I listened to the podcast today. It broke my heart to hear how TX authorities didn’t take her disappearance seriously. Her story was only really publicized in Kentucky where she was from. Both of her parents died without ever knowing what really happened.
I’m shocked there isn’t more traffic here.
Texas Missing Persons Clearinghouse Online Bulletin, Browse photos and searchable bulletins of missing persons, abductors, and unidentified persons, a central repository for information and pictures of missing and unidentified persons in Texas.
www.dps.texas.gov
Clipping found in The Courier-Journal published in Louisville, Kentucky on 7/31/1983. Kathy Mae Brownfield Goad 1982 TX
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Clipping found in The Courier-Journal published in Louisville, Kentucky on 7/31/1983. Kathy Mae Brownfield Goad 1982 TX (1)
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View the digital scanned newspaper from The Park City Daily News dated 09 Sep 1983, page 13.
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Clipping found in The Park City Daily News published in Bowling Green, Kentucky on 11/11/1984.
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Clipping found in The Courier-Journal published in Louisville, Kentucky on 12/3/1984. Kathy Mae Brownfield Goad 1982 TX
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Details of Disappearance
Kathy was employed at a bank in Fort Worth, Texas in 1982. She took the day off of work on November 11, 1982 and planned to go shopping. Kathy has never been heard from again. Her husband Steve, who reported her missing on November 12, found her vehicle abandoned in the parking lot of Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport on November 15, four days after her disappearance. There was no sign of her at the scene.
Authorities initially believed Kathy took an American Airlines flight to Los Angeles, but they later discounted this possibility. Steve was initially considered a suspect in her disappearance, but he passed a lie detector test and was cleared within a short time.
Steve stated that, a few days before her disappearance, he and Kathy purchased a truck from a Hurst, Texas car dealership and the salesman had made sexual advances to her. The salesman had a criminal history for assault, sex crimes and criminal mischief.
When police went to the dealership to talk to him, they learned he had been fired after being arrested: he had allegedly caused $1,000 in damage to a woman's vehicle after she refused his advances.
Authorities interviewed the salesman and believe he was deceptive when answering their questions. He initially agreed to take a lie detector test, then changed his mind and refused.
A confidential informant told the police the salesman had told him he murdered Kathy and dumped her body in a lake. When investigators searched the car the salesman was driving the day of Goad's disappearance, they found strands of hair in the trunk that matched samples taken from Goad's hairbrush.
All this information was brought before a grand jury in February 1983, but the prosecutor refused to bring a case against the salesman because Kathy's body had not been located.
Kathy was born and raised in Kentucky and, during high school and for a time following graduation, worked for the Warren County, Kentucky Clerk's Office. She had an excellent employment record there. After she and Steve moved to Texas she maintained weekly phone contact with her parents in Kentucky.
The case salesman remains the prime suspect in her disappearance, but no one has been charged in her case. It remains unsolved.