Blueeyedbrowngirl
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2016
- Messages
- 186
- Reaction score
- 882
My gut says Peaches’ identity is right under someone’s nose and they don’t realize it.
Strictly opinion and yep, as I’ve previously suggested: I think she’s from one of the racially diverse neighborhoods comprising Queens and was likely a victim of circumstance - she wasn’t a working girl, but accepted a ride from a seemingly kind stranger who turned out to be LISK.
Peaches disappeared in the mid-nineties when LISK likely prowled the streets because escort agencies kept records. Back then, anywhere along Roosevelt Avenue, Queens Plaza, and the LIRR hub at Sutphin & Archer in Jamaica was a hotbed of prostitution, and all had an eclectic mix of working girls and regular folks just trying to catch a train, bus, or cab.
Whoever knows Peaches probably isn’t aware of the LISK case or if they are, it’s because they occasionally saw it on the news but didn’t give it much thought. Go deep into these Queens neighborhoods, someone’s going to say “yeah, I knew a girl with that tattoo, but I thought she just went away…”
Lastly, if Peaches wasn’t reported missing, it’s not necessarily because no one cared about her. Often, the families friends of the missing have no idea where to start, who or what agency to contact, or maybe they assume someone else already made a report. I guarantee Peaches’ name is closer than we think, at least I pray that it is.
Strictly opinion and yep, as I’ve previously suggested: I think she’s from one of the racially diverse neighborhoods comprising Queens and was likely a victim of circumstance - she wasn’t a working girl, but accepted a ride from a seemingly kind stranger who turned out to be LISK.
Peaches disappeared in the mid-nineties when LISK likely prowled the streets because escort agencies kept records. Back then, anywhere along Roosevelt Avenue, Queens Plaza, and the LIRR hub at Sutphin & Archer in Jamaica was a hotbed of prostitution, and all had an eclectic mix of working girls and regular folks just trying to catch a train, bus, or cab.
Whoever knows Peaches probably isn’t aware of the LISK case or if they are, it’s because they occasionally saw it on the news but didn’t give it much thought. Go deep into these Queens neighborhoods, someone’s going to say “yeah, I knew a girl with that tattoo, but I thought she just went away…”
Lastly, if Peaches wasn’t reported missing, it’s not necessarily because no one cared about her. Often, the families friends of the missing have no idea where to start, who or what agency to contact, or maybe they assume someone else already made a report. I guarantee Peaches’ name is closer than we think, at least I pray that it is.
Last edited: