The case of Evelyn 'Dottie' Lees has just been featured on the newest
DNA:ID podcast.
Per Jessica Bettencourt's reporting, the afore mentioned pension checks were mailed to the home owned by her nephew,
Lynn Gowan. Because her deceased husband's former employer, Union Pacific, had never been notified of her death, they continued to pay the pension and
someone continued to cash those checks on Dottie's behalf for approximately ten years after she was last seen.
When LE approached her living nieces and nephew, LE told them Dottie had died around 1988. The living relatives were adamant that she had died a decade after that. One of the nieces told investigators that her father,
Lynn Gowan, had told them that Dottie had turned mean because of her Alzheimer's and not to visit her. That they should '
remember her the way she was'.
So, for ten years, no one attempted to visit Dottie, thinking she was ill when in fact they couldn't – she was dead. The previous poster
@djanga mentioned that PCSO said that 'those people' (
that collected her benefits for ten years) are also dead. At some point, roughly ten years after Dottie was dead, Union Pacific was made aware that Dottie was deceased. So, the checks stopped coming. One of the nieces inquired about Dottie's cremains and was told by Lynn's wife,
Carrell, that there had been a mix-up at the crematorium so they had no remains to bury.
Apparently, as soon as Lynn Gowan's living relatives started to put all of this together, based on LE injuries, they stopped cooperating with the investigation. And that's where it stands today.
Please check out the excellent
DNA:ID podcast for complete details.