MA MA - Sandra Crispo, 54, Hanson, 7 August 2019 #2

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  • #61
Very interesting possibility.
 
  • #62
hansonwoman-1565620431.jpg

Hanson police are searching for a missing woman who was last heard from on Wednesday.

Sandra Crispo, 54, is 5 feet, 9 inches tall and has blue eyes and brown hair.

Police said Crispo has ties to the Quincy area.

The Hanson Police Department said it has no reason to believe any foul play is involved.

Anyone with information is asked to call police at 781-293-4625.

Hanson police searching for missing woman

Thread #1
Mechanic was referred to SC by daughter. SC was last in her house between Wed. night and Thurs. morning; hence lights were on. The mechanic called SC Thurs., got no answer so he called daughter about parts that needed to be ordered. Whonever was involved, drove there. Back door unlocked is important. Was it dead bolt ? Would need key to lock from outside. Her shoes and purse were missing, implying she left willingly. Not necessarily so. Doesn't seem to be local person or persons involved. Dog should have been at door when daughter and grandchildren arrived on Friday but was sitting in recliner. Daughter said dog is usually very active, jumping around. Mattress being moved could indicate she was overpowered in that room. I agree with previous poster that Hanson and Quincy police should be working together. Ties to Quincy might hold promising leads.
 
  • #63
Did SC leave back door unlocked when she went to drop off her car so she could get back in ? She might have had house key on same key chain with car key; there's no way I think mechanic was involved. Did relative notice which door she went in when they dropped her off ? If she went in back door she would have locked it being fairly new to neighborhood. She spoke to a family member on her landline after getting home. Was she expecting someone she knew and let them in, unaware of their intent ? Small towns can give you false sense of security where as larger cities or towns your neighbors are more aware of people's comings and goings. No one would have noticed a vehicle if it arrived in the driveway after dark when blinds are drawn.
 
  • #64
Those houses were close together and wasn’t it a gravel road? Wouldn’t a neighbor have heard something? I suspect it was a quiet neighborhood.

I think the road was unpaved? So perhaps dirt or gravel? I will have to go back and look.
 
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  • #65
I agree it was a quiet neighborhood. I didn't know it was a gravel road. A neighbor might have heard something if their (neighbor's) a/c was off and a window was open. Could cut up watermelon have been left from boys visit on Wednesday and not for anticipated visit 2 days later ? Just curious as to what others might think.
 
  • #66
Did SC leave back door unlocked when she went to drop off her car so she could get back in ? She might have had house key on same key chain with car key; there's no way I think mechanic was involved. Did relative notice which door she went in when they dropped her off ? If she went in back door she would have locked it being fairly new to neighborhood. She spoke to a family member on her landline after getting home. Was she expecting someone she knew and let them in, unaware of their intent ? Small towns can give you false sense of security where as larger cities or towns your neighbors are more aware of people's comings and goings. No one would have noticed a vehicle if it arrived in the driveway after dark when blinds are drawn.

There's a podcast linked upthread that answers some of these questions. Supposedly the key ring she gave the mechanic did have house keys on it (I don't think the mechanic is involved either). So she either left the door unlocked OR she had a spare key hidden somewhere. According to the interview with her daughter in the podcast, she was, let's say, wary of the new neighborhood and insisted on hanging up towels to cover the windows before the curtains were up. It makes me think she was concerned about privacy and was probably not the type to deliberately leave doors unlocked, but who knows. She had been in Hanson only three months after living in a close-knit city all her life, one that had its share of property crime.

The family member who dropped her off, which was her son-in-law according to later reports, did NOT see her enter the house. Her driveway is small and unpaved (as was the road, at least at that time), he didn't pull his truck all the way in when he dropped her off and his view of where she entered was obscured. This is according to her daughter in the podcast interview.

I'm not sure how it was determined that the cut up watermelon was not already partially served. We do know that there were diapers still in the trash. IMO whatever happened, happened that Wednesday night.
 
  • #67
There's a podcast linked upthread that answers some of these questions. Supposedly the key ring she gave the mechanic did have house keys on it (I don't think the mechanic is involved either). So she either left the door unlocked OR she had a spare key hidden somewhere. According to the interview with her daughter in the podcast, she was, let's say, wary of the new neighborhood and insisted on hanging up towels to cover the windows before the curtains were up. It makes me think she was concerned about privacy and was probably not the type to deliberately leave doors unlocked, but who knows. She had been in Hanson only three months after living in a close-knit city all her life, one that had its share of property crime.

The family member who dropped her off, which was her son-in-law according to later reports, did NOT see her enter the house. Her driveway is small and unpaved (as was the road, at least at that time), he didn't pull his truck all the way in when he dropped her off and his view of where she entered was obscured. This is according to her daughter in the podcast interview.

I'm not sure how it was determined that the cut up watermelon was not already partially served. We do know that there were diapers still in the trash. IMO whatever happened, happened that Wednesday night.
I agree Yemelyan, whatever happened took place on Wednesday night that is why I believe she was no longer in the house when the mechanic called her on Thursday to discuss needing more parts and after the mechanic called the daughter, the daughter called her.
 
  • #68
Today is 10 months since SC vanished. Prayers for her family to have closure. Does anyone else think it is more than an eerie coincidence that on the one night her car isn't there, she vanishes without a trace ? When the perp or perps are known to the victim, isn't it usually pre- planned ?
 
  • #69
Today is 10 months since SC vanished. Prayers for her family to have closure. Does anyone else think it is more than an eerie coincidence that on the one night her car isn't there, she vanishes without a trace ? When the perp or perps are known to the victim, isn't it usually pre- planned ?

I don't think it is a coincidence. I also think it's significant that she had the whole day on Thursday "off" from responsibilities. I don't know that the foul play, if indeed that's what it was, was pre-planned, but IMO she interacted with someone she knew that night, this is not a stranger abduction situation. All MOO.
 
  • #70
Her days off were dictated by her daughter's work schedule so I didn't think that had any significance.
 
  • #71
Her days off were dictated by her daughter's work schedule so I didn't think that had any significance.
 
  • #72
I think someone knew she had a set schedule and babysit the same days every week.
I am curious about the phone call - did someone call her? What time was the call?
 
  • #73
If she used a spare key to get in after dropping off her car, she would have locked the door after.arriving home. She would have used the key to lock the door the second time she left unless she was unable to. I wondered when did the police originally go there ? Was the mattress and fallen bed slats still in the position the daughter found them in when the police arrived or did the daughter tell the police about what condition the bedroom was in. I am curious as well MimosaMornings as to who the phone call on the landline was to or from.
 
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  • #74
❤️
 
  • #75
Was SC overpowered in the bedroom and knocked out ? That's one possibility. Also, if a neighbor heard a car approaching when it was dark and peeked out, they may have briefly only seen héadlights; somé people would think that's not worth reporting to police.
 
  • #76
Her days off were dictated by her daughter's work schedule so I didn't think that had any significance.

It would have zero significance if a random stranger abducted her or a person who, at least, didn't know her well. However, I think she knew very well who was coming and that part was arranged.
 
  • #77
If she used a spare key to get in after dropping off her car, she would have locked the door after.arriving home. She would have used the key to lock the door the second time she left unless she was unable to. I wondered when did the police originally go there ? Was the mattress and fallen bed slats still in the position the daughter found them in when the police arrived or did the daughter tell the police about what condition the bedroom was in. I am curious as well MimosaMornings as to who the phone call on the landline was to or from.

Her daughter has said in multiple MSM interviews her idea of what happened. She says she believes her mother came back from the mechanic shop and at some point that evening fell asleep with the door unlocked. LE has not come out with an official version so I view this as just a theory. It's not necessarily what I think happened. However, because even her daughter doubts that she remembered to lock a door, I don't think we can make definitive statements here like "she would have done X" or "she would have done Y."

There is info out there about the calls. I'll post when I find it.
 
  • #78
Okay here's the MSM link where the daughter discussed the last OUTGOING phone call, (which was to the daughter...no word on if it was to her cell, home phone, answered or not, or the time). I find it interesting that the last incoming call was not discussed. Perhaps the news station edited that part out. Perhaps the police asked that it not be discussed. It seems an interesting omission.


Notice in this interview, her daughter says that Sandra was happier than she had been "in a long time." That puts an idea into my mind of what things had been like before moving to Hanson 3 months prior, of times before the grandkids were around. How were they different and why. The podcast her daughter did also goes into this. It's definitely a piece of the puzzle IMO.
 
  • #79
It appears the grandkids filled a void in SC life.
It would have zero significance if a random stranger abducted her or a person who, at least, didn't know her well. However, I think she knew very well who was coming and that part was arranged.
Her daughter has said in multiple MSM interviews her idea of what happened. She says she believes her mother came back from the mechanic shop and at some point that evening fell asleep with the door unlocked. LE has not come out with an official version so I view this as just a theory. It's not necessarily what I think happened. However, because even her daughter doubts that she remembered to lock a door, I don't think we can make definitive statements here like "she would have done X" or "she would have done Y."

There is info out there about the calls. I'll post when I find it.
She believes her
Her daughter has said in multiple MSM interviews her idea of what happened. She says she believes her mother came back from the mechanic shop and at some point that evening fell asleep with the door unlocked. LE has not come out with an official version so I view this as just a theory. It's not necessarily what I think happened. However, because even her daughter doubts that she remembered to lock a door, I don't think we can make definitive statements here like "she would have done X" or "she would have done Y."

There is info out there about the calls. I'll post when I find it.
She doubts her mother remembered to lock a door. Makes me wonder did SC have a history of forgetting to lock doors ? The more you read, the more you wonder about.
 
  • #80
Okay here's the MSM link where the daughter discussed the last OUTGOING phone call, (which was to the daughter...no word on if it was to her cell, home phone, answered or not, or the time). I find it interesting that the last incoming call was not discussed. Perhaps the news station edited that part out. Perhaps the police asked that it not be discussed. It seems an interesting omission.


Notice in this interview, her daughter says that Sandra was happier than she had been "in a long time." That puts an idea into my mind of what things had been like before moving to Hanson 3 months prior, of times before the grandkids were around. How were they different and why. The podcast her daughter did also goes into this. It's definitely a piece of the puzzle IMO.
Thank you for the video link Yemelynn. I noticed the daughter said when describing finding the door was unlocked she had an expression of surprise .
 
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