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#Post#: 3566--------------------------------------------------
OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut River
in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1998
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:02 pm
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HTML https://i.imgur.com/p9AyJKs.jpg
This unidentified male was found in the Connecticut River in Old
Saybrook, CT on March 31, 1998. The body had been exposed for
several years in water and possibly a marsh area. He is believed
to have been White or Hispanic. The photograph above 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.
#Post#: 3567--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:03 pm
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HTML https://identifyus.org/en/cases/1821
Case Information
Status Unidentified
Case number 98-03624
Date found March 31, 1998 00:00
Date created May 16, 2008 13:33
Date last modified September 15, 2015 09:33
Investigating agency
date QA reviewed May 02, 2011 07:49
Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
Agency State of CT Chf Med Examiners Ofc
Phone 860-679-3980
Case Manager
Name Michelle Clark
Phone 860-573-8583
Exclusions
The following people have been ruled out as being this decedent:
First Name Last Name Year of Birth State LKA
Kenneth LaManna 1949 Connecticut
Warren Niederfringer 1948 Connecticut
Kenneth Reed 1964 Connecticut
Edivano Ribeiro 1971 Connecticut
Stephen Sullivan 1962 New York
#Post#: 3568--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:05 pm
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HTML https://identifyus.org/en/cases/1821
NamUs UP # 1821
ME/C Case Number: 98-03624
Middlesex County, Connecticut
30 to 35 year old White Hispanic/Latino Male
Case Report - NamUs UP # 1821
Case Information
Status Unidentified
Case number 98-03624
Date found March 31, 1998 00:00
Date created May 16, 2008 13:33
Date last modified September 15, 2015 09:33
Investigating agency
date QA reviewed May 02, 2011 07:49
Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
Agency State of CT Chf Med Examiners Ofc
Phone 860-679-3980
Case Manager
Name Michelle Clark
Phone 860-573-8583
Demographics
Estimated age Adult - Pre 40
Minimum age 30 years
Maximum age 35 years
Race White
Ethnicity Hispanic/Latino
Sex Male
Weight (pounds) , Cannot Estimate
Height (inches) 68, Measured
Body Parts Inventory (Check all that apply)
Body conditions
Not recognizable - Near complete or complete skeleton
Probable year of death 1997 to 1998
Estimated postmortem interval 1 Years
Circumstances
Location Found
GPS coordinates
Address 1
Address 2
City Old Saybrook
State Connecticut
Zip code
County Middlesex
Circumstances
Body was discovered by fishermen floating in the Connecticut
River. Mostly skeletonized; heavily adipocered. Characteristics
of mandible appear to be of a male. In 2004, body was buried as
a John Doe.
Skeletal findings
The remains are of a highly skeletonized, heavily adipocered
Caucasian male. The mandible shows characteristics of a male.
The individual has a broken nose. Nasal bones deviate to the
left side of face. There are two bilateral foramina in the
parietal bone.
Fingerprints
Status: Fingerprint information is currently not available
Clothing on body
Coat with a purple zipper
Remnants of black pants
black socks (degenerated)
Clothing with body
Footwear
FILA brand sneakers, Size 9.5
Jewelry
1 silver lighter - butane eagle standing on globe with no 2688
Dental
Status: Dental information / charting is available and entered
DNA
Status: Sample submitted - Tests complet
#Post#: 3569--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:08 pm
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HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/272umct.html
The Doe Network:
Case File 272UMCT
HTML https://i.imgur.com/p9AyJKs.jpg
Sketch of victim
Unidentified White / Hispanic Male
Located on March 31, 1998 in Old Saybrook, Middlesex County,
Connecticut.
Estimated Date of Death: 1-5 years prior
Skeletal Remains
Vital Statistics
Estimated age: 20 - 35 years old.
Approximate Height and Weight: 5'6"-5'8"; 200 lbs.
Distinguishing Characteristics: Hair and eye color is unknown.
It is unknown if he had any tattoos or scars.
Clothing: Fila sneakers size 9 ½; a black-colored Lavon,
lightweight jacket or windbreaker with a maroon/purple zipper,
tan in color, size XL and waist-length black Levi's 550’s, waist
36, length, 32.
Personal Effects : A silver butane lighter bearing a s/n 2688
and round insignia with an eagle found to be of Chinese make was
also found.
Skeletal Findings: He has a broken nose. Nasal bones deviate to
the left side of face. There are two bilateral foramina in the
parietal bone.
Fingerprints: Not available
Dentals: Available, His front teeth protruded and his upper left
front tooth slightly overlapped the upper right front tooth.
Postmortem avulsion and accounted for #7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 21,
22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 28.
DNA: Not available
Case History
This unidentified male was found in the Connecticut River in Old
Saybrook, CT on March 31, 1998. The body had been exposed for
several years in water and possibly a marsh area. He is believed
to have been White or Hispanic.
The photograph above 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.
Investigators
Old Saybrook Police Department
860-395-3140
OR
OCME
Edward McDonough
860-679-3980
Email
You may remain anonymous if you wish.
Agency Case #:
98-03624
NCMEC #:
NCMU400068
Source Information:
America's Most Wanted
NCMEC
UDRS
#Post#: 3570--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:11 pm
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HTML https://i.imgur.com/SSXN29P.jpg
#Post#: 3571--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:14 pm
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Old Saybrook, Connecticut
HTML https://i.imgur.com/228JBUO.jpg
#Post#: 3572--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:16 pm
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HTML http://www.theday.com/article/20101123/NWS04/311239934
State hopes playing cards deal clues in cold cases
Published November 23. 2010 2:03AM | Updated November 23. 2010
10:16AM
By Izaskun E. Larrañeta Day Staff Writer
On the six of diamonds is the face of Erika Cirioni, who
disappeared in Norwich in 2006.
An unidentified John Doe, whose body was recovered from the
Connecticut River by Old Saybrook police in 1998, is the nine of
hearts.
The ace of clubs belongs to Janette Reynolds, who was last seen
hitchhiking in Colchester in 1978, and whose body was found the
following year in the City of Groton.
All of their faces seem to make the same appeal: Can you help
solve my case?
The playing cards, highlighting 52 unsolved homicides and
missing person cases, are being distributed among the 18,250
inmates in the state's 17 correctional facilities. The Chief
State's Attorney's Office in partnership with the Department of
Correction and law enforcement agencies created the cards.
Each card has a picture of the missing person or victim, along
with a description of the case and a phone number where callers
can leave an anonymous tip.
Carol Cirioni, Erika's mother, was present Monday at the
unveiling of the playing cards at the Chief State's Attorney's
Office in Rocky Hill. She hopes the cards will give her and
Erika's two sons some answers.
Erika Cirioni was last seen on Dec. 31, 2006 on Division Street
in Norwich.
"Her two sons need her so badly," said her mother. "They miss
her so much. We can't even celebrate New Year's Eve because that
is when Erika disappeared."
She continues to buy Christmas gifts for the daughter who she
says was a bit troubled but would never abandon her children,
now 13 and 9.
"I think something terrible happened," said Cirioni. "I know
someone out there has information on what happened to her. If
they are any type of a human being, they would come forward."
Leo C. Arnone, commissioner of corrections, said he hopes the
cards will trigger new information from inmates.
"Somebody out there somewhere knows what happened in these
cases," said Arnone. "We're hoping that these cards will
generate new information to help solve these crimes."
Chief State's Attorney Kevin Kane said there are between 400 and
500 unsolved homicides and disappearances. The cases depicted on
the cards were selected with the help of local law enforcement
agencies and the state's Cold Case Unit.
"Some of these cases are homicides committed by people who may
have committed other homicides or will commit another homicide
in the future," Kane said. "These families are living with the
loss of a loved one, hoping to find some answers."
Beth Profeta said: "Twenty-six years ago my mother was
murdered."
Her mother, Mary Badaracco, of Sherman, was last seen Aug. 20,
1984.
"My family was killed on that day, too," Profeta said. "We need
to solve this case now. If an inmate out there has information,
please come forward."
Badaracco has been presumed dead even though her remains have
never been found.
Gloria Jean Bell describes herself as a "dead woman walking."
Her son, Edward Bell Jr., was killed just a short distance from
their Hartford home on May 6, 2005.
"I heard the gunshot and there I saw my son lying on the ground
in the rain," said Bell. "They killed me that night."
Placement of the victims on the cards was done at random, Kane
said. Featured on the king of hearts is William Spicer Jr., who
was 82 when he was killed on his tree farm on Thomas Road in
Groton in 1995.
Desiree Michaud is on the queen of clubs. She was found murdered
inside a motel room on Route 184 in Groton in 1984.
The $12,250 cost of producing the playing cards was financed by
criminal asset forfeitures, not taxpayer money.
The cards are modeled after decks distributed to U.S. troops in
Iraq shortly after the 2003 invasion. The decks there featured
the names and likenesses of that country's most wanted
fugitives, including Saddam Hussein as the ace of spades.
At least 20 other states are using "cold case" playing cards to
help solve cases that seem to have no new leads.
The first round of cards will be distributed free of charge to
the inmates. The cards will eventually be the only playing decks
available to inmates for purchase for 64 cents at a prison
commissary. Posters will also be distributed at police stations.
"All of these cases involve the disappearance or death of
somebody's loved ones," said Kane.
i.larraneta@theday.com
HTML https://i.imgur.com/SSXN29P.jpg
#Post#: 3573--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:17 pm
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HTML http://www.nhregister.com/news/article/Missing-in-Connecticut-Giving-a-name-to-the-11547255.php
Missing in Connecticut: Giving a name to the 'missing missing,'
databases and DNA may help identify unnamed remains (video)
Michelle Tuccitto Sullo, Investigations Editor
Published 12:00 am, Saturday, February 4, 2012
The region's nameless dead have been found floating in the
Connecticut River, hidden in ditches and dumped in forests and
near highways. Around the state, human remains have been found
by street sweepers, hunters, hikers and passers-by and unearthed
by construction crews.
Police have worked for years trying to figure out who they are
-- a young woman found murdered in East Haven still remains
nameless after 37 years.
East Haven police Detective Sgt. Bruce Scobie said police would
like to solve the mystery, know her name and capture her killer.
Scobie, a father himself, thinks about Jane Doe's parents and
relatives.
"You wonder if this person had family somewhere at one time,"
Scobie said. "Are they out there wondering? Did they pass on,
never knowing what happened to her? It is hard to believe no one
ever missed her. There must be someone out there with a story of
a friend or cousin who disappeared. Someday, I'd like to hear
that a name has been put to her."
According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's National
Crime Information Center, the country's number of unidentified
deceased was at 7,551 as of Jan. 1. However, it isn't mandatory
for law enforcement to enter all cases into this database,
according to a center spokeswoman.
FACEBOOK PAGE: Missing in CT
RELATED: Investigators hope circulating photos will help
identify unknown remains
U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, D-5, who has proposed the federal "Help
Find the Missing Act," or "Billy's Law," in honor of missing
Waterbury man William Smolinski Jr., estimates there are 40,000
sets of unidentified remains nationwide. Murphy's proposal seeks
to create an organized system to match remains to missing
people, and an incentive grants program for law enforcement and
medical examiners to report information to NCIC, the U.S.
Department of Justice's National Missing and Unidentified
Persons System, or NamUs, and the National DNA Index System.
"Unless you put information about unidentified remains on NamUs,
you are cutting out the most important investigators, the loved
ones of the missing," Murphy said, as NamUs is open to the
public. "The Internet is perfectly positioned to solve these
cases, yet we aren't using it to its capacity."
On Friday, NamUs, which launched in 2007, listed 41 cases of
unidentified remains found in Connecticut, going back to 1972.
It listed 8,165 open unidentified remains cases for the country.
While various databases can help match the missing to the
unidentified, investigators frequently aren't using all
available databases. Older cases predate DNA extraction
technology. In many area cases, the unidentified bodies were
buried, so investigators don't have DNA to add to databases
unless they exhume the bodies.
Of the 41 cases of unidentified remains listed on NamUs for
Connecticut, only three show DNA samples have been submitted,
with no DNA samples taken even for many cases in years when the
technology was available, the site shows.
Under state law effective in October 2011, in cases involving
remains where homicide is suspected, the office of the chief
state medical examiner has to obtain tissue samples, bone and
hair for DNA typing, and these samples must go to the Division
of Scientific Services within the Department of Public Safety.
While several cases of unidentified remains from years ago have
been added to NamUs in recent months, the NamUs list isn't
complete. State Victim Advocate Michelle Cruz said plans are
under way for statewide training for law enforcement on how to
use NamUs.
East Haven's Jane Doe, for example, isn't on there yet, though
police say they are considering including her.
A truck driver found her body Aug. 16, 1975, in a drainage ditch
behind a department store on Frontage Road. The white woman was
found wrapped in a canvas tarp with black wire around her neck,
waist and knees. Her cause of death was asphyxiation by
suffocation, according to police.
Police have circulated an artist's rendering of the brunette,
who is believed to have been 18 to 28 years old. They have
featured her case on The Doe Network. This has led to occasional
leads, but none have led to Doe's identity.
Scobie said police are discussing exhuming her body from a
Hamden cemetery to try to get DNA from her remains.
Police have Jane Doe's dental records, but she was found in an
era that pre-dates the widespread use of DNA testing, Scobie
said.
Scobie said having her DNA may not lead to any matches, because
there may not be DNA available from women who went missing back
then for comparison.
"Exhuming her body is something that has been discussed," Scobie
said. "If the laboratory said there would be viable DNA, we
would probably do it."
Also, while an artist did a rendering of Doe years ago, Scobie
said computer technology has advanced so much that using her
skull today could result in a more accurate image of what she
looked like.
#Post#: 3574--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:20 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
continued
Henry C. Lee, forensics expert, professor and founder of the
University of New Haven Forensic Research Training Center, said
technology has changed tremendously in the years since the
discovery of East Haven's Jane Doe. According to Lee, in older
cases of unidentified remains, DNA samples weren't taken, but
with today's technology, DNA can be extracted from hair and
bone.
Lee also cautioned that getting DNA from the remains won't
necessarily solve the East Haven mystery.
"It is so many years ago, it would be hard to track down family
to get the known DNA (for comparison)," Lee said. "If we don't
know where the victim came from, we don't have known DNA to
compare with, and that becomes shooting in the dark, and makes
the case very difficult."
Scobie said he doesn't believe Jane Doe was from the area, as he
believes someone would have reported her missing, and she would
have been recognized back then from publicity about the case. It
is possible her parents are dead, he said.
"The theory is she was killed elsewhere and then brought to that
location," Scobie said. "I personally don't think the crime
occurred very far away. She was pretty well bound, tied and
gagged. Someone took their time with her. I think it was a
premeditated killing."
Doe possibly had a small mole on her chin, and she had pierced
ears and wore small gold circular earrings, according to Scobie.
"There was an item used to gag her which leads me to believe the
homicide was committed locally," he said.
Police don't want to be specific about the item used to gag the
victim, because if police ever get a confession, only the killer
could identify it, Scobie said.
Police believe she had been there up to five days before her
discovery.
"Whoever put her there, did not want her found," Scobie said.
"There are a lot of theories. I'm not sure a person who was just
traveling through would take the time to conceal a body like
that."
Over the years, leads about her possible identity have come
through the Doe Network, but they have all been ruled out
through dental or medical comparisons, according to Scobie.
According to Scobie, police have a suspect in Jane Doe's death,
Glen Askeborn, who served prison time for a similar slaying in
Maine. Askeborn, who dressed in women's clothes, used the name
Samantha Glenner also, according to police.
According to the Maine Department of Corrections, Askeborn was
released from prison in September 2009.
"The body in that (Maine) case was concealed and disposed of in
a similar manner, and we went to interview (Askeborn) in a Maine
prison," Scobie said. "He denied any knowledge of it. He lived
in East Haven at the time of this (Jane Doe) incident, and there
were a lot of similarities. Personally, I do think he was
involved, but we have no direct evidence."
Investigators in Old Saybrook have their own unsolved case.
Fishermen discovered the badly decomposed body of a man floating
in the Connecticut River in Old Saybrook on March 31, 1998.
John Doe's case is on the Doe Network, and it was entered on
NamUs in 2008. The NamUs site says his DNA is not available, but
his dental information is available for comparison. The site
estimates his age at between 30 and 35 and describes him as a
white male, who was 5 feet, 8 inches tall. His remains were
mostly skeletonized. He was wearing a coat with a purple zipper,
and had remnants of black socks and pants, and he wore size 9½
FILA brand sneakers. He also had a silver lighter, the NamUs
site shows. Officials estimate his death as between 1990 and
1998. His remains were eventually buried as a John Doe.
The man is featured in the state's cold case playing card deck,
which is given to state prisoners, as the nine of hearts. The
card describes him as an unidentified person, aged between 29
and 32, and about 200 pounds. A drawing of him on the card
depicts him as dark-skinned.
Old Saybrook police Sgt. Charles Mercer said the investigation
determined his body was in the water for years, and police
believe he floated downriver to Old Saybrook.
"The condition of the body indicates he was in a marshy area
before high water moved the remains to the river," Mercer said.
According to Mercer, the facial reconstruction of a dark-skinned
male was done by the National Center for Missing and Exploited
Children, and police believe it is an accurate representation of
what he looked like, though Mercer said the skin color could be
much lighter and is "at best a guess."
"His bone structure suggests he probably was Hispanic or
Caucasian, or of mixed race," Mercer said.
#Post#: 3575--------------------------------------------------
Re: OLD SAYBROOK JOHN DOE: M, 30-35, found in the Connecticut Ri
ver in Old Saybrook, CT - 31 March 1
By: Akoya Date: March 12, 2020, 5:22 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
continued
Police have widely distributed the man's image, even featuring
his case on America's Most Wanted's website. His dental records
were submitted to the American Dental Association and the
Department of Defense's dental unit, according to Mercer.
Police do not know the victim's cause of death, so they don't
know if there was foul play, Mercer said. They also do not have
his DNA, Mercer confirmed.
"We could not submit DNA as there were some restrictions at the
time, and we really did not have a cause of death," Mercer said.
Exhuming the body, such as for DNA testing, isn't likely until
police can locate someone linked to him, according to Mercer.
Police distributed descriptions of the man's clothing, and
because of the lighter he had, even contacted the National
Lighter Museum in Oklahoma, hoping for leads and clues to his
identity. The lighter model was widely distributed, police said.
"It is all to no avail," Mercer said. "I had always hoped to
identify him before I retire. A lot of time was expended, but
with no results, I'm afraid."
Milford police are still investigating two unidentified remains
cases that date back to the early 1990s.
On Aug. 21, 1992, people walking in the woods off Oronoque Road
in Milford found the body of an Asian man in his early to mid
20s. The victim had been shot multiple times and rolled up in a
rug. His case is listed on the NamUs database. The site
indicates DNA testing was not done, but investigators do have
his dental X-rays. He is also on the Doe Network.
Also in Milford, on March 24, 1994, a city public works crew
found a male headless torso in a bag, also near Oronoque Road by
the Housatonic River. The torso case hadn't been entered into
NamUs as of Friday.
Officer Jeffrey Nielsen, spokesman for the Milford police, said
both cases are active investigations. Investigators received an
inquiry on the torso case as recently as December from Canada,
but the remains didn't match, according to Nielsen, who said the
torso case likely hasn't been put on NamUs because of the lack
of identifying information.
"We are hopeful any open investigation can be solved," Nielsen
said. "One of the obstacles for the torso case is that there are
no dental records or fingerprints to go off of, no limbs with
tattoos, which are all helpful in identifying. When these cases
happened, DNA databases weren't available."
"You need to have identifying information on the people -- you
need things for comparison," Nielsen said.
Lee said he was involved in investigating the Milford
dismembering case.
"That victim was more than likely not from Connecticut," Lee
said. "No missing person matched that individual. Either the
person was from another place and came to Connecticut and was
killed here, or was murdered someplace else and dumped in
Milford."
According to Lee, while technology has improved for identifying
remains, investigators still face obstacles such as time and
staffing. "Technology has changed tremendously -- we now have
databases," Lee said. "Police departments are pretty busy and
have new cases. Sometimes, when nobody in a family is pushing
and police have new cases, and the laboratory people have a big
backlog, a lot of cases fall through the cracks, with nobody
really pursuing them. It is possible, if they were focused on,
they would be solved. Reviewing the cases takes a lot of time
and manpower."
Lee noted that the National Cold Case Center at the Henry C. Lee
Institute of Forensic Science at the University of New Haven has
had success at solving old cases, but investigators have to ask
for their assistance.
State police spokesman Lt. J. Paul Vance said he doesn't know
exactly how many unidentified remains cases there are in the
state.
Vance said he doesn't think staffing at the laboratory is an
issue.
When asked why it is so difficult to identify these people,
Vance said, "Sometimes there are no identifiers, or there is
nothing on file to compare them to, even if the information is
entered into a database."
Kenna Quinet, associate professor of criminal justice, law &
public safety at Indiana University-Purdue University, said some
long unsolved cases may fall under the category of the "missing
missing," or unidentified people who were never reported
missing.
These individuals often are prostitutes, homeless, drug addicts,
children who have been kicked out of their homes, undocumented
immigrants, or people who lost contact with family and friends,
according to Quinet.
"There's really two levels, one group of people who are never
missed by anyone, and others who are eventually missed but there
is a significant delay in the missing report -- days, weeks,
months, even years," Quinet said. "That obviously makes for a
difficult investigation for police."
"I think we are underestimating the number of homicides and the
number of serial murders in the U.S. because we are not counting
the 'missing missing,' and some people are not only never
reported as missing, but we never find the body," Quinet said.
Visit the Missing in Connecticut Facebook page at
Facebook.com/MissingInCT.
Call Michelle Tuccitto Sullo at 203-789-5707. Follow her on
Twitter @nhrinvestigate.
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