burblestein
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Oh, forgot to mention several suspicious deaths. And of course there are some ongoing homicide trials.
In that situation, a thief would have figured out a way to pass some of them. A fake i.d. and a little practicing of the signature would have done the trick. In fact, he probably could have talked a few store clerks into accepting checks without an i.d., so some of them would have surfaced.I used traveler's checks during the 70s. When you bought your traveler's checks from your bank, you signed every check. Came time to cash in, you had to show ID and counter-sign the check in front of the person cashing it. If the signature didn't match, or the ID was phony or missing, no money. A thief knowing that Linda and Steve had travelers' checks, and knowledgeable of how they worked, would have little incentive to steal the checks. An unknowing thief would find himself stuck with them.
When two people who are traveling together disappear, the are many explanations that fall into the realm of the "possible", but considering the time and place, being murdered is the most likely. This reminds me of the case of Mitchel Weiser and Bonita “Bonnie” Bickwit who disappeared while hitchhiking a year earlier in New York State.
Most likely they were killed by someone who picked them up rather than a fellow hitchhiker, because it would be near impossible to disappear two bodies without a vehicle. It would be interesting to know where Vaughn was in June '74 and if he had a car.
Hitchhiking was were common and drivers were often glad to pick them up back in that era. The increasing awareness of the number of hitchhikers and drivers who became victims greatly reduced the practice by the end of the decade.
Women traveling alone were the classic target of sexual predators but some high profile serial killers targeted young men as well. Many young people in the missing persons data bases from that era were know to hitchhike but no one knows the circumstances of their disappearance. In some respects, hitchhiking sets up a perfect crime. The perpetrator has no ties to the victim, the victim enters the vehicle voluntarily and the perpetrator is able control the crime scene and the dump site, and be long gone before a body is found. Usually no real effort is made conceal the bodies. Sometimes, in remote area with heavy vegetation, bodies dumped near a roadway are not found for years, if ever.
\Are there any articles/interviews out there with Linda's family?
\
Not that I’ve been able to find. Her uncle did comment on her profile on the missingin.org site and offered to answer questions about Linda and, I’m assuming, her disappearance. I know that burblestein was trying to post there to try to get in contact with him, but I haven’t seen any posts other than the original 3 on Linda’s profile from 2014. I’m thinking the site might not be monitored any longer.
I'd like to learn more about her. How she met Stephen, what their relationship was like, what her education was, her personality, etc. I'm not trying to judge here, but something just doesn't seem right to me about a 24 year old woman hooking up with a 17 year old boy. (I would feel the same way if it were a 24 yr old man and a 17 year old girl, no double standard here). She was definitely the "adult" in that relationship. I wonder whose idea it was to hitchhike across the country?