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DNA technology is often used successfully to identify human remains. Just this week, detectives announced they identified a John Doe found 45 years ago in Snohomish County as a transient Native American man. Detectives also identified a Jane Doe who went missing 41 years ago from her Lake Loma cabin as Alice Lou Williams. Now, one local mom is hoping to get some answers after her daughter, Jessica Seybold, disappeared in 2017.
www.q13fox.com
ARLINGTON — Over four years since Jessica Seybold was last seen, the Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office was searching a property east of Arlington this week, searching for clues in her disappearance.
Seybold, then 39, was last seen in the Trafton area on Dec. 13, 2017. The sheriff’s office received a tip related to a property there to search, spokesperson Courtney O’Keefe said. “That is one of the last known places she was seen,” she said.
Anyone with information related to Seybold’s disappearance can submit tips to the sheriff’s office at 425-388-3845. Callers can be anonymous.
www.heraldnet.com
The weekend she went missing, Becky Woeppel, Seybold's mother, told FOX 13 that her daughter told her she was at a home near Arlington. Then, she video-messaged her mom on Facebook from outside Angel of the Winds Casino, telling her that she was scared and that she was with a "creepy guy who had her car keys."
Woeppel says she believes her daughter is buried on that property near Arlington.
So far, investigators have recovered bags of buried trash and even furniture,but no human remains yet.
Detectives say they also did ground-penetrating radar, but the problem with that is there is so much trash and junk and rocks that it was hard to see.
Woeppel said she hopes this excavation will bring her daughter’s cold case to a close.
"It kills me inside to know what she went through and the animals are out and running around and they're going to do it to somebody else's child," she Woeppel said. "Our family needs to be able to say goodbye to her."
"They definitely need to be nervous because they're criminals. They’re murderers. They’re rapists and they’re pigs. They don't belong outside of a jail cell," she said.
www.q13fox.com
DNA technology is often used successfully to identify human remains. Just this week, detectives announced they identified a John Doe found 45 years ago in Snohomish County as a transient Native American man. Detectives also identified a Jane Doe who went missing 41 years ago from her Lake Loma cabin as Alice Lou Williams. Now, one local mom is hoping to get some answers after her daughter, Jessica Seybold, disappeared in 2017.

Digging for answers: Detectives searching for new clues in case of woman missing since 2017
DNA technology is often used successfully to identify human remains. Just this week, detectives announced they identified a John Doe found 45 years ago in Snohomish County as a transient Native American man. Detectives also identified a Jane Doe who went missing 41 years ago from her Lake Loma...
Seybold, then 39, was last seen in the Trafton area on Dec. 13, 2017. The sheriff’s office received a tip related to a property there to search, spokesperson Courtney O’Keefe said. “That is one of the last known places she was seen,” she said.
Anyone with information related to Seybold’s disappearance can submit tips to the sheriff’s office at 425-388-3845. Callers can be anonymous.

Sheriff’s office excavates property in search for missing woman | HeraldNet.com
Jessica Seybold, 39, has been missing since December 2017. Authorities received a tip about a property east of Arlington.
The weekend she went missing, Becky Woeppel, Seybold's mother, told FOX 13 that her daughter told her she was at a home near Arlington. Then, she video-messaged her mom on Facebook from outside Angel of the Winds Casino, telling her that she was scared and that she was with a "creepy guy who had her car keys."
Woeppel says she believes her daughter is buried on that property near Arlington.
So far, investigators have recovered bags of buried trash and even furniture,but no human remains yet.
Detectives say they also did ground-penetrating radar, but the problem with that is there is so much trash and junk and rocks that it was hard to see.
Woeppel said she hopes this excavation will bring her daughter’s cold case to a close.
"It kills me inside to know what she went through and the animals are out and running around and they're going to do it to somebody else's child," she Woeppel said. "Our family needs to be able to say goodbye to her."
"They definitely need to be nervous because they're criminals. They’re murderers. They’re rapists and they’re pigs. They don't belong outside of a jail cell," she said.

'Our family needs to be able to say goodbye:' Detectives excavating property near Arlington for missing mom
Deputies are digging up a property near Arlington in hopes of finding 39-year-old Jessica Seybold, a mother of two who disappeared in the area in 2017.
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