mysteriew
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Police dont have the bullet that killed Tammy Salyer.
They dont have the shell casing that could link it to the murder weapon. They dont have the car in which the 18-year-old Virginia High School graduate died.
And they wont say what happened to them.
After more than 15 years of investigation, the city Police Department has lost evidence, accused a dead woman of murder and made no arrests.
NEW LIGHT ON AN OLD CASE
Questions have surrounded Salyers death for years, ever since the chilly night of Feb. 28, 1990, when a bullet struck her in the head as she drove home from work on northbound Interstate 81 near whats now Exit 7.
Police said for a decade and a half that the bullet crashed through the drivers side window of Salyers car just after midnight, apparently fired from a passing car.
Her car ran off the road, crossed the median and the southbound lanes, ricocheted off a tree and crashed into a fence, police said.
Authorities said they found just one clue the bullet that killed her, damaged almost beyond recognition. A search of the interstate failed to turn up a shell casing that could have helped identify the gun.
Salyers family wasnt surprised. They learned more than five years ago that the shooting wasnt random, that it wasnt a drive-by and that Salyer might have known her killer. But they still dont have the answers they want.
VANISHING EVIDENCE
Teresa Salyer finally saw the photo around 1998.
Police told the family it came from an enlargement of one of the original crime scene photos. They didnt say how they found it or why no one mentioned it before.
It showed a shell casing lying in the back seat of her sisters car.
"I saw the picture myself," she said. "If I hadnt seen the picture myself, I wouldnt have believed it."
YEARS OF DEAD ENDS
The case came after two other killings that remain unsolved the deaths of 8-year-old Travis Shane King, who disappeared Aug. 22, 1986, and was found dead across the state line the next day, and Ngoc Duong "Mai" Helvey, a 30-year-old expectant mother found beaten and stabbed to death in her crafts shop on Feb. 13, 1984.
TIMELINE
http://www.tricities.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=TRI%2FMGArticle%2FTRI_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031785398520&path=!news
The link won't post correctly. You will need to cut and paste into your address bar.
They dont have the shell casing that could link it to the murder weapon. They dont have the car in which the 18-year-old Virginia High School graduate died.
And they wont say what happened to them.
After more than 15 years of investigation, the city Police Department has lost evidence, accused a dead woman of murder and made no arrests.
NEW LIGHT ON AN OLD CASE
Questions have surrounded Salyers death for years, ever since the chilly night of Feb. 28, 1990, when a bullet struck her in the head as she drove home from work on northbound Interstate 81 near whats now Exit 7.
Police said for a decade and a half that the bullet crashed through the drivers side window of Salyers car just after midnight, apparently fired from a passing car.
Her car ran off the road, crossed the median and the southbound lanes, ricocheted off a tree and crashed into a fence, police said.
Authorities said they found just one clue the bullet that killed her, damaged almost beyond recognition. A search of the interstate failed to turn up a shell casing that could have helped identify the gun.
Salyers family wasnt surprised. They learned more than five years ago that the shooting wasnt random, that it wasnt a drive-by and that Salyer might have known her killer. But they still dont have the answers they want.
VANISHING EVIDENCE
Teresa Salyer finally saw the photo around 1998.
Police told the family it came from an enlargement of one of the original crime scene photos. They didnt say how they found it or why no one mentioned it before.
It showed a shell casing lying in the back seat of her sisters car.
"I saw the picture myself," she said. "If I hadnt seen the picture myself, I wouldnt have believed it."
YEARS OF DEAD ENDS
The case came after two other killings that remain unsolved the deaths of 8-year-old Travis Shane King, who disappeared Aug. 22, 1986, and was found dead across the state line the next day, and Ngoc Duong "Mai" Helvey, a 30-year-old expectant mother found beaten and stabbed to death in her crafts shop on Feb. 13, 1984.
TIMELINE
http://www.tricities.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=TRI%2FMGArticle%2FTRI_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031785398520&path=!news
The link won't post correctly. You will need to cut and paste into your address bar.