Normancita
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I think of you everyday, Anna!
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The thing is.... if Anna is not with us anymore then there are only a few possibilities. Since she has not been found near her car, I think it's safe to assume she did not harm herself. So what are the other options? Are there more than I have listed below? Would cadaver dogs be relevant at this junction?
1) Transported alive and harmed at the location she is at, the car ditched elsewhere
2) Harmed at home and transported to a different location in her car, or a different vehicle, her car ditched elsewhere
3) Harmed at home and is still somewhere near the home
So if not self-harm, the options expand to:Let's jump off of this post and do a little "noodling". If Anna committed suicide, she most likely would not have gone far. If along the trail, someone would have spotted her or smelled something horrible. If the Cadets searched all along the trail into the woods, she is probably not there. So that leaves A) Drove the car, parked it and left with someone else or B) Abducted (etc) by someone else and the car was dumped there. With scenario A, I doubt she would have broken off complete contact with family and her child, so that leaves abducted when she left with someone else. or scenario B where the car was dumped later. Either way that seems to indicate she is not a willing participant in her going missing. There are a host of scenarios we could be chasing, from my original "money" related to "someone close to her or that she knew" that we all could be thinking about.
With regard to the missing person last year in Tyler State Park, she committed suicide and was found later in an open field of tall grass near where she was last known to be.
If one of you is enterprising and owns a drone or has a friend with one of the higher quality type, you could do a drone search of the areas around the trail as long as you comply with FAA regulations. No one other than the US Government owns the airspace above their property. At least it would rule out the searchers missing her remains.
The tree canopy and understory vegetation is so dense right now that you wouldn't be able to see anything from a drone.
I think there is a significant possibility that she was placed in a dumpster that was removed and/or emptied shortly after she was last seen in March. By the time she was reported missing, it was too late to look in likely dumpsters.
Yes. The vegetation is likely going to be too thick with all of the rain this year. My own inkling would be, if possible, to look along the creek that is to the west of where her car was found and where she lived - I think it is Pine Creek I would have to check the map again. I am sure it runs through private lands but one can probably walk through (not a group) unless someone complains. There is also a clear cut that runs toward the Turnpike east of where her car was located. Don't know if it is for power lines or why the clear cut but if it is power lines or a pipeline the land belongs to a corporation and it is likely not patrolled by anyone so it could probably be searched by a person or two. My instinct is that since there was such a long period of time since someone other than her husband had seen her alive and her being reported missing that her car is not close to where she will be found.If the vegetation is that thick, the only areas visible would be open fields. Regrettably this would mean waiting until the fall to do any drone or approved searches if nothing develops on the investigative front.
The thing that keeps bumping in the back of my mind is that someone disposing of a body in "most" cases does not want to transport it very far due to the risk of being seen or GPS tracking on cars or cell phones. They also do not want to schlep a body over their shoulder into the woods very far with roots and rocks to trip over and the risk of getting lost in the dark. They also tend to dispose of a body in an area they are familiar and comfortable with. Attempting a quick dump in an unfamiliar area is all but a 100% chance of it being discovered and the risk of DNA evidence being in good condition for processing, not to mention foot and tire prints. Also dumping the car so close is really odd. Whomever did it had to know it would be found in short order as soon as it hit the news. I sorta feel what ever happened, it went down quickly and there was not time to move the car further away. Interested in what the rest of you think.
It really depends on which dumpster. Something could have occurred in the next town over, for example.However PSP and local LE can determine who the trash contractor is, and if one of you local folks want to do some digging, look at the name on the dumpster. A quick call to the contractor asking what landfill they use might get you a clue to where she would be, if she went into a dumpster. One would hope LE thought of this scenario.
I think sneaking back on foot for two miles in the dark was about the minimum a person might think was safe enough to go after dumping a car. Especially if they risked leaving a sleeping toddler home alone for it. Everything is on the line at that point, everything to lose, with few options. JMOIf the vegetation is that thick, the only areas visible would be open fields. Regrettably this would mean waiting until the fall to do any drone or approved searches if nothing develops on the investigative front.
The thing that keeps bumping in the back of my mind is that someone disposing of a body in "most" cases does not want to transport it very far due to the risk of being seen or GPS tracking on cars or cell phones. They also do not want to schlep a body over their shoulder into the woods very far with roots and rocks to trip over and the risk of getting lost in the dark. They also tend to dispose of a body in an area they are familiar and comfortable with. Attempting a quick dump in an unfamiliar area is all but a 100% chance of it being discovered and the risk of DNA evidence being in good condition for processing, not to mention foot and tire prints. Also dumping the car so close is really odd. Whomever did it had to know it would be found in short order as soon as it hit the news. I sorta feel what ever happened, it went down quickly and there was not time to move the car further away. Interested in what the rest of you think.
Charlestown township has many trails, I know of one trail that is very close to her home and location where Anna's car was recovered. I have never used or explored the "McDevitt" trail, but can't help to wonder if PSP searched that particular trail.
It really depends on which dumpster. Something could have occurred in the next town over, for example.
There is also a stream closer to Anna's house Pigeon Run, which I could not tell on Googlemaps how big or small it is. However, I am local and have to say this area is so wooded and dense that there are quite a few places someone could easily dump and no one would know about it.
Very disheartening no news and no person of interest yet.