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       #Post#: 5505--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:23 pm
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  HTML http://unidentified.wikia.com/wiki/File:10384766_832120420186766_3219391224402305460_n.jpg
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/hgYcAUV.jpg
       #Post#: 5506--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:24 pm
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  HTML http://unidentified.wikia.com/wiki/Princess_Doe
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/IbnQqg7.jpg
       #Post#: 5507--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:25 pm
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  HTML https://i.imgur.com/W9u5Mjw.jpg
       #Post#: 5508--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:26 pm
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  HTML https://i.imgur.com/cGJQshM.jpg
       #Post#: 5509--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:27 pm
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  HTML http://www.missinginamerica.us/apps...sing-in-america-gives-princess-doe-a-new-face
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/o3WjXOE.jpg
       Princess Doe is the name given to an unidentified homicide
       victim found in Blairstown, New Jersey, United States, in 1982.
       The body was a young white female between the ages of 15 and 20,
       although she has also been stated to be as young as 14. Her face
       had been bludgeoned beyond recognition. The approximate height
       of the victim was 5'2" and her weight was 110 lbs.] The body was
       discovered at the Cedar Ridge Cemetery in Blairstown early on
       the morning of 15 July 1982. She was the first unidentified
       decedent to be entered in the National Crime Information Center.
       As of 2014, Princess Doe still remains unidentified. No arrests
       were ever made in the case. The Warren County Prosecutor's
       Office is the law enforcement agency investigating the case and
       still considers the case active. The body was buried in the
       Cedar Ridge Cemetery, not far from where she was discovered, in
       January 1983.[4] The remains of Princess Doe were exhumed in
       1999 so that samples could be collected for DNA testing, which
       was extracted from her femur in Baltimore, Maryland. The body
       was reburied in the same grave.
       Missing In America now feel strong a New Addition added to Name
       Us as Of Oct 13 2014 is that of Princess Doe
       Kathlein Kelly Is now in Name Us as Of Oct 2014 and currently
       being looked at and compaired to Princess Doe Thanks To founder
       of Missing In America Nancy Schaefer
       Kathleen Kelly, 12 yrs old, Springdale PA, missing since May 22
       1981
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/3ZNr6OD.jpg
       #Post#: 5510--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:29 pm
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  HTML http://csafd.proboards.com/thread/724/jane-princess-doe-1982
       Jane "Princess" Doe 1982
       Post by CSA FD on Oct 2, 2007 at 2:07pm
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/yOulPDv.jpg
       Unidentified White Female
       Located on July 15, 1982 in Blairstown, Warren County, New
       Jersey.
       Cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head.
       Estimated date of death is weeks before her discovery.
       Her nickname is Princess Doe
       Vital Statistics
       Date of Birth: approximately 1964-1968
       Estimated age: 14 - 18 years old.
       Approximate Height and Weight: 5'2"-5'4"; 90-100 lbs.
       Distinguishing Characteristics: Brown, straight shoulder-length
       hair. Both of her ears were pierced; her left ear was
       double-pierced. She wore nail polish on her right fingernails
       only.
       Dentals: Available. Lower anterior teeth are crowded. Her two
       front teeth are slightly darker than the rest of her teeth teeth
       were in fairly good condition. She had some work done, which
       indicates she probably belonged to a middle class family before
       she became estranged from them.
       DNA: MtDNA available
       Clothing: The following items of clothing were found around the
       victim when she was discovered:
       Red v-neck pullover shirt with yellow piping on the front
       portion of the shoulder area and blue and black piping around
       the neck, sleeves and waist;
       Wrap-around skirt with red, white and blue print with a wide
       border of peacock designs on the lower portion;
       Gold-colored chain with small white beads and a 14-karat gold
       cross with an ornate design.
       Case History
       The victim was discovered in a wooded area of at the north end
       of Cedar Ridge Cemetery on Route 94 in Blairstown, New Jersey.
       She was partially unclothed. She was severly beaten prior to her
       death.
       Investigators have learned that the victim may have been a
       runaway. She may have worked as a hotel housekeeper in Ocean
       City, Maryland from 1979 - 1982. The unidentified runaway who
       worked at the hotel matched Princess Doe's description. The
       worker used several aliases while employed. Maryland is the last
       known locale of the unidentified girl.
       Police believe Princess Doe was from the Long Island, N.Y. area,
       and was estranged from her family.
       Her face had been bludgeoned beyond recognition. She was not
       pregnant when she died, and had never given birth. Toxicology
       results showed she was not using drugs at the time of her death
       -- but those results may have been tainted because investigators
       believe she was found several weeks after she died.
       Investigators
       If you have any information concerning this young woman's
       identity or the circumstances surrounding her death, please
       contact:
       Warren County Prosecutor's Office
       Sgt. Steve Speirs Jr.
       908-475-6275
       OR
       New Jersey State Police
       800-709-7090
       All information may be submitted on an anonymous basis.
       NCMEC #: NCMU400028
       NCIC Number:
       U-630870962
       Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with
       information regarding this case.
       #Post#: 5511--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:30 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       continued
       Jane "Princess" Doe 1982 Apr 29, 2013 at 10:59pm
       When Princess Diana met her fate three months ago, thoughts of
       another tragic victim, Princess Doe, came to mind.
       Unlike her more famous counterpart, Princess Doe was likely near
       the bottom rung of the socio-economic ladder. She was a white
       teen-ager — a runaway in all likelihood, according to
       authorities — whose face was beaten beyond recognition in July
       1982. Her body was then dumped alongside a cemetery on Route 94
       in Blairstown, N.J., a speck of a town just 15 minutes east of
       Stroudsburg.
       Despite countless attempts to identify her — including a
       20-minute spot on an HBO crime special that aired in 1983 —
       authorities know little more about the murder victim than they
       did 15 years ago: She was between 14 and 18 years old and was
       wearing a red V-neck pullover, a red, white and blue print
       wraparound skirt and a gold chain with tiny white beads and a
       14-karat gold cross.
       Authorities also know that somebody was very angry at the girl,
       angry enough to bludgeon her face beyond recognition with a
       blunt object. Who that person is and the murder weapon have
       never been determined.
       Police sources have said it is very rare that a murder victim,
       particularly one who is so young, is still unidentified 15 years
       later.
       The case is old, but not forgotten. As recently as September the
       Warren County, N.J., Prosecutor's Office learned that the young
       woman likely was working in the tourist town of Ocean City, Md.,
       from 1979 to 1982 as a hotel housekeeper. Presumed by police to
       be a runaway, she used several aliases, investigators have
       learned.
       This month — 15 years after the community of Blairstown buried
       the girl near the lonely spot where her battered body was dumped
       — Princess Doe made headlines again, this time in theNew York
       Times .
       A prestigious group of current and former federal agents, former
       prosecutors and forensic specialists from around the world
       called the Vidocq Society met recently in Philadelphia to
       discuss the case.
       The private group is named after a 19th-century French detective
       credited with introducing the use of scientific tools and
       extensive record-keeping into police work. The elite group
       brainstorms on cold murder cases, sometimes offering insight
       that those who had investigated may have overlooked. The society
       has been credited with helping police throughout the country
       solve several cases.
       Frank Bender, a Philadelphia artist and forensic sculptor who
       made a bust of Princess Doe to help police put a face on the
       victim, is one of the founders of the prestigious group that
       boasts 82 original members and 100 special members. He and at
       least one other member had worked on the Princess Doe case, and
       it was their interest that brought it the attention of the
       society.
       Vidocq spokesman Dick Lavinthal, who works as a public affairs
       specialist with the U.S. Department of Justice, said the society
       provides professional investigators with a "cadre of law
       enforcement and forensic experts at no cost.''
       The society meets bi-monthly in Philadelphia to discuss cases,
       and several members typically will form an ad-hoc committee to
       pursue cases they think they can help on, he said.
       Because the Princess Doe case is active, Lavinthal said he could
       not comment specifically on what other avenues were being
       pursued. Any fruitful information, he said, would be turned over
       to the Warren County, N.J., Prosecutor's Office, which is
       following up on new leads.
       Present at the Vidocq meeting was Warren County Prosecutor John
       J. O'Reilly, who was in Philadelphia to see if this group of
       experts could help his office develop any information.
       O'Reilly said members helped him with profiles of what the
       killer could be like. He is hopeful that someone in the society
       may turn up a substantial lead.
       The case, O'Reilly said, has been particularly difficult because
       authorities still do not know the identity of the girl.
       "It is a very troubling thing that there are kids who are
       runaways, and no one bothers to report them as missing. As a
       result, there's no record that these kids are out there
       somewhere.''
       While O'Reilly and his detectives continue their footwork, the
       gravestone marking the girl's plot serves as a grim reminder of
       the perplexing case:
       Policeman haunted by killer's presence
       By his own admission, former Blairstown, N.J., police lieutenant
       Eric Kranz became obsessed and then frustrated with the Princess
       Doe case. Kranz, who in 1982 was second in command at the small
       but spirited police department, headed up the investigation of
       the murdered teen.
       To this day, Kranz said he thinks he spoke to the teen's killer
       at the cemetery where she was found. But others involved in the
       investigation — state police and the Warren County Prosecutor's
       Office — did not want to interrogate the suspect until the girl
       was identified, he said.
       Princess Doe, an unidentified teen between 14 and 18 years old,
       was dumped in a ravine off Route 94 in the small New Jersey
       community just 15 minutes from Stroudsburg in July 1982. Despite
       the case still being open to this day, authorities do not know
       who the girl is or how she ended up bludgeoned beyond
       recognition in rural northern New Jersey.
       Kranz, who worked day and night on the case in its early years,
       said he met the suspect shortly after the girl was buried in
       January 1983. Citizens reported seeing him several times at her
       grave so Kranz went to the cemetery to see him.
       The man, who lived nearby, turned out to have a record of
       violence, being arrested for fighting with police and assaulting
       at least one family member before he moved to Blairstown. He
       traveled in his line of work, and he quite likely passed through
       Maryland — the girl's last known location before she died — at
       the time of her death, Kranz said.
       Kranz said he also spoke to his suspect's brother during the
       course of the investigation, who told the then-police lieutenant
       that his brother had the capacity to commit such a brutal crime.
       Kranz said he found no physical evidence linking the suspect to
       the crime, but the suspect sold his vehicle —which Kranz
       theorized was used to transport the murder victim — to an
       out-of-state party shortly after the girl's body was found.
       Kranz said he went to New York to search the vehicle, but was
       not able to get access to it.
       Kranz said the prosecutor at the time, Howard McGinn, told him
       not to interrogate the suspect until the girl was identified.
       "I have a very strong suspicion he is the killer,'' Kranz said.
       "I am the only one on God's green earth who really thought the
       guy did it, and I was never given the opportunity to pursue that
       the way I thought it should be done. . . . .This thing could
       have been solved years ago, but I didn't have it in me to pursue
       it anymore.''
       Frustrated with his constant run-ins with other investigators
       assigned to the case by the New Jersey State Police, Kranz
       resigned from the township department in 1985. He is now
       disabled, recovering from a back injury.
       Kranz said his suspect moved from Blairstown in the past decade.
       He does not know where the man lives now.
       Different account
       McGinn, who was Warren County's prosecutor from 1981-86, said he
       does not remember Kranz having a suspect he wanted to
       interrogate.
       "I don't recall anything like that at all,'' said McGinn, who
       now has a private civil practice in Warren County. "That doesn't
       ring a bell.''
       The state police investigators who worked on the case with Kranz
       have retired and left the area. They could not be reached for
       comment.
       But McGinn did say that the focus of the case from the outset
       was to find out who the victim was.
       "Because we couldn't positively identify her, we couldn't do
       much else until that was done. Once we had an ID, then we could
       have focused on who did it,'' said McGinn, who added that he was
       satisfied with Kranz's handling of the investigation.
       When told of Kranz's assertion there is a viable suspect,
       current Warren Prosecutor John J. O'Reilly said: "This case has
       been investigated extensively by my office and the state police.
       That's all I can really say about it. We pursued every lead we
       had.''
       O'Reilly said he thought someone from his office had been in
       touch with Kranz, but Kranz said no law enforcement officers
       consulted with him since he left the police department 12 years
       ago.
       Kranz said the state police investigators did not get involved
       in the case for months, primarily because they knew it would be
       difficult to solve. When they did join the investigation, he and
       they butted heads frequently because the state police were
       constantly criticizing his procedures.
       Kranz called it an "embarrassment'' that a case requiring so
       much paperwork and legwork only had one township detective
       working on it in its early months until the state police
       answered his nine-man department's plea for help.
       Former prosecutor McGinn agreed there was not enough manpower in
       the case's early stages.
       "We were concerned about getting sufficient personnel on the
       case. Blairstown Police Department was small at the time, and of
       course our office was small at the time, too. But at some point
       the state police did get involved. I can't recall the timeline
       anymore after all these years,'' McGinn said.
       #Post#: 5512--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:34 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       continued
       Obsessed with case
       Kranz said he became obsessed with Princess Doe because of the
       enormity of the workload and brutality of the crime. He labeled
       as a "failure'' the case's first mission: To determine the
       identity of the girl whose head was bludgeoned beyond
       recognition and whose body was then dumped in a ravine off Route
       94 during a mid-July heat wave in 1982. After that, find the
       killer.
       Once word was out that the battered corpse had been found near a
       cemetery on July 15, 1982, hundreds of calls poured into the
       small police station, from parents whose children had run away,
       from police officers from other jurisdictions checking on
       missing persons and from cranks and tipsters. Scores of psychics
       called, offering their services, but were turned down, Kranz
       said.
       Also, Kranz examined hundreds of missing person and forensic
       reports in an effort to identify her.
       "I'm almost sure she passed through my work, but for the most
       ridiculous reason I did not recognize her,'' he said.
       For example, forensic reports told him that the corpse had no
       broken bones, so missing-person reports where the victims had
       once had broken bones were ruled out automatically.
       Then, Kranz said, he learned that some young people's bones mend
       in such a way that it is nearly impossible to tell that they
       were once broken. Hence, he said, some of the missing-person
       reports may had been valuable after all.
       "At times I was going through the trash can trying to
       backtrack,'' he said.
       Use of media
       The strategy from the outset was to keep the case in the media.
       Kranz named the girl "Princess Doe'' so that she would have some
       sort of identity and "a personality to keep her in the press.''
       A forensic artist from Philadelphia was recruited to reconstruct
       her appearance in the form of a bust so that it could be
       photographed to make posters and fliers.
       The plan worked. Papers large and small ran stories on the
       bizarre case, TV crews covered press conferences and an HBO
       special on strange crimes did a 20-minute segment on it. The
       show aired nationally and generated many calls from parents who
       children had run away, but no significant leads materialized, he
       said.
       A novel, "Death Among Strangers,'' used the case as a backdrop.
       "I can't for the life of me understand how a life can be erased
       without anyone coming forward who has some idea who she was,''
       said Kranz.
       The Warren County Prosecutor's Office, which has since taken
       over the case, determined three months ago that the girl was
       likely a runaway last living and working as a maid in Ocean
       City, Md. But investigators still do not know who she was or how
       she ended up dead in rural northwestern New Jersey.
       With the case taking a toll on Kranz's personal life, in 1985 he
       resigned to become executive director of the Foundation to Find
       and Protect Children, a lobby and investigative non-profit
       agency that helped parents find their runaway children. The job
       ended a year later when funding dried up.
       Since then Kranz said he has had a variety of jobs. "Whatever I
       had to do to make a living, I did,'' he said. He left Blairstown
       shortly after resigning from the police department, and he has
       maintained no ties. He will say only that he now lives in
       northern New Jersey.
       "I was so burned out after that case," he said. "It was enough
       to exasperate anyone.''
       Investigators study possible Maryland connection
       Princess Doe may have worked in shore town
       In September, detectives from the Warren County, N.J,.
       Prosecutor's Office held a press conference on the Princess Doe
       case, not in Blairstown or the county seat of Belvidere, but 230
       miles from their office in Ocean City, Md.
       One detective, Bill Eppell, told the local Maryland media
       gathered in the police station in that seashore town that a
       $1,000 reward was being offered for information leading to the
       identification of a young murder victim who worked in Ocean City
       from 1979-82.
       Although the victim has been named Princess Doe shortly after
       her battered body was found dumped in a ravine in Blairstown,
       N.J,. in July 1982, the detectives never used that term. Through
       the years, the case has received international coverage,
       including a 20-minute spot on an HBO crime special in 1983.
       Detective Eppell, according to the Ocean City Today weekly
       newspaper, was paraphrased as saying "investigators believe she
       was in Ocean City during the years 1979 to 1982. They believe
       she worked in housekeeping at the Harrison Hall (hotel) during
       the summers of 1980 and 1981 and might have stayed in the North
       Division Street Area near the foot of the Route 50 bridge.''
       The article also said that when the detectives from New Jersey
       were tracking down leads in July canvassing Ocean City hotels,
       they found six people who had information about the victim.
       But in an interview last week, Eppell's boss, Warren Prosecutor
       John J. O'Reilly, said his office has not determined yet that
       the victim, believed to be between 14 and 18 years old, was
       living in Ocean City, Md. He said his office has not ruled it
       out either.
       O'Reilly said the reporter who wrote the story "misconstrued
       what the detective said'' when she wrote her story. He would not
       comment further on specific information on this aspect of the
       case, nor would he say what evidence led his detectives to Ocean
       City.
       Story accurate, reporter says
       When told of the prosecutor's statement, the reporter said she
       stood by her work and that she was always willing to cooperate
       with police. She had no other comment.
       Detective Eppell, who is on vacation, was not available for
       comment last week, and his partner on this case, Detective Susan
       Bloodgood, said office policy dictates all information would
       have to come from Prosecutor O'Reilly.
       Jay Hancock, public relations officer for the 100-officer Ocean
       City Police Department, said the New Jersey reward is still
       being offered. As of Thanksgiving, he said three or four tips
       have been forwarded to Warren County. He did not know if any of
       the tips were helpful to New Jersey authorities.
       Other than assisting Warren County detectives when asked, his
       department does not have an active role in the Princess Doe case
       since the girl was murdered in New Jersey, Hancock said.
       "From what I recall, they were pretty sure the girl who had
       worked down here was the same girl who was found in New
       Jersey,'' Hancock said.
       The girl's identity — a key to finding her killer — has eluded
       authorities for more than 15 years.
       Hancock said Harrison Hall, where the teen is believed to have
       worked, is a large hotel on the boardwalk, and North Division
       Street where she is suspected of living has more modest rental
       properties that appeal to seasonal workers.
       If authorities are closer to learning who the girl was, they are
       not saying.
       Leads pursued
       Prosecutor O'Reilly said that many leads have been followed up
       on, especially in cases where mass murderers have targeted young
       women. When cases like that enter the limelight, O'Reilly said
       his detectives look into it to see if the killer's timeline
       could have crossed paths with Princess Doe. To date, no solid
       evidence has emerged from the legwork, he said.
       O'Reilly said he did not know if the murder victim's identity
       would ever be learned, but he said his office would follow up on
       every viable lead.
       "It's very painstaking work, there's no question about that. But
       sometimes you do get lucky,'' he said.
       Princess Doe Timeline
       JULY 1982: Teen's body found in ravine on Route 94 near a
       Blairstown, N.J., cemetery. Her face was beaten beyond
       recognition.
       OCTOBER 1982: A Philadelphia forensic artist makes a bust of the
       girl's face.
       JANUARY 1983: Blairstown officials bury the girl in the cemetery
       where she was found.
       JUNE 1983: HBO airs a 20-minute spot on the case to an
       international audience.
       MARCH 1985: Blairstown Police Lt. Eric Kranz, the chief
       investigator on the case, resigns from the department. He never
       works in law enforcement again.
       JULY 1997: Warren County, N.J., detectives go to Ocean City, Md.
       and interview six people who had information about the victim, a
       runaway.
       SEPTEMBER 1997: Warren County detectives post a $1,000 reward in
       Ocean City for information about the still unidentified victim.
       NOVEMBER 1997: The Vidocq Society, a prestigious group of
       international crime experts, agree to re-examine the Princess
       Doe case.
       DEC. 16, 1997: The victim is still not identified and her killer
       is still free.
       #Post#: 5513--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:36 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-910913
       Posted January 15, 2013 by
       CLeigh32
       Location Blairstown, New Jersey
       30-Year-Old NJ Cold Case Victim Needs a Real Name instead of
       "Princess Doe"
       By CLeigh32 | Posted January 15, 2013 | Blairstown, New Jersey
       Imagine you're a 15 year old girl growing up in a middle class
       home in the early 1980's. You have a great family; you love your
       parents, siblings and pets; you're a good student. But then
       something shatters your perfect life, and you run away. After
       spending several months on the streets, you make some wrong
       choices and end up dead in a cemetery in rural NJ. Here's the
       worst part - your killer bludgeons your face so badly, that
       three decades later your face, name, identity, and murderer
       still remain one of New Jersey's oldest unsolved mysteries.
       This is the true story of Princess Doe. Princess Doe was found
       in the Cedar Ridge Cemetary in Blairstown, NJ in July of 1982.
       All that is known about her is that she was a white female
       between the ages of 14-18 years old, 5'2", approx. 105 pounds.
       Blairstown is not a town in New Jersey that many have heard of,
       and most of the residents like it just that way. A rural farm
       town tucked away just below the Delaware Water Gap, its beauty
       and serenity are unprecedented and not at all what you'd picture
       when you think of stereotypical New Jersey towns. Everyone in
       Blairstown is friends, neighbors, acquaintances with everyone
       else....so as you can imagine, when something like this happens
       in a town like Blairstown, it shakes the community to its very
       core. The citizens of Blairstown will never let Princess Doe's
       memory fade, as they hold a memorial for her on the day she was
       found every year, in the very cemetery she was found in, around
       a headstone they raised money for back in 1983. Most everyone in
       this picturesque town knows about Princess Doe - most of them
       were residents when her body was found all those years ago - and
       they want a resolution to this tragic story.
       I was born in 1982 just a few weeks before Princess Doe's body
       was found. I grew up in Blairstown, and as a true crime fanatic
       the story of Princess Doe saddened me yet fascinated me at the
       same time. How was it, I thought, that a girl of this age could
       go missing....but not be missed? How is it possible that NO ONE
       has stepped forward to claim their missing
       daughter/sister/friend/niece/neighbor (and the list goes on)
       after almost 31 years? Several years ago I began writing a
       fictional novel, offering my explanation for this sad reality. I
       felt that Princess Doe deserved a name, and an identity, and
       since law enforcement was no closer after several decades to
       finding her identity or her killer, maybe I could do something
       to help. My novel "The Untold Story of Princess Doe" was
       published in April 2012. The local response I've gotten has been
       overwhelming, and the lead detective on the case, Det. Stephen
       J. Speirs, has said on multiple occasions that my book has
       "helped to breathe new life back into the case". After the
       book's publication, Det. Speirs and I appeared on CNN Saturday
       Morning, and America's Most Wanted featured a segment on the
       case this past fall. In addition, I have been on several dozen
       radio shows around the country talking about the case and the
       book. I am convinced SOMEONE, SOMEWHERE has to know SOMETHING
       about this girl. I refuse to believe that you can live on this
       earth for 14-18 years, go missing, and not have come in contact
       with anyone that could recognize or speak for you.....to me,
       it's impossible. Yet Princess Doe is practically the poster
       child for missing unidentified victims - she was the first
       person ever entered into the FBI's Missing Unidentified Persons
       Database back in 1983. Though my book has helped to get the word
       out about Princess Doe and her plight, I realize I have not even
       begun to reach half of the people that I need to with regards to
       this story. The only way we are ever going to find out Princess
       Doe's true name is if we keep spreading the word....telling her
       story...getting the composite sketches/renderings of her face
       out to the public....it's the only way we will ever get answers.
       I have been trying to use my book as a tool to raise awareness
       on this case and garner national interest in hopes that the
       answers we seek might somehow come to us from a currently
       unknown source.
       Over the years there have been several leads in the case, the
       most recent happening this fall. Princess Doe's hair strands
       were sent for a new kind of isotope testing in Utah, and the
       results showed that she actually was transient in the months
       leading up to her death...she may have at one time lived in the
       Southwestern United States. So how did she get from the
       Southwest to the Northeast? Didn't someone see her on that trek?
       And how did she end up in a cemetery in Northern New Jersey?
       These are the questions that have gone too long without answers
       and I believe with the right amount of exposure, Princess Doe's
       headstone will eventually be able to bear her given name.
       Nancy, please help me share this fascinating story with America.
       There are so many more twists and turns to the case that cannot
       even be explained in the amount of characters I am allowed in
       this description. It's time to find out this girl's identity and
       finally bring her killer to justice. Princess Doe deserves to
       rest in peace with dignity....with America finally knowing her
       name.
       For more information on this case please visit
       whoisprincessdoe.com.
       Thank you,
       Christie Leigh Napurano
       #Post#: 5514--------------------------------------------------
       Re:  PRINCESS DOE: WF, 14-18, found in Blairstown, NJ - July 198
       2
       By: Akoya Date: May 18, 2020, 5:39 pm
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