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Silver Alert canceled for missing Franklin County man :: WRAL.com
Posted December 10, 2009
The N.C. Center for Missing Persons canceled a Silver Alert Thursday for Roger Wade Ayscue.
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The Silver Alert was canceled because they automatically expire after 90 days, authorities said.
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Ayscue, called "Kojak" by friends, is white with blond hair and blue eyes. He is 5 feet 4 inches tall, weighing about 197 pounds. He was last seen at 290 Collie Road in Castalia.
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Family says brother of Nash County 2004 cold case suspect has been missing for decade
NASH COUNTY, N.C. (WNCN) – Roger Ayscue, best known by friends and family as Cojack, has been missing for the past 10 years.
“Everybody loved Cojack,” said Theresa Bobbitt Ayscue, who was raised alongside Roger. “There was nobody like Cojack, nobody.”
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Cojack went missing in July of 2009. He lived in Castalia in Franklin County with a roommate, very close to the Nash County line. The Franklin County Sheriff’s Office is offering a reward for any information.
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So when they saw on the news that Cojack’s sister had been charged with the murder of her roommate and sister-in-law, they wondered if she could have had something to do with her brother’s disappearance.
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2 relatives killed, 2 missing
SPRING HOPE — For several years, a southern Nash County woman’s family members tended to disappear and die. She’s now accused of killing her sister-in-law, who has been missing for 15 years.
Kimberly Hancock, 49, has been charged with
first-degree murder in the 2004 death of
29-year-old Deborah Elaine Deans.
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Still missing are Deans’ husband and Hancock’s brother, Roger Wade Ayscue, not seen in a decade. Ayscue disappeared from Castalia in 2009.
Hancock killed her father in 1989. At 18, Hancock shot her father in the face with a .25-caliber pistol while he slept on the family’s sofa. She pleaded guilty to manslaughter and received a six-year suspended sentence since her father had been abusive, according to court records.
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“That’s how these cold cases get solved,” Stone said. “We need the help of media and the public.”
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Anyone with information related to the case is asked to call the Nash County Sheriff’s Office at 252-459-4121.
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Interesting details in the articles and Hancock's photo. If she's involved with all these cases, she's a serial killing monster slowly (over the course of years) attacking her own family ! She's sick.