Recovered/Located PA - Lindsay Ollinger, 27, rest stop on I-80W at MM194, Greene Township, 14 Oct 2019

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  • #1
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- Clinton County, Pennsylvania -
- Lindsay M. Ollinger, 27 -
- Endangered -
- 14 October 2019 -

Lindsay M. Ollinger
White / Female / 27 Years Old
NO Cell Phone :: NO Money
NO Contact with Loved Ones

5' 7" ::: 160 Lbs.
Hazel Eyes ::: Dark Brown Hair
Large Tattoo of Rose on Lower-Left Arm
[Born 4 March 1992]

ollinger2.jpg


Greene Township,
Clinton County is in North-Central, PA.
Day Eleven

1)) Crime-Watch PA:
CASE: MISSING PERSON!! Lindsay OLLINGER!! Last seen on Interstate 80 - Greene Township -
^^^ Click for Additional Photo of Arm Tattoo ^^^

2)) Google™ Supplements & Updates:
Lindsay Ollinger - Missing - PA - بحث Google

3)) Lindsay's 2017 Facebook™
Lindsay Ollinger

4)) Others Missing in Pennsylvania:
Missing Persons Discussion

Check Back Package:

A)) (Lower) Magisterial District Judge Docket Sheet:

B)) (Upper) Court of Common Pleas Docket:
C)) Philadelphia Municipal Court:
D)) State-by-State Incarceration: VINELinkS:
E)) NamUs:
National missing & Unidentified persons system:
Missing Persons Search
Checked Nationwide, again on 24 Oct.
BOLO = [BOWL' low] = Be On the Look-Out
DOB = Date of Birth
LE = Law Enforcement
MC = (Philadelphia) Municipal Court
MEPA = Missing Endangered Person Advisory
MSM = Main-Stream Media
NCIC = National Crime Information Center
PSP = Pennsylvania State Police - Lamar Station: (570) 726-6000



[Contribution # 6860
Thread # 481930]

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Last edited:
  • #2
State Police seek woman who went missing along I-80 last week
upload_2019-10-24_22-13-53.jpeg

Additional photo

Lindsay Ollinger was being transported to Pyramid Health Care in Duncansville, when she decided she no longer wanted to go and was left at a rest area at Mile Marker 194 along I-80 West at about 7 p.m. on Oct. 14, State police say.

She is considered a missing person and is wanted in Philadelphia for dangerous drugs, police say.

Ollinger, 27, is from Bensalem, Bucks County, and has been known to frequent the Kenstington, Philadelphia County areas
 
  • #3
Linsday Ollinger was last seen at a rest stop on I-80 westbound at mile marker 194 in Greene Township on October 14, 2019 at approximately 7:00 p.m.

Ollinger was being transported to Pyramid Health Care facility located in Duncansville, when she decided she no longer wanted to go. Ollinger is from the Bensalem, Bucks County area and has been known to frequent the Kensington, Philadelphia County areas.

Ollinger is described as a 27-year-old white woman, 5'7", 160 lbs. with hazel eyes, brown hair and a rose tattoo on her left wrist.

MISSING PERSON: Woman left at I-80 rest stop in Greene Township

b8510c7b-cef2-4941-aedc-90f3b4f899c3-large16x9_Ollingermissing.jpg
 
  • #4
  • #5
State Police seek woman who went missing along I-80 last week
View attachment 210998
Additional photo

Lindsay Ollinger was being transported to Pyramid Health Care in Duncansville, when she decided she no longer wanted to go and was left at a rest area at Mile Marker 194 along I-80 West at about 7 p.m. on Oct. 14, State police say.

She is considered a missing person and is wanted in Philadelphia for dangerous drugs, police say.

Ollinger, 27, is from Bensalem, Bucks County, and has been known to frequent the Kenstington, Philadelphia County areas
Why would she be left off at a rest stop? Appears the Health Care Center is for addiction recovery/rehab. I get she probably has a choice whether or not to get help, if that's the reason for her going there, but I find it incredible that she was just left at a rest stop and not taken back home. There must be more to this story. IMO
 
  • #6
Why would she be left off at a rest stop? Appears the Health Care Center is for addiction recovery/rehab. I get she probably has a choice whether or not to get help, if that's the reason for her going there, but I find it incredible that she was just left at a rest stop and not taken back home. There must be more to this story. IMO

My thoughts as well. Was she being transported in some professional/official manner (like by someone from the facility, an interventionist etc) or by just a friend or family member or?
 
  • #7
This is terrible, she is so vulnerable and would have been absolutely desperate, likely wanting her drug of choice, having no money and no phone for a ride or help from loved ones. So so scared for her and I’m so sorry her family has to go through this, hope she’s laying low and will reappear soon... but I really hope she didn’t end up with some unsavory characters... sighhh
 
  • #8
At first I thought "how darn cruel of a family member or friend to just leave her there, stranded" but If an ultimatum was given "Treatment or else" perhaps family or the friend couldn't enable/support her bad choices any longer if she wasn't going to get help. Keep heading to treatment or my help to you (providing you a ride) ends here.
If that's what happened, I can't really fault the person driving her. You have to draw the line somewhere and stick to it.

Tough situation regardless. I'm sure those who love her are worried sick about her. Missing is bad enough but being an addict creates an additional layer of worry about who they are with and what they are doing.
 
  • #9
Interesting info here. She seemingly changed her mind, but MM 194 is a fair distance from Bucks County. I wander if she perhaps became unmanageable and the driver had no voice but to leave her. Still, how was she supposed to get home or anywhere without money or credit cards?
BBM

State Police seek woman who went missing along I-80 last week

Lindsay Ollinger was being transported to Pyramid Health Care in Duncansville, when she decided she no longer wanted to go and was left at a rest area at Mile Marker 194 along I-80 West at about 7 p.m. on Oct. 14, State police say.

She was not in possession of a cell phone, currency, or credit cards, and has not been in contact with her family, according to police. She is considered a missing person and is wanted in Philadelphia for dangerous drugs, police say.

Ollinger, 27, is from Bensalem, Bucks County, and has been known to frequent the Kenstington, Philadelphia County areas, police say.
 
  • #10
I-80 does not go through Greene Township. I-84 does. The Greentown rest stop on I-84 is just west of the 390 interchange. Shiny Mountain road is the closest small road to that rest stop. It is very rural and wooded.

If I go by the Clinton County reference, there is a Greene Township listing (makes no sense as Green Township is way north) rest stop at mm 194 with Valley Road as the nearest rural road within walking distance. Again very rural with nothing but woods and fire trails for miles. She would have either walked to Valley road and hitch hiked, or hid out in the woods until the transporter had left and then hitched a ride with another car or truck driver, and we all know the very high risk associated with that scenario. Lewisburg is the closest large city, however there are a number of smaller towns. A lot of territory to cover. She has had 15 days to get back to her stomping grounds, if she decided to go back.
 
  • #11
The last thread like this that I remember was the Susan Bachman case.
 
  • #12
  • #13
Huh, I wonder why I got different results on Google. Thanks CCJD.
 
  • #14
She is considered a missing person and is wanted in Philadelphia for dangerous drugs, police say.

Ollinger, 27, is from Bensalem, Bucks County, and has been known to frequent the Kenstington, Philadelphia County areas


This makes my heart sink. Kind of hoping she at least made it to Kensington.

Prayers for her safe return and for her poor suffering family.
 
  • #15
If she decided she was not interested in going to rehab, I would assume she walked away from whomever was transporting her, not that they left her.
 
  • #16
Being wanted for "dangerous drugs" is a really weird way to phrase that. Is it more like possession of a controlled substance or distributing or what?

It's so, so hard when someone abruptly decides they do not want treatment. I can't imagine how the people she was with probably felt (rehab employees or family or whomever) when they had to let her out. Her judgement was obviously very poor but there's no way to legally detain someone who is on their way to voluntary treatment. This is so scary - I hope she is okay.
 
  • #17
"dangerous drugs" makes me think that it was drugs cut with a potentially lethal substance. Have seen that come up in the Philly news lately.
 
  • #18
As far as walking away from rehab, it would depend. For mental illness there is form 201 to self commit and form 302 to be involuntary committed. I would assume the same is available for drug issues. I don't think we have that level of background information on this case. Same with regards to what occurred when she ran off. Did the transporter try to chase her, locate her, report her to PSP right away, or did they give up, leave and then call it in?
 
  • #19
bump

Where is Ms. Ollinger?
 
  • #20

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