Posts Tagged ‘Missing’

Commodities broker from Chicago faked death

By alisa in Chicago, court cases, Crime, fraud, Investigations, legal papers, Missing Persons Investigations at July 22nd, 2011 | No comments

Arthur Gerald Jones, who had a seat on the Chicago Board of Trade, was reported missing in 1979. Police were suspicious of his disappearance and they believed his intentions to vanish were from his gambling debts and other trouble he might have been in.

In 1986, Jones was declared dead and his family collected his social security benefits.

“Mr. Jones apparently had a valid Social Security number that was issued to another person, and that’s how he was discovered, was someone filed a complaint,” said Kevin Malone of the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles. Investigators found that Jones had been alive the whole time, living under the alias of Joseph Richard Sandelli. Malone said Jones first went to Florida under the Sandelli alias, and then to Las Vegas in the late 1980s.

Jones is set to appear in court on charges of felony identity theft and fraud on Aug. 23.

Read more @ CBS Chicago News

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Care Trak Helps Locate the Lost

By admin in Chicago, gps, gps tracker, Illinois, Investigations, Locate Investigations, Missing Children, Missing Persons, Missing Persons Investigations, MSI Detective Services, Police Records, Technology, technorati at September 5th, 2010 | No comments

CareTrakIn a story from the Daily Herald, Buffalo Grove Police in Illinois announced Care Trak, a new program that will enable them to track, and find, persons with special needs if they go missing during a city council meeting last week.

The system uses radio transmitters to “find individuals with Alzheimer’s, autism, Down syndrome and similar disabilities who may have wandered away. It is available to residents who meet the guidelines, which include having a full-time caregiver.”

Families who meet a “needs assessment” can buy the transmitters–about the size of a standard wrist watch–and secure it to the wrist or ankle of family members. Once attached and activated, the transmitter sends out a signal, which will allow police to locate individuals who are missing.

Once notified, police can use directional tracking devices to locate the missing individual; the range of the signal varies, about a mile on the ground or five from an aircraft.

According to the Daily Herald, sixteen departments in Northern Illinois use the system, including Schaumburg, Crystal Lake and Naperville. It has assisted in more than 2,000 rescues.

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Missing Girl Found 7-Years Later

By admin in Attorney Services, Crime, Missing Children, Missing Persons, MSI Detective Services, Police Records, Private Investigator, Safety, Security, Surveillance Services, technorati at July 17th, 2010 | 1 comment

A 7-year Los Angeles cold case regarding the disappearance of Amber Nicklas is nearing resolution. FBI, Los Angeles, and Arizona police officers, armed with court orders, found Amber Nicklas–now 8-years old–living in a Phoenix home with her “family.”

Missing

The story is bizarre, and much of the information is confidential due to the ages of those involved.  In September 2003, Amber Nicklas was living with foster parents when her three biological aunts visited her, taking their niece to a nearby Chuck E. Cheese restaurant. The child was never returned to foster care, and two of the three aunts were arrested, charged, and imprisoned. The third aunt, along with the baby girl had vanished.

In late 2009, a LA County detectives received a lead that was strong enough to re-open the case; it turned out to be false, but detectives were already re-examining details and updating the case with new information. The only hard evidence–a picture of baby Amber and a footprint from her birth certificate.

In early July 2010, detectives found–and interviewed–the missing third aunt who had disappeared with Amber. Following this interview, and armed with a court order, LA detectives knocked on a Phoenix-area door to discover Amber was alive and well, living with her “family” (her parents and two siblings).  The Phoenix family–whose names are not being released–were raising Amber in the Gypsy tradition, and hired an attorney, claiming they were unaware the girl was considered missing.

Amber’s biological grandmother, according to their lawyer,  gave them custody of the child in 2003 because the girl’s mother, a drug addict, was unfit to provide care.

At this stage, no one is facing criminal charges because there are no signs of abuse or neglect. Los Angeles County Captain Patrick Maxwell said his investigators were ‘heartbroken’ and emotionally ‘torn up’ because Amber’s been returned to foster care, far away from the only family she’s known.

While authorities in both LA and Phoenix are searching for answers, no doubt struggling with the notion that the motives behind Amber’s abduction were to provide the girl with a better chance in life, her Phoenix family plans to petition for her custody.

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Profiler Comments on Missing Boy

By admin in Attorney Services, Chicago, Crime, Criminal Background Check, Criminal Records, Illinois, invasion of privacy, Investigations, Missing Children, MSI Detective Services, Police Records, Private Investigator, Surveillance Services, Technology, technorati at June 16th, 2010 | 1 comment

Parents worry about their young children all of the time. However, the worry tends to abate when parents feel secure knowing that their kids are with relatives, at home, or in school.  Unfortunately, the Kyron Horman disappearance is eroding the public’s trust in school safety.kyron_horman_missing

Last seen wearing a pair of black cargo pants, white socks, black Sketchers (tennis shoes) and a black CSI t-shirt, Kyron disappeared from his Oregon elementary school on Friday, June 11th, 2010.

The boy, age 7, was reported missing when he did not return from school on the bus. His stepmother, the last person who had contact with Kyron, said that he was walking to his classroom when she dropped him off that morning.

When Kyron didn’t return home after school, his parent contacted the school, learning then that he never made it to class. They immediately contacted police, who launched a missing person’s search. According to this morning’s news, the search is now a criminal investigation.

As professional private investigators, MSI’s detectives have seen their share of missing child investigations, but not one that occurred in broad daylight on elementary school grounds. The reported circumstances in this case are very troubling.

In Portland, a criminal profiler echoed our thoughts,  on record that they don’t think a stranger played a role in the boy’s disappearance.

According to criminal profiler Dr. Ron Turco, “Something doesn’t fit. He was an intelligent boy and was very proud of what he did at school. You have to hypothesize that he went with someone he knew. A family member or someone associated with the family.” (Dr. Turco is not involved with the investigation and offered his professional opinion.)

Oregon police investigators seem to agree, but have not commented on the pending investigation, stating that Kyron is “an endangered missing child.”

If you have any information concerning this case, please contact the local tip line in Oregon at (503)- 261-2847 or your nearest FBI Office. In Chicago: (312) 421-6700.

The FBI’s Missing Person description:

“Kyron is a White male with blue eyes and brown hair. He is 3’8″ tall and weighs 50 pounds. Kyron was last seen wearing a black T-shirt with the letters “CSI” in green and a handprint graphic on it, black cargo pants, white socks, and black Skechers sneakers with orange trim. He wears wire-rimmed glasses.”

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