The way the town came together to take care of her when she was unknown. How they cared for her memory and how the detective spent his life trying to identify her. They were wonderful people to do all that.
This has really touched me. So many loved and cared for an unknown person. My heart breaks for her family especially her son. May her killer be forever tormented in hell.
On this day I was married to the love of my life, July 26, 1974 . I lost my wife after 46 years of marriage (Oct 3 , 2020) . May the lady and my wife Rest in His Presence. 🌹
My father was police in Connecticut during this tragedy. He said the Massachusetts State Police attempted to send a flyer to every law enforcement organization in the country. This took years.
It’s just so heartwarming that the Police never give up trying to find the truth. As heartbreaking as it is, a family now has answers after 46 years. Totally amazing! Tragic story but she is now laid to rest peacefully.
Richard, if you ever see this I want you to know that I am a mom, and I just know your mom has been looking down and watching over you your whole life and she is so proud of you. I’d give you a big ole mom hug if I could even though I’m not your mom.
An agonising watch. Hard to believe people look normal but hidden inside them is a warped world. These poor people, the beautiful girl victim, the warmth of the lovely townspeople, the caring police force and chief who never gave up. The dreadful pain for her son and all her family. We must care for young women going out alone and always keep check with and on them. A very good documentary thank you❤.
Fwiw, I had a life review in an NDE. Since a lot of other accounts report the same experience, I'll venture to say he had one, too: you don't just see everything you did in life, but you experience every emotion and thought of all those in the scene. It even ripples out into the lives of those you never met since they were somehow affected. It may not fit the definition of hellfire, etc - a fiction - but it is powerful aspect. And to materialists, I realize that non-local consciousness isn't proven: millions of NDEs are still compelling. Paz y luz ✨️
Yes, indeed, very chilling. But, there are many writters who wrote way worse things, but never hurt a fly! Well in fact, he wasn't a writter, really. Just a diletant. And his drawings are quite puerile, too. This man/murderer's 'cook book' reminded me of a guy/former lawyer, (NY city) who drew the same strange way, and he was very messed up too, in his head. 🤔 😓 Very disturbed and disturbing.
Nice to hear the full story. I've heard about The Lady of the Dunes for almost as long as I can recall. I remember seeing websites where amataur sleuths tried to figure it out. And over the years there would be news pieces & features here in MA. And when they found her, I don't recall hearing much info of who she was, and then it just all vanished. Now and again I'd think of this case when I was on the Cape, esp if I was in an area with dunes. But nice to see the full story. What a horrible story, but always loved that folks watched over her grave, as they did in a few other unknown cases. I hope that brought her son and family some comfort, that we loved her, prayed for her and worried about her before we knew who she was.
On the contrary, had she chosen to raise her kid, she probably never would have met the creep that killed her. Bad choices lead to bad consequences and I have a hard time believing that her instincts and others warned her about that guy, who already had a bad reputation before they got married in Nevada.
@@packrat76 As if cutting her hands off is a mitigating factor?! The cop in the video said she was very nearly decapitated. If a head is only barely still attached, it counts as a decapitation in my books. The remaining strand of skin, or tendon, or even a small bit of bone that was close to letting go, doesn't matter. She was hit with an object, probably a sharp one, using overwhelming force, that was very nearly enough to separate the head. There is no difference.
Dang why did i watch this on my lunch break. 😢 sad story, im so glad she was identified and her son and family have some peace. What a beautiful lady she was. Rip
It's amazing how cold cases can be closed so long after the crime. One of the unfortunate things about them though is that by the time they are solved the perpetrator is often dead and so escapes punishment for their crime. But at least she finally got her name back and her loved ones are able to visit her grave and gave her a proper service. Hopefully she can rest in peace now.
Thank you for this wonderful documentary. Thank you to all who worked hard on solving this murder. Thank you to the people of PTown who visited her grave. So glad her son and her family found out what happened to her so long ago. Sad story 😢🙏
when i was around 9 years old. a friend of my father, his son disappeared. he was around 16 years old. it felt like the whole town went looking for him. of course i was young so I'm not sure of my memory. it could have been neighbors friends and family. anyway, we looked for him and its like he evaporated into thin air. my uncle when i was 14 was murdered. nobody knows who did it. all we had was rumors. its very cruel what happened here, but i am glad her son got to have answers and some measure of peace and that people never stopped looking for answers because let me tell you its not always the case
Those are the most organized and neat files especially passing through so many administrative offices over the decades. Such loving care for this poor woman!
I often point out cases like this when people describe modern times as being somehow more violent than the past. 70’s were the age of serial murderers after all. Our capabilities to identify victims & killers from so long ago now is amazing, technology. But it’s only great if enough people care to figure it out. Here, they did.
There’s a lot more of them out there than we realize. Just be mindful of the manipulation tactics and don’t react to their nonsense. Take a deep breath and smile and wave like the dearly departed Queen did.
Amazing how the community and professionals took care of her case, and of her, for decades. I'm not sure a provincial town in Europe would be so caring for a stranger's person/body. 🤔
They used to be the lifeguard stations that dotted the outer cape coastline and were moved into the dunes. They have no electricity, insulation, or running water. They were maintained by families that got 99 year leases on the land.
@@epflrz1625 That's awfully lucky! Here in Alberta Canada, a 99 year lease with the govt means nothing. My friend had a cabin in the woods, near the mountains and on a stream, in a gorgeous place! It was a 2 hour drive from the city, in a fairly remote and unspoiled spot. His family had the place for many generations. They put A LOT of time and money into it, but kept it very rustic. There was no power or running water, but he had a propane fridge and a woodstove. He and many others in that area were tossed out because a company wanted to mine for coal. There is no excuse for any coal fired power plants here in 2024, but this right wing bunch of loonies running the province are as regressive as can be. The plan was later changed and no mining was done, as far as I know, but the lease was still rescinded. I don't know what happened to the cabins. Those places were loved so dearly by the cabin owners, who had a false impression of safety with the 99 year lease. It wasn't even mine, but I saw it many times and I loved it dearly, so even my heart was broken by it. It was near Robb Alberta, south of Edson, on the road to Cadomin. When I saw it Robb consisted of a store and a hotel, but it wasn't a town.
Feel so sorry for this old man who as child, an adolescent and an adult kept hope to meet his mother, only to find out the terrible reason for her abandon was the brutality of an evil man 😢😢.
@@abprairiegurl Google what? What's the name of the Wikipedia page? It just kills me that people would say ""Look it up!" forcing hundreds of people to go that trouble, trying so many different search terms, possibly with no success, when you could so easily have given us something to work with.
People, if you go to Google or Wikipedia and use "Lady Of The Dunes" which is this video's title, as your search term, you will get a link to the Wikipedia page for the case.
I've seen that same cookbook before. I thought it was the weirdest sick thing. To see that it relates to a real murder. Makes me sick. Because that's what I thought about this cookbook. That it was sick minded. Like the writer killed a real person. It's the wording that I recall. Not the name of the book. It was in a 2ndhand shop. The guy asked me what I thought of it. I told him that I thought the description was a murder. Not recipes. The sick f.
Mrs H 🇬🇧 ... Heinous Evil monster Guy was ...I'm sorry for the other victims. .What a stunningly beautiful looking lady who should of had a life with her son ...RIP pretty lady, Ruth Terry... Richard has every right to feel how he does cos he was robbed of his Mother after his adopted parents died... I'm so sorry Richard .. Your mother did the right thing by you which she showed how unselfish she was... You came before her & her feelings...I'm sorry you never got the chance to meet her.... I'm sorry to Ruth's family..Dying from an illness is devastating enough but murder is unforgivable....!
What a fascinating and sad 😔 case. That poor woman. It's so unfair and vile when a human takes away another's LIFE. SAVAGE. IT'S NOT OUR PLACE TO DO THAT.
Every time I hear about the police throwing away the evidence or just losing it through years it makes me think about the Bella from the Wych Elm. How those mfkrs literally lost the victim's bones and scull blows my mind! So much could be done with the DNA technology these days but... alas! No scull no further investigation.
❤😢😮wow what a nice story even though it was sad 😔 murder but the love 💕 that was there too people good people and her son still alive to see his mothers place ❤ 1975 2000s. Rip young lady 😊 💐amen 20/24 Bless her
I don't understand the son, he was given to family but this mother never stopped a minute to visit her child and he's mourning her? I just don't understand.
You don't understand because you haven't been there. That isn't at all uncommon. People avoid being exposed to painful situations, especially when that is a result of their own actions, even if they couldn't be blamed for making the decision they made. Many mothers do seem out their children later, once they feel strong enough to face up to it, but this woman never got that chance. The son will never know if she would have done it or not. But it doesn't always go well at all when they do! My friend, who I will call Carrie, searched for her daughter. The daughter was not allowed to have an info on Carrie, her biological mum, until she was 18. Then, because both parties consented, the info was given to them both. They corresponded, and then eventually met. My friend is disabled, and so she is poor. The fight cross country cost a lot of money. A while later the daughter broke off her engagement and refused to talk or write anymore to Carrie, her biological mother. Of course my friend was devastated! After a few years more, Carrie broke off all communication with her friends. When I phoned her, she lied to me, pretending to be somebody else. She said "Carrie's not home." She did that three times before I gave up. Other mutual friends say she snubbed them too. I feel so bad for all the pain she must be in! She has always been such a lovely person! Her daughter broke her heart! But obviously she was in great pain too. I don't know how either of them are doing now, and I'm so sad about it. But I do know that we shouldn't judge others, especially when we don't know all the facts. There were years when I couldn't stand to communicate with my family too. If you haven't been through that you should consider yourself VERY lucky! Obviously this woman was so afraid. It's also possible that it was forbidden, and therefore she could not have had any idea where he was. I haven't watched very far into the video yet, so I don't yet know what years the events took place. I wanted to adopt a child in the early 80s, so I have first hand experience with the process. Previous to about 1980 almost all adoptions were closed, and no info was given to the people. Not the child or the parents. Both birth parents and adoptive parents, as well as the children, were all in the dark. They were not allowed to know about each other. That was called a "closed adoption". There were no registries where a person could give their name, address, phone number, and relevant info, so that the other person could find them if they looked. That did change in the 80s, but only slowly. The more open adoptions were naturally called "open adoptions". Now there are far less adoptions of any kind happening, for several reasons. And I don't think any of them are closed adoptions anymore, but prior to 1980 they were all closed, and even past the age of 18 for the child, no information was available most of the time. In fact, most adopted children were not even told they were adopted. Suddenly everything changed at once in the early 80s, like an avalanche. People my age that adopted saw the harm that keeping secrets had done and refused to lie anymore. If they had adopted kids they told them the truth, so by about 1984 or 85 all adoptions were open ones. In most or even all cases, that was by far the best way to do it. Not always the easiest, but still the best. Lying to children is so unfair, and never turns out to be the better way.
FUCK you UA-cam! Put my fucking comment back! There was nothing wrong with it. It was helpful! Your shadow ban is bullshit you fucking assholes! PUT MY COMMENT BACK!
Disgusting that that cop put her head in a bag ..what the heck was wrong with him...appalling if that was my mom id lose it on him...he disrespect her ..wow..im.socked
You're right. It was disrespectful and not worth the indignity. Would have been better to stop searching for the killer than to futher desecrate that poor woman like that.
@@clayerkwiltee2315 That's ridiculous! You and the OP are way out of line! She wouldn't care. She's dead! Would you prefer he just carried it in his hands, shedding pieces everywhere? Held it in his lap while driving? He had to put it in something. Would you prefer a Safeway bag? How about Walmart? A bag's a bag. How else was he gonna get the case solved? It's his persistence that kept the case in the spotlight. If not for him, the other cops that helped might never have even heard about it. How about you and the OP provide velvet lined bags to every police force in the US? Is that a better idea?
@@cattymajiv *In the end the killer got away scot free* (and lived a fairly long life). The pursuit of justice vs dignity. I personally would not want MY head riding around like, Yorick from Hamlet, town to town in a bag. Personally I'd rather the killer get away with it, if that were the only way to pursue justice. I would not want MY mom's or any loved one's head, paraded around like a _'Show & Tell'_ school exhibit. It was disrespectful and the killer was never caught. So in the end the poor woman suffered two indignities: one by the killer and the other by this cop/ex-cop.
@@evapektas All murderers of spouses say that. Whenever they hear it, the cops need to immediately double down on their investigation of the remaining spouse, even if it seems like the person did just take off! Almost nobody ever just voluntarily disappears with out a trace!
They didn't have evidence 😂. I guess body parts and puddles of blood wasn't good enough. He convinced them he was some rich guy who would sue them probably.
The way the town came together to take care of her when she was unknown. How they cared for her memory and how the detective spent his life trying to identify her. They were wonderful people to do all that.
That is what the real Provincetown is all about!
I'm not sure a province town in Europe would be so caring for the death of a stranger. This town has some very conscientious people. 👌🙏💝
❤
Indeed❤
This has really touched me. So many loved and cared for an unknown person. My heart breaks for her family especially her son. May her killer be forever tormented in hell.
On this day I was married to the love of my life, July 26, 1974 . I lost my wife after 46 years of marriage (Oct 3 , 2020) . May the lady and my wife Rest in His Presence. 🌹
Died to Covid ?
Death is peace?
@@chiendinh-je2xi
Be Karen elsewhere, please.
❤❤❤❤❤
@@pannamal5182 on this day I took a 💩
What a sad story. I felt so for her son, who was never able to find his mom in time. Life can be cruel sometimes. I sincerely hope he is doing ok.
My father was police in Connecticut during this tragedy. He said the Massachusetts State Police attempted to send a flyer to every law enforcement organization in the country. This took years.
It’s just so heartwarming that the Police never give up trying to find the truth. As heartbreaking as it is, a family now has answers after 46 years. Totally amazing! Tragic story but she is now laid to rest peacefully.
Richard, if you ever see this I want you to know that I am a mom, and I just know your mom has been looking down and watching over you your whole life and she is so proud of you. I’d give you a big ole mom hug if I could even though I’m not your mom.
Thank you to all the police for never giving up on her.
An agonising watch. Hard to believe people look normal but hidden inside them is a warped world.
These poor people, the beautiful girl victim, the warmth of the lovely townspeople, the caring police force and chief who never gave up. The dreadful pain for her son and all her family.
We must care for young women going out alone and always keep check with and on them. A very good documentary thank you❤.
That is so sad. Her murderer never paid for his crime.
Yep no justice ⚖️😡😈
Fwiw, I had a life review in an NDE. Since a lot of other accounts report the same experience, I'll venture to say he had one, too: you don't just see everything you did in life, but you experience every emotion and thought of all those in the scene. It even ripples out into the lives of those you never met since they were somehow affected.
It may not fit the definition of hellfire, etc - a fiction - but it is powerful aspect.
And to materialists, I realize that non-local consciousness isn't proven: millions of NDEs are still compelling.
Paz y luz ✨️
I am not religious but for those that are you can be assured justice has been served.
What good that would do. Bring her back to alive? Blood lusting creeps you are funny.
@@mtadams2009 AMEN, The Lord says, "vengeance is mine". God bless
Great work by all the professionals who never gave up the hunt. Thank you for reporting this update.
I’m glad her son got some closure, my heart is with him and her family.
That book is downright disturbing, it's like something from a horror movie."The tender look will become one of despair." Talk about chilling.
Yes, indeed, very chilling. But, there are many writters who wrote way worse things, but never hurt a fly!
Well in fact, he wasn't a writter, really. Just a diletant. And his drawings are quite puerile, too.
This man/murderer's 'cook book' reminded me of a guy/former lawyer, (NY city) who drew the same strange way, and he was very messed up too, in his head. 🤔 😓 Very disturbed and disturbing.
Nice to hear the full story. I've heard about The Lady of the Dunes for almost as long as I can recall. I remember seeing websites where amataur sleuths tried to figure it out. And over the years there would be news pieces & features here in MA. And when they found her, I don't recall hearing much info of who she was, and then it just all vanished. Now and again I'd think of this case when I was on the Cape, esp if I was in an area with dunes. But nice to see the full story. What a horrible story, but always loved that folks watched over her grave, as they did in a few other unknown cases. I hope that brought her son and family some comfort, that we loved her, prayed for her and worried about her before we knew who she was.
The thought accured to me by giving her son up for adoption she very well might have saved his life from the same fate.
On the contrary, had she chosen to raise her kid, she probably never would have met the creep that killed her. Bad choices lead to bad consequences and I have a hard time believing that her instincts and others warned her about that guy, who already had a bad reputation before they got married in Nevada.
Why would state police just throw away some of the evidence??
Unfortunately this happens quite a bit in old cases.
Sheer stupidity, or pressure from someone in the Evidence Department because of lack of space? As dumb as that is, it did happen.
When this happened my mom and I pondered how angry someone would be to decapitate someone. We figured the dead woman knew her killer.
He cut off her HANDS, not head.
I agree. She knew him! But I don’t think it was Whitey Bulger.
@@packrat76It said she was nearly decapitated. As many cracks as the skull had, wow!😮
@@packrat76 As if cutting her hands off is a mitigating factor?! The cop in the video said she was very nearly decapitated. If a head is only barely still attached, it counts as a decapitation in my books. The remaining strand of skin, or tendon, or even a small bit of bone that was close to letting go, doesn't matter. She was hit with an object, probably a sharp one, using overwhelming force, that was very nearly enough to separate the head. There is no difference.
God bless Ruth Marie Terry and her loving boy ❤
Dang why did i watch this on my lunch break. 😢 sad story, im so glad she was identified and her son and family have some peace. What a beautiful lady she was. Rip
Remembered and loved by all of Cape Cod❤
It's amazing how cold cases can be closed so long after the crime. One of the unfortunate things about them though is that by the time they are solved the perpetrator is often dead and so escapes punishment for their crime.
But at least she finally got her name back and her loved ones are able to visit her grave and gave her a proper service. Hopefully she can rest in peace now.
Thank you for this documentary.
People need to get out of that mindset, that murders do not happen in their towns, sick people are everywhere! I was only 7 when this happened.
I am proud of them that they brought her home to be buried with a nice headstone.
Thank you for this wonderful documentary. Thank you to all who worked hard on solving this murder. Thank you to the people of PTown who visited her grave. So glad her son and her family found out what happened to her so long ago. Sad story 😢🙏
So young,so beautiful, so sad. May she finally R.I.P
The son is an empath. I felt his anguish 😢.
Such a bittersweet story. Her killer may have escaped judgement in this life, but that doesn't mean he escaped punishment in the afterlife.
It is such a sad story. Grateful to thw police for not giving up on this case.
The people of that town took such care of her. It’s good they finally could put a name to her. May she be resting peacefully 🙏🏻
In all realism, him finding out this late, she could have long passed away due to age.
Someone really wanted her not to be identified.
Rest in peace Ruth Marie Terry
Why would they throw that stuff away?
How thar bastard got away with what he did to numerous people is diabolical. The justice system at the time was flawed beyond belief.
when i was around 9 years old. a friend of my father, his son disappeared. he was around 16 years old. it felt like the whole town went looking for him. of course i was young so I'm not sure of my memory. it could have been neighbors friends and family. anyway, we looked for him and its like he evaporated into thin air. my uncle when i was 14 was murdered. nobody knows who did it. all we had was rumors. its very cruel what happened here, but i am glad her son got to have answers and some measure of peace and that people never stopped looking for answers because let me tell you its not always the case
You can see so much of his beautiful Mum in her son...
Those are the most organized and neat files especially passing through so many administrative offices over the decades. Such loving care for this poor woman!
That book - what a wretched, ghoulish artefact. I would imagine having that thing in your home would be torturous - its silent screams, deafening.
Ruth Marie, I am glad you were finally found by your loved ones and others.
May you now rip.
Can barely wait for the movie. If anyone knows of a finished production please mention it here. Thanks
I hope the son has some sort of peace knowing now, there isn't that question mark anymore, and that mom can rest in peace.
I often point out cases like this when people describe modern times as being somehow more violent than the past. 70’s were the age of serial murderers after all. Our capabilities to identify victims & killers from so long ago now is amazing, technology. But it’s only great if enough people care to figure it out. Here, they did.
Beware the Narcissist
There’s a lot more of them out there than we realize. Just be mindful of the manipulation tactics and don’t react to their nonsense. Take a deep breath and smile and wave like the dearly departed Queen did.
They say there could be up to 25 to 50 serial killers in the United States at this moment Scarry !
Never heard this story. Excellent doc,
Amazing how the community and professionals took care of her case, and of her, for decades. I'm not sure a provincial town in Europe would be so caring for a stranger's person/body. 🤔
Her healthy heart stopped pumping at the moment her skull was crushed.
Interesting that these places sre called "shacks" as they look so much nicer than many houses I've seen or lived in. Must be a colloquialism.
If you're rich enough to have a vacation home on Cape Cod, they're shacks. You should see their primary homes.
They used to be the lifeguard stations that dotted the outer cape coastline and were moved into the dunes. They have no electricity, insulation, or running water. They were maintained by families that got 99 year leases on the land.
@@epflrz1625 That's awfully lucky! Here in Alberta Canada, a 99 year lease with the govt means nothing. My friend had a cabin in the woods, near the mountains and on a stream, in a gorgeous place! It was a 2 hour drive from the city, in a fairly remote and unspoiled spot. His family had the place for many generations. They put A LOT of time and money into it, but kept it very rustic. There was no power or running water, but he had a propane fridge and a woodstove.
He and many others in that area were tossed out because a company wanted to mine for coal. There is no excuse for any coal fired power plants here in 2024, but this right wing bunch of loonies running the province are as regressive as can be. The plan was later changed and no mining was done, as far as I know, but the lease was still rescinded. I don't know what happened to the cabins.
Those places were loved so dearly by the cabin owners, who had a false impression of safety with the 99 year lease. It wasn't even mine, but I saw it many times and I loved it dearly, so even my heart was broken by it.
It was near Robb Alberta, south of Edson, on the road to Cadomin. When I saw it Robb consisted of a store and a hotel, but it wasn't a town.
Feel so sorry for this old man who as child, an adolescent and an adult kept hope to meet his mother, only to find out the terrible reason for her abandon was the brutality of an evil man 😢😢.
🪔I pray peace for the son of The Lady of the Dunes and comfort knowing you will see her again🪔
That book says it all.
Love your documentary
Why dont these producers balance the volume of speakers? One is so quiet you cant hear, another is so loud it wakes up the neighborhood.
It’s weird how someone could do these things and want to live the next day. Evil. Couldn’t watch the part with the book. Burn it. Salt the earth.
Was the murderer her son's father? What happened to the murderer? If you said he was dead I must have missed it.
Google it, there is Wikipedia page with the details.
@@abprairiegurl Google what? What's the name of the Wikipedia page? It just kills me that people would say ""Look it up!" forcing hundreds of people to go that trouble, trying so many different search terms, possibly with no success, when you could so easily have given us something to work with.
People, if you go to Google or Wikipedia and use "Lady Of The Dunes" which is this video's title, as your search term, you will get a link to the Wikipedia page for the case.
@@cattymajiv Thanks. 👍
Thank you!❤❤
She married the wrong guy. She wanted peace and happiness and found despair
I've seen that same cookbook before. I thought it was the weirdest sick thing.
To see that it relates to a real murder. Makes me sick. Because that's what I thought about this cookbook. That it was sick minded. Like the writer killed a real person. It's the wording that I recall. Not the name of the book. It was in a 2ndhand shop. The guy asked me what I thought of it.
I told him that I thought the description was a murder. Not recipes. The sick f.
They threw all the evidence away
God bless him! He looks like his Mother! Prayers for healing for all involved! Patricia Gambino Harrington
Very nice town’s people I’d love to live there ❤
Me too
Mrs H 🇬🇧 ... Heinous Evil monster Guy was ...I'm sorry for the other victims. .What a stunningly beautiful looking lady who should of had a life with her son ...RIP pretty lady, Ruth Terry... Richard has every right to feel how he does cos he was robbed of his Mother after his adopted parents died... I'm so sorry Richard .. Your mother did the right thing by you which she showed how unselfish she was... You came before her & her feelings...I'm sorry you never got the chance to meet her.... I'm sorry to Ruth's family..Dying from an illness is devastating enough but murder is unforgivable....!
Poor woman,it's sad she have no justice ..
Fabulous show thank you
Wow. So sad.
What a fascinating and sad 😔 case. That poor woman. It's so unfair and vile when a human takes away another's LIFE. SAVAGE. IT'S NOT OUR PLACE TO DO THAT.
I still don’t understand what this serial killer’s connection was to P town. He seems like he was a west coast person. That poor poor woman.
It said that his parents had bought property there.
Fisherman aman who escaped from prison a mental person a neighbour a stranger who came to town😮 poor lady😢
Poor lady
RIP 🙏🏽💖💐
HOW SAD
What happened to the killer? Was he found? Did he die? Tragic story
So genetic genealogy solved this case?
Pretty much ...
If you know a creep turn him in!!!
RIP 🙏
Why was any of the evidence thrown away!!!!
Very Sad History RIP 🙏 ❤❤
sometimes beasts pretend to be humans
Every time I hear about the police throwing away the evidence or just losing it through years it makes me think about the Bella from the Wych Elm. How those mfkrs literally lost the victim's bones and scull blows my mind! So much could be done with the DNA technology these days but... alas! No scull no further investigation.
Rachel White describes it as if she is talking about JAWS ....." we depend on the tourists"
Notice how they drag the story out by repeating the same thing over and over.....and over......and over....
What happened to the murderer? Did he died?
So sad
Find out where Rex's father was that day
Now we have ADT ! 😊
❤😢😮wow what a nice story even though it was sad 😔 murder but the love 💕 that was there too people good people and her son still alive to see his mothers place ❤ 1975 2000s. Rip young lady 😊 💐amen 20/24 Bless her
While clearing weeds and rusty tin
I found a skull, it rattle and grin
😢
Similar to the boy in the box took 67y before getting a id of the boy
I don't understand the son, he was given to family but this mother never stopped a minute to visit her child and he's mourning her? I just don't understand.
You don't understand because you haven't been there. That isn't at all uncommon. People avoid being exposed to painful situations, especially when that is a result of their own actions, even if they couldn't be blamed for making the decision they made. Many mothers do seem out their children later, once they feel strong enough to face up to it, but this woman never got that chance. The son will never know if she would have done it or not.
But it doesn't always go well at all when they do! My friend, who I will call Carrie, searched for her daughter. The daughter was not allowed to have an info on Carrie, her biological mum, until she was 18. Then, because both parties consented, the info was given to them both. They corresponded, and then eventually met. My friend is disabled, and so she is poor. The fight cross country cost a lot of money.
A while later the daughter broke off her engagement and refused to talk or write anymore to Carrie, her biological mother. Of course my friend was devastated! After a few years more, Carrie broke off all communication with her friends. When I phoned her, she lied to me, pretending to be somebody else. She said "Carrie's not home." She did that three times before I gave up. Other mutual friends say she snubbed them too.
I feel so bad for all the pain she must be in! She has always been such a lovely person! Her daughter broke her heart! But obviously she was in great pain too. I don't know how either of them are doing now, and I'm so sad about it. But I do know that we shouldn't judge others, especially when we don't know all the facts. There were years when I couldn't stand to communicate with my family too. If you haven't been through that you should consider yourself VERY lucky! Obviously this woman was so afraid.
It's also possible that it was forbidden, and therefore she could not have had any idea where he was. I haven't watched very far into the video yet, so I don't yet know what years the events took place. I wanted to adopt a child in the early 80s, so I have first hand experience with the process.
Previous to about 1980 almost all adoptions were closed, and no info was given to the people. Not the child or the parents. Both birth parents and adoptive parents, as well as the children, were all in the dark. They were not allowed to know about each other. That was called a "closed adoption". There were no registries where a person could give their name, address, phone number, and relevant info, so that the other person could find them if they looked. That did change in the 80s, but only slowly. The more open adoptions were naturally called "open adoptions".
Now there are far less adoptions of any kind happening, for several reasons. And I don't think any of them are closed adoptions anymore, but prior to 1980 they were all closed, and even past the age of 18 for the child, no information was available most of the time. In fact, most adopted children were not even told they were adopted. Suddenly everything changed at once in the early 80s, like an avalanche. People my age that adopted saw the harm that keeping secrets had done and refused to lie anymore. If they had adopted kids they told them the truth, so by about 1984 or 85 all adoptions were open ones. In most or even all cases, that was by far the best way to do it. Not always the easiest, but still the best. Lying to children is so unfair, and never turns out to be the better way.
FUCK you UA-cam! Put my fucking comment back! There was nothing wrong with it. It was helpful! Your shadow ban is bullshit you fucking assholes! PUT MY COMMENT BACK!
Disgusting that that cop put her head in a bag ..what the heck was wrong with him...appalling if that was my mom id lose it on him...he disrespect her ..wow..im.socked
You're right. It was disrespectful and not worth the indignity. Would have been better to stop searching for the killer than to futher desecrate that poor woman like that.
@@clayerkwiltee2315 That's ridiculous! You and the OP are way out of line! She wouldn't care. She's dead! Would you prefer he just carried it in his hands, shedding pieces everywhere? Held it in his lap while driving? He had to put it in something. Would you prefer a Safeway bag? How about Walmart? A bag's a bag.
How else was he gonna get the case solved? It's his persistence that kept the case in the spotlight. If not for him, the other cops that helped might never have even heard about it. How about you and the OP provide velvet lined bags to every police force in the US? Is that a better idea?
@@cattymajiv *In the end the killer got away scot free* (and lived a fairly long life).
The pursuit of justice vs dignity.
I personally would not want MY head riding around like, Yorick from Hamlet, town to town in a bag.
Personally I'd rather the killer get away with it, if that were the only way to pursue justice. I would not want MY mom's or any loved one's head, paraded around like a _'Show & Tell'_ school exhibit.
It was disrespectful and the killer was never caught. So in the end the poor woman suffered two indignities: one by the killer and the other by this cop/ex-cop.
@@clayerkwiltee2315 Unless by some miracle he repented at the end of his life, he is currently extremely regretful of his actions...
@@LSX427-b3n He may have repented. Still, he never went to jail.
🙏❤
Hmm 🤔 left doors unlocked safe town 😮😢🤨💔
stupid thing to do 😢
What about the husband
What do mean what about the husband?? He died in 2002. Never investigated or brought to justice
@@jkennaw4314 Why was he never brought to justice? They knew it was him. Or perhaps they found this out after he died. Clearly, I missed something...
@@sandrapisani9225 No you did not miss anything.
They could not connect him to her death...not enough evidence..
He said she just ran Off.
@@evapektas All murderers of spouses say that. Whenever they hear it, the cops need to immediately double down on their investigation of the remaining spouse, even if it seems like the person did just take off! Almost nobody ever just voluntarily disappears with out a trace!
They didn't have evidence 😂. I guess body parts and puddles of blood wasn't good enough. He convinced them he was some rich guy who would sue them probably.
Serial Killer.
Can this reporter be any more cringe?
Hard core killer
A mob job
Lar insurance