Little's whereabouts is urged to contact the Daytona Beach Police Department at 386-671-5100 or Crime Stoppers at 888-277-8477. Laurel Lea Rogers Missing since: Feb. 1, 2010 What happened: The woman left her mother's house in Port Orange with a friend and never returned. Listed at 5 feet 7 inches and 150 pounds, the woman has the auto-immune disease lupus and disappeared without her medication. Anyone with information call Port Orange police at 386-756-7400. Lauretta Rogers remembers seeing the news trucks outside her home after a trip to the Port Orange police station. She had just reported her daughter Laurel Lea Rogers missing and hopes were high of finding her. The media could only help spread the word, she thought. The story hit the airwaves. Days, weeks passed and nothing turned up. Now more than two years later, Lauretta Rogers watches as police continue to scour the Central Florida region and the media is still abuzz about Michelle Parker, an Orlando mother with ties to Daytona Beach who went missing Nov. 17, the same day she appeared on the TV show "People's Court." Lauretta Rogers can't help but feel pain for the Parker family, though she feels like she has been given the cold shoulder. "My daughter is missing, too," she said through tears. "What (attention) I do get, I appreciate. We have to keep Laurel's name out there." It's a hardship felt by parents and siblings whose loved ones have disappeared. For a time, people stop to help search, but eventually life goes on and those left behind struggle to keep the names of the missing alive. For more than 20 years, Wanda Hinson and her family have searched unsuccessfully for Linda Little, who vanished sometime on Oct. 11, 1991. The family has put up billboards, and Little's face has appeared on the sides of Volusia County buses, but no trace of Little has surfaced, said Hinson, Little's sister. "I know it's an almost impossible case, but there are miracles out there." Police say the 43-year-old got off work from the Chart House on South Beach Street in Daytona Beach and rode her bicycle across the Broadway Bridge and stopped at Matey's Brig. Hours later, Little was seen at a nearby 7-Eleven that morning. She was never seen again. Whether Little is alive or dead remains to be seen, but family members suspect Oba Chandler is responsible for what may have happened to Little. The former Volusia County man was executed last year for drowning an Ohio mother and her two daughters in the Gulf of Mexico. He never confessed to the triple murder or any other crimes. Rogers, on the other hand, can only imagine what may have happened to her daughter. The mother said her daughter was supposed to be picked up by a friend. She never returned home. Two years later, Laurel Lea Rogers' bank accounts remain untouched and her cellphone has not been used. Laurel Rogers, who was 28 at the time she vanished, had the auto-immune disease lupus and left her medication at home, her mother said. "I wish I had the answer," she said. Mandy Ciehanoski has been missing since Feb. 7, 2011. A truck she was driving was found abandoned at a park on Fleming Avenue in Ormond Beach. A Volusia County grand jury indicted the woman's ex-boyfriend Michael Annicchiarico with first-degree murder. Investigators have used dive teams and cadaver dogs to search more than a dozen locations, but the body of the single mother has not been found. Ciehanoski's hair and blood was found in the suspect's trash. The woman's mother, Debbie Ciehanoski, said she still has hope her daughter's body will turn up. She can only rely on the word of investigators who say they are actively searching for her. But she admits the wait frustrates her. "It's a miserable feeling," she said. Todd Matthews, a spokesman for the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, knows firsthand how families feel like they're swimming up current to find answers. Matthews became obsessed about identifying a woman's remains found on the side of a dirt road in rural Kentucky in 1968 by his eventual father-in-law. In 1998, the remains were identified as Barbara Ann Hackman-Taylor. He said he couldn't get television producers and law enforcement to help in his effort, but identifying the body set off a media frenzy. "They weren't interested until a special event happened," he said. Similarly, families often have very little success reviving interest in the disappearances of their loved ones as time marches on. Hinson said the Daytona Beach Police Department wasn't too concerned initially about Little's disappearance because she had the right to not tell anyone where she would be. The case failed to gain any traction. This happens to countless families, Matthews said. "Everybody wants their loved one's story out there and they don't understand why it seems like the rest of the world doesn't care," he said. Even Michelle Parker is in danger of being lost in the sea of missing faces as the case drags on, Matthews said. "If nothing happens, you can't keep writing the same story every day," he said. "And the families feel like they've been let down." Rogers says she believes as the Parker case goes cold, the woman's family will find themselves alone in their search as well. But she hopes that doesn't happen. "My heart really goes out to them," she said. "No matter how much TV coverage they get, it's still the same pain." Matthews said there is always hope if there is a voice. http://www.news-journalonline.com/news/loc...-love-ones.html "You can make a difference, you just gotta keep yelling," he said. |
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