JusticeWillBeServed
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NamUs
Doe Network
Colorado Cold Case File
Charley Project
Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance
Missing Since: May 30, 1976 from Colorado City, Colorado
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date of Birth: October 3, 1957
Age: 18 years old
Height and Weight: 5'9, 150 pounds
Distinguishing Characteristics: Caucasian male. Brown hair. Lepley's right hand is scarred and deformed. He goes by his middle name, Joe, and his nickname is Taco. He has a coppery complexion.
Clothing/Jewelry Description: A green Texaco t-shirt, a coat with the name "Joe" on it, blue jeans and lace-up hiking boots.
Details of Disappearance
Lepley was last seen at the Texaco station at Interstate 25 and Colorado 165 in Colorado City, Colorado on May 30, 1976. He had worked there part time for two years. Lepley picked up the keys from the manager and began his shift at 6:15 a.m. Only about fifteen minutes later, customers wanting to buy gas discovered the station was unattended. A short time after that, Lepley's manager and the police found Lepley's 1967 pickup truck in the station parking lot with the keys in the ignition. Inside the station, the manager's citizen band (CB) radio had its microphone ripped out and the cash register, which had contained between $50 and $100, was empty. Lepley has never been heard from again.
Authorities stated a middle-aged Caucasian male, with graying sandy-colored hair and blue eyes, about 5'11 tall and 175 pounds, was seen at the Texaco station between 6:30 and 7:30 the morning Lepley disappeared. The person drove a "flashy" two-door late model car, possibly a Pontiac Grand Prix, colored silver or white with maroon trim and a maroon landau top. He was pulling an unusual four- or five-foot-long, tarp-covered plywood trailer that may have been handmade. He may have been en route to Wyoming at the time. This individual is the prime suspect in Lepley's disappearance. He has never been identified.
Foul play is suspected in Lepley's case. He was a senior and honor student at Rye High School at the time of his disappearance, studying motorcycle mechanics in a vocational porgam, and went missing just days before graduation. He was a pole-vaulter, a football player and basketball player, and once had been president of his class. After his graduation, Lepley planned to spend the summer working for his father as a plumbing apprentice, then enlist in the Air Force and attend Adams State College.
Lepley's mother believe he was abducted after he surprised someone burgling the gas station. Although he disappeared during the daylight hours in a high-traffic area on Memorial Day Weekend, no one saw or heard anything suspicious. His case remains unsolved.
"Rye senior possibly kidnapped from gas station three days before graduation"
http://blogs.denverpost.com/coldcases/2012/06/02/rye-senior-disappears-gas-station-days-graduation/4309/
Series on killer resurrects Lepley mystery - July 25, 1991
Doe Network
Colorado Cold Case File
Charley Project
Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance
Missing Since: May 30, 1976 from Colorado City, Colorado
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date of Birth: October 3, 1957
Age: 18 years old
Height and Weight: 5'9, 150 pounds
Distinguishing Characteristics: Caucasian male. Brown hair. Lepley's right hand is scarred and deformed. He goes by his middle name, Joe, and his nickname is Taco. He has a coppery complexion.
Clothing/Jewelry Description: A green Texaco t-shirt, a coat with the name "Joe" on it, blue jeans and lace-up hiking boots.
Details of Disappearance
Lepley was last seen at the Texaco station at Interstate 25 and Colorado 165 in Colorado City, Colorado on May 30, 1976. He had worked there part time for two years. Lepley picked up the keys from the manager and began his shift at 6:15 a.m. Only about fifteen minutes later, customers wanting to buy gas discovered the station was unattended. A short time after that, Lepley's manager and the police found Lepley's 1967 pickup truck in the station parking lot with the keys in the ignition. Inside the station, the manager's citizen band (CB) radio had its microphone ripped out and the cash register, which had contained between $50 and $100, was empty. Lepley has never been heard from again.
Authorities stated a middle-aged Caucasian male, with graying sandy-colored hair and blue eyes, about 5'11 tall and 175 pounds, was seen at the Texaco station between 6:30 and 7:30 the morning Lepley disappeared. The person drove a "flashy" two-door late model car, possibly a Pontiac Grand Prix, colored silver or white with maroon trim and a maroon landau top. He was pulling an unusual four- or five-foot-long, tarp-covered plywood trailer that may have been handmade. He may have been en route to Wyoming at the time. This individual is the prime suspect in Lepley's disappearance. He has never been identified.
Foul play is suspected in Lepley's case. He was a senior and honor student at Rye High School at the time of his disappearance, studying motorcycle mechanics in a vocational porgam, and went missing just days before graduation. He was a pole-vaulter, a football player and basketball player, and once had been president of his class. After his graduation, Lepley planned to spend the summer working for his father as a plumbing apprentice, then enlist in the Air Force and attend Adams State College.
Lepley's mother believe he was abducted after he surprised someone burgling the gas station. Although he disappeared during the daylight hours in a high-traffic area on Memorial Day Weekend, no one saw or heard anything suspicious. His case remains unsolved.
"Rye senior possibly kidnapped from gas station three days before graduation"
http://blogs.denverpost.com/coldcases/2012/06/02/rye-senior-disappears-gas-station-days-graduation/4309/
A Colorado college professor who lived in the same county came under suspicion, said Jeff Lepley, Joes older brother.
Four days before Joe disappeared the professors wife vanished. The professor remarried and his second wife died under suspicious circumstances. The remains of the professors first wife was found four years after she and Joe had disappeared. The man committed suicide.
Betty Lepley said law enforcement officials including a group of retired FBI agents and detectives who reviewed his case in 2005 believe the professor is somehow linked to the case.
Series on killer resurrects Lepley mystery - July 25, 1991