Mina280909
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2023
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Rest in peace Lisa
I looked too. Her case always stuck with me because her reconstruction looks EXACTLY like my mom when she was 19-20. My mom is alive and well but it was jarring the first time I saw it.I was hoping to find a photo on ancestry.com or newspapers.com and I found nothing.
The best I found was a Lisa Coburn from the Atlanta area, but I don't think it's herI was hoping to find a photo on ancestry.com or newspapers.com and I found nothing.
It's not the same one. There are basically no records for her on Ancestry besides proof of residence.The best I found was a Lisa Coburn from the Atlanta area, but I don't think it's her
Either way, rest in peace Lisa.
They are phenomenalThe Facebook group "Jane Does and Missing 1970s-1980s" said in their most recent post that they believe they have found a photo of Lisa, but won't publish it until the admins can verify. They also said the photo of Lisa bears a remarkable resemblance to the NCMEC sketch
There is a photo of her, check the comments of the post saying she's identified. It really does look like her, or dm me and ill show you the photoThe Facebook group "Jane Does and Missing 1970s-1980s" said in their most recent post that they believe they have found a photo of Lisa, but won't publish it until the admins can verify. They also said the photo of Lisa bears a remarkable resemblance to the NCMEC sketch
I saw the photo of her and I can say that it looks very similar to the Carl Koppelman and NCMEC sketch.There is a photo of her, check the comments of the post saying she's identified. It really does look like her, or dm me and ill show you the photo
I think that portrait on the left is an artist's reconstruction, not a photo.
The body of Lisa Coburn Kesler (photo at left) alongside a composite drawing of her previously unidentified remains, has been identified in North Carolina, 33 years after she went missing.
Both of those are reconstructions. The one on the left is by NCMEC, the one on the right by @CarlK90245 . Neither is a photograph of Lisa.
The body of Lisa Coburn Kesler (photo at left) alongside a composite drawing of her previously unidentified remains, has been identified in North Carolina, 33 years after she went missing.
Explains how both images appear in the same pink shirt. I'm sure that actual photographs of Lisa will be forthcoming. It is good to see that she has been identified after so many years. Had she been reported as missing, perhaps the identification would have been made sooner.Both of those are reconstructions. The one on the left is by NCMEC, the one on the right by @CarlK90245 . Neither is a photograph of Lisa.
I don't know about this case, but many of the historic cases I've followed and seen solved, there has been something said in the media , often by LE about 'never reported missing ' and then it comes out later that they WERE reported missing and the LE either junked the file after a little while or never investigated, or never took the report at all because they thought the victim was a runaway or they had things in their life that made them more vulnerable. I'm sure there are people who genuinely go missing and nobody notices or reports it, but by now I've learnt to ignore that phrase in press releases, because it seems to rarely be true.Explains how both images appear in the same pink shirt. I'm sure that actual photographs of Lisa will be forthcoming. It is good to see that she has been identified after so many years. Had she been reported as missing, perhaps the identification would have been made sooner.