Logans Missing Facebook Page
https://www.facebook.com/groups/851611808302269/permalink/853199371476846/
TIMELINE FOR LOGAN SCHIENDELMAN MISSING He is son to Hanna, grandson to Ginnie and nephew to Mary.
May 19, Thursday
Logan was last seen at home a little south of Tumwater at 7:45 am. He left sometime during the day Thursday and did not come home that night.
May 20, Friday
Logan did not return home on Friday. His car was found at I-5 milepost 92 Southbound in the center median lodged against the concrete barrier. Registered Owners (Ginnie and Bill Gebo) were not notified. The car contained Logan’s cell phone, car keys, water bottle, snacks in a small grocery bag with $25 cash and wallet containing a debit card and his drivers license in the glove compartment. Car was towed by Baker Towing to their lot in Tenino at the request of a Washington State Patrol Sgt Shades who drove around the area to check for persons on foot but did not see anyone.
His grandmother, Ginnie, pinged Logans phone around 11:00 am this day (Friday) about 3 hours before the car was abandoned on I-5 milepost 92. The AT&T locator services gps indicated the the phone was on Boulevard Road in Olympia approximately within an 8 block radius of Steel Street where Logan’s mother lives.
May 22, Sunday
Ginnie discovered Logan was not at his mothers home as she had thought and drove to the Thurston County Sheriff Office in Olympia but they were closed. She stopped at the Patrol Offices at the Tumwater Airport but the door was closed and locked.
May 23, Monday
Ginnie returned to the Thurston County Sheriffs Office in Olympia and reported Logan as missing When a Detective ran the vin number of the car it was then discovered the car had been towed by the State Patrol on Friday May 20. Ginnie immediately sent to Baker Towing in Tenino and retrieved the car which contained Logans belongings. Logans car had been in the tow yard for approximately 4 days. There were car registration papers in the car. A detective from Thurston County Sheriff was assigned to the case.
May 25, Wednesday
Ginnie notified her sister and brother-in-law, Mike and Mary Ware in the evening that Logan was missing
.
May 26, Thursday
Mike Ware went to the courthouse to speak with the detectives. Later that day the detective called Logan’s mother, Hanna to see if she had heard from Logan. Detective had very little information but started working the case immediately and found that there were witnesses that had seen the car on I-5 and dialed 911. They had seen the car pull to the right hand shoulder of I-5 and open the driver door to get out. The man then closed the driver door and moved to the passenger seat and let himself out of the car, running towards the woods. This man was a white male about 6 feet tall. Not Logan. The unoccupied car then rolled across three lanes of traffic and lodged itself on the center median concrete barrier coming to a stop. The Thurston County Detective then went to Ginnies home to fingerprint and photograph Logans car. He also took possession of the phone and Logans computer and searched Logans room with the permission of his grandparents
.
The detective also indicated he was just beginning his series of days off from their four day 10 hour a day workweek which did not include the holiday so he would not be getting back to us until Tuesday, May 31.
This timeline was written on May 30, 2016. It has now been 11 days since we have seen Logan.