IN IN - Wendy Felton, 16, Marion, 1987 -&- Tricia Reitler, 19, Marion, 1993

DNA Solves
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Marion police renew efforts to solve 1993 disappearance of college student
http://cbs4indy.com/2018/03/26/mari...-solve-1993-disappearance-of-college-student/
GRANT COUNTY, Ind. – Twenty-five years ago this week, an Indiana Wesleyan student vanished without a trace.

Police say freshman psychology major Tricia Reitler took a break from writing a term paper and walked to a store just half a mile from the university campus.

Unfortunately, the 19-year-old was never seen or heard from again.

The disappearance in March 1993 sparked a massive manhunt, but sadly, a quarter of a century later, Reitler’s body has never been found.

“This is 25 years coming up this week, but it hasn’t been forgotten,” said Marion Police Deputy Chief Stephen Dorsey.

[...]

Marion police say the case is still an open investigation. There is a $1,000 cash reward for information that results in an arrest.

If you know any information about Tricia’s disappearance, call Crime Stoppers at 765-662-TIPS (8477).
 
I lived in the area in the earlier 90's. I remember a billboard sign in Gas City about a missing young couple, anyone know about this?
 
  • NCMEC: 772531
posterTitleMissing.png

Wendy Felton
NCMC772531c1.jpg

    • Missing Since
    • Jun 4, 1987
    • Missing From
    • Marion, IN
    • DOB
    • May 10, 1971
    • Age Now
    • 47
    • Sex
    • Female
    • Race
    • White
    • Hair Color
    • Brown
    • Eye Color
    • Brown
    • Height
    • 5'5"
    • Weight
    • 115 lbs
Age Progressed
NCMC772531e1.jpg

Wendy's photo is shown age-progressed to 45 years. She was last seen at home in Marion, Indiana. She has a one inch scar on her right shoulder and she wears hard contact lenses.

Have you seen this child? WENDY FELTON
 
  • NCMEC: 780520
posterTitleMissing.png

Tricia Reitler
NCMC780520c1.jpg

    • Missing Since
    • Mar 29, 1993
    • Missing From
    • Marion, IN
    • DOB
    • Feb 9, 1974
    • Age Now
    • 45
    • Sex
    • Female
    • Race
    • White
    • Hair Color
    • Brown
    • Eye Color
    • Blue
    • Height
    • 5'3"
    • Weight
    • 103 lbs
Age Progressed
NCMC780520e1.jpg

Tricia's photo is shown age-progressed to 43 years. She was last seen on March 29, 1993. Tricia has a tattoo on her left ankle.

Have you seen this child? TRICIA REITLER
 
I know this is an old thread but I just found this site as I was going thru some stuff online about these two cases & thought I'd throw my 2 cents worth out there.
I've lived in Marion all my life & have always been interested in these two cases & recently I've really been thinking about them a lot & have been reading everything I could find on the cases.
I know with 100% certainty within my own self that Larry Hall is responsible for Tricia Reitlers disappearance (and when I point out to others why I say that, they tend to agree with me) & he very well may have been involved with Wendy's also.
I've also got a theory about where he may have disposed of Tricia's remains based on his own account & evidence found in his possession & places he was known to frequent & I spend a lot of time in that area hunting & whatnot but it is a big tract of land.
I figure if I'm going to be out in the woods hunting or mushroom hunting or whatever I might as well go to that particular area & who knows might just stumble on something.
What tract of land are you referencing? And why do you believe that to be the place where he could have disposed of Tricia's remains?
I've worked in Marion for years, and I live in a nearby town, I would be very interested to know your reasoning! :)
 
Of course nobody knows who killed these girls except those involved, but think about this. Larry Hall has an IQ of 80 which is far from being a savant serial killer. The van he supposedly murdered over 30 women in had 5 fingerprints inside it and they were all his. No DNA, no hair, no fibers from any of the 30 women he brutally raped and murdered and pulled into the van. He was a janitor, so IF he was that good at his job and he cleaned the van that well... let me discuss Christopher Martin. He grew up in the same town as Larry, but didn't know him and decides to write a book about him filled with mostly court transcripts and files. He insinuates in the book that Larry killed every girl who was murdered in the midwest if their murder was unsolved. Christopher Martin didn't even say he spoke to Hall until the end of the book. The problem with Martin (one of many) is his insinuations have caused so many people to assume Hall murdered these women, they've stopped looking for them or their killers. LE are having to spend extra money and manpower to disprove his "theories" that Hall killed these women based on his assumptions in the book. In the case I've been working on, Martin told LE he had a code with Hall where Hall would only talk to him. He said when Hall talks to him he tells him "One truth and two lies" and he deciphers it so law enforcement can't understand it. I certainly don't believe Hall is a stand up guy, but the families of these missing women deserve justice... not a possible diversion from searching by someone's attempt for financial gain through a publication.
 
The Disappearance of Tricia Reitler and Many Others
Nov 18, 2019

tr.jpg
(Tricia Lynn Reitler went missing March 29, 1993 from Marion Indiana. Photo courtesy of ID Discovery.)

In March 1993, Tricia Lynn Reitler, 19, was a freshman psychology major at Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion, Indiana. Teachers described Tricia as a beautiful and brilliant student with a high grade point average. Her future was bright until . . . she vanished without a trace.

The Disappearance
During the early evening of Tricia’s disappearance on March 29, 1993, she was writing a term paper and decided to take a short break to walk to Marsh Supermarket, approximately half a mile from the university campus. According to investigators, while at the store, she purchased a root beer and a magazine leaving the store to return to her dormitory in Bowman Hall. She never made it back.

Her disappearance has been a jigsaw puzzle that has kept investigators baffled for 26 years. After extensive searches, police discovered Tricia’s bloodstained jeans, shirt, and shoes in a field near Seybold Pool and the Center Elementary School. Also, police found small droplets of blood on an earring on the sidewalk about a quarter mile between the store and the campus.

Tricia was a runner. In fact, she had taken two runs that unseasonably warm Monday in March. Her father, Garry Reitler believes her flexibility and fitness contributed to the difficulty the canine tracking dogs had. During the search, her scent was all over the place in the area where the abduction had occurred.

One More Day
Tricia’s disappearance results in parents without a daughter, siblings growing up never knowing their sibling, and a town still looking for answers 26 years later. Still, many questions remain.

“It’s unbelievable, I mean you walk around kind of like you are in a daze,” said Donna Reitler, Tricia’s mother. Donna has spent decades coping by carrying on for her husband and other three children. But moving on hasn’t been easy because she feared “moving on” meant leaving Tricia behind and she just couldn’t do that.

Donna told the Chronicle-Tribune, “You tell yourself, ‘Oh, just one more day. Just one more day,’ and here you are 26 years later.”

Both parents have coped differently, but have managed to keep their marriage together, defying all odds. “Somebody says they saw her, or they found something,” said Garry. “It’s a struggle but as a father, you have to go out and look, you have to exhaust all of those leads.”

Garry has often worked alongside law enforcement in the search for his daughter.

Their daughter has appeared on CNN, C-SPAN, Dateline, even The Jerry Springer Show. People have written books and even a movie made for television but that doesn’t matter to Garry and Donna — they just need answers.

Law Enforcement’s Frustrations

“It’s a case that’s been worked by multiple agencies for years. It’s still difficult, there’s no doubt about that,” retired Marion Police Detective Jay Kay. “I’ve always tried to stay positive. I’ve always believed sooner or later; the answers will come forward.”

Though the investigation may seem at a standstill, according to Marion County Deputy Chief Stephen Dorsey as of March 2019, police are reviewing new DNA samples in the case. Dorsey says police want to put Tricia’s abductor in prison, but also want to find Tricia to ensure she is returned to her family where she belongs. It’s something Donna and Garry admit they need too.

“Still this whole thing of going over and over different scenarios that could have happened or maybe we didn’t think of this or maybe we should have gone here or this or that; like I said that does not stop,” Donna said. “To be able to bring her home and put her to rest; it’s not going to change the outcome. Tricia will still be gone, but I think for our family we will be able to move on to a certain degree.”

The Reitler’s and police have followed up on hundreds of leads over the years and one person keeps coming up. “We’ve had a number of suspects over the years, one being Larry Hall, however, we don’t have any evidence that puts Larry into the mix of Tricia being missing,” said Dep. Chief Stephen Dorsey of Marion Police Department.

A Serial Killer?
Larry DeWayne Hall is currently serving a life sentence at a medium-security federal psychiatric prison in North Carolina for the 1993 abduction of Jessica Roach, 15, near Georgetown, Illinois, a short distance from the Indiana border. Her body was later found in the fall of 1993, in a cornfield near Perrysville, Indiana.

Jessica Roach
Jessica was last seen at approximately 3:30 p.m. on September 20, 1993, riding her bicycle near her home in Georgetown.

Hall was never charged with Roach’s murder because police could not pinpoint where she was killed. According to federal court records, Hall signed a written confession that he kidnapped and killed Jessica Roach, but he has since recanted. Some believe Hall is responsible for killing up to 40 women and girls.

Christopher Hawley Martin, author of Urges: A Chronicle of Serial Killer Larry Hall describes Hall as being bullied as a child and as a juvenile bedwetter. Martin writes that Hall traveled the country in his van as a Civil War reenactment buff.

Raised in a big house on a cemetery in Wabash, Indiana, identical twins Larry Hall and Gary Hall’s father was the sexton (gravedigger) at the cemetery. Both brothers were Civil War reenactors who kept to themselves, traveling to many states in pursuit of their pastime.

During the research for his book, Martin began traveling the country and researched disappearances and unsolved murders of women around each of the Civil War reenactment event that Hall was known to have ventured. The picture that emerged was frightening — there were many.

Martin began corresponding with Hall in prison and was able to obtain information on other missing and murdered girls.

Laura Depies
Laura Jean Depies, 20, worked a shift at Graffiti store at Fox River Mall in Appleton, Wisconsin. At approximately 10:00 p.m., Laura and a co-worker locked the store and walked to their cars in the mall parking lot. Depies was going to her boyfriend’s home and headed east on College Avenue in her 1984 Volkswagen Rabbit. She pulled into the Town of Menasha parking complex (now Fox Crossing) and parked. Her friends can remember hearing her pull in, but she never arrived at her boyfriend’s apartment. Once they realized time had elapsed, they immediately went outside and started searching while calling the police. The only physical evidence found at the scene was Laura’s drinking cup left on the hood of her car.

Hall told Martin he stalked mall parking lots, plazas and stores looking for victims. Hall then claimed he spotted Laura Depies at a store and followed her to the apartment parking lot where she was chloroformed and abducted. He then assaulted and killed her at a remote location, claiming he dumped her body in a wooded area.

According to Fox 8 News, during the investigation of Jessica Roach’s murder, police found notes in Hall’s van that said “Lori” and “Fox River.” Investigators then concluded that Hall attended a Civil War Reenactment in Kaukauna the weekend before Depies vanished.

Hall has never been charged with the potential abduction and murder of Depies because there is a lack of physical evidence to support his confession. Due to red-tape, Wisconsin law enforcement has been unable to get Hall to Wisconsin to show them where he claims to have dumped Laura’s body.

Mark Depies, Laura’s father, doesn’t believe Hall.

“I’m not buying that much at all,” Depies said. “especially without a body or anything to go on other than he confessed.”

However, Menasha Police Department have said Hall knows things about the abduction only the killer and police would know.

“The unfortunate thing is I only have memories of her first 20 years,” Laura’s mother Mary Wegner told ABC News. “I don’t know that you can ever really have closure . . . there are still some loose ends that I feel need to be followed up, including finding the remains of my daughter.”

Paulette Webster
Martin decided to question Hall about the abduction of Paulette Webster missing from Chester, Ill., pm on September 2, 1988.

Hall claimed Paulette was taken from the main east/west roads through Chester which is where she was, in fact, walking home from her friend’s house at approximately 11:00 p.m.

He also claims to have picked Paulette up near a mobile home park, which again Martin found was true. Hall then said he took Paulette to a remote location where she was kept and sexually assaulted for several hours. Hall said he either threw her in the Mississippi River or buried her.

Letters from Jail
In the letter to Martin, Hall goes also claims there are several girls buried in the Mark Twain forest in Missouri. This information has led some to believe he may have abducted Stacy McCall, Suzanne Streeter, and Streeter’s mother Sherrill Levitt. Known as the Springfield Three, they were all abducted from their home on June 7, 1992, in Springfield, Missouri.

Halls claims to have begun murdering young girls and women in the summer of his high school graduation in 1981. While Hall’s stories and admissions are compelling, law enforcement is still at a standstill without any of the bodies to pursue any murder charges.

Thomas Lauth of Lauth Investigations International headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana, is a 25-year veteran in the field of missing persons and missing person private investigator who believes there is some credence to Hall’s claims, however, he also points out there are other serial killers out there too. “The FBI estimates as many as 50 serial killers operating in the United States at any given time,” said Lauth. “When we are talking that serial killers can average 30-40 victims during their lifetime (if not more), that is not a small number of victims when combined.”

Meanwhile, the parents of Tricia Reitler, Laura Depies, Paulette Webster and the many others Hall has admitted to abducting wait through heart-wrenching and never-ending days for answers that will enable them to finally bring their daughters home.

Larry DeWayne Hall & the Disappearance of Tricia Reitler
 
I had the misfortune of running into this man twice, just before it came out in the news. Scary! I feel very lucky because I believe that I lived near him.
In 1994 we had planned to move to Wabash, IN, so we were there to look at an apartment that we had seen advertised. We had actually passed it but didnt rralize and went doen the sidestreet over to turn around. My then husband spots a man down the road and says we will ask him. I immediately got the most panivked feeling and pleaded with him not to ask him. He did anyway and it was fine nothing happened. He told us where to go, found the place and ended up moving in. Didnt think much of the incident again until one day I am outside selling Christmas wreaths that my husband and I had made. I was home alone at the time. He came up and asked me if I could make a black one. I calmly said no we dont have the right colored material and he left. It left me shakin because it 2as an odd request and I just again had the panocked feeling of this person.
I dont know how much time had passed after that but one day I open the paper and there is his face and it said that he had killed 6 or 7 women!
 

I remember when this young lady went missing and am really surprised there's been no progress in finding her.

She was a low-risk victim. Smart, good student attending a private college - Indiana Wesleyan in Marion, IN.

She was working on a term paper and decided to take a break and go to the local grocery store for Family Circle magazine. Witnesses saw her leaving the grocery store, but she disappeared after that.

The receipt was found alongside the road and, two days later, her clothes were found across the road from the supermarket.

Her clothes have been tested numerous times, with no results from the DNA found.

Local LE still consider her disappearance an open case.

ETA: I wonder if the DNA they did find was determined to be from an unknown source, only partial DNA or from Tricia herself?
 
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Looking at these cases, you can’t help but notice Marion isn’t far from Delphi, IN. It’s not to say the kidnappings and murders of so many young women and teens are connected, but that small town LE may overlook some hard to find suspects. As the Delphi murders of Abby and Libby have revealed, the monsters committing these murders aren’t always the local creeps and misfits. Sometimes they’re the regular guys with steady jobs, families and nice homes.
 

I remember when this young lady went missing and am really surprised there's been no progress in finding her.

She was a low-risk victim. Smart, good student attending a private college - Indiana Wesleyan in Marion, IN.

She was working on a term paper and decided to take a break and go to the local grocery store for Family Circle magazine. Witnesses saw her leaving the grocery store, but she disappeared after that.

The receipt was found alongside the road and, two days later, her clothes were found across the road from the supermarket.

Her clothes have been tested numerous times, with no results from the DNA found.

Local LE still consider her disappearance an open case.

ETA: I wonder if the DNA they did find was determined to be from an unknown source, only partial DNA or from Tricia herself?
Good question regarding the DNA.
 

299DFIN - Wendy Louise​

Added: 2006; Last Updated: 04/06/2024 - By: hb Feltonhttps://www.doenetwork.org/cases/299dfin.html
ALT TXT
ALT TXT
299DFIN.jpg
299DFIN1.jpg

Right 3: Age-progressed by NCMEC to age 38 years; 45 years; 51 years


Name: Wendy Louise Felton
Nickname/Alias: Unknown
Case Classification: Endangered Missing
Missing Since: June 4, 1987
Location Last Seen: Marion, Grant County, Indiana

Physical Description​

Date of Birth: May 10, 1971
Age: 16 years old
Race: White
Gender: Female
Height: 5'5"
Weight: 110 to 115 lbs.
Hair Color: Brown, naturally wavy, shoulder length
Eye Color: Brown
Distinguishing Marks/Features: Wears hard contacts; 1" scar on right shoulder; pierced ears

Identifiers​

Dentals: Available
Fingerprints: Available
DNA: Available

Clothing & Personal Items​

Clothing: Purple nightshirt with "86" on the front in white
Jewelry: Gold watch
Additional Personal Items: Unknown

Circumstances of Disappearance​

Wendy's sister drove their parents to the airport on June 4, 1987. When she returned home, Wendy had disappeared. It's believed she disappeared between 2:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. She left all her belongings behind, including her purse and favorite sneakers.

Investigators initially believed Wendy ran away from home. Her case was later changed to Endangered Missing.
 

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