mysteriew
A diamond in process
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This case was never discussed on a national level, yet was well covered locally. It has never been officially solved. What is so striking is not only the horrific murder of the 16 yo law enforcement student, Cheryl Fossyl- but also the rumors and allegations of a coverup by the very people who were charged with investigating the murder. Some of the suspects involved in the murder are now dead. Some are still living. Some accused of being involved in the coverup are no longer in office. Some are. Was she killed to cover up the fact that she had information about another killing? or to coverup a drug ring?
Opinions seem to vary. It has been almost 30 years since the murder in a small town and rural area- where the victims family and the suspects see each other at the only grocery store in town. Many residents are still reluctant to discuss it or speculate about the murders and the coverups.
http://www.kdbs.us/help_the_children_link.htm
Georgetown, OH -- Feb. 13, 2001 -- State Highway Patrol Trooper Toby Via swallowed hard, staring at the shallow waters of Straight Creek and the severed head of a teenage girl who would haunt this small rural town for the next 24 years.
A few minutes earlier on that June 11, 1977, day, four boys who had been fishing the creek had frantically flagged down Via's cruiser as it approached the U.S. 68 bridge.
They led Via and Sgt. Wayne Vessels to a spot near the bridge where the boys had found horror instead of bluegills and bass - a sight Via would later describe as one of the worst in his 25-year patrol career.
"It was all bloated up to about the size of a basketball," the retired trooper recently recalled. "I assume whoever did it was driving over the bridge and just flipped it out the window."
Seventeen days later and 18 miles distant, two boys camping near Ohio 125 in an adjoining county found the matching, headless body of a 16- year-old girl lying just off the highway.
The disappearance of Cheryl Fossyl, a Georgetown High School junior missing for 24 days, had been solved. It was later determined that she had been beaten to death, then decapitated.
But discovery of her body only partially eased the fears of this close-knit farming community 45 miles southeast of Cincinnati.
Then, as now, the question remained: Who killed Cheryl Fossyl?
http://www.cincypost.com/2002/10/09/brown100902.html
Forensic evidence examined by experts hired by the Fossyl family, Gerhardstein said, shows the 4-foot-11, 84-pound Fossyl was brutally beaten before her body was cut apart and strewn across two counties.
Fossyl was killed to keep her from talking about the murder of Monroe Hines inside R.G.'s Bar also known as Kelly's Bar, according to the suit.
http://www.channelcincinnati.com/investigations/1710648/detail.html
http://www.wkrc.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=88B88607-06D6-4D87-B9A1-BBF21C52C996
There are many more links out there on Cheryl's murder, and on the possible related murder of Monroe Hines. Very little is known about the investigation that was done as much of the paperwork, reports and evidence cannot be located. One deathbed confession does not appear to have been offically investigated. I haven't copied the entire articles that are specifically mentioned here and there is a lot more information in those articles.
Opinions seem to vary. It has been almost 30 years since the murder in a small town and rural area- where the victims family and the suspects see each other at the only grocery store in town. Many residents are still reluctant to discuss it or speculate about the murders and the coverups.
http://www.kdbs.us/help_the_children_link.htm
Georgetown, OH -- Feb. 13, 2001 -- State Highway Patrol Trooper Toby Via swallowed hard, staring at the shallow waters of Straight Creek and the severed head of a teenage girl who would haunt this small rural town for the next 24 years.
A few minutes earlier on that June 11, 1977, day, four boys who had been fishing the creek had frantically flagged down Via's cruiser as it approached the U.S. 68 bridge.
They led Via and Sgt. Wayne Vessels to a spot near the bridge where the boys had found horror instead of bluegills and bass - a sight Via would later describe as one of the worst in his 25-year patrol career.
"It was all bloated up to about the size of a basketball," the retired trooper recently recalled. "I assume whoever did it was driving over the bridge and just flipped it out the window."
Seventeen days later and 18 miles distant, two boys camping near Ohio 125 in an adjoining county found the matching, headless body of a 16- year-old girl lying just off the highway.
The disappearance of Cheryl Fossyl, a Georgetown High School junior missing for 24 days, had been solved. It was later determined that she had been beaten to death, then decapitated.
But discovery of her body only partially eased the fears of this close-knit farming community 45 miles southeast of Cincinnati.
Then, as now, the question remained: Who killed Cheryl Fossyl?
http://www.cincypost.com/2002/10/09/brown100902.html
Forensic evidence examined by experts hired by the Fossyl family, Gerhardstein said, shows the 4-foot-11, 84-pound Fossyl was brutally beaten before her body was cut apart and strewn across two counties.
Fossyl was killed to keep her from talking about the murder of Monroe Hines inside R.G.'s Bar also known as Kelly's Bar, according to the suit.
http://www.channelcincinnati.com/investigations/1710648/detail.html
http://www.wkrc.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=88B88607-06D6-4D87-B9A1-BBF21C52C996
There are many more links out there on Cheryl's murder, and on the possible related murder of Monroe Hines. Very little is known about the investigation that was done as much of the paperwork, reports and evidence cannot be located. One deathbed confession does not appear to have been offically investigated. I haven't copied the entire articles that are specifically mentioned here and there is a lot more information in those articles.