March 31, 2011

02/26/11: Austin Bice, 22, Madrid, Spain

Austin Bice
Credit: El PAIS / Carlos Rosillo
Austin Bice, 22, an honor student in international business at San Diego State University was last seen in the early hours of Saturday, Feb. 26, 2011, in Madrid, Spain.

Bice, an exchange student at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, had spent the night with friends drinking in an apartment before going out to La Sala Riviera nightclub located on Virgen del Puerto in western Madrid.

A doorman at the club suggested Bice rest a while before going in because he looked unwell. A friend stayed outside with him until 1 a.m., when Bice said he was going to walk home. When he failed to return home, roommates reported him missing.

On March 8, 2011, Bice’s body was found in the shallow, slow-moving waters of the Manzanares River, 900 feet south of the nightclub where he was last seen. The body was located after a 550-yard section of river was drained as part of the search.

There were no immediate signs of foul play. An autopsy was carried out, but it is not clear when the results will be released to Bice's family and to a Spanish investigating magistrate. The results of toxicology tests and a full autopsy report are pending, and should be available in the next several weeks. An independent autopsy in San Diego will also be performed.


About Austin Bice

Austin Bice was described by the Examiner.com as “an honor student, star football player, loving son, brother, and a caring friend to many people. Austin was a mature and stable adult, who was admired by many people, and was described as "lighting up a room" with the warmth and energy of his personality by those who knew him well.”

Austin Bice
Facebook photo

Bice, from Carlsbad, California, had been attending school at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, in part of the city called Getafe, since January 15. Carlos Lopez-Terradas, who runs the exchange program at Carlos III University, described Bice as a popular young man with lots of friends.

According to the Examiner.com, “In postings on his blog, Bice wrote about his experience with Spain…[he] was amazed at the party scene, with both Spanish and foreign students often staying out until dawn, but said in a Feb. 9 post that he wasn't imbibing as much as others.

"’Before I came to Spain, I was told by all of my advisers that I should try to keep calm at parties and not try to be the typical loud and drunk American," Bice wrote. "I have done exactly that, staying back and watching hilarious drunken events occur from a relatively sober mind. The Spaniards at the party were not following along with this ideology.’"

On his last post on Feb. 25, he said he was going out: "Hopefully it will not disappoint (I assume it will not). It's in Madrid and it should be a fun night."

Bice was tall and physically fit. He was six-foot-four, 230 pounds and had recently climbed Mt. Whitney in California with his father. He was a star football center at SDSU and was called a “gentle giant.” He also enjoyed softball and kickball at San Diego State, and cheering on the SDSU Aztecs, his favorite basketball team.

He added: "Now, I truly must be going, my Spanish roommates are expecting me to prepare some authentic American food ... Hope they like Hamburgers!"

A Memorial Trust has been set up in Austin Bice’s name to fund scholarships. For more information or to donate, visit the family’s Web page at http://www.austinbice.com/.

11/30/10: Joe Sjoberg, 22, Madison, WI

Joe Sjoberg (pronounced: SHOW-BERG), 22, was last seen Tuesday, November 30, 2010. Joe, who lives in Madison, Wis., was last seen on the near East side of Madison on North Baldwin Street. Sjoberg who is originally from Seattle, Washington, was reported missing by his roommate after he didn't show up at home or at work. He was last seen at work on Monday, Nov. 29, 2010.

Madison police investigated Joe's disappearance and found that his car and cell phone were gone. The cell phone appeared dead and Joe had not contacted any friends or family, something that was considered to be very uncharacteristic of the young man.

"Nothing has been found that would indicate he is the victim of a crime, but police are trying to locate him," said police spokesman Joel DeSpain. They hoped that Sjoberg just needed some time away and would return on his own.

According to the Seattle Times, "Sjoberg, who spent the Thanksgiving holiday with three of his four siblings in New York days before he disappeared, had shown no signs of depression, his parents said. Although a search of his computer at work showed he had visited some websites that discuss suicide, his parents aren't jumping to conclusions." Sjoberg's family posted on Twitter, Reddit, Craigslist, Facebook and also created a Web page. The Facebook page had more than 12,000 members.


Car found with remains inside

In late March 2010, Madison police confirmed that a burned out car found in a field on Monday, Mar. 28, outside of Columbus, WI, belonged to Joe Sjoberg. Human remains, later identified as Sjoberg's, were found inside the car.

The car was found by a farmer trimming along a fence line at 11:15 a.m. on Monday, Mar. 28. He described the remains as "only bones."

Columbia County Sheriff Dennis Richards told WISC News.com, that the car was found 500 yards off a road and within sight of Highways 16, 60 and 151, yet it was difficult to spot without looking directly at it.

"It was out in the elements for a while," Richards said.

He added that the fire that burned the vehicle appeared to be very hot, as all that was left of the car was metal.

"They are literally picking out piece by piece in that car," Richards said. "It's a very, very time-consuming task that they are taking on right now."

The State Crime Lab used body fragments to identify the body, Columbia County authorities said.

The Associate Press has reported that "Law enforcement sources say Sjoberg's cell phone had pinged in the area in December and there were plans for a ground search [that] weekend" because the snow had melted.

According to the article, Madison police said foul play wasn't suspected.''


About Joe Sjoberg

Photo Credit:
Carleton College
According to the Seattle Times, Joe Sjoberg graduated from Seattle's Roosevelt High School in 2006. He was a former Washington state elementary-school chess champion. He attended college at Carelton College in Northfield, Minnesota, where he was captain of the swim team and won best of meet in some competitions. He has been described as an excellent student, sociable with many friends, and a lot of confidence.

Sjoberg, had graduated from college in June and started working for Epic Systems, a Madison-area software company, in July.

Joe's obituary reads, "His easy smile, exuberance, booming laugh, and his loving and compassionate heart, were a light in our lives for almost 23 years. We are profoundly grateful for the time we had with him. We will miss him more than we can ever say, but take solace in knowing that he will live on in our hearts and in memories of the multitude of people whose lives he touched." (Legacy.com)

Credit: Carleton College
A memorial service was held at the Carleton College chapel on May 28. A funeral was held on June 4 at St. Matthew's Church in Seattle. The service included a Mass and was followed by a reception at Roosevelt High School Theater. In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to either of two funds set up in Joe's honor:

Roosevelt Drama Joe Sjoberg Memorial Fund
Checks made out to AFORD (Associated Friends of Roosevelt Drama)
Memo: Joe Sjoberg Memorial Fund
PO Box 15886
Seattle, WA 98115
For more information, contact: robertsjobergiii@gmail.com or patmarcus43@gmail.com.

Carleton College Joe Sjoberg Memorial Fund
Online: give.carleton.edu
By phone: Carleton's Gift Accounting Office at 800-758-9441.
Mail: Carleton College, Gift Accounting, 1-CENREC, 1 N College St, Northfield, MN 55057.


Facts of Interest
Name/age: Joseph S. Sjoberg, 22
Last seen: 11/30/10, Madison, WI
Physical decription: 5'10, 180-200 lbs with short, light brown hair and hazel eyes. According to his roommate, he had three or four weeks worth of beard when he was last seen. He may have been wearing a hoodie and/or a ski jacket and grey casual sneakers with red trim, described as being " a bit beat up."
Notes: Sjoberg drives a gray 1991 Chevy Caprice with Washington license plate 513 WYN.
Investigating Agency: Madison Police Department

First published: 12/30/10. Updated: 03/13/11, 06/17/11.

March 18, 2011

St. Patrick's Day reflections

St. Patrick's Day Parade, South Boston 2007
Photo credit: Boston.com

I hope you all had a happy and safe St. Patrick’s Day. I have read no news reports of missing men, so my hope is that all our young adults have made it home safely. I’d like to take a moment to reflect on how St. Patrick's Day has touched the lives of some of the young men who have gone missing.


Missing in Boston

The weekend of St. Patrick’s Day 2007 greeted revelers in Boston with an assault of stinging, pelting snow that was carried horizontally by the cold, whipping wind. Visibility along the water was poor and temperatures were in the teens. The storm was not expected to wind down until March 17. Despite the poor weather in Boston, the St. Patrick’s Day festivities carried on with many venturing out in the snow.

That weekend, two young sailors from North Carolina—Dustin Willis, 26, and William Hurley, 22—arrived in Boston to spend their shore leave at one of the nation’s biggest annual St. Patrick’s Day celebrations. Although the men were stationed aboard different ships, their lives would intersect in an odd coincidence, years later—both would ultimately disappear, their lives ending tragically.



Dustin Willis

Dustin Willis

Dustin Willis, a 26-year old Navy petty officer 3rd class, was serving aboard the USS Donald Cook, a guided missile destroyer carrying a crew of approximately 338. The vessel arrived in South Boston on Mar. 16, 2007 and had docked in Boston Harbor for St. Patrick’s Day.

“Dusty,” as he was known to family and friends, was a native of Frisco, N.C. and was stationed out of Norfolk, Va. He and his girlfriend, Shawna, and their 5-year old son, Logan Gene, were living in Rodanthe, N.C. They were looking forward to the future, when they could spend more time together as a family and eventually make a home for themselves in Virginia Beach, Va.


A long-awaited night on the town

The crew of the USS Donald Cook was just coming off a long and tedious schedule and looking forward to some down-time before their return trip home. Like many other Navy personnel that night, Dusty decided to celebrate St. Patrick's Day with an evening out on the town, despite the poor weather.

He and some of his shipmates spent the evening in Boston’s tourist area, the Faneuil Hall/Quincy Market area. This area is on the waterfront and about 11/3 miles from the ship.

Dusty was wearing civilian clothing, a jacket, blue jeans, and a tuxedo t-shirt which did stand out a bit from the crowd, but it was not his habit to carry much cash.

He spoke with his parents in North Carolina around 10 p.m., then called Shawna again at 10:50 p.m., mentioning that he had some beers to drink that night. Both his father and his girlfriend say he was not drunk; he was in full control of his faculties and not slurring his words.

Shawna was still chatting on the phone with Dusty at 11 p.m., when he and his shipmates left McFadden’s bar. When Willis turned the corner near the Black Rose Pub in Quincy Market, his shipmates lost sight of him in the blowing snow. They assumed he had ducked into a building, but when they checked out a few places, he was nowhere to be found. His cell phone call to Shawna then ended abruptly.

Both Shawna and his shipmates called Dusty's cell phone and left messages, but got no response. An hour later, Dusty's phone was found by a passerby on the sidewalk near the Legal Sea Foods restaurant by the Long Wharf. It was then turned in to the police department.

There was no other trace of Dusty Willis.

Dusty, a gas turbine system technician, was known to be exceptionally reliable. Just three days before the night of his disappearance, he had just received the Navy Achievement Medal and was described as having a stellar, spotless record during his four years in the Navy. It was not like him to disappear, yet he was not reported missing until 7:30 a.m. Sunday, when he was due to report back to the ship.



Long Wharf in Boston
Photo credit: kamalyn
On Wed., Mar. 21, 2007 at around midnight, Dusty Willis's body was found in the frigid waters of Boston Harbor, not far from the Long Wharf, where his cell phone was found. His identification was found on his body. There was no significant trauma found, and authorities said his body had been in the water for more than a few days. The underwater scene was documented with a camera as part of the evidence collection.

Officials believe Dusty's death was a bad mishap, that after he was separated from his friends, he became confused in the driving snow and accidentally fell off the dock.

"I do miss my son. He served his country and I am very proud of him. I am glad he had friends in the service-- people who cared about my son. My other four children, their wives, their grandchildren, my wife, Michelle, we want to thank everyone for what they've done. We want to take my son home and give him the burial he deserves," Dusty's father, Tony Willis, told TheBostonChannel.com.


William Hurley

On St. Patrick's Day 2007, William Hurley, 24, was serving alongside a crew of 206 aboard the Navy frigate USS De Wert. Spending shore leave in Boston over the St. Patrick’s Day weekend is a tradition for the Navy, and like the USS Donald Cook, the DeWert had docked in Boston Harbor.

William Hurley, also ventured out into the blizzard-like conditions to celebrate St. Patrick's Day. He met his future fiancee, Claire, while out on the town.

Claire, a graduate of Emmanuel College, was working on her master’s degree in teaching at the University of Massachusetts in Boston. William belonged to the MP Division and had served on the USS DeWert since Sept.7, 2005. He was stationed out of Mayport, Fla.

William Hurley and girlfriend, Claire
On May 30, 2008, about a year after William and Claire met, William's military service on the USS DeWert ended. That December, he moved to Quincy, Mass., to live with Claire. The two had agreed to get married and were in the process of saving up some money. William had bought Claire an engagement ring for Christmas, but told a coworker that the timing wasn’t quite right to give it to her yet.

William worked as a greenskeeper at the Weston Country Club in Weston, Mass. On Oct. 8, 2009, a coworker invited him to see his first Boston Bruins hockey game at the TD Banknorth Gardens in Boston. After getting off work, William took the train to the coworker's home in Brighton, Mass. There, they were joined by another friend, and the three took public transportation to the game.

William had previously commented that he was tired and, reportedly, he also had two or three beers at the game. After the first period, he called Claire to pick him up. According to one report, he felt ill.

Claire drove from their home in Quincy to pick him up; and William left the game to meet her outside. William was not very familiar with the area. He did not know where to tell Claire to meet him, so he asked a passerby the exact address. Claire heard someone yell “99 Nashua Street,” then William told her his phone was about to die, and he would wait for her there. The call ended abruptly. Claire was just two blocks away, but by the time she arrived at the address, William was gone.

According to WHDH.com, William's cell phone was found smashed on the ground during one of the searches to locate him.

Authorities found no other trace of the young man until six days later on Oct. 14, 2009, when his body was found in the Charles River. There were no signs of trauma to the body, and his wallet, cash, and keys were found on his person, ruling out the possibility of robbery.

At the time, Boston.com reported that “Hurley appeared to be walking across the street from the Nashua Street Jail in an 'unfenced area' of a park along the banks of the Charles.”

It is not known why he was headed in that direction, especially when he knew his ride was coming.


Eugene Losik
with girlfriend, Caitlin
Eugene Losik

Four months later, another young man, Eugene "Gene" Losik, disappeared after a birthday party celebration in Boston. While Gene did not disappear on St. Patrick's Day (he went missing on Feb. 20, 2010), he did have ties to the military, and disappeared in the area where Dusty Willis had been found just three years before. Gene's girlfriend of four years, Caitlin, was one of the last people to see him. The couple had planned to get married the following year.

Gene was a graduate of the College of Engineering at University of Massachusetts-Amherst, obtaining a degree in Electrical Engineering in 2008. While he was not in the military, he worked as an engineer developing test equipment at Raytheon Integrated Defense Systems in Tewskbury, Mass. The company holds large international and domestic military defense contracts, including the US Missile Defense Agency, the US Armed Forces, and the Department of Homeland Security.

The night he disappeared, Gene spent the evening drinking and dancing at Fanueil Hall with his girlfriend Caitlin and some friends. The group then returned to their rooms at the nearby Marriott Long Wharf Hotel. Gene and a buddy played cards in another friend's room from 1:15 a.m. until about 2:10 a.m., while Caitlin slept in her hotel room. About fifteen minutes after the card game broke up, Gene was seen on camera leaving the hotel through the back entrance, possibly to have a cigarette. The back entrance is near Tia's Restaurant and Christopher Columbus Park.

It is unclear why he did not return to the hotel or where Gene may have been headed. He was not wearing a coat or a hat, his cell phone had run out of its charge, and he only had about $20 in his wallet.

On Nov. 18, 2010, his body was found in Boston Harbor near Rowe's Wharf.

Friends and family also wonder why Gene wasn't spotted by someone after he left the hotel. The hotel is a popular spot and very active with people coming and going into the early hours of the morning.


A busy weekend in the harbor

On the weekend Gene disappeared, Navy and Coast Guard forces had also been brought in to secure the Boston Harbor area for the first of several LNG tanker deliveries from Yemen. The vessel was scheduled to arrive on Tues., Feb. 23, 2010, while Gene Losik was still missing.

The tankers, which arrive at a rate of two to three per month, carry liquefied natural gas. Local officials have opposed having the vessels in the harbor, citing safety concerns about the explosive fuel coming within 50 feet of some residential neighborhoods. Concerns about lending support to terrorism or increasing the risk of terrorist activity were also raised, as the suspect in the failed Christmas Day plot to blow up a Detroit-bound flight had reportedly received training in Yemen.



LNG Tanker from Yemen in Boston Harbor
Photo source: Massachusetts National Guard

Because of these concerns, the arrival of the first tanker in Boston was a massive, choreographed, multi-agency effort. Streets were secured in the harbor area, and Boston Police had special operations and detail officers standing by as the 935-foot Maran Gas Coronis crossed under the Tobin Memorial Bridge around 4:30 a.m.

The tanker had been searched by the Coast Guard several miles off shore before coming into the harbor. When she arrived, the ship was "flanked by pilot vessels and tugs, and was escorted by about a dozen law enforcement boats, with their blue lights flashing. Two police helicopters patrolled above, and an army of state and local police officers, including special operations officers, guarded the land. Patrol cars and wagons were visible at nearly every vantage point with a view of the ship’s arrival." (WHDH.com, 2/23/10).

Yet, despite all the additional personnel stationed around the harbor, no one spotted the missing Gene Losik.


Gregory Hart

In March of 2010, the family of a man from Dedham, Mass. became worried when he did not show up to meet them for a St. Patrick's Day parade. Gregory Hart, "Greg" as he was known to family and friends, had last been seen with three old colleges buddies at a bar in Providence, R.I., where he was celebrating a new job. Providence is about an hour southwest of Boston.

Greg Hart with girlfriend, Bridget
Greg was last seen at around 1:40 a.m when he got up and left the tavern. He either said nothing when he left, or his friends did not hear him at the time. Throughout the night, friends tried calling Greg's cell phone, but it went unanswered. By Sunday, when he hadn't returned for the St. Patrick's Day parade, his family became "seriously worried" and filed a missing person's report.

Police did not begin a search for Greg, despite reports that some type of disturbance or altercation had taken place at the bar that night.


Family suspects foul play

Three days later, a family friend found Hart's body washed up against a tree limb in the rain-swollen Woonasqatucket River in Providence. It was found upstream from the bar where he was last seen.

An autopsy indicated that Greg, a licensed and experienced scuba diver who was very familiar with the water, had drowned. The exam also noted injuries to the body that suggest Greg had been in a fight that night, but the medical examiner maintains that there were no signs of foul play. Tests also showed that Greg had been very intoxicated at the time, yet his friends say he didn't have much to drink that night.

Greg's family believes it was foul play and has hired a private investigator. Among the many things they found: tests on Greg's cell phone indicate that the phone had not been in water, although one police report said the phone was found on his partially submerged body.

Greg Hart had just moved to Dedham, Massachusetts. Like Gene Losik, he was a graduate of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and had had a girlfriend, Bridget, for the past four years. He was also very bright and had been on the dean's list all through college, graduating cum laude in economics.

Greg was in the Navy and had been accepted into an officer's program to be a Navy fighter pilot. He had also just landed a new job as an applications specialist at Meditech, a leading software vendor to the healthcare industry based out of Westwood, Mass. The job provided him with opportunities to travel.

The news has devasted his family. "He's my heart. I can't even function. Nothing's important anymore," his mother, Marianne Hart, told the Providence Journal.

Hart’s father said his son was his “best friend.”


Other young men with ties to Boston

Other young men with ties to Boston have also disappeared during the month of March, though they do not appear to have a connection to St. Patrick's Day or the military.

Most recently, Alexander Grant, a 19-year old student at Boston College, died on Mar. 5, 2011 from drowning and hypothermia after visiting friends at a party in Skidmore College in Saratoga, N.Y. Alexander, who lived in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., was a talented keyboardist, accomplished musician, mathematician, and fundraiser for various charities. He worked for the past three years as an intern at Risk Resources, LLC, a financial advisory company in New York City.

Just four days prior to Alexander's disappearance, 24-year old David Mark was found on the shoreline near 498 Meridian Street in East Boston, Mass. David, who was from Albany, N.Y., had left on a spur of the moment trip to visit his sister in the Boston suburb of Newton, Mass. Authorities suspect that after stopping at a bar in Boston, David, who suffered from Type 1 diabetes and was without his insulin, may have become confused and disoriented.


Other young men who disappeared on St. Patrick's Day

Other young men have disappeared on St. Patrick's Day, although not in Boston, and they did not necessarily have other factors in common.

Joshua Kamuela Kaneakua, 22, of Minneapolis, Minn., was last seen on Mar. 17, 2007, at Gabby's Saloon and Eatery on the northeast side of Minneapolis, where he had been celebrating St. Patrick's Day. His body was discovered in the Mississippi River on Mar. 27, 2007, near the Lake Street Bridge. His death was ruled a suicide.

Antwane Tucker, 24, of St. Cloud, Minn., also vanished after leaving Gabby's Saloon on St. Patrick's Day in 2009. His fully clothed body was found on Friday, May 15, 2009 near the Hennepin Avenue bridge. There were no signs of trauma, and the death was ruled a suicide.



Originally published: 3/18/11 11:24 a.m.    Updated: 3/13/12 4:19 p.m.

March 15, 2011

02/21/11: Barrett Snyder, 24, Biloxi, MS

Barrett Snyder
Barrett Andrew Snyder, 24, was last seen in the early morning hours of Feb. 21, 2011. The Montgomery, Alabama resident was a lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force and had just graduated U.S. Air Force Officer Training School on Feb. 18. Three days later (2/21), Snyder was on his way to Texas, where he was assigned to begin intelligence training. On his way to Texas, he visited Biloxi, Mississippi, checking in at the Kessler Air Force Base on Feb. 21. He contacted his family that day. That was the last time they heard from him.

Snyder’s fully-clothed body was found floating face-down at the edge of a sand bar in Mississippi Sound at 11:45 a.m. on Sunday, February 27, 2011. The location was about 30 yards from the shore of Miramar Park. People walking on the beach at first thought they were seeing a dolphin; and it wasn’t until they got closer that they saw shoes and realized it was a person.

Biloxi police said there were no obvious signs of foul play.

An autopsy, performed by Harrison County Coroner Gary Hargrove, showed that Snyder had drowned and had likely been dead for about six days.

Donald Snyder said, "The coroner told me today that they don't believe there was any foul play and that it was probably an accidental drowning," Snyder's father said Monday night. "The police are asking some of the businesses in the area if they have cameras that might have recorded what happened ... because they don't know what happened."

Hargrove said Barrett Andrew Snyder last spoke with a friend in the early morning hours of Feb. 21 and forensic tests indicate Snyder died soon after that.

Police found Snyder’s black 2009 Subaru Legacy about 2-1/2 miles away. The car was parked in the parking lot of Venues, a nightclub on Caillavet Street, in an area where there are piers.

How Snyder reached the area where he was later found remains unclear.

"I know I'm sounding like a grandmother, but Barry, he was a very caring kind of person, and a super guy," grandmother Janet Snyder of Hollidaysburg said. "We are just all in shock, and I can't imagine what happened to him."

Police say the investigation is ongoing.


About Barrett Snyder

Barrett Snyder, a native of Altoona, Pennsylvania, is the son of Altoona optometrist Donald G. and Sandy Snyder and a 2004 graduate of Hollidaysburg Area Senior High School. Snyder played soccer in high school and later went on to play for Grove City College and then became a girls' soccer coach for Mount Aloysius College.

Snyder was living in Altoona until October when he moved to Montgomery, Alabama, and enrolled in U.S. Air Force Officer Training School.

"He delayed going to the training in Alabama so he could finish the soccer season at Mount Aloysius," Donald Snyder said. "He just loved coaching that team."

He graduated from U.S. Air Force Officer Training School on Feb. 18 during a ceremony his parents attended at the Maxwell Air Force Base.

Snyder said the Air Force is assisting with funeral arrangements, which are pending.

"This has been quite a shock for the whole family," Snyder said. "We've just been trying to make sense of it all."

If you have any information about Barrett Snyder, call the Biloxi Police Department's Criminal Investigation Division at (228) 435-6112 or Police Dispatch at (228) 392-0641.

March 13, 2011

05/14/08: Brandon Swanson, 19, Taunton, MN

Brandon Swanson - Taunton, MN
Missing since 5/14/08
(See poster.)
Brandon Swanson is still missing.

Brandon Swanson, 19, was last seen on 5/14/08 in Canby, Minnesota. Swanson had finished his last day of classes at Minnesota West Community and Technical College in Canby, where he was enrolled in a wind turbine program. Later that evening, he was visiting friends to celebrate.

On his way back home to Marshall, MN, Swanson was driving alongside a washed out field when he accidentally drove his vehicle into the ditch and became stuck. He made a cell phone call to his parents, Annette and Brian, at 12:30 a.m. for help. The Swansons left their home to meet him.

When Annette and Brian Swanson were unable to find him, Swanson said he was going to walk toward the town of Lynd where he could see lights. He stayed on the phone with his father, and headed down a gravel road. He had been on the phone for 47 minutes when his father heard him say an expletive, then the call ended abruptly around 2:10 a.m. His parents continued looking for him for several hours, and then called the police at 6:30 a.m.



     Source: KROC.com, 2 Feb 2024. https://kroc.com/brandon-swanson-minnesota-missing/



The following day, authorities used cellular phone records to locate Swanson's car. It was found 1-1/2 miles north on Lyon Lincoln Rd., off Hwy 68 west of Taunton, MN. The location was about 20 miles away from Lynd, nowhere close to where Swanson thought he was.


Was drinking involved? 

That night, Brandon hit up two parties in celebration of the end of the spring semester. One party was in Canby and the other was in Marshall.  There have been mixed reports about Swanson drinking on the night he disappeared, but all seem to agree that he was not impaired. According to the Charley Project, investigators do not believe that Swanson was impaired. Brian Swanson also told the Marshall Independent that his son did not sound intoxicated or incoherent. He added that there was no way that Brandon would have been able to fake his way through a 47 minute phone call with his dad.

Officials have said there is no evidence foul play, nor any indication that Brandon would have staged his own disappearance. According to the Charley Project, some authorities believe that Swanson accidentally fell into the Yellow Medicine River while walking in the dark. Brandon wore glasses and was legally blind in his left eye. The river was also high at the time with a strong current. Still, Brandon's family and many friends and volunteers have no plans to give up searching.

March 7, 2011

03/02/11: David Mark, 24, Newton, MA

David Mark
David Mark, 24, of Albany, NY, had breakfast at his parents home on Wednesday, March 2, then left on a spur of the moment to visit his sister in the Chestnut Hill area of the Boston suburb of Newton, MA. Mark never arrived. His family was immediately concerned because David suffered from Type 1 diabetes and was dependent on insulin. He last had insulin on March 1 and did not have enough with him to treat himself properly, which put him in danger of becoming very disoriented, confused, or even lapsing into a coma. David also suffered from Asperger’s syndrome, a form of autism that makes is difficult to communicate with people socially.

According to Robert Mark, because of his medical conditions and the length of time he had been missing, he very well could have looked disheveled, possibly even appearing to be homeless. He said that he may have left his contact lenses in too long causing his eyes to appear bloodshot. He also has an eye twitch and a condition that causes him to walk in a stiff manner. But both Robert Mark and police emphasized that the public should not be afraid to approach him; he needed emergency care. His family urged people to make contact with him, if they saw him. "Just walk up to him slowly and say, 'David, it looks like you need some help,' " said Robert.

Investigators determined that David Mark was last seen at the Boston Beerworks, near Fenway Park in Boston, MA. Police were led there by Mark's computer history, which showed he had looked up the bar before he left. Police were then able to verify through Mark's E-Z Pass records that he had been on the Massachusetts Turnpike heading into Boston. 

A waitress at the bar said she remembered seing Mark in the bar early that afternoon and that he was in "good spirits."

A cell phone tower detected that Mark's phone was in use soon after leaving the bar.

Mark’s car was found later near the Brimmer & May School at 10 Middlesex Road in the Chestnut Hill area. The location of the car was about a mile from his sister’s home. Mark was nowhere to be found. His family has left a note on the car in the event that he returns.

Witnesses told police that the car had been in the same spot since Wednesday.

Mark had about $40 cash in his wallet, and his debt card has not been used since he left Albany.

David Mark had just completed a master's degree in geography and G.I.S. at the State University of New York at Albany. Mark’s father, Robert, said that his son is very familiar with Boston and might be using the MBTA, particularly the Green Line. David also received a BA summa cum laude from the university in 2009 and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.

On Mar. 8, 2011, the body of David Mark was found on the shore in East Boston by a consultant for a local Boston fishing company. The body was found on the shoreline near 498 Meridian Street, downstream from the Andrew McArdle Bridge, after apparently drifting along the river. Police said that there were no signs of trauma.


Facts of Interest
Name/age: David Mark, 24
Last seen: 3/2/11, Boston Beerworks, Boston, MA
Physical description:  5'5", 150 pounds, dark hair, some facial hair. Last seen wearing: black leather waist jacket, a tan knit shirt with no collar, and black and gray Adidas sneakers.
Recovered: 3/8/11, East Boston near 498 Meridian Street.
Notes: IDavid requires insulin, and will need an ambulance and emergency treatment.
Investigating Agency: Newton Police, 617-796-2100.

Published 3/7/11.  Updated: 3/9/11, 3/18/11.

March 3, 2011

08/01/09: Justin Burkhart, 28, Bend, OR

Justin Burkhart
(ProjectJason.com)
On Saturday, August 1, 2009, 28-year old Justin Burkhart got off work at 9 pm and spent the night drinking and dancing with friends at the Underground, a nightclub on Northeast Third Street in Bend, Oregon. The group stayed until the bar’s 2 a.m. closing, then Burkhart invited friends back to his new apartment to have a glass of wine. He had just moved in two days before.

The group drank on the front porch of Burkhart's apartment complex in downtown Bend with other tenants of the complex until around 3:30 a.m., when two of his friends, who were brothers, left to walk the two female party guests back to their car a few blocks away. As the brothers were leaving, Burkhart said he was going to the Pita Pit to get something to eat. The friends told Burkhart that the restaurant had closed for the night, but he headed there anyway.

He only had his wallet and his keys with him.

A witness saw Burkhart walking near a footbridge next to Drake Park. It was the last time he was seen.

Eloisa Chavez, Burkhart's mother, and Teri DuFresne, a private investigator working on the case, believe Burkhart may have headed to the 7-Eleven on Galveston Avenue, about a half- mile's walk from his apartment, after finding the Pita Pit closed. DuFresne said employees of the 7-Eleven did not recall seeing Burkhart that night.

When Burkhart missed appointments with friends over the weekend and then didn't show up for work on Monday, he was reported missing. 


Recovery

On June 7, 2010, Justin Burkhart’s body was found in the Deschutes River by a Bend city employee, just below the Newport Bridge. The body was dressed in pants, shoes and a shirt and Burkhart's identification was found on the body.

An autopsy determined he had drowned, and there were no signs of foul play.

The case was forwarded to the district attorney's office for review.


About Justin Burkhart

Chavez's private investigator found no evidence to suggest that anyone wanted to harm Burkhart. He was known to be jovial, had a vibrant personality, was well liked, and had no known enemies.

(BendBulletin.com)

Burkhart had some previous run-ins with the law for drug offenses, but after a 2-year stint in federal prison on a cocaine charge, it all seemed to be behind him. When he was released in 2008, he enrolled in Central Oregon Community College, and made the dean's list for the fall 2008 term.

In late 2008, he started working at Allyson's Kitchen in the Old Mill District. He was engaged at the time of his disappearance. She told the media that he not involved in drugs. He was "doing great things, and trying to be the best man he could be.”

In the days leading up to his disappearance, Burkhart was stressed because his fiancee was moving to Alaska. The couple had decided to put the wedding on hold so her income would not disqualify Burkhart from receiving grants to pay for school. Two days before his disappearance, Burkhart tried to persuade her to go get married at the courthouse, but she wanted to stick to their plan.

But while he was a bit down about these developments, there was no sign that he was depressed. In fact, he had purchased a plane ticket to visit Alaska in early September, and was planning to move there in November. He was even considering meeting his fiancee in Hawaii instead to marry her. 

His co-worker said Burkhart was an “open book” who would have likely told her if he was feeling threatened by anyone or if he were seriously depressed.

A Celebration of Life was held at the Riverbend Community Park on July 17, 2009 in Bend, Oregon.


Facts in This Case:
Last seen: 8/1/09, Bend, OR
Recovered: 06/7/10, Deschutes River
Physical description:  Hispanic, 5'8", 155 pounds, dark brown eyes, brown close-cut hair, medium complexion.
Identifying Characteristics: Has a dental retainer. Tattoos include a sleeve on his left arm, "JDB" on right arm, and "Scrap" on his right calf.
Last seen wearing: Green polo shirt, jeans, silver-tone Fossil watch
Investigating Agency: Bend Police (541) 693-6911
Investigative Case #: 09-03-05-261

March 1, 2011

01/31/10: Brandon Graves, 24, Sumter, SC

Brandon Graves - MISSING
Brandon Graves is missing.

On January 30, 2010, Brandon Graves and a friend left Myrtle Beach, SC, on a spur of the moment trip to join members of his fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha Inc. for a homecoming event at Morris College in Sumter, SC. The twenty-four year old called his girlfriend along the way, and then called friends when he arrived.

His fraternity won first place at homecoming’s step competition.
At around 11 p.m., Graves went with two friends to Sebastian’s Night Life at 3289 Broad St., in Sumter County, but he was apparently asked to leave the club just before midnight.

Surveillance video taken outside the club shows Graves being turned away by a bouncer, before leaving. He appeared upset.

According to WLTX.com, the club’s night manager, “was standing just a few feet away when Graves came up to the club.” The manager told WLTX.com that Graves, “was intoxicated, we think, but not out of hand, but we didn't want any trouble so we told him he had to leave for the night.”

After being ejected from the club, a friend saw Graves him in the parking lot talking to a group of people. Witnesses say Graves then left in a white car, possibly to head to another club with someone.

A few hours later, Graves placed three cell phone calls. The first was at about 1 a.m., when Graves called a friend for some phone numbers. At 3 a.m., he called his cousin but got no answer, so he left a message. The last call he made was at about 4 a.m. to a friend in Myrtle Beach; he said he would see him later that day. It was the last time anyone heard from Graves.

Graves was reported missing Feb. 1, according to a police report.
Sumter County police have said that Graves has no police record, was not known to associate with drug dealers, and was a well-liked, athletic individual. His family told the media that it is unlikely that Brandon would be carrying any cash (SCNow.com, 4/29/10).

The Sumter County Sheriff’s Department initially said there was no reason to believe anyone would want to hurt Graves, but on February 6, police said they had suspicions that a crime may be involved in the disappearance.

In February 2010, authorities were able to identify a man from Claredon County who may have been the one to leave with Graves in the white car, but they said he was not a suspect.


About Brandon Graves

Brandon’s aunt and adoptive mother, Lois German, raised him since he was 3 after the death of his mother, who is her sister. She considers Brandon to be like her own child, and notes that he was always respectful as a child.

Graves, who earned the nicknamed “Peanut” because of his small stature, is described by his family as a very family-oriented person who always stayed in close contact.

At the time of his disappearance, Graves was living an hour and a half away in Myrtle Beach, and he returned to his hometown of Little Rock, SC, every weekend to be with his family and go to church.

Graves’ older sister, Vassie Lloyd, said it is not like him to leave and not contact his family or to contact his girlfriend of 7 years.

"It’s not like him to not have a called somebody.”
- Brandon Graves's sister
“We don’t know where he’s at and that’s out of character for him,” Lloyd said Wednesday from her Charlotte, N.C., area home. “He’s a quiet laid back type of person. He’s a very friendly person, most times you see him he’s always smiling. He’s easy to get along and it hurts my heart that someone would want to hurt or harm him. It’s not like him to not have a called somebody.”

His brother, Lorenzo Graves, says Brandon is a" very good person” who was outspoken and friendly. “Everybody he met became his friend,” he said.

Graves attended Morris College for a year before transferring to Coastal Carolina University (CCU), where he graduated in December 2008. While at CCU, he worked as a student trainer on the CCU football team. He had just gotten a new job in Myrtle Beach two weeks before his disappearance.

If you have any information about Brandon Graves, call Sumter police at 843-436-2700 or make an anonymous call to Crimestoppers at 1-800-CRIME-SC.


Facts in this Case:Name/age: Brandon Rodriguez Graves, 24
Last contact: 1/31/10, 4 a.m., Sumter, SC
Physical Description: 5'4” 150 pounds, long black hair in dreadlocks, brown eyes.
Last seen wearing: Blue T-shirt with a black thermal shirt under it, black jeans and black baseball cap.
Notes: Graves suffers from asthma, and his family is concerned that without proper medication, his health could suffer.
Investigating Agency: Sumter police at 843-436-2700