Pennysmom1
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The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
By bringing people, information, forensic science and technology together, NamUs helps resolve cases.
www.namus.gov
- Missing Since 04/12/2012
- Missing From Martinsville, Indiana
- Classification Missing
- Sex Female
- Race White
- Date of Birth 06/30/1956 (68)
- Age 55 years old
- Height and Weight 5'5, 160 - 175 pounds
- Distinguishing Characteristics Caucasian female. Gray hair, brown eyes.
Details of Disappearance
Wallace was last seen in Martinsville, Indiana on April 12, 2012. She left a note saying she was going to Ohio to live and work. She took a red backpack, a blue backpack, a set of floral-print luggage and her female Shih Tzu dog. She said she'd send for her truck later, and her family members could do what they liked with her other belongings. She has never been heard from again. Few details are available in her case.Nov 25, 2012
Relatives search for missing family member
MARTINSVILLE — Brenda K. Wallace left a note when she disappeared from her home on April 12, but that doesn’t mean her family is satisfied she is safe.In fact, the note begs more questions than it answers, her brother Tom Wallace said.“It was the Thursday before mom turned 90, and the whole...
www.reporter-times.com
<<Tom Wallace said his sister was depressed and had been since Harman Becker closed, leaving her unemployed. He said Brenda worked several jobs since then, but that she couldn’t keep a job for long. Her unemployment had finally run out, deepening her frustration, he said. Complicating matters, Anderson said the family and friends told him that Brenda Wallace was a drinker and sometimes went on binges. Public record shows a misdemeanor DUI from 2000, but no other run-ins with the law. Anderson said finding Brenda Wallace if she doesn’t want to be found is unlikely. All of his searches have come up empty.>>
<<“She doesn’t have a cellphone, doesn’t have any accounts, didn’t have a job at the time. We’ve checked work records and it doesn’t show where she has worked anywhere in Indiana. We don’t have access to Ohio. We just have no way to try to find her.”Tom Wallace thinks someone in Martinsville likely knows where she went, since someone had to help her leave.“She knows everyone in town,” Wallace said of his sister, who graduated from Martinsville High School in 1974. “Someone in Martinsville has to know where she is.”>>