summergirl1
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According to the Facebook page her family runs, there's now a new investigator on her case, and it's regarded as an active case, not a cold case.
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Listened to the 10 episodes of the podcast...wow just wow....Great job. Still so many questions not answered... Will they ever. I feel so much sympathy for her sister and mother. They are the sweetest people imo.
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Please keep Sue's family in mind. January 19, 2023 is right around the corner. Her sister has stated that the holidays can be a challenging time.
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There used to be a video on YouTube of a press conference held by Sheriff Starry and other officials in 2017 or 2018. The county no longer publishes the video on their YouTube channel which is too bad because it showed the determination of these agencies to resolve the Susan Swedell case...
......Cars and car trouble
This flier is especially helpful because it does not jump to the conclusion that Sue actually had car trouble that night and does not specify what car trouble she may have had: contrast with info from the Charley Project profile and several newspaper reports which assume that because there was car trouble a few days later that there must have been that night also.
The fact is that Sue only reported that she had "car trouble" to the gas station attendant as her reason for wanting to leave her car parked in the gas station lot. The gas station attendant, a woman in her mid-20s, was the sole eyewitness at the gas station. She did not witness an overheating car and did not hear the term "overheating" from Sue. Nobody ever confirmed that there was any mechanical problem with that car that night.
The car was Sue's mother's - a maroon 1975 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme. Her mother drove it home the next morning without detecting any mechanical problems. It wasn't until 5 or 6 days later when her mother drove it again when the car overheated. A mechanic told her that somebody had unscrewed the petcock on the car's radiator causing all the fluid to drain out of the cooling system, thus causing the overheating.
There is not sufficient information in published sources to confirm when this apparent sabotage occurred. It either happened prior to her arrival at the gas station on the day Sue was last seen, or it happened sometime after she was last seen at the gas station....
............LINK:
It’s been decades since Hang Lee and Susan Swedell disappeared. What happened to the teens?
A search for answers weighs heavily on investigators and families.www.twincities.com
JAN 27, 2024
[...]Lake Elmo, Minnesota, authorities dedicated to solving 1988 disappearance of Sue Swedell: ‘It’s been too long’
The 19-year-old was worried about the blizzard conditions and was having car troubles when she stopped at a gas station about a mile from her home. She reportedly got into a car with a man and was never seen again.www.nbcnews.com
Dateline spoke with three officials from the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. Criminal intelligence analyst Blake Trantham has been working on Sue’s case for six or seven years, Detective Nick Sullivan worked it for five years, and Detective Cooper Valesano was recently assigned to the case to bring a fresh set of eyes.
[...]
Trantham told Dateline how their department first learned Sue Swedell had vanished. ... “Eventually that night, deputies went around looking in ditches and they -- they found her car parked at a, um, a gas station in -- in Lake Elmo. And it was empty. It was locked.”
The gas station was about a mile from Sue’s home. Her purse and glasses were left behind in the car.
[...]
The gas station attendant also told authorities that she had seen a car pull up behind Sue. Sue spoke with the man for a couple of minutes before she asked the attendant if she could leave her car at the station. “There was somebody that rolled up behind [Sue],” Blake Trantham said. “They spoke for maybe 15 minutes standing next to one another.”
[...]
“[Sue] got into the car of this man that she was talking to, and she was seen -- last seen going in the direction of our house,” Christine told Dateline.
[...]
“At the bottom of the radiator there was a drain plug, it was called a petcock. And the mechanic determined that petcock, that drain plug of the radiator, had been loosened, and so coolant had leaked causing the car to overheat,” Trantham said. “So there’s speculation that maybe is what Susan was experiencing that night on the way home.”
Trantham told Dateline that the mechanic “believed that someone would have had to have tampered with it,” but authorities had no proof of that.
[...]
A co-worker told investigators that “a male had been calling for her, like, a couple of weeks or so leading up to her disappearance,” Trantham told Dateline. Authorities were never able to identify that person.
[...]
Christine runs the “Swedell Strong” Facebook page, where she shares updates and information in Sue’s case.
[...]
True.Or possibly, she spent so long talking to the man because she wasn't sure about trusting a stranger she'd just met, and wanted to be sure he had good intentions, just double checking, or maybe honestly wasn't sure about going with him and wanted to make sure that he was going to take her to her house that night? Maybe he kept insisting he could help? Her other option would have been to call her family from the gas station if they would have let her use their phone or use a payphone if there was one there and she had change for it..