• #41
Sometime ago I saw an article on Facebook about 3 children that were left alone at the Barcelona train station in I think 1984.
Skipping to modern days they found family thanks to DNA test, discovering that the parents are missing since 1983 and it makes me think to this case...I know they disappeared from Spain or maybe France and the Does were in Germany, but the couple of parents seems to travel a lot because they were criminals, what if they ended up dead in Nuremberg? Family at the time did not report them missing because of their line of work. Would also explain the rolex, not many "common" workers would have it because of the price.
 
  • #42
Sometime ago I saw an article on Facebook about 3 children that were left alone at the Barcelona train station in I think 1984.
Skipping to modern days they found family thanks to DNA test, discovering that the parents are missing since 1983 and it makes me think to this case...I know they disappeared from Spain or maybe France and the Does were in Germany, but the couple of parents seems to travel a lot because they were criminals, what if they ended up dead in Nuremberg? Family at the time did not report them missing because of their line of work. Would also explain the rolex, not many "common" workers would have it because of the price.
An article on the three children abandoned at a Barcelona train station: Three abandoned children, two missing parents and a 40-year mystery

Their missing parents names were Ramón Martos Sánchez and Rosario Cuetos Cruz. I do not think these are our Does, but they should certainly be ruled out.
 
  • #43
An article on the three children abandoned at a Barcelona train station: Three abandoned children, two missing parents and a 40-year mystery

Their missing parents names were Ramón Martos Sánchez and Rosario Cuetos Cruz. I do not think these are our Does, but they should certainly be ruled out.
I made an account just to say this. This article has many pictures, including the parents. They were Spanish through and through. But they could of gotten clothes in Italy. The father was a career tea leaf engaged in money laundering and that sort of thing and I think went to and lived in Paris and France under false identities after it kicked off in Spain. The fact that they were both career tea leafs is why I think there could be a connection with the mafia and thus Italy. Plus the fact that the women had a Rolex. An expensive watch even then so you never know. I think the daughter has or had an FB group set up trying to find her actual parents so I might try and find that and see if this was put on there. There are pictures of the parents on the article and I think they look a little alike (especially the women) but I am not convinced. Three abandoned children, two missing parents and a 40-year mystery
An artical with more pictures: Tres hermanitos abandonados que solo recordaban sus nombres y el misterio de sus padres “fantasmas”
 
  • #44
I made an account just to say this. This article has many pictures, including the parents. They were Spanish through and through. But they could of gotten clothes in Italy. The father was a career tea leaf engaged in money laundering and that sort of thing and I think went to and lived in Paris and France under false identities after it kicked off in Spain. The fact that they were both career tea leafs is why I think there could be a connection with the mafia and thus Italy. Plus the fact that the women had a Rolex. An expensive watch even then so you never know. I think the daughter has or had an FB group set up trying to find her actual parents so I might try and find that and see if this was put on there. There are pictures of the parents on the article and I think they look a little alike (especially the women) but I am not convinced. Three abandoned children, two missing parents and a 40-year mystery
An artical with more pictures: Tres hermanitos abandonados que solo recordaban sus nombres y el misterio de sus padres “fantasmas”
I will add. The fact that the perpetrator did not take the Rolex to me shows it was not a robbery that went wrong....
 
  • #45
Btw the Schengen region did not exist yet in 1983. If they were Italian they would have needed a visa to enter Germany, and vice versa.
A bit late answer, but there was no need for a visa for travels between Italy and Germany, as both countries were members of the EEC (European Economic Community), and following the Rome Treaty, signed in 1957, (EEC - "Inner Six": Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, West Germany)
  • Internal Freedom: Following the 1957 Treaty of Rome, the 1960s saw the gradual implementation of free movement for workers, allowing citizens of the six member states to work, reside, and travel freely without needing work permits or traditional visas.
It was not only the "Inner Six" that benefited from travel freely without visas in the 1960s and 1970s, as many other countries had sign treaties with the EEC. I visited several European countries in the 1970s, and never needed a visa, only a valid passport was needed.
 
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