Search for missing Belle Isle woman presses on 3 weeks after disappearance
Oct 16, 2020
On the day she disappeared, Scott Hollingsworth said he initially assumed his wife was out running errands, but grew worried when she didn’t return home that night. She took her purse and wallet but left her cell phone at home, which wasn’t uncommon.
“She kind of worked at 100 miles an hour,” he said. “Run and go, that’s how she was. She was very high-energy.”
He later found a backpack full of belongings that she had packed, which led him to believe she had checked herself into a mental health facility.
“She was a fighter. She was prepared to heal herself,” he said.
He also thought she might have been at the yoga studio that day. Weeks later, he now believes his wife of almost 25 years headed east on Narcoossee Road toward Lake Nona, based on reported sightings.
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Satellite company joins search
Hundreds of friends, relatives and strangers have volunteered to help with search parties in the Central Florida area, dividing up sections on aerial maps, Scott Hollingsworth said. Friend and attorney Dan Newlin donated the use of his helicopter, as well.
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The resources behind Hollingsworth’s search extended to new heights after family and friends at a Tuesday press conference called on companies such as SpaceX, L3 Harris Technologies and Microsoft to help in their search for Hollingsworth.
Bill Moore, a real estate agent and former police detective of more than a decade, pleaded for the geospace and technology giants to look for stored satellite images of Hollingsworth’s car at the Walmart and nearby Bank of America, where $20 was withdrawn from her bank account at the ATM minutes before she entered the store.
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BIPD Detective Jeremy Millis told the Orlando Sentinel that police are receiving 15 to 20 Crimeline tips about the case daily. He encourages anyone with resources to continue reaching out, especially those with buggies and four-wheel-drive vehicles that can go places an aerial view might miss.
“Just get in there and try and find every nook and cranny, especially locals, because a lot of locals know where the hideout areas are,” Millis said.