Found Deceased PA - Linda Stoltzfoos, 18, Bird-in-Hand, Lancaster County, 21 June 2020 *arrest*

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  • #301
Al

Also she is wearing a CAP like a head covering, not a white CAPE
That bugged me too. Some news outlets said cap and others said cape.
 
  • #302
Hopeithelps. Did Linda ever attend "Hut Parties" to your knowledge?
No. Linda is a young 18, definitely not a rebel. I've only had brief passing interactions with her anyway. She's very soft spoken.
 
  • #303
Thank you @Hopeithelps. That semi-removes the more rebellious cultural element.

Anyone know if Mill Creek been checked?

The Amish are great folks for the most part and very little trouble. Other than businesses dealings with the public, they keep to themselves. Most issues arise during the summer when the "English" tourists show up acting like snotty butt heads.
 
  • #304
Thank you HereSheComes. I guess I’m more wondering and guessing you’re correct with a large family around why no one saw her after services? Meaning does that narrow down the timeline as to Linda having to have gone missing on her way home vs going home and back out again. Just wondering out loud I guess!
Only Linda left for home soon after the service was over, to change clothes before going to a different house for a youth gathering. Her parents and siblings stayed for a while at the farm where they had their church service. They did not expect Linda to still be home by the time they got there. They probably thought she be home around 11pm, and likely went to bed. Sometime in the night, or the next morning, they discovered that Linda had not come home.
 
  • #305
Only Linda left for home soon after the service was over, to change clothes before going to a different house for a youth gathering. Her parents and siblings stayed for a while at the farm where they had their church service. They did not expect Linda to still be home by the time they got there. They probably thought she be home around 11pm, and likely went to bed. Sometime in the night, or the next morning, they discovered that Linda had not come home.

BBM:

I wonder if this was her usual routine or not, i.e., did she normally return home alone after church to change before heading over to the youth group, or was this unusual/atypical for her for her to change clothing b/t church and youth meeting?
 
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  • #306
why change clothes? the clothing i've seen is modest and non descriptive. why a need to change
 
  • #307
I'm having a hard time visualizing what the route from her the farm to her home is like.

Has anyone seen any MSM video footage showing the route from the farm to her house and/or are there any locals here who are really familiar with the road she was on when she went missing?

Is that road heavily trafficked by vehicles?

Are homes/farms set back a way from the road, or would passing vehicles be observed by people in their homes?
 
  • #308
Thank you @Hopeithelps. That semi-removes the more rebellious cultural element.

Anyone know if Mill Creek been checked?

The Amish are great folks for the most part and very little trouble. Other than businesses dealings with the public, they keep to themselves. Most issues arise during the summer when the "English" tourists show up acting like snotty butt heads.

I went to college in Lancaster...I know of the snotty butt heads that you speak about. Many, many disrespectful “English” tourists.
 
  • #309
why change clothes? the clothing i've seen is modest and non descriptive. why a need to change

What she wore to church might be her “good” dress, which she may have wanted to change out of before doing something else
 
  • #310
why change clothes? the clothing i've seen is modest and non descriptive. why a need to change

Her church clothes are probably her best clothes. To go out running around at youth group, she’d probably wear older clothing and a less starched cap.

I had a lady who cleaned for me, and one day she asked if I’d drive her to a family reunion when she was finished. She changed into her good clothes for the reunion—they were pretty similar to what she cleaned in but just newer and crisper. She kept her cap in a Tupperware container, which made me smile.
 
  • #311
  • #312
I went to college in Lancaster...I know of the snotty butt heads that you speak about. Many, many disrespectful “English” tourists.
Don’t get me started. We live in a picturesque little town, and some tourists act like nothing is private property and try to eat their lunch on people’s porches or play in their backyards. Like are you even from this planet?

I’ve also heard from an Amish lady who was confronted by tourists insisting she and the other Amish in our town are just people in costumes then proceeding to ask her a bunch of embarrassing questions.
 
  • #313
I'm having a hard time visualizing what the route from her the farm to her home is like.

Has anyone seen any MSM video footage showing the route from the farm to her house and/or are there any locals here who are really familiar with the road she was on when she went missing?

Is that road heavily trafficked by vehicles?

Are homes/farms set back a way from the road, or would passing vehicles be observed by people in their homes?
It’s definitely not a heavy traffic area. Very private backroads and GPS directs traffic away from the area
 
  • #314
That bugged me too. Some news outlets said cap and others said cape.
Some Amish dresses have a cape which is an extra, separate piece of material that goes over the top of the dress.
Screen Shot 2020-06-25 at 7.02.05 PM.png
 
  • #315
Around here, it’s the plainer Mennonites who wear what we call “cape dresses.” They have an extra layer of fabric over the top to downplay your chest, basically. Not terribly flattering, but they are usually made in printed fabric for extra charm lol.

I tried to upload a pic, but you can Google “Mennonite cape dresses” if you want a visual.
 
  • #316
What are “hut parties”?
This term came from Amish Mafia tv show which was about 2% truthful. A hut is a rental home or apartment. The Amish Mafia show had young Amish renting a home for a weekend and then having friends come over to party.

Amish people don't waste money and they barter for a lot of their needed wares. The Amish Mafia episode with Amish renting a "party apartment" made me roll with laughter.
 
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  • #317
Around here, it’s the plainer Mennonites who wear what we call “cape dresses.” They have an extra layer of fabric over the top to downplay your chest, basically. Not terribly flattering, but they are usually made in printed fabric for extra charm lol.

I tried to upload a pic, but you can Google “Mennonite cape dresses” if you want a visual.
The extra fabric is for modesty. It's to cover their breasts.
 
  • #318
Her church clothes are probably her best clothes. To go out running around at youth group, she’d probably wear older clothing and a less starched cap.

I had a lady who cleaned for me, and one day she asked if I’d drive her to a family reunion when she was finished. She changed into her good clothes for the reunion—they were pretty similar to what she cleaned in but just newer and crisper. She kept her cap in a Tupperware container, which made me smile.
Married Amish women will make their own wedding dress and then it becomes their church dress forever or as long as they can fit into it. I would assume that a church dress for young adults is also a very special dress which they don't wear to their after-church teenage sing alongs (youth group meeting).
 
  • #319

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