Presumed Located OH - Kevin James Cassetty, 21, Hartville, 23 July 1982

Hi msbelindam, did Kevin had particular jewelry, a picture of you and his daughter on him, certain personal artifacts he had always with him, something with his initials or the like, as far as you know? Is there anything noticeable about his teeth?
 
I know this is not the best of sources....but I still wondered about the presumed death status of Kevin. If somebody has a better source than please post.

Declared death in absentia - Wikipedia

United States[edit]
The U.S. Constitution provides that all powers not expressly or implicitly assigned to the federal state are reserved to the 50 unitary states. The declaration of a missing person as legally dead thus falls under state jurisdiction unless there is a reason for the federal government to have jurisdiction (e.g. the party was military personnel who went missing while on active duty). Otherwise, there are 57 U.S. jurisdictions that comprise the United States, each of which has its own law on the question.

People who disappear are typically called missing, or sometimes absent. Several criteria are evaluated to determine whether a person may be declared legally dead:

  • The party normally must have been missing from their home or usual residence for an extended period of time, most commonly seven years
  • Their absence must have been continuous and inexplicable (e.g. the person did not say they had found a new job and were moving far away)
  • There must have been no communication from the party with those people most likely to hear from them during the period the person has been missing
  • There must have been a diligent but unsuccessful search for the person and/or diligent but unsuccessful inquiry into their whereabouts.
Professor Jeanne Carriere, in "The Rights of the Living Dead: Absent Persons in Civil Law" (published in the Louisiana Law Review), stated that as of 1990, the number of such cases in the United States was estimated at between 60,000 and 100,000.[13] Often the missing person's bank accounts are checked for activity, and possible sightings investigated.[citation needed]

According to Edgar Sentell, a retired senior vice-president and general counsel of Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company, almost all states recognize the presumption of death, by statute or judicial recognition of the common law rule. Some states have amended their statutes to reduce the seven-year period to five consecutive years missing, and some, such as Minnesota and Georgia, have reduced the period to four years.[14]

If someone disappears, those interested can file a petition to have them declared legally dead. They must prove by the criteria above that the person is in fact dead. There are constitutional limitations to these procedures: The presumption must arise only after a reasonable amount of time has elapsed. The absent person must be notified. Courts permit notifying claimants by publication. Adequate safeguards concerning property provisions must be made in the case that an absent person shows up.

Some states require those who receive the missing person's assets to return them if the person turned out to be alive. If a person is declared dead when only missing, their estate is distributed as if they were dead. In some cases, the presumption of death can be rebutted. According to Sentell, courts will consider evidence that the absent person was a fugitive from justice, had money troubles, had a bad relationship, or had no family ties or connection to a community as reasons not to presume death.[14]
 
Still not sure about a right timeline. This UID had al kinds of things I can't "see" in Kevin, but to be sure I post it here. Surgical repair to the left knee, evidenced by a screw and staple installed in the tibia. The procedure would have required a sophisticated hospital, an extended hospitalization and a long recovery period, possibly 6 months to a year. Might have worn glasses, they are not sure. Found in Wisconsin, September 21, 1982. Far fetched....you never know...
168UMWI

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
168UMWI3.jpg
168UMWI2.jpg
cassetty_kevin.jpg


Don't want to be rude....sorry upfront.
 
Last edited:
Very interesting case. I really wonder what happened to this young man.
 
Still not sure about a right timeline. This UID had al kinds of things I can't "see" in Kevin, but to be sure I post it here. Surgical repair to the left knee, evidenced by a screw and staple installed in the tibia. The procedure would have required a sophisticated hospital, an extended hospitalization and a long recovery period, possibly 6 months to a year. Might have worn glasses, they are not sure. Found in Wisconsin, September 21, 1982. Far fetched....you never know...
168UMWI

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
168UMWI3.jpg
168UMWI2.jpg
cassetty_kevin.jpg


Don't want to be rude....sorry upfront.

For convenience; the above mentioned John Doe is identified. Kevin's file is still up, so this is not Kevin.
 
Is it really? I was still able to pull the Doe's profile up in NamUs.

Strange, because I did it just now and it says that the page doesn't exist. Also in the other link I posted (Doe Network) says that this particular John Doe is identified in big letters..... 168UMWI
 
About:
The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)

Personally, I don't think the one suggested is Kevin Cassetty, because Kevin has an eagle tattoo on his lower right arm and a tattoo of an anchor with the words "Death Before Dishonor" below it on his upper left arm.

John Doe had a recognizable face, all scars were still visible so my guess is that they couldn't have missed a tattoo on the other arm. Inventory of remains is blank, that's a petty, because now it's open for interpretation. Were all parts recovered or not? IMO they only could have missed the other tattoo if the second arm was missing.

BTW I think it's strange that in the John Doe Namus file they don't mention on what site/arm the tattoo is placed. I consider that a serious shortcoming.

In the Namus file
"Old tattoo which appears to be an eagle, an anchor and either letters USN or USM (likely either US Navy or US Marine)"
 

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