SheWhoMustNotBeNamed
Former Member
3 years this Christmas day since Larry disappeared.
$10,000 reward.

The Yakima Herald-Republic (http://is.gd/DGI3mv ) reports 51-year-old Ladena Mann appeared by summons Friday in Yakima Superior Court on felony welfare charges linked to Larry Riegel's disappearance.
Where was Larry? It's still a question to which his family will simply not give up hunting for answers.
"My poor mother. She's 86 and doesn't know what's happened to her only son," Sally Green, another of Larry's four sisters, told Dateline. "We're going to do whatever we have to in order to get those answers."
Years soon ticked on, but answers never came. A private investigator was hired, funded by the family, and a cadaver dog was brought in during the summer of 2010 to sniff around an area they thought Larry could have been buried. Nothing, however, was uncovered.
To make matters more troubling, family members say Larry had undergone neck surgery to address some neurological and pain issues in his upper back just a few weeks prior to his disappearance.
Lt. Nolan Wentz of the Yakima Police Department has been running down leads in Larry's case for nearly three years. Wentz was doing internal investigations at the time when the department's captain recommended he take a look at the case.
"Usually when people hand me a missing person's case, it's a homicide. And I believe this is the case here too," Wentz told Dateline.
Countless hours have been spent tracking each person who may play a role in the puzzle of the case. But perhaps the people who may hold the best possible key have not yet been identified.
It's been nearly seven years since Susan Riegel Vaughn has spoken with her brother Larry, described as a beloved hunter, pilot, and family man.
He was supposed to come to a family gathering the day after Christmas in 2009, but never showed.
"I felt instinctively that something was wrong," Susan said.
His family sent him countless texts and phone calls in the following weeks.
But weeks went by with no response. Weeks turned into months, then years.
What began as a missing person's case, is now a homicide investigation.
"We want to know what happened, we want to know the circumstances," Susan said.
A few leads have come up in the investigation, but nothing strong enough to prosecute. The case is even more difficult without a body and little physical evidence.
"I do have a fair idea, based on what information I do have, what probably did take place, but until someone is able to come forward and confirm that, it's just speculation," Lt. Wentz said.
Yakima County Prosecutor Joe Brusic is now taking on the investigation.
"I believe that there are people out in our community that know exactly what happened to Larry Riegel. And I want to talk with those people and I want to find out what they know," Brusic said.
Riegel’s 67th birthday was Dec. 15. A few days later, a new billboard went up near the Eakin Fruit Co. in Union Gap. Alongside a big photo of a smiling Riegel are these words: “Remember Me? 10 years and the search continues.” The billboard includes a new $25,000 reward for tips that lead to the recovery of Riegel’s remains and urges those with information to call the Yakima Police Department.
Family of man missing for 10 years increases reward for information