Ok, I just now read the documents that were posted. I just wanted to say to Annasmom that I can only imagine how it must have felt, after all this time to read the documents. I feel for you! I felt like someone slapped me in the face to read that GW didn't want you to know his whereabouts and that he so casually admits, as if it were not a big deal, that he hadn't seen Anna since the divorce. I am so sorry! I wonder sometimes how you deal with this. Your love for Anna over yourself is evidenced by the fact that, day after day, you open old wounds with the dim hope that we will find the truth. I just wanted to tell you that I love you!
The FBI 2nd attachment has the date wrong when Anna disappeared! They have January 16, 1976. Now, if they were investigating several incidences during the time Anna vanished, ie: crime in the area, places of interest for suspects, this date is 3 years in advance of the actual year Anna went missing.
Q: Would this be of importance? Should the FBI be informed of this wrong date?
Q: They stated Anna was perhaps drowned however still a missing person's case in San Mateo County, did they not try to dig up anything on George Brody? only Waters?
Thanks!
The date is wrong by three years and the name is also wrong (Anna Christine). The Victim/Witness report filed by the date Dec. 2, 1996 even has the name wrong (Christine Waters). I did not include this in the scans. The NamUS report has come up with a mole on her neck which I never saw and neglects to mention the (indestructable) rubber boots she was wearing when she disappeared in 1973. I certainly would not call her brownish blonde hair "strawberry blonde". There was no red in it at all.
Are you getting the impression that the FBI had just made up their minds about what happened, even in the absence of physical evidence, and were eager to close this case? When, on the day she disappeared, we tried to file a missing persons report, we were told that we could not do this until 24 hours had passed.
At this point, especially considering all the red tape we had to go through to get these papers, I don't see much point in trying to correct them. Please tell me if you disagree, however, since I am not the only one making decisions here.
~~
Hi, Not sure what the FBI were thinking at that time, I do think they are trained to be exact, no errors are acceptable on their part. I would definitely contact them - the contact you may have now and mention these errors. Afterall, this is a missing person's case, a very important one at that!
Also, while we're at it, do we know if George Brody was investigated by the FBI? I realize an alias maybe the result but perhaps he didn't change his name, would they have anything on this man at all? I would be very interested to learn about this.
They did create a file on Brody, another one on Waters, and the one they sent us on Anna's disappearance. They did not send anything from the other files.
They did create a file on Brody, another one on Waters, and the one they sent us on Anna's disappearance. They did not send anything from the other files.
FWIW, if you have a copy of his death certificate, you can get his file, if it hasn't been destroyed. I was able to ask for GW's, but it had been destroyed only 6 months prior to me inquiring.
I received a letter dated July 12 regarding my request April 5 for information on George Brody. The letter says "Records which may be responsive to your...request were destroyed on August 21, 2003." Apparently records are sent to the National Archives and Records Administration, so they are not actually destroyed, but it is another whole long involved process to get them. If anybody has the energy to do this (I'm afraid I do not), I have the file number and will happily turn it over.Why WHY WHY?? When it is just as easy to run a sheet of paper through a scanner as it is a shredder! Why ever destroy anything of that nature when there is limitless capability to digitally store everything?
I received a letter dated July 12 regarding my request April 5 for information on George Brody. The letter says "Records which may be responsive to your...request were destroyed on August 21, 2003." Apparently records are sent to the National Archives and Records Administration, so they are not actually destroyed, but it is another whole long involved process to get them. If anybody has the energy to do this (I'm afraid I do not), I have the file number and will happily turn it over.
I received a letter dated July 12 regarding my request April 5 for information on George Brody. The letter says "Records which may be responsive to your...request were destroyed on August 21, 2003." Apparently records are sent to the National Archives and Records Administration, so they are not actually destroyed, but it is another whole long involved process to get them. If anybody has the energy to do this (I'm afraid I do not), I have the file number and will happily turn it over.