May 31, 2007

STUDENT MURDERED IN GHANA DURING SCHOOL TRIP



Phylicia Moore



What’s “Missing” from the Media? Missing Black Women




It is obvious that the mainstream media does not pay attention to missing black women. Especially considering this case is almost identical to that of Natalee Holloway, who went missing on a school trip to Aruba for her high school graduation. (See http://arubanboycott.blogspot.com) The difference? Phylicia is black, Natalee is white. Phylicia was found, Natalee has not.


Phylicia Moore, an 18-year old honor student from New Jersey, earned and saved every penny in order to go to Africa for a goodwill class trip to Ghana to donate books to orphaned children suffering from AIDS. 23 classmates joined her, along with nine chaperones.


Phylicia Moore died on April 15, 2007. This is almost two months later! Why didn’t the media pick up on this? Another 18-year old girl murdered in another country?


What Facts Do We Know?


Moore was last seen at 10:30 p.m. at the pool of her hotel with all the students and chaperones when she decided to go back to her room for the evening. Around 9:00 a.m. the next day, Moore was found dead, partially submerged in the hotel pool with her clothes on and no shoes. More



Questions:


Did Phylicia share a room with another student? Are there security cameras at the hotel? If so, were they checked? Why weren’t the students and chaperones officially questioned instead of submitting vague statements to Ghana officials before leaving?



Moore’s father, Douglass charged, “The chaperones didn’t do a bed check…someone murdered her and made it look like a drowning.” Ghana officials ruled her death as “an accidental drowning”; however, two months later no toxicology tests have been completed to rule out other possibilities! The preliminary autopsies in Ghana and the United States opined “an undetermined cause of death”. The Moore family hired an independent pathologist who determined that Phylicia Moore had been placed in the water only a short time before she was found.


Douglass Moore is questioning the autopsy and is urging federal agents to step in. However, Ghana is not required to petition assistance from the United States over a murdered American unless they ASK for help. Since April 15, Ghana has not asked federal officials for help in solving this case. The Moore family believes that Ghana officials are a part of a cover-up in the murder of his daughter.



Two months later…what has Ghana done?





May 27, 2007

JENNIFER KESSE--MISSING AFTER RETURNING FROM CRUISE...NOW 16 MONTHS LATER



I remember when this story first hit I was so deeply involved with the Natalee Holloway case to know every detail about Jennifer Kesse. To be honest, I had no idea she had JUST returned from a Caribbean cruise. All I knew was that she was missing.


Now nearly two years later, I've learned incredible amounts of information regarding stories and "outings" of human/sex trafficking, women and girls being abducted and sold into slavery off cruise ships or while vacationing. Not just women from other countries. Women in OUR COUNTRY. Add to that, Jennifer is one hot commodity in that business sector. She's young, blonde, white, thin... She would bring in a lot of money to whoever wanted to take her.


After reading more into this case I am definitely re-thinking my opinion and now consider her missing status as a possible abduction and not a murder.


Why? Three perfect reasons:


1. She was JUST on a cruise where someone could have been stalking and watching her the entire time. If that person were a cruise ship member they could have had records, including her name, where she was coming from and going to, when she was leaving, etc.



2. She is a beautiful blonde white woman. That's a diamond in the human/sex slave industry.


3. She conveniently lives in Orlando, Florida. Her abductor could have followed her or gathered information on where she lived. Florida is a gateway out of here for human trafficking. What better location for this crime?




One Crime...One Video...Too Late?

What happened to Jennifer Kesse, the blonde financial adviser from Orlando, Fla., who disappeared 16 months ago? Nobody knows, but a week ago, the Orlando police announced that they may finally have a break in the case.


To motivate anyone with information about the case to help investigators, Kesse's boss offered a $1 million reward for information that leads to Kesse's safe return by July 4.


Kesse, then 24, disappeared Jan. 23, 2006, apparently without a trace. She had just returned from a Caribbean cruise with her boyfriend. The following day, her parents and her boyfriend were alerted of her disappearance when she didn't arrive at work. Her Chevy Malibu, found parked in a condominium lot near her home three days later, seemed to be the only clue. And at the time, police obtained a video of a person they now consider a "person of interest."


A week ago the Orlando police released that grainy video to the public. The video shows someone parking Kesse's car in a condominium lot near her home on the day she disappeared. Police say they didn't release the video earlier because they were hoping to use it to check the story of any suspects.


Sgt. Barbara Jones of the Orlando Police Department told ABC News that the video was held back "as an investigative tool to be able to lock a suspect into the story," but added that "its release could generate more leads, significant leads which may break the case." Police hope that, despite the rough quality of the video, it might jog someone's memory about seeing that person that night. (How will releasing this video NOW jar anyone's memory from 16 months ago???)


Kesse, at 5 feet 8 inches, is at least four inches taller than the person on the video. She has sandy blond shoulder-length hair and green eyes and weighs 125 pounds. But the past week has yet to yield results. The parking lot camera was a considerable distance from the car and it's difficult to see the person parking it, but another camera shows that same person walking past a metal gate seconds later. In that video the person appears to be about 5 feet 4 inches in height, and wearing white socks with dark shoes. Neither camera clearly shows the person's face nor do they detail whether the person is a man or a woman.


Along with the $1 million reward being offered by Kesse's employer, her family has offered its own reward, started a Web page www.jenniferkesse.com and been active in keeping her disappearance in the public's consciousness. Kesse's parents addressed area media May 17, saying they believed Jennifer was abducted and had not simply run away. The release of the video showing someone else parking her car seems to reinforce the theory that there was foul play in her disappearance.


Jones, however, said that the status of the case remains the same; Jennifer Kesse is categorized as "a missing and endangered adult." They say that Kesse called her boyfriend at around 10 p.m. the night before she disappeared. That was the last contact she had with friends or family. Her credit cards and cell phone have not been used since her disappearance, according to police, and they point to the video to show that someone else, not Kesse, was the last to drive her car. The video shows that whoever parked the car did so very carefully, backing up at least once to make sure it went into the space straight. Police surmise that the person parking the car did not want it to attract attention, which may be why Kesse's car was not located for several days after her disappearance was reported.


Police say they have followed up more than 1,000 tips from all over the world, but so far the facts surrounding Kesse's disappearance remain elusive. Along with releasing the video, the police have a tip line 321-235-5300, as does the family 407-722-2162. Anyone with information about the case is asked to call either tip line.


May 24, 2007

CRAIG STEBIC OFFICIALLY SILENCES HIS CHILDREN





Craig Stebic Refuses To Let His Kids Talk To Cops



PLAINFIELD, Ill. (CBS 2) -- Investigators in Plainfield say Craig Stebic will not let them talk to his children about their mother's disappearance, and that he is no longer speaking to authorities himself on the advice of his attorney.


Deputy Chief Mark Eiting said Craig, as the children's legal guardian, can prohibit police from interviewing them. "He has the right as the parent to not let us talk to the children," Eiting said. But the Plainfield police do feel that the kids could be instrumental in the search for Lisa. "I feel confident that the 10- and 12-year-old children want us to find the whereabouts of their mom," said Plainfield Police Commander Mike Altenhoff.




Aside from visiting Lisa's two sisters two weekends ago, the children have remained home with their father when they are not at school and their father Craig has monitored their television viewing.


A neighbor said she and many of her neighbors are concerned about Lexi and Zach continuing to live with Craig. "I'm really scared for those children and that's really what everyone says, too," she said. "Who knows if he's going to snap with those children in the house."


A LOOK INTO CRAIG STEBIC AND HIS LIES

The Search of the Stebic Home


What was confiscated?

-Both Lisa and Craig Stebic’s vehicles
-Blankets and towels
-High-powered assault rifles and handguns
-AK-47 assault rifle
-Desert Eagle .44 Magnum
-Ruger mini-assault rifle
-10-gauge double barrel shotgun


Already Lying

He stated that the weekend before she went missing he went “deer hunting”. Then he changed his story to “I was hunting rabbits”.…The source says DNA from the blood-stained tarp found in Craig Stebic's truck matched Lisa Stebic.” (Source) 

So, if it was deer or rabbit blood, then why has this source claimed it was Lisa’s blood through DNA testing? I keep stressing Scott Peterson…but how eerie are the similarities between the two? 

Is Craig Stebic a murdering sociopath?
Rabbit and/or Deer Hunting? 

Craig Stebic claimed he was in Michigan “hunting” the weekend before Lisa disappeared. First he states he was hunting deer, then for rabbits. Here is the law in Michigan for rabbit and deer hunting:

Rabbit Hunting September 15, 2006 - March 31, 2007



Deer Hunting Bow: Oct 1- Nov 14, 2005, and Dec 1, 2005- Jan 2, 2006 

Regular Firearms: Nov 15-30, 2005 

Muzzleloaders: Dec 2-18, 2005 varies by zone- check web site


“Daddy Dearest” Craig Stebic's father, Joe, described Lisa Stebic in the past tense during an appearance on CNN's "Larry King Live."

"All he told me one time was that she was on that computer," Joe Stebic said. "He figures something happened over that computer and e-mail stuff. That's all I know." 

Then why didn’t the FBI take the computer? Because he’s full of BS. Typical action from someone as low as Scott Peterson’s parents.

What do the neighbors think? 

"He acts like it's a normal life," said neighbor Lisa Maggio who lives next to Stebic. "He does landscaping, goes to and from work. He acts like it's normal day to day, like she's coming home tomorrow; he doesn't seem like a normal father of kids should act of a missing mother."  Source

Other notables: 

Craig Stebic was arrested in 1995 for having the high powered rifles in the back of his pickup near an elementary school. During this time the Stebic’s were separated and Lisa was pregnant.


May 23, 2007

CRAIG STEBIC DENIED SOLE CUSTODY OF CHILDREN




JOLIET, Ill. — The husband of missing Illinois mom Lisa Stebic was denied sole custody of the couple's two children Tuesday. Craig Stebic's lawyer, Dion Davi, filed the legal motion after Lisa disappeared, arguing that his client was afraid that if and when Lisa ever came back, she may take off again, this time, with the children — Alexis, 12, and Zachary, 10.


In family court on Tuesday, Davi argued that while Lisa has been missing for three weeks, she has not assisted with any parenting responsibilities. Lisa's attorneys have filed on her behalf requesting that petition be denied.


Judge Joseph Polito ruled that Craig's case had no merit and struck his motion from consideration. Lisa's attorney, Glenn Kahn, told reporters after the hearing that the judgment has no impact on the kids and that they will remain under Craig's care, since he still has all of his legal rights. But Davi countered that, saying it's "unfortunate" the court ruled this way, because Craig is subject to the loss of certain rights if his wife were to take the kids to another jurisdiction without his permission.





May 21, 2007

LISA STEBIC'S FAMILY IN DENIAL?



I don't care how you look at it...this case is too familiar to that of Scott and Laci Peterson. It is a fact that most crime victims know their perpetrator...and the majority of homicides are committed by someone the victim knows. A large percentage of female homicides are committed by a man they have been involved with.


"In 2003, 1,817 females in the United States were murdered by males in cases in which a single offender killed a single victim. In more than nine in ten of these cases (92 percent), the victim was murdered by someone she knew. Three in five victims who knew their offenders (62 percent) were wives or intimate partners of their killers. " (Source)



If Craig Stebic is indeed the person involved
in Lisa's disappearance, what was his likely motive?


Divorce
Child Support
Child Visitation
Spousal Support
Hatred?


Click here for a detailed listing of domestic homicides of women by state



FAMILY HOLDING OFF BLAME


(Source)--The cousin of missing Illinois mom Lisa Stebic says her family is holding off casting blame on who may be responsible for her disappearance until evidence proves exactly what happened to her. "The police have not told us they have a suspect," Mark Greenberg told FOX News on Monday. "The people pointing fingers at this point are the media."



THE BLOOD STAINED TARP


Craig Stebic's divorce attorney, Dion Davi said that after two searches of the Stebic home earlier this month, he received from police an itemized list of what was taken from the home, which included the family computer. The tarp was not on the list for either of those two searches. That means it may be something else police found after those two searches that prompted the May 14 warrant.


Unnamed police sources said officials used the blood evidence to obtain the warrant by positing a scenario that her husband Craig, an avid hunter, might have used the tarp to transport his wife's body from the home. ...The car the blood was found in was one of the family's two vehicles, a 2002 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck. Craig Stebic gave police the family's computer but would not submit to a lie-detector test on the advice of his attorney.


...It was reported May 17 that Stebic was trying to have her husband evicted from their Plainfield, Ill., home so the family could "live in peace." Stebic's petition for temporary eviction stated he was being "unnecessarily relentless, cruel, inconsiderate, domineering and verbally abusive." His behavior was "jeopardizing the mental well-being" of their children, she wrote.

LISA STEBIC'S BLOOD FOUND ON TARP IN HUSBAND'S CAR





(CBS) Plainfield, Ill. There's a new lead in the disappearance of Lisa Stebic; it comes as friends and families mark the missing woman's birthday.


An unnamed police source saying police found a tarp in Craig Stebic's truck which has tested positive for his wife Lisa Stebic's blood.
The Will County State Attorney's Office will neither confirm nor deny that, saying the warrant is under seal.


It's information the missing woman's side of the family was surprised to hear.




A tarp investigators confiscated from Stebic's home as evidence has tested positive for Lisa Stebic's blood and that evidence sparked a judge to approve a search warrant on the home executed Monday.



"It's extremely painful and difficult," said Mark Greenberg, Lisa Stebic's cousin. We've been contacting and discussing what's been going on with police. We've asked them to tell as much as they can to us without jeopardizing the investigation. This is news to us."




And now for a perfect Scott Peterson quote:



Craig Stebic said he'd talk later, but
was busy with family during the birthday celebration.



May 17, 2007

THE STEBIC'S TROUBLED MARRIAGE AND CRAIG'S POSSIBLE MOTIVE

A Troubled marriage


Craig Stebic has said he and Lisa had not spoken much in the six months before she disappeared, essentially living separate lives under the same roof. In fact, Kahn's Wednesday motion said the couple had minimal interaction since October.


Craig filed for divorce in January, citing irreconcilable differences, according to court records. Lisa and Craig both sought joint custody of their children, ages 10 and 12, with Lisa as the residential custodial parent; child support; and division of their marital property.



IS THIS THE MOTIVE?


Lisa Stebic was seeking alimony, but Craig said they could each support themselves, court records say. According to Lisa's petition, Craig earns more than $80,000 per year, while she earns less than $10,000 per year.


Eight days after his wife was reported missing, Craig filed an emergency motion for custody of the kids. Davi said granting temporary custody would protect Craig in case Lisa planned to return, take the children and disappear again. Lisa had not previously threatened to take the children away, Davi said. But he felt the motion was necessary, considering the unanswered questions surrounding her disappearance.



Lisa's petition lends credence to some concerns her friends have raised since her disappearance, including that Lisa sought counseling at Guardian Angel Community Services in Joliet.


"I've heard her say, 'If anything ever happened to me, look towards Craig,'" said Amer Zegar, speaking with The Herald News' partner the Naperville Sun. Zegar and his wife hosted Lisa and her two children at his home several times since January. "I don't want to blame someone who's innocent. (But) we're scared, we really are," he said.


A friend of Lisa's said the petition didn't surprise her."Sometimes she'd come in (to work) in the morning and you could see she was crying. She didn't really want to talk about it," said a friend who didn't want her name used. "Lisa said things. I know it wasn't a pleasant situation. She was going to counseling in Joliet with her children."


(Source)


CRAIG STEBIC--IT'S COERCION! LISA STEBIC UPDATE...



Coercion: force or the power to use force in gaining
compliance, as by a government or police force.



I don't believe it's called coercion when a SEARCH WARRANT was issued by the Court. It is a lawful search of the premises in which Lisa Stebic was last seen. There must be probable cause to search the house, so Craig if you have nothing to hide, then you wouldn't have called it "coercion".



Looks like Craig Stebic needs
a basic lesson in the Constitution:


Under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, most searches by the police require a search warrant based on probable cause...in order to obtain a search warrant, an officer must first prove that probable cause exists based upon direct information or hearsay information. Hearsay information can even be obtained by oral testimony given over a telephone, so long as its source has a basis for its knowledge that is either reliable or has veracity, as determined by a totality of the circumstances. The standard for a search warrant is much lower than the lack of reasonable doubt required for a later conviction. (Source)






Lisa Stebic Filed To Have Husband Kicked Out


PLAINFIELD, Ill. (CBS 2) -- Lisa Stebic, the missing mother from Plainfield, tried to have her estranged husband evicted the day she disappeared.


An attorney for Stebic released a petition she mailed to his office. In it, she called husband Craig Stebic "unnecessarily relentless, cruel, inconsiderate, domineering and verbally abusive," and wrote that his conduct was "jeopardizing the mental well-being" of their two children, the Joliet Herald-News reported.


...Several friends painted a picture of an extremely troubled marriage. They said Lisa told them Craig threatened on several occasions that he would kill her and nobody would find her.


Family members have said the allegations surprised them and that Craig would never hurt his wife. But neighbor Amer Zegar said that last week, during visits to his home, Lisa spoke of receiving verbal abuse from her husband and expressed fear of him and his threats. Zegar and his wife, who declined to be named, said Lisa had been receiving counseling from the Guardian Angel Home in Joliet - a nonprofit organization that provides services for victims of domestic violence and rape.


The FBI and police earlier this week searched the Stebic home. Craig Stebic has accused authorities of coercion. "They say he's not a suspect. They say he's not a person of interest. But they come in the middle of the night, take the kids out of their sleep and force them to sleep in a car while they search for hours," said Craig Stebic's attorney.

(Source)



One does not have to be a person of interest in order to obtain a search warrant.




May 16, 2007

FORGET YOUR TRIP TO BERMUDA...



A botched investigation? A botched legal system? Corrupt officials? Corrupt government? Sound like Aruba?


Rebecca Middleton is victimized TWICE by the Court of Bermuda 

WASHINGTON - Bermuda's Supreme Court on Friday rejected an appeal by the father of slain Canadian teenager Rebecca Middleton to order a new investigation into the decade-old case - despite admitting prosecutors made grave errors in the initial prosecution. 

Judge Richard Ground, Bermuda's chief justice, expressed "great personal sympathy" for Middleton's parents, but ruled no further charges could be brought against the girl's two alleged killers. 

In an 18-page decision, Bermuda's top judge said the primary suspects in Middleton's brutal rape and murder were protected by strict "double jeopardy" rules barring prosecutors from bringing new charges for crimes arising from the same set of facts. 

In 1998, members of the jury were taken to the beach where the rape and murder of Rebecca Middleton took place. "Prosecutorial error or oversight is not a good reason," Ground wrote. "Despite eloquent arguments advanced to the contrary, it is not permissible for me to ignore or modify" the law. 

Middleton was on vacation in Bermuda when she was discovered lying partially naked on a deserted road with 35 stab wounds. 

The investigation later determined she had been restrained and repeatedly raped during the assault. Despite strong circumstantial and forensic evidence linking two men - Kirk Mundy and Justis Smith - to the killing, neither of the accused was ever convicted of a serious crime. 

Before waiting for the results of forensic evidence, prosecutors cut a deal with Mundy to plead guilty. He served five years in prison for accessory to murder, in exchange for testimony implicating Smith in Middleton's death. 

Smith was acquitted of murder after the judge in his trial directed the jury to acquit him - a decision later described as "astonishing" by Bermuda's privy council. Bermuda's director of public prosecutions, in a March 2006 decision, determined any new charges would constitute an "abuse of process" against the two men. 

Test results had linked Mundy directly to the crime. His semen was found inside Middleton and lawyers have dismissed his claim of consensual sex as preposterous. But "the Crown ... remains bound by its original agreement," Ground wrote. "There is no new evidence now available that would change that ... because Mundy always admitted presence at the scene and (sexual) intercourse, further DNA evidence which now links him to the crime would add nothing." 

Despite the botched investigation and prosecution into Middleton's death, Ground said he agreed with earlier findings that "it is the law against double jeopardy, not any want of evidence, which debars further proceedings" in the case.

(entire article)
Read the case history of the Rebecca Middleton case HERE

FORMER MISSING GIRL TANYA KACH GETS HER DAY IN COURT





Sex slave case goes to trial
McKeesport suspect stabbed self before last trial



Allegheny County prosecutors will try again today to bring to trial a former school security guard accused of keeping Tanya Kach under his control at his McKeesport home for 10 years.




On the eve of his last scheduled trial in February, Thomas D. Hose reportedly took pills and inflicted a half-dozen superficial stab wounds to his abdomen. The trial, or possible plea hearing, was postponed until this month while Mr. Hose went to Mayview State Hospital for evaluation. So far as his attorney knows, Mr. Hose, 49, remains at Mayview. Asked about his client's health and mental state, attorney James Ecker said he has not spoken with Mr. Hose lately, but expects him to be in Common Pleas Court today for jury selection in his trial.


Also today, Mr. Hose's co-defendant, Judith C. Sokol, 58, of Duquesne, is also scheduled for trial in the case. Ms. Sokol is charged with child endangerment for allegedly helping Mr. Hose change the victim's appearance and to permit sexual encounters between Mr. Hose and the victim at Ms. Sokol's home.


Tanya Kach turned up in McKeesport 14 months ago, 10 years after she disappeared as a 14-year-old student at Cornell Intermediate School, where Mr. Hose was a security guard. Kach told police she had been kept a psychological prisoner by Mr. Hose while she lived under the alias, "Nikki Diane Allen."


Testimony at previous court proceedings has indicated Mr. Hose had sex with Miss Kach during the time she lived in his home, located in the same neighborhood as the home in which Kach was raised. Kach filed a federal lawsuit last September against the McKeesport School District, its school board, the city of McKeesport, its police department and a number of individuals she claims were negligent and responsible for her detention by Mr. Hose.


http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07136/786265-55.stm



GIRLS GONE WILD? NOPE...TRY JOE GOES SUICIDAL



Poor Joe Francis...



Joe, don't you know what happens to the new guys who cry and whine first in prison? They are subjected to being passed around as "the new bitch"...and who knows? You may even have a new boyfriend named "teabag"! (Use your imagination...) But threatening to commit suicide because you broke MANY laws and knew it is pretty pathetic. Are you in the same camp at pathetic Paris? Are you both writing each other letters and crying over your demise?


Get used to that orange jumpsuit...it works well for you!



MAY 14--"Girls Gone Wild" boss Joe Francis has been having such a rough time in a Florida jail that he recently told a psychiatrist that suicide was a possibility if his imprisonment was prolonged.


The porn impresario, who this week finishes a 45-day sentence for criminal contempt, also told Dr. Ronald Markman that he was being housed with "all murderers" in his section of the Bay County lockup.



"I started freaking out and screaming, I couldn't breathe," said Francis. "I don't think I can handle this on a long-term thing--I'm not a criminal."



Markman, hired by Francis's defense team, interviewed the 34-year-old late last month and drafted the below report, which was filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Nevada. Markman concluded that while Francis was "clinically stable," he demonstrated "significant psychiatric issues" for which he has shunned treatment due to embarrassment.


During a two-hour interview, the inmate appeared to minimize his drug and alcohol use, Markman concluded. Francis denied using pot, claimed to have tried cocaine only a few times, and said he had one drink per week. (WHAT COMPLETE B.S.!!! I'm sure many can attest to his drinking and weed use. Once a liar, always a liar!) He also copped to trying mushrooms.


The psychiatric report was included in a defense filing seeking to have Francis expeditiously transferred from the Florida jail to Reno, Nevada, where he is to soon be arraigned on a federal indictment charging him with tax evasion.






Part of Psychiatric Report:


"…he did, however, express a potential for suicidal activity if his incarceration is prolonged. (Just like a little boy…if I don’t get my way I’ll hold my breath until I’m blue! Keep holding that breath, Joe. Throwing out suicidal threats won’t get you anywhere.)


There was no evidence of a psychotic process or thought disorder, though he demonstrated a rather authoritative demeanor. Judgment was generally adequate, though he acknowledged a lack of patience and understanding with the recent events that led to his incarceration. There was some evidence of social immaturity, while insight to his situation was rather marginal.

Based on this initial evaluation, I would make a preliminary diagnosis of:


AXIS I: Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder vs. Bipolar Disorder vs. Cyclothymic Disorder. Adjustment Disorder with Anxiety vs. Anxiety Disorder. R/O Polysubstance Abuse.

AXIS II: Personality Disorder, NOS (Not otherwise specified), with Immature Narcissistic Features









While Francis petitioned to be allowed to travel from Florida to Nevada via commercial airliner, that request was rejected last week by a federal magistrate judge. Instead, Francis, who usually travels via Lear jet, will fly cross-country on "ConAir", the no-frills (and often circuitous) prisoner transport service operated by the U.S. Marshals Service.







35 MINUTES ON PARIS AND ONLY 10 ON LISA STEBIC?




On Monday night Nancy Grace dedicated 35 minutes to Paris Hilton’s jail time and only 10 minutes on missing mother, Lisa Stebic! What has this world come to? I realize that the MSM relies on ratings…but with so many people out there that hate Paris Hilton and could give a damn about her, why would Nancy’s show concentrate so heavily on the SAME issue night after night?


In my opinion, Lisa Stebic’s disappearance is eerily similar to that of Laci and Scott Peterson. I find this more important than poor Ms. Hilton and dire attention is needed on this case…NO MORE NEWS ON PARIS HILTON!



Here are some latest developments:

  • Lisa’s children, 10 and 12 years old, say they last saw their mom at about 3:00 o`clock in the afternoon.
  • Lisa’s husband Craig reported she went out for a jog and was last seen at approximately 6:00 p.m. on April 30, 2007. She did not take her vehicle, but her purse and cell phone are missing.
  • Craig never reports Lisa missing. Instead he asks a neighbor if he had seen her. The neighbor felt something was suspicious and called the police himself. Craig Stebic never contacted police at any time.
  • Lisa and Craig were in the process of a divorce, but still living under the same roof. Neighbors said Lisa was going to counseling sessions at a facility in Joliet for victims of domestic violence. But others say it was counseling for their son about the pending divorce.
  • In 2006, the Plainfield police were called to the home on a report of verbal fighting. Craig Stebic said Lisa came home late; Lisa had told friends that Craig locked her out of the house that night.
  • In 1995 Craig Stebic was arrested in Lake County and faced two felony counts and four misdemeanor counts of unlawful use of a weapon. Police found a 10-gauge double-barrel shotgun, a .44 magnum semi-automatic pistol, a Ruger Mini-14 assault rifle and an AK-47 semiautomatic rifle in his pickup truck. He reportedly received supervision for the offenses.
  • Craig Stebic stuns family by refusing to take a polygraph.
  • On the day of Lisa's disappearance, Craig Stebic gave the children money to go to the store to buy some candy. At this point Craig and Lisa are alone in the house. When the children return, Lisa is gone.



My question: What time did the children leave and get home from the store?


  • The police have not had contact with Lisa’s children since the day that she went missing. Police want to speak with the children, but are unable due to Craig Stebic unwillingness to cooperate.
  • Divers searched a couple of retention ponds near the Stebic home last week but found nothing.
  • Craig is using an attorney and the police have to go through Stebic`s attorney. A request by the police made to have the children sent to the Will County advocacy center several days ago. Craig Stebic`s attorney has not given the go-ahead on this issue.



Craig Stevic’s attorney Dion Davi, put forth a statement:


"All courses of action that I have taken have been in the best interest of my client and his children. We have in no way intended or hampered the investigation that the police are conducting," he says. "With the exception of the polygraph, all requests made by the Plainfield Police Department have been met or in the process of being met. We intend to fully cooperate and assist in any way possible with the investigation."



Question: Did the police search the house where Lisa was last seen?


Ed Miller reporter for "America’s Most Wanted" stated, "Well, they have searched inside the house, but my sources tell me that, as of now, this investigation is severely hindered because of the husband. In other words, they did a very quick search in the very beginning.


They did speak to the children in the very beginning, as well as they did speak to the husband, Craig, in the very beginning. But as you well know, in any investigation, they do follow-up questions. And the husband is not cooperating.


Through his attorney, he says he is cooperating, but that`s not really the definition that police believe cooperation is. In other words, if you really are looking for your wife, whether or not you`re getting divorced -- that is the mother of your children -- you would say, "Sure, come on in. What can I do to help? Ask me anything."



Lisa's husband is the only logical suspect:




Pat Brown, a criminal profiler stated, “Well, I`m guessing they`re looking very heavily at that husband, because, who else is there to look at, at this point? You know, this man, if he were innocent, he would be not doing what he’s doing. If he was innocent, there would be no physical evidence in his house, no physical evidence in his car, no physical evidence anywhere near him. So what`s his problem?”

(source 1)
(source 2)



LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:

  • A search warrant was issued and Plainfield Police, the Joliet Police Department's Special Operation Squad and the FBI's Evidence Reponse Team swarmed the home of missing Plainfield woman Lisa Stebic and her husband, Craig, at about 11:30 p.m. searching for four hours and eventually taking away the couple's two vehicles (a 2002 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck and a 2004 four-door Saturn Ion. Both were registered to Craig Stebic, but one was used by Lisa.)
  • There may be other possible evidence and the contents of that warrant are under court seal.
  • Craig Stebic gave police no protest as they entered the home.





May 13, 2007

WHERE IS BRIANNA MAITLAND?


Whereabouts of Vermont teen still a mystery


With few clues in her disappearance three years ago, parents offer reward



VERMONT - People who knew her say Brianna Maitland had a lot of life, happiness and spontaneity. Just life sparking from her eyes. They say she had poise — everybody would turn around and look. She's the kind of girl that attracted a lot of attention. Brianna has drawn a lot of attention from folks in rural, upstate Vermont, an area known for its rustic beauty and solitude. But the tranquility here has been shattered by a disturbing possibility — that something horrible may have happened to the beautiful girl with the broad smile, who vanished more than two years ago. The mystery surrounding 17-year-old Brianna began on March 19, 2004.


The day had gone well enough, according to her mother, Kellie. “I was with her most of that day,” she recalls. “We went out for breakfast. We went shopping. It was an upbeat day.” Kellie was happy to have the time with her daughter. Months earlier, Brianna, who had just earned her graduate equivalency degree and was anticipating college, had moved out and was living with a girlfriend.


Her independent streak had become a sore subject with both her mom and her father, Bruce. “I didn't want her to be out living on her own,” Bruce says. “It was an arrangement that we didn't like, but we tolerated.” “We didn't have a choice,” Kellie says. To support herself, Brianna had taken a job as a dishwasher at a local bed and breakfast.


That Friday, after shopping with her mom, Brianna went on to work. Bruce and Kellie happened to pass by the inn that night, and thought about stopping to say hi, then changed their minds. “She hadn't worked there that long, and it was like, well, you know, maybe she wouldn't want her parents coming in and you know, hi, here we are type thing, so we didn't stop,” Bruce says. “And you know -- I mean, you know, now I wish very much that we would have stopped.” At 11:20 p.m., Brianna clocked out, and according to detective Brian Miller of the Vermont State Police, had left a note with her roommate, saying she would be home after work.

Rob Stafford, Dateline correspondent:
Does anyone see her get into her car at the restaurant?

Brian Miller, Vermont State police: Yes. Other employees recalled her leaving the restaurant and getting in her car, driving away.

Within seconds, she disappeared into the cold and gloom of that late winter night. No one has reported seeing her since.

Stafford:
In talking to the people at the restaurant, how did Brianna seem at work that night?
Miller: She seemed fine. She was — seemed herself.
Stafford: Did she seem upset in any way?
Miller: No.

Precious time would pass before anyone realized she was missing. Her roommate assumed Brianna had changed her mind and gone to her parents house. Bruce and Kellie had no idea their daughter was missing until three days later when the roommate called looking for Brianna. “A few minutes into the conversation, you know, we think something's pretty seriously wrong, but I'm not into a full-fledged panic yet,” Bruce says. We think, 'Well, okay, Brianna, she just went to another friend's or something that she had and decided to stay there for a couple of days.'”

Stafford:
But those feelings are about to change.
Bruce: Yeah.

The change in their quiet lives would be dramatic and frightening. First, they went to the state police, to see if they had any news about their daughter. On a hunch, police showed them a photograph. “And he pulls this picture of Brianna's car out of the file and says, "is this your daughter's car?" Bruce says. “My stomach rolled,” Kellie says. “I started to shake. I saw evil in the picture.”



“Now you're terrified to know that — something really bad has happened,” Bruce says. Then Brianna vanished, her car was spotted at an abandoned farmhouse, about a mile from where Brianna worked. Police assumed the car had been ditched, and had it towed to a local garage. Now, as her parents looked at the picture, they panicked. The tail end of the car had been slammed backwards into the side of the building. Did Brianna have an accident, or did something more sinister happen?

Stafford: One theory you have is that someone spotted your daughter, became obsessed with her, hid in the back seat of her car. She didn't now the person was there. She's driving home, and that person attacks her.
Bruce: Yes, yes.
Kellie: That's a possibility.

Her parents took some comfort in the fact that Brianna was very strong, and knew self defense. But their anxiety was growing. Four days had passed since Brianna was last seen. Bruce was furious that even after this much time police hadn't searched the trunk of Brianna's car to see what was inside. When he learned the keys had been lost, Bruce grabbed a crowbar and headed to the garage.

Stafford: What is going through your mind as you're prying open the trunk of your daughter's car?
Bruce: Oh, dear God, please, let not her be in there.

She wasn't, and police looked through the rest of the car for possible clues.

Stafford:
Any signs of a struggle inside the car?
Miller: No.
Stafford: Any sign that she was a victim of some violent confrontation at the scene where her car was found?
Miller: No. There's nothing obvious to indicate that at all.

Brianna was curious about the world beyond the Vermont hills. Despite that, her parents don't think she ran away. Police found her contact lenses, and migraine headache medicine in the car, along with two paychecks, totaling less than $150 — money that would have been crucial to a teenager living on her own.

Stafford:
The fact her paychecks are still in the car, what does that tell you?
Miller: That she either intended to go back to the car at some point and retrieve her personal belongings, or that, you know, she didn't leave willingly.

Family and friends began a frantic search and posted flyers pleading for help. Tips came in and one went directly to Bruce — the caller told him some men were holding Brianna against her will at a house outside of town. Bruce called the police, who moved in.

Stafford:
What do they find in that house?
Bruce: They find everything that has to do with selling crack cocaine and — and — you know and all the paraphernalia, a gun, thinning agent, scales, ledgers, everything a drug dealer would have in the house.

Although she was familiar with the men who lived there, the raid failed to turn up any sign of Brianna. Still, drug use had become a growing scourge in this rural area in recent years. Had Brianna been involved with drugs?

Miller: I would say she experimented with a wide range of drugs.
Stafford: And do you think that is at all connected to her disappearance?
Miller: We cannot rule it out.

Her parents are convinced she didn't do hard drugs. Whatever the case, more than a year would pass without any solid leads.

Stafford: At that point, have you lost all hope of finding Brianna alive?
Bruce: Not all hope, but it's pretty — it's a pretty dim light.

Then, nearly two years after Brianna's car was found at this building, there was a dramatic turn in the case — a tip to police that Brianna might be alive. That she was spotted 500 miles from here in a place no one would have expected. Vermont police received a startling call from a local man, who had been visiting Atlantic City, New Jersey. “And he says, ‘I was down in Caesar's Palace and I was playing cards. I saw this woman. I think it was Brianna Maitland,’” Miller says. Kellie and Bruce weren't sure what to make of the news.

Stafford: Are you afraid to allow yourself to believe this could be the real thing?
Bruce: Yeah, kind of — I'm, you know — at that point you — you just not — you know, not again, you know, not again, not — not one more time. I just, you know, don't want another — I don't want another false alarm.



Security cameras barely captured the woman on tape. She and the man sitting next to her are wearing matching T-shirts with an unusual logo on the front. The lighting is poor and the quality of the video is bad. Still, Kellie sees strong similarities between the woman on the tape, and her daughter Brianna.


“Oh, the side profile is almost identical,” Kellie says. “The only thing that was different slightly was the end of the nose. It kind of had a little bit more of a ball at the end of the nose then what I'd recalled. Other than that it was — it was a ringer.”


Many of Brianna's friends think it's her too. But Bruce is not convinced.


“I want to believe that it's her. I really do,” he says. “And you kind of — whenever you want something so bad you can't even trust your eyes sometimes, especially when it's not clear.” If it's not Brianna, then who is the mystery woman? If it is her, where is she now and why hasn't she called her family and friends?

Stafford: If Brianna is the person on that tape, what do you want her to know?
Kellie: We love her very much. And that we hope if we've done anything wrong that she could forgive us if we have. If there's anything that she thinks we couldn't understand we'd be willing to forgive that. The love we have for her is beyond everything.

Bruce and Kellie are waiting for someone to come forward and positively identify the woman in the casino. In the meantime, they say that they themselves see Brianna, everywhere, and nowhere.

Bruce: You see this girl on the cell phone over there?
Kellie: Yes.
Stafford: And, you did a double take.
Kellie: Oh, yeah.
Bruce: Sure. Right there, even now.
Kellie: Yeah.
Bruce: Yeah. She looks a little like Brianna.
Kellie: She does. There's a strong resemblance.

The Maitlands have offered a $20,000 reward for information about Brianna's whereabouts. This mystery is their nightmare, and more than three years later, they have no idea how or if it will end.

Bruce: We'll find out. Or we'll die trying, one of the two.


May 3, 2007

MINNESOTA WOMAN DRUGGED, RAPED IN CANCUN

Does this remind anyone of Natalee Holloway? When you are out of the country, you have NO rights, the laws are usually very different and less strict, and the victim usually never gets justice.


Just remember, you are NEVER automatically safe on vacation.




(Source)--"The last memory that I had was drinking my drink and then all the sudden, it just went black," a Twin Cities mother recalls as she dabbed her eyes with a tissue. We'll call her Mary. Mary says she was drugged and raped while on vacation in Cancun, Mexico.


"I had fingerprints, bruising on my arm, I looked down and I really knew then that I had been assaulted," Mary said. She admits she left her beer unattended at a hotel bar, she believes someone slipped Rohypnol into her drink. Mary tells us she does vaguely remember seeing a man on top of her before blacking out again.


"There is just a period of time and it is usually a couple of hours, where there is absolutely no memory," Emily Huemann said of Rohypnol. Huemann is the program coordinator for Ramsey County Sexual Offense Services.


The U.S. State Department has warnings for travelers on its website, addressing the situation Mary describes. Government officials say drugging drinks is common in resort city nightclubs in Mexico.



Mary says when she woke up, "I felt really helpless, I felt like oh my god, nobody is here to help me." She says she didn't get any help from hotel staff and claims her travel agent told her if she couldn't identify her attacker, police would not help.



"She looked right at me and said, oh honey, Cancun is very dangerous, she said this happens all the time," Mary recalled her travel agent saying. Mary's husband got in touch with the U.S. Embassy. A worker there told her not to go to a hospital in Mexico because there are no rape kits in there. She was told to come home immediately and get medical help. (Meaning go home and forget about it...)


When she got home, she says emotional help was tough to find. There are no sexual assault support groups in Anoka County where she lives. At this point, Mary is on a waiting list for a support group in another county.


Mary started sending out dozens and dozens of emails, and it's made a difference. Anoka County is now working on setting up support groups. "I'm not going to let the shame of this crime stop me from getting the help that I need, and helping other people," she concluded.