FL FL - Jean Stewart, 16, Miami Lakes, 25 March 1980

  • #81
I am so sorry to hear this. I was hoping for a better outcome to her story. My prayers are with you. All these years not knowing must have been so hard, I am glad that you at least have an answer and I hope you will also get justice for Jean.
 
  • #82
i am sorry also for your loss.. and sorry that you had to go through all you did for all these years. this should not have happened.
 
  • #83
for all your kind words and prayers. We need to work to make sure that these kinds of delays and cases being overlooked for years and years does not happen anymore. That will be my focus when all is said and done. This must stop. How many more people out there waiting years needlessly? sigh
 
  • #84
  • #85
Jean Marie should have been identified in 1981. I am outraged. This shows why volunteer work such as ours is so important.

Prayers to you and your family, Lauran!
 
  • #86
  • #87
Did anyone at the gas station see or hear anything? It is odd that she just vanished without a scream or anything.
 
  • #88
Although this is not the outcome I would have wished, I am glad that you can bring her home Lauran. I am sorry that you had to wait and wonder all of these years. Prayers and hugs to you.
 
  • #89
There is a thread for Jean Marie Stewart under Missing but not forgotten that contains this info as well. Perhaps someone could merge the threads...
 
  • #90
Jean Marie should have been identified in 1981. I am outraged. This shows why volunteer work such as ours is so important.

Prayers to you and your family, Lauran!

I agree - it should not have taken this long. How ridiculous! They need to improve their system and make sure this doesn't happen again.

Lauran, I'm so glad this chapter is finally closed for you, and hope you can get justice for Jean!
 
  • #91
I'm both sad and happy at the same time, if that makes sense. I'm sad that someone took her life away, but happy she has been identified. I'm sorry for the confirmation that you have to face in her death.:(
 
  • #92
Thank you all for your kind words. I am heartbroken but determined. We need to work to ensure that this kind of delay in identification stops. Mandatory reporting, centralized database AND mandatory reopening of cold cases to ensure those cases are entered as well and DNA where possible could go a long way to ensure this does not happen again.
 
  • #93
Bumping this thread up.

Jean was identified a little over eight years ago, thanks to the determination of Lauran Halleck. I can't find any updates on the homicide investigation post identification though.

The case is included in the book The Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths Are Solving America’s Coldest Cases and it mentions the person of interest a little. Though I could only read a small portion of it through google books so I'm not sure what the conclusion is.

https://books.google.com/books?id=DIaQAgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=The+Skeleton+Crew:+How+Amateur+Sleuths+Are+Solving+America%E2%80%99s+Coldest+Cases&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiZxrWCmu7LAhXJ9x4KHQO7ASUQuwUIKTAB#v=onepage&q&f=false
 
  • #94
Was this a WS volunteer, DNA Doe volunteer? Just curious. I hope the DNA leads them to her killer.

Victim's funeral is closure for family

Snips:
Prompting the service is the fact that in November, authorities positively identified skeletal remains found in Hialeah, Fla., in April 1981 as Jean.

"We're getting closure on this, and they started the investigation. We're just thankful that this is coming to an end," Jean's brother, Eric Stewart, said yesterday.

Police in Hialeah confirmed they have opened a homicide investigation, which is active, according to Sgt. Ralph Nazario.

"We're at that juncture still where we're not at liberty to disclose anything about the case. We want to protect the integrity of the case. We're moving along. We're investigating it as an open homicide, and that's where we're at," Sgt. Nazario said.

Pittsburgh police got involved in the case and sent Jean's dental records to Florida authorities.

However, it wasn't until last year that a volunteer with a Web-based network which tries to find missing persons and identify remains helped put a name to the skeleton found in Hialeah, next to Miami Lakes, just 13 months after Jean vanished.

A positive match was made with dental records. Authorities have not been able to explain why the match took 27 years.
 
  • #95
This thread should be moved to found deceased .
 
  • #96
Bumping this thread up.

Jean was identified a little over eight years ago, thanks to the determination of Lauran Halleck. I can't find any updates on the homicide investigation post identification though.

The case is included in the book The Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths Are Solving Americas Coldest Cases and it mentions the person of interest a little. Though I could only read a small portion of it through google books so I'm not sure what the conclusion is.

The Skeleton Crew

Did you ever find any updates on the homicide investigation? I have been unable to find a single thing myself, so far.
 
  • #97
Hi All,

Just read the post-gazette article: After 27 years, girl's cold case becomes a homicide

If I read the subtext, it appears the Stewart family think the boyfriend/brother of OP to be a suspect? I think he is as good as anyone to be looked at first.
 
  • #98
Hi All,

Just read the post-gazette article: After 27 years, girl's cold case becomes a homicide

If I read the subtext, it appears the Stewart family think the boyfriend/brother of OP to be a suspect? I think he is as good as anyone to be looked at first.
With all due respect to the OP of this thread, I have to agree. To me he is the most likely suspect in this case. His story just doesn't make sense to me. I admit, the fact that the clerk in the 7-11 told police he saw her in the car is pretty compelling but we all know that witnesses can be unreliable. Maybe he was mistaken. Maybe he was intimidated into telling police what he told them. Or bribed to do so. She was a 15 year old girl who went to live with the family of her older boyfriend. Not sure of age difference between them, but that is kind of an unusual situation. I know it was a different era. For me, it just boils down to the fact that boyfriends/husbands are most likely culprits in situations like this. From a logistics standpoint, the timeline makes no sense to me. You park and run in to an empty store to buy a pack of smokes and the person who stays in the car just disappears into thin air? I just don't buy it. If the gentleman is still alive, I sincerely hope he is re-interviewed by detectives. In 1980 the cops may have just taken the word of a young man who lived in an upper class neighborhood, probably was clean cut and "all American" and so forth without pressing too hard. For the record, this is all supposition on my part and of course other scenarios are possible.
As an aside, I am intimately familiar with that 7-11 as I lived in the area from the late 80's to the late 90's. One of my favorite restaurants, Beverly Hills Cafe and one of the best little bars, Delaney Street, was in that same shopping center. I went in to the store many times for smokes and other stuff blissfully unaware that this event had unfolded there.
 

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