- Joined
- Sep 19, 2009
- Messages
- 4,044
- Reaction score
- 7,987
I'm still thinking Canadian. Don't know why. Just instinct and the fluent French I think. Wonder how Canada trains its military in the foreign languages.
RSBM. Here is the NH Woman's Namus profile for comparison: https://identifyus.org/en/cases/2174There are a lot of holes and weird things about this case. He listed his wife as Elizabeth Evans in 1980 around the time the murders might have happened. I wonder how many missing women there are with the name Elizabeth from the 1970s on The Charley Project. Maybe one is the woman who was found in the barrel in 1985.
RSBM. Here is the NH Woman's Namus profile for comparison: https://identifyus.org/en/cases/2174
I looked and didn't find too many Elizabeths reported missing during the 70's that match the description:
1971: Elizabeth Lande missing from Philadelphia at age 21: https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/2508/
(While she could have had kids after she wen missing, she is way too short to be the woman in the barrel at only 50-54" tall)
1974: Elizabeth Converse from Michigan at age 50 -- Too old: https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/23656/
1977: Elizabeth Brown from from North Carolina at ager 53 -- too old: https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/2534/
1978: Elizabeth Byron missing at age 36 from Ventura County, California: https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/17693/
There are very few details in Elizabeth Byron's case. She is closest to the right age of the woman in the Barrel and the right height at 66". Does anyone know if Elizabeth Byron has been submitted?
I like Elizabeth Byron for the mother of the middle child, wish she had DNA available.
As for her possibly being the adult female, she'd have to have had a child missing with her as well. If she had gone missing in 1968 or so instead of 1978, it would have been possible to have a child that age unknown to her family. However, the LKA date of 1978 without a female maternal relative also missing would rule her out, I would think.
Rhonda Labbe has both dental and DNA available, according to NamUs. I'm thinking she could be an automatic rule out, which aren't listed. The only real way to find out is to submit it, though.
https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/4613/1/
Here's an MP from Canada who could be RE:
https://www.services.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/missing-disparus/case-dossier.jsf?case=2015044121&id=8
Thank you.
Are RE's fingerprints in AFIS?
Also, do you know if they seized any computers from Joon's house and scoured them for any evidence?
Yes.
Yes-already checked previously and in line to be double checked.
To clear up a few other questions out there-he never had an official ID in any AKA. (In the past-if pulled over and you don't have ID you give your name and DOB and get the cite in that name/DOB-in the past there was no computer systems to verify that name on site. Also if arrested/no ID/give an AKA and no prints in system-you are now under that AKA with those prints-as happened under Curtis Kimball.) Would not register any vehicle to himself-just buy it private party or steal it and drive it.
Also Crime Watch Daily will have a new show on this case within the next month. I'll post the date when I know.
I came across this article about a man missing from Canada since 1977, legally declared dead in 1986, and just recently found alive living in Oklahoma under an assumed name and it made me think of RE: http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/ontario-man-missing-since-1977-found-alive-in-u-s-1.1974646
I wonder if RE could be a Canadian that was declared dead after going missing and is no longer on a missing persons list?
That's a possibility, but Canada doesn't have much of a list, if you ask me.
I wonder if they automatically declare people dead after so many years? I noticed there were not many missing cases from the 70's and 80's. Anyone know if LE could cross reference RE's profile with those who had to be declared dead? Maybe there is not a list online but it could be a start to finding out his identity.
That's a possibility, but Canada doesn't have much of a list, if you ask me.
Across Canada the government and police departments have done a terrible job of tracking missing persons, assisting families to find missing persons, and establishing laws about missing persons.
This might be why our databases of missing persons seems to be "lacking". It has mostly been volunteer groups and activists across Canada who have kept the missing in the media.
what I'm seeing here is other victims being dumped in a state park and since Lisa was possibly present he lied to her about how they died.Police asked Lisa whether she had any brothers or sisters. She used to, she told them, but they died from eating “grass mushrooms” while they were camping.