ME ME - Roderick Neal Hotham, 38, Veazie, 16 September, 1992

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Namus
"Mr. Hotham was a Bangor resident. He was last seen at the Stucco Lodge in Veazie on September 16, 1992. A missing person report was made two days later after Mr. Hotham failed to show up for a scheduled meeting."

Hair: brown
Eyes: brown
Height: 5'10"

7" scar on buttocks
 
Missing Persons | Maine State Police
Hotham, Roderick
Case date: 1992
Town: Veazie

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Rod Hotham was living in Veazie when he was last seen in September of 1992. He was a Certified Public Accountant and was indicted on Federal charges in November of that same year.

Contact: Maine State Police Major Crimes Unit - North, 198 Maine Avenue, Bangor, Maine 04401. Telephone (207)973-3750 or toll free 1-800-432-7381.

You may also report information about this crime using the leave a tip form.
 
Namus
"Mr. Hotham was a Bangor resident. He was last seen at the Stucco Lodge in Veazie on September 16, 1992. A missing person report was made two days later after Mr. Hotham failed to show up for a scheduled meeting."

Hair: brown
Eyes: brown
Height: 5'10"

7" scar on buttocks

Original
 
Sept 16, 2016

<<Facing $4 million in fraud charges, Bangor accountant Roderick Hotham vanished 24 years ago, on Sept. 16, 1992, the very day he was set to share with the state attorney general the information he claimed implicated others in serious crimes. The Bangor Police Department still lists Roderick Hotham as a fugitive from justice.

Yet Tim Hotham insists that his brother, who would now be 62, is dead and that the Maine State Police searched for his body just west of Dover-Foxcroft in 2005.>>




This is interesting...a letter to Pres. Donald Trump from Roderick's brother. I'm not posting this for any political arguments-only because the brother outlines what Roderick was working on before he disappeared.


<<Rod was an accountant from Bangor, Maine. His troubles started when he was asked in the late 1980s to do an independent audit of the books of the Penobscot Indian Nation who had received an eighty million dollar land claims settlement in the early 1980s. The group who won the settlement for the Penobscots also went on to manage it for them and the Indian Nation felt that this group was not being honest with them. Rod had unwittingly stepped into a high level, far reaching operation that was basically siphoning the Indian’s money away from them. He never talked a lot about what he had uncovered in his investigation that took him to the Cayman Islands. I believe Rod never talked about what he had uncovered because he understood the enormity of what he had stepped into and wanted to protect his family. They offered him a lucrative business deal to get him to play along but when he chose not to get involved they began to work to destroy him. >> More info at the link...
 

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