Roselvr
Ask me how to get your loved one in NamUs
I believe that the living sister is the twin.
I'm messaging her right now and you are correct, her mom is Doris's twin
I believe that the living sister is the twin.
December 2015 I first spoke with Putnam's family and then with authorities. Last contact with her is from 1974/75. I would be very interested to know who had contact with her in 1991 as that is information that completely contradicts what the family told me. However I also don't think she is the Allenstown woman and am awaiting conformation of my research.
Welcome and thank you for joining us!Hello everyone! Doris is my aunt, my mom is her twin sister. We just lost my other aunt, Dolores in July. I have posted My Aunt Doris' information onto NamUs but it's not showing yet. I emailed my contact person to find out why it's not listed. I was shocked when I did a search for my aunt, which I have done many times throughout my life, to find you all talking about her and my cousin. I was so happy. Thank you for sharing her information...it means the world to me!
Hello everyone! Doris is my aunt, my mom is her twin sister. We just lost my other aunt, Dolores in July. I have posted My Aunt Doris' information onto NamUs but it's not showing yet. I emailed my contact person to find out why it's not listed. I was shocked when I did a search for my aunt, which I have done many times throughout my life, to find you all talking about her and my cousin. I was so happy. Thank you for sharing her information...it means the world to me!
Yes I did send Carrie an email and she said she was going to look into it
ww.nbcnews.com/feature/cold-case-spotlight/two-decades-later-remains-found-identified-missing-mother-cynthia-louise-n647781
Coincidence or what? Could this be both Cynthia Louise's? Check out the case of Kimberly McClean from PA and Lori Erica Ruff who used multiple identities in different states before being identified after her suicide in TX. Strange but true story.
After 26 years, Melody and Kimberly Day can finally bring their missing mother home.
Authorities in Missouri announced yesterday that remains discovered at the end of August 1990, have been positively identified to be those of Cynthia Louise Day, who vanished that same month from National City, Illinois.
In the end, it was a single fingerprint that made the match, authorities said.
"Emotions are all over the place," Melody Day, one of Cynthia's daughter, told Dateline Tuesday night. "The thought of what actually happened is the saddest."
The announcement was a small comfort for Cynthia's two daughters, but it was no surprise. The sisters have long believed the decomposed remains long kept in a box labeled 'Jane Doe' were their mother's remains.
"The woman's reproductive organs were missing, my mother had a full hysterectomy. There were breaks in the pelvis, my mother broke her pelvis giving birth to me, and again slipping on ice years later," Melody, one of Cynthia's daughters, told Dateline earlier this year.
No, as in each Cynthia was identified as being a different body. There is no possible way Cynthia Louise Putnam was also Cynthia Louise Day. Cynthia Putnam wasn't just reported missing in 1974. She was also found dead in 1974. They had her name.
Cynthia Day disappeared in 1990, and was actually found in 1990, but was not identified until recently.
In the case of Lori Erica Ruff, one woman, had used more than one identity in or from other states before she committed suicide Texas. Had she not left the strong box with details inside, the multiple identities might never have been discovered. In this case, there were two Cynthia Louise's, strikingly similar from publicly known information. Weren't both originally from the New England area? If the similarities are strong enough, perhaps the possibility should be evaluated to see if she could be both missing women. I believe there was a time lapse between the time the first one went missing and the body was found--more than enough time to have assumed a new identity. It sounds "wild," but Lori Erica Ruff from Texas and Washington/Kimberly McClean from PA was "wild"---and real!
We have long known that abducted children are sometimes given new identities...is it so unreal to believe that the same could be done with adults--especially ones who are murdered and unable to say what happened to them? Would anyone have believed the Lori Ruff/Kimberly McClean story if it had been presented as a possibility here without her strongbox proof and the efforts of the SSA investigator? I don't think so.
What I see here is a looooong line of missing people reported (mostly children and young adults) up and done the east coast and progressing westward from PA, NJ, and Delaware into Maryland/West Virginia/Ohio (Cumberland Gap/Applachian Trail) and into the midwest. Admittedly, I don't have all the "missing persons" information to look at, and ,I venture to believe that many went unreported, but it seems to me those areas have a larger than average number of cases which were reported, and I ask myself what do they have in common? Sharing my thoughts for discussion, but not going to defend them from attacks and ridicule. I have found some of the cases date back into the 40's, exacerbating in the 50's, 60's, and 70's. In my mind, it is obvious that one culprit could not be acting completely alone for all those years. So my next question is what do those 40 years have in common, especially in the areas I mentioned? They were all war decades, with both prosperity and depression, but the Cumberland Gap Appalachian Mountains area seemed to me to receive a particularly hard hit.
No, as in each Cynthia was identified as being a different body. There is no possible way Cynthia Louise Putnam was also Cynthia Louise Day. Cynthia Putnam wasn't just reported missing in 1974. She was also found dead in 1974. They had her name.
Cynthia Day disappeared in 1990, and was actually found in 1990, but was not identified until recently.