Several sites, including the Charley Project page for Katie (As Ekaterina was known as), list the following important details:
Katie was last seen in Monterey, California, on April 5, 1998. She left her home on Casanova Street to go to a friend's residence on the corner of San Pablo Avenue and Judson Street in the Seaside area. Her friend told authorities that Katie stayed until approximately 8:00 PM and last saw her walking towards Fremont Boulevard on her way back home.
Katie never arrived home, and her mother has not seen or heard from her since.
Her mother initially reported her missing as a possible abduction victim. She does not believe her daughter was abducted or killed, but believes Katie originally ran away to start a new life for herself. Her belief that her daughter left on her own was confirmed when she noticed that some of Katie's clothing was missing from her room. She also hung up posters around the area with her photograph on them. After this, she received several dropped phone calls, and various people reported seeing her in the local area after her disappearance.
Her mother also recalled how Katie fell in with the wrong crowd when she was in the 6th grade. She had many good friends in Foothill Elementary School, but didn't follow the district guidelines; she was to attend King Middle School. She reportedly got into quite a bit of trouble, and as a result, she was transferred to Fitch Middle School. She was put into a class for children with behavioral problems. By the time Katie returned to King Middle School, her relationship with her mother was strained, and her mother felt they were not connecting as well as they had before. The police and the FBI at the time also concluded that Katie originally left on her own accord.
In 2010, a man named Charles Allen Holifield was named as a possible suspect in Katie's disappearance. He is believed to have committed multiple crimes against women since 1979 in the Monterey area of California. He was also charged with the 1998 murder of Christina Marie Williams.
Williams, a 12-year-old girl, was last seen walking her dog on June 12, 1998. She left her home at 7:30 PM in the Fort Ord military base area of Seaside, CA. A stranger presumably abducted her at the time. Her dog eventually returned home without her. It would take several months to find her.
On January 12, 1999, an ecological surveyor discovered Christina's remains on a small nature preserve that belonged to the University of California. The remains were skeletal and severely deteriorated and were recovered from a wooded area. They were identified as belonging to Christina via dental records soon afterwards. Her cause of death could not be determined at the time, but evidence pointed towards murder.
The remains had been found only 3 miles away from where Christina was abducted. Searches were done in that area when the investigation started, and no remains were found. Authorities believe that they were placed there at a later date.
Charles was considered a suspect in the case for many years until his arrest in April of 2017. The California Department of Justice Crime Laboratory retested Christina's underwear that was found on her body for any possible DNA evidence left behind by her killer. They were able to recover semen sample,s which were matched to Charles via DNA.
He was charged with kidnapping, sexual assault, and first-degree murder in relation to Christina's murder. He was already serving a life sentence at the time of his arrest. He was previously convicted of raping and strangling a 14-year-old girl from Monterey and attempting to kidnap an 18-year-old girl in the early 1980s.
Holifield also attempted to abduct a female jogger at gunpoint on September 13, 1998. She was able to escape him, and he was also charged with this case. In March of 2020, he was found guilty of all charges brought against him in Christina's case. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Investigators have considered his possible involvement in Katie's disappearance because both she and Christina had attended Fitch Middle School. Holifield's brother's home was two blocks away from where Katie was last seen, and he would've crossed paths with her that night while driving in the area.
Investigators have found no conclusive evidence to link him to her case. Her mother holds onto hope that her daughter is safe and unharmed and that Holifield did not kill her.
Katie's family immigrated to the United States from Russia in 1990 when she was just 5 years old. Her mother recalls that she was happy, strong, and kind-hearted towards others. She continues to hope Katie is alive and will contact her one day.
Katie's disappearance remains classified as an endangered runaway, and her case remains unsolved. Her current whereabouts are unknown. She might be in the Seaside, California area or in the local area.
Katie would be 40 years old now.
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Seaside, California is a town of 32,000 people.
It's located in Monterey County, and was formerly known as "East Monterey."
The corner of San Pablo Avenue and Judson Street in Seaside is an older area and looks relatively quiet. There's a park roughly a block away. Katie was supposedly headed to Fremont, which is one of the main streets in Seaside. I definitely agree with the above statement that if Holifield had come out of his brother's home that night, he would have seen Katie. That, coupled with the facts that:
a) Katie looked like his typical victim, and
b) She was only 13 years old at the time of her disappearance, which doesn't leave me very hopeful.
A 13-year-old doesn't typically have that many resources to be able to stay away for over 27 years.
Christina Williams was found only 12 miles away from San Pablo & Judson at the old Ford Ord military site.
Does anyone else have anything to add? Any ideas, thoughts?