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#Post#: 8134--------------------------------------------------
LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, OH al
ley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 10:57 am
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HTML https://i.imgur.com/j77NgzZ.jpg
Her body was wrapped in a pink blanket, and dumped near I-75 in
an alley near the corner of Collingwood and Emmett Streets. Her
burning body had been thrown into a bunch of weeds behind an
abandoned auto body shop and doused with gasoline. She was
charred and decomposed beyond recognition. She probably died of
a cocaine overdose several days earlier. Her body showed no
signs of trauma or injury besides those caused by the fire.
#Post#: 8135--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 10:58 am
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HTML https://identifyus.org/en/cases/4778
Case Information
Status Unidentified
Case number 745605
Date found June 16, 1987 13:22
Date created December 10, 2008 13:31
Date last modified July 08, 2016 07:56
Investigating agency
date QA reviewed
Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
Name James Patrick
Agency Lucas Cnty Coroners Ofc
Phone 419-213-3900
Case Manager
Name Elizabeth Murray
Phone 513.244.4948
Exclusions
The following people have been ruled out as being this decedent:
First Name Last Name Year of Birth State LKA
Ellen Akers 1966 Florida
Maria Anjiras 1961 Connecticut
Tavia Bailey 1970 Florida
Lynn Bandringa 1945 California
Phyllis Berry 1954 Texas
Diana Braungardt 1969 Missouri
Phyllis Brewer 1961 Ohio
Tracy Byrd 1968 Pennsylvania
Susan Cappel 1962 Ohio
Debra Cole 1969 Indiana
Cynthia Coon 1956 Michigan
Deborah Dean 1961 Missouri
Carol Donn 1963 Florida
Anita Drake 1948 Ohio
Wendy Felton 1971 Indiana
Debra Frost 1967 Utah
Martha Green 1970 Tennessee
Shannon Green 1969 Kentucky
Jamie Grissim 1955 Washington
Clara Grunst 1963 Missouri
Joan Hall 1966 Oregon
Teresa HAMMON 1963 California
Margaret Holst 1958 Nebraska
Rochelle Ihm 1966 Arizona
Rebecca Kellison 1954 Colorado
Kimberly Kersey 1968 Washington
Kimberly King 1966 Michigan
Kim Larrow 1965 Michigan
Lori Lloyd 1961 Ohio
Tammie McCormick 1972 New York
Deborah Meyer 1958 Wyoming
Kimberly Moreau 1969 Maine
Kimberly Moreau 1969 Maine
Nancy O'Sullivan 1959 Illinois
Jeanne Overstreet 1963 Arizona
Madeline Ponds 1969 Mississippi
Sharon Pretorius 1960 Ohio
Dean Pyle Peters 1966 Michigan
Angela Ramsey 1961 Florida
Julia Salucka 1967 Missouri
Patricia Schmidt 1964 Virginia
Lisa Sexton 1966 Ohio
Lisa Sexton 1966 Ohio
Catherine Sjoberg 1957 Wisconsin
Tracy Snow 1964 Missouri
Belinda VanLith 1957 Minnesota
Emma Vaughn 1967 Florida
Tammie Wilkinson 1965 Missouri
April Zane 1960 Illinois
#Post#: 8136--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 10:59 am
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HTML https://identifyus.org/en/cases/4778
NamUs UP # 4778
ME/C Case Number: 745605
Lucas County, Ohio
16 to 21 year old White Female
Case Report - NamUs UP # 4778
Case Information
Status Unidentified
Case number 745605
Date found June 16, 1987 13:22
Date created December 10, 2008 13:31
Date last modified July 08, 2016 07:56
Investigating agency
date QA reviewed
Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
Name James Patrick
Agency Lucas Cnty Coroners Ofc
Phone 419-213-3900
Case Manager
Name Elizabeth Murray
Phone 513.244.4948
Demographics
Estimated age Adult - Pre 30
Minimum age 16 years
Maximum age 21 years
Race White
Ethnicity
Sex Female
Weight (pounds) 110, Estimated
Height (inches) 66, Estimated
Body Parts Inventory (Check all that apply)
All parts recovered
Body conditions
Not recognizable - Charred/burned
Probable year of death 1987 to 1987
Estimated postmortem interval Days
Circumstances
Location Found
GPS coordinates
Address 1 3434 Collingwood Blvd.
Address 2
City Toledo
State Ohio
Zip code 43608
County Lucas
Circumstances
Body wrapped in a pink-colored cloth similar to a blanket, and
dumped near I-75 in an alley near the corner of Collingwood and
Emmett Streets.
Physical
Hair color Blond/Strawberry
Head hair
Blonde or light brown; fine texture; 6-7 inches long.
Left eye color Unknown or Missing
Right eye color Unknown or Missing
Eye description
Burning precluded determining eye color.
Piercings
Five pearl studs in each ear.
Fingerprints
Status: Fingerprint information is currently not available
Clothing with body
Jordache blue jeans under the body.
Jewelry
Five white round pearl pierce earrings each ear.
Other items found
with body
Body wrapped in pink colored cloth, similar to that of a
blanket.
Dental
Status: Dental information / charting is available and entered
DNA
Status: Sample submitted - Tests complete
#Post#: 8137--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:00 am
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HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/335ufoh.html
The Doe Network:
Case File 335UFOH
HTML https://i.imgur.com/IXhgjZE.jpghttps://i.imgur.com/GfTHk2B.jpg
d roof of the body shop. They interviewed neighbors. They tried
to match their Jane Doe with women missing from other states.
Investigators
If you have any information about this case please contact:
Toledo Police Department
Detective Bart Beavers
419-936-3724
--
Lucas County coroner's Office
419-213-3900
You may remain anonymous when submitting information.
Agency Case Number: A270-87
NCIC Number:
U-448521459
Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with
information regarding this case.
Source Information:
I Care
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
#Post#: 8138--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:01 am
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HTML http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-F...ogy-seeks-to-solve-mysteries-of-2-bodies.html
POLICE & FIRE
LUCAS COUNTY
Technology seeks to solve mysteries of 2 bodies
Digital facial reconstruction gives hope to cold cases
ByTaylor Dungjen | BLADE STAFF WRITER
Published on April 22, 2013
John Doe's bones were found along the Lake Erie shore in 2005.
Someone knows who Lucas County’s “John Doe” is.
Since the man’s bones were found along the Lake Erie shoreline
more than seven years ago, the Lucas County Coroner’s Office has
fielded inquiries from investigators with unsolved cases and
anxious family members looking for loved ones.
None has matched.
“It makes me feel frustrated, you know? Because I know, if that
was my family member and I was looking for them, I would want
somebody to help me,” said Dr. Diane Scala-Barnett, Lucas County
deputy coroner.
A new digital facial reconstruction, done by a forensic artist
from the Broward County Sheriff’s Office in Florida, gives new
hope that John Doe will, someday, be himself.
Nationally, fewer than 2 percent of unidentified remains are
ever identified, said Catyana Skory, the forensic artist. About
11 percent of the cases she’s helped with have had positive
resolutions.
“It’s important for them to know we’re still trying,” Ms. Skory
said. “There are people out there trying to get these cases
resolved, and this is something that does need support from the
public.”
More than 9,300 unidentified persons have been reported to the
National Missing and Unidentified Persons System. Of those, 740
have been resolved, according to the missing persons agency.
HTML https://i.imgur.com/7tDqAaI.jpg
Jane Doe was burned beyond recognition in an alley in 1987.
There are 66 Ohio cases in the database; two — including John
Doe and a Jane Doe — are from Lucas County.
In 1987, Jane Doe’s burned body was found wrapped in a pink
blanket. She was dumped in an alley near Collingwood Boulevard
and Emmet Street and set on fire. Her body was so burned, it’s
impossible to say what color her eyes were; taking fingerprints
was impossible.
Jane Doe is believed to be between 16 and 21 years old. She
weighed 110 pounds and was 5 feet, 6 inches tall.
Under her body, investigators found blue Jordache jeans. In each
ear, Jane Doe had five small white pearl earrings.
“I’ll never forget that,” Dr. Barnett said.
The girl had fine, strawberry-blonde hair that reached her
shoulders. Her death certificate lists the cause of death as
undetermined.
John Doe’s body was found early Nov. 4, 2005. Polaroid pictures
taken by a coroner’s investigator show that it was a bright,
beautiful day.
From a boat in Lake Erie, behind Oregon’s wastewater treatment
plant in Jerusalem Township, a duck-hunting father-son duo saw
the man’s bones along the rocky shoreline.
Nearby was a clump of clothing: Adventurer’s Club sweatpants,
large, maybe blue, and Hanes undershorts, size 32.
That was it. No wallet. No identification. No obvious clues.
John Doe could have died there. He could have been dumped there.
His body could have washed ashore.
What’s known about John Doe isn’t much. At some point, the
bridge of his nose was broken, and he has a healed shoulder
blade injury, and he had, perhaps, been shot in his right leg.
He was black and, when he died, was between 30 and 50 years old,
according to an anthropological report compiled by Julie Mather,
director of forensic anthropology for the Lucas County Coroner’s
Office.
Based on measurements of John Doe’s left tibia and femur, he was
between 5 foot, 3 inches, and 5 feet, 8 inches. He had a thin
build.
At some time during his life, John Doe had access to good dental
care, the report notes.
Despite the dental care, John Doe had an abscess at the root of
a maxillary left-central incisor, fillings, and gum disease.
Dr. Barnett said the clothing that they recovered didn’t have
any tears or holes to show John Doe was physically assaulted,
although maybe he was and the wound was to his torso and only
affected his soft tissue.
John Doe had been dead for at least several months, Dr. Barnett
said, basing the observation on a lack of soft tissue.
John Doe’s information was eventually uploaded to databases, and
that’s when the inquiries came in: missing boaters from Canada;
a missing Bedford, Ohio, husband; another missing Canadian man,
and a man missing from Columbus since 2002.
The Columbus inquiry also came with a request for DNA, Dr.
Barnett said. Parts of John Doe, including a vertebra, femur,
and humerus, were sent to the University of North Texas Health
Science Center in Fort Worth. Scientists there were able to
extract DNA from the vertebra, Dr. Barnett said.
Last year, John Doe’s information was uploaded to the National
Missing and Unidentified Persons System. An offer from Ms. Skory
to do the reconstruction, free of charge, followed.
John Doe’s case file and skull were sent to Florida and, weeks
later, a picture of what John Doe might look like was complete.
The image might not be 100 percent accurate — there’s no way to
know, for instance, how John Doe wore his hair or if he had a
mustache — but the proportions should be about right, and that,
Ms. Skory said, is crucial.
“We can get the head shape and proportions of the eyes, nose,
and mouth, and that’s very important,” said Ms. Skory, who has
done reconstructions and composite sketches for more than 10
years. “Those are the most recognizable features for people.”
Still, it won’t matter how spot-on the images are until the
right person sees them, Ms. Skory said.
Dr. Barnett is hopeful that is exactly what will happen.
“It’s so exciting,” she said. “I feel like somebody has got to
know him.”
Anyone who may be able to identify John or Jane Doe should call
the Lucas County Coroner’s Office, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, at 419-213-3900; any other time, call the
Toledo Police Department at 419-245-3142.
Contact Taylor Dungjen at: tdungjen@theblade.com, or
419-724-6054, or on Twitter @taylordungjen
#Post#: 8139--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:04 am
---------------------------------------------------------
HTML http://unidentified.wikia.com/wiki/Lucas_County_Jane_Doe
Lucas County Jane Doe
Lucas County Jane Doe was a female found deceased in Ohio in
1987.
Lucas County Jane Doe
HTML https://i.imgur.com/M6FClLm.jpg
Sex Female
Race White
Location Toledo, Ohio
Found June 16, 1987
Unidentified for 29 years
Postmortem interval Days
Body condition Decomposed/Burned
Age approximation 16 - 21
Height approximation 5'4 - 5'7
Weight approximation 110 - 115 pounds
Cause of death Possible overdose
Lucas County Jane Doe was a female found deceased in Ohio in
1987.
#Post#: 8140--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:05 am
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HTML http://icaremissingpersonscoldcases.yuku.com/topic/816/Unidentified-Female-Found-1987-in-ToledoOhio
IDENTITY OF WOMAN FOUND DEAD A LONGTIME MYSTERY IN TOLEDO
Author: ROBIN ERB THE BLADE
Dateline: TOLEDO
Do I remind you of someone?
The reconstruction of her smiling face has prompted that same
question for years, but no one has been able to offer answers to
Jane Doe, officially known as Lucas County coroner's case No.
A270-87.
She is the county's only unidentified female death case and has
become one of the area's longest-running mysteries. Today,
exactly 10 years since her burning body was found in an alley
near Detroit Ave. and Collingwood Blvd., investigators have more
questions than answers.
The woman, estimated to be 16 to 21 years old, was wrapped in a
tan tweed carpet and a pool cover, thrown into a bunch of weeds
behind an abandoned auto body shop, and doused with gasoline. A
passing motorist found her body, which was charred and
decomposed beyond recognition.
She probably died of a cocaine overdose several days earlier,
the coroner's office said. The body showed no signs of trauma or
injury besides those caused by the fire.
Authorities believe those who were with her panicked and dumped
her body, but investigators haven't ruled out homicide.
"We just didn't have any answers to those questions," Coroner
James Patrick said.
Jane Doe was Caucasian, possibly having some American Indian in
her ancestry. She was 5 feet 4 to 5 feet 8, of slender build,
with blond or light brown hair. She had several pearl earrings
in each ear, bright pink polish on her toenails and finger
nails, and wore Jordache jeans.
Her dental work was unusual in that her front teeth were
straight, but her lower first molars and upper right molar had
been extracted when she was young.
Most likely, forensic anthropologist Julie Saul said, Jane Doe
had a beautiful smile.
In the basement of the county coroner's office, Jane Doe's skull
sits on a laboratory shelf where Julie Saul and her husband,
Frank, see her every day.
The couple, forensic anthropologists who work for the coroner's
office, might be the only possible link to Jane Doe's identity.
The Sauls have taken their search for her name far beyond their
Arlington Ave. lab. When they travel on lectures, they carry a
picture of Jane Doe with them and study the faces on all the
missing-persons posters they can find.
They watch shows like "America's Most Wanted" and "Unsolved
Mysteries" for clues.
Inquiries have come from as far away as New Jersey, Tennessee,
Texas, Pennsylvania, and Arizona.
But time and time again, dental records and other identifiers
have become dead ends, leading the Sauls back to the same
questions.
Where was she from? Why did she die? Why would someone set her
on fire and dump her body?
In 1991, frustrated by dead-end computer searches, the Sauls
turned Jane Doe's skull over to Amy Sanderson, a forensic
scientist at the Michigan State Police crime lab in East
Lansing, Mich.
Anderson used clay, complicated anthropological formulas, and a
bit of artistic guesswork to reconstruct Jane Doe's face.
Investigators put posters of the reconstructed face in police
stations across the region.
A cartoon-like speech bubble connected to her face asks: "Do I
remind you of someone?"
Today, thistles, tall grass, and flowers grow behind a former
auto-body shop where a North Toledo man found the smoking body
on June 16, 1987.
Detective Tom Ross, the lead investigator on the case, returned
to the site recently - on a muggy, partly overcast morning much
like the one 10 years ago when the body was found.
Investigators had searched the area extensively, including the
weeds and roof of the body shop. They interviewed neighbors.
They tried to match their Jane Doe with women missing from other
states.
In the end, they came up with nothing. Her file was long ago
shelved in the dusty basement of the Safety Building downtown.
The case gnaws at Ross, who has spent more than two decades
solving Toledo homicides, meticulously recording each one in a
three-ring binder.
He theorizes that the woman might have been institutionalized
for years in an orphanage or a similar facility. Perhaps she was
released, turned to drugs, and was forever lost to the streets.
Under those circumstances, he said, she probably would have no
relatives and no one to miss her.
"I still think of her every once in a while," he said. "I still
wonder. I don't know if we'll ever find answers. There's always
a chance."
The Sauls have not given up hope either. Anthropologists, Frank
Saul said, must steel themselves against becoming personally
involved with their subjects.
But as Julie Saul handles Jane Doe's skull, her fingers tracing
the eye sockets and teeth, it is with more than clinical
curiosity.
"The last thing we can do for anybody is to identify them and
understand why they died," she said, shaking her head.
How sad it must be to die without loved ones, she ponders aloud.
How sad it is not to know where loved ones have gone.
The Sauls would not say where Jane Doe's remains were buried.
Frank Saul said he prefers to think of her grave not as Jane
Doe's final destination, but as a temporary resting place until
she can be buried with family.
"We want to offer something to her next of kin, give them some
resolution," Frank Saul said.
"It's a matter of respect. You have to keep trying - you must."
#Post#: 8141--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:06 am
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HTML https://www.pinterest.com/pin/348958671112060145/
HTML https://i.imgur.com/wHsl5Rs.jpg
Learn more at missingkids.com
Jane Doe 1987 - Date Found Jun 16, 1987 Location Found Toledo,
OH She had been deceased for several days before being found.
The female is 16-21 years old. She was slender, standing
approximately 5’04”-5’07” tall and weighing around 110 pounds.
#Post#: 8142--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:07 am
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HTML http://justicefornativewomen.blogspot.com/2016/06/the-lucas-county-jane-doe-discovered-in.html
The Lucas County Jane Doe, Discovered in Ohio in 1987.
These are forensic reconstructions of the Lucas County Jane Doe:
HTML https://i.imgur.com/XR7T2te.jpg
HTML https://i.imgur.com/ApzCWPV.jpg
Jane's burning body was discovered by a passing motorist in an
alley near Detroit Avenue and Collingwood Boulevard in Toledo,
Ohio on June 16th, 1987. She is believed to have been between
the ages of 16 and 21 when she died. Authorities believe an
overdose of cocaine to be the most likely cause of death due to
her blood work and the lack of trauma to her body. She died
several days prior to being lit on fire and was dumped and set
ablaze by someone who panicked when she died with them. However
even with this being the working theory, homicide has not been
ruled out. Jane remains unidentified.
If you have any information regarding the death or identity of
the Lucas County Jane Doe, you are encouraged to call the Lucas
County Coroner's Office at 419-213-3900.
Description: Jane had a slender build and near-perfect alignment
of her front teeth. She had light brown or dark blonde hair
about 6 or 7 inches in length. She wore five pearl earrings in
each lobe. She was likely between 5'4 and 5'7 in height and
weighed around 110 pounds.
Tribal Information: Jane Doe is thought to be white with
possible Native American ancestry. As she is unknown, so are her
people.
#Post#: 8143--------------------------------------------------
Re: LUCAS COUNTY JANE DOE: WF, 16-21, set on fire in a Toledo, O
H alley - 16 June 1987
By: Akoya Date: July 20, 2020, 11:08 am
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HTML http://usedview.com/can-you-identify-me-helping-lucas-ohio-jane-doe-june-1987-get-her-name-back/
“Can You Identify Me?” helping Lucas Ohio Jane Doe June 1987 get
her name back
By Contributor May 31, 2013
Lucas Ohio Jane Doe 1987 once had a real name. She was a
daughter, a granddaughter, perhaps even a niece or an aunt, but
she made a terrible decision one night that cost her that life
and changed the lives of everyone she knew.
Her likeness, thanks to Amy Sanderson, appears online at the
website “Can You Identify Me?” (CYIM) along with information
about where and how she was found, her age and other pertinent
knowledge that should help anyone who knew this young lady, to
contact those who can help.
CYIM was a brilliant idea built out of a desire to help those
who have no name in death, to get it back.
By combining forensic artistry, know-how of a former “America’s
Most Wanted” producer, knowledge of a victim’s mother who found
her unidentified child thousands of miles away from home and
that of a deputy coroner; they can glean enough information to
put composites together that could help solve cases all across
the nation.
Lucas Ohio Jane Doe 1987 was found in Toledo, Ohio behind an
abandoned auto-shop, near I-75 on June 16, 1987. Her poor body
had been wrapped in a tan tweed carpet and a pool cover, then
dropped there and burned.
Detectives believe, from what evidence they did have, that she
had died of a drug overdose and that whoever she had been with
had been panicked into doing what they did. Although they
haven’t ruled out homicide, it was fairly easy to ascertain what
had happened.
Although she had been burned almost beyond recognition, a team
from CYIM was able to come up with a composite of what she
would’ve looked like.
Other Statistics Include:
Estimated age: 16-21 years old
Approximate Height and Weight: 5’4″-5’8″; 110 lbs.
Distinguishing Characteristics: Possibly some Native ancestry.
Light brown/dark blonde hair of fine texture, 6-7 inches long.
Slender build. Bright pink polish on her toenails and
fingernails.
Dentals: Near perfect alignment of front teeth. Lower first
molars and upper right first molar extracted in late childhood.
Third molars not present (upper left impacted). No fillings or
restorations.
Clothing: Jordache jeans. Five pearl earrings in each ear.
DNA: Yes, in CODIS
They were able to share that she had picked a bright pink nail
polish for her fingers and toes, drawing a sad kind of picture
in your head of a young girl bending over to reach her toes,
admiring how pretty they looked.
It isn’t just her young age that catches your attention alone.
No, it is also the thought of her painting her nails in the days
before her death, that show her as the human-being she was and
the young lady who belonged to a family.

If you have any information about this case please
contact: 

Toledo Police Department

Detective Bart Beavers: 
 419-936-3724 

–
Lucas County coroner’s Office:
 419-213-3900
You may remain anonymous when submitting information.
Agency Case Number: A270-87
NCIC Number: 
U-448521459.
 Please refer to this
number when contacting any agency with information regarding
this case.
For more info: for those who live Ohio and want more
information, please contact the Ohio Attorney Generals Office
at: 800-282-0515 or local: 614-466-4986. They are located at 30
E Broad St #14, Columbus, OH 43215 (Transit: E Broad St & N High
St). For directions, please see Google Maps
Top Related Stories
More Articles: Cleveland Courage Fund for Knight, DeJesus, Berry
and her daughter at $75,000 and growing.
Ohio Missing Persons Community Support:
Ohio Attorney General: ‘In this traumatic time do not cut
yourself off from others who can support you such as family,
friends and clergy. Talk to your doctor if increased stress is
affecting your health.”
Team Hope: The mission of Team HOPE is to assist families with
missing, exploited and recovered children by offering peer
support including empowerment, emotional support and coping
skills from a trained volunteer who has had or still has a
missing or exploited child.
Sources: Can You Identify Me,
canyouidentifyme.org/LucasOhioJaneDoeJune1987; The Doe Network,
HTML http://doenetwork.org/cases/335ufoh.html
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