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  • sideshowknob:

Elaine,  is described as being 5’ 4 ” in height, stocky build, and with mousey brown hair. When last seen on Ballinclea Heights, Killiney , she was wearing jeans, runners and either a blue jacket or jumper.

Anyone with information regarding Elaine’s whereabouts should contact Stepaside Garda Station on 01-6665700, or you can call the Missing Persons Helpline on 1890 442 552.

    sideshowknob:

    Elaine,  is described as being 5’ 4 ” in height, stocky build, and with mousey brown hair. When last seen on Ballinclea Heights, Killiney , she was wearing jeans, runners and either a blue jacket or jumper.

    Anyone with information regarding Elaine’s whereabouts should contact Stepaside Garda Station on 01-6665700, or you can call the Missing Persons Helpline on 1890 442 552.

    Source: dredericktatum
    • 8 months ago
    • 5 notes
    • #missing person
    • #she works with my sister and this is so close to my house and they found her car a few days ago its so sad
  • disneyyandmore:

I know this isn’t Disney, and to be honest, I don’t care right now.
MISSING PERSON. 
My friend has gone missing, and if you guys could please spread this around, I’d be very appreciative about it. it’s been a while since anyone has seen her, and we’re all worried. 
Here’s another picture of her,

If you live in Illinois or anywhere around Chicago or just indiana or anything, please spread this around. Please. 

    disneyyandmore:

    I know this isn’t Disney, and to be honest, I don’t care right now.

    MISSING PERSON. 

    My friend has gone missing, and if you guys could please spread this around, I’d be very appreciative about it. it’s been a while since anyone has seen her, and we’re all worried. 

    Here’s another picture of her,

    If you live in Illinois or anywhere around Chicago or just indiana or anything, please spread this around. Please. 

    Source: disneyyandmore
    • 8 months ago
    • 3274 notes
    • #missing person
  • belowtheair:

Missing From Kingsland, Georgia Since 8/23/2012 Car Found in Deerfield, Florida Please Help Find Ivy MerckIvy Dawn Merck, age 24, was last seen August 23, 2012. Her dark green 2008 Honda CRV was found around 10 p.m. Wednesday in the parking lot of a Marshalls store at 3850 W. Hillsboro Blvd., in Deerfield Beach, Florida. Merck, a Camden native and University of Georgia graduate, was listed as 
missing after her father, Steven Merck, told police in Athens that his daughter never arrived home in Kingsland last Thursday, August 23, 2012.Merck told her roommate and boss at the Good Hands Vet Clinic, where she worked as a vet tech, on Tuesday, Aug. 21, that she was leaving Athens to drive home to Kingsland. She was driving her dark green 2008 Honda CRV, license place number AYZ-5912.On Aug. 23, the Good Hands clinic received a text from Merck and a request for copies of her dog’s medical records from the clinic where Merck boarded the dog until Thursday, Aug. 30.Merck is 5’1” tall, weighs 115 pounds, with brown eyes and dark blonde to brown hair. If anyone has seen or had any recent contact with Ms. Merck please contact the Camden County Sheriff’s Office at (912) 729-1442 or (912) 510-5160 or (912) 510-5100 or report it to Broward Sheriff’s Office Det. Chris Blankenship, who is working with the Kingsland (Ga.) Police Department, at (954) 321-4268 or anonymously report information to Broward Crime Stoppers at 1-866-493-TIPS (8477) or online atwww.browardcrimestoppers.org

    belowtheair:

    Missing From Kingsland, Georgia Since 8/23/2012 Car Found in Deerfield, Florida Please Help Find Ivy Merck

    Ivy Dawn Merck, age 24, was last seen August 23, 2012. Her dark green 2008 Honda CRV was found around 10 p.m. Wednesday in the parking lot of a Marshalls store at 3850 W. Hillsboro Blvd., in Deerfield Beach, Florida. 

    Merck, a Camden native and University of Georgia graduate, was listed as 

    missing after her father, Steven Merck, told police in Athens that his daughter never arrived home in Kingsland last Thursday, August 23, 2012.

    Merck told her roommate and boss at the Good Hands Vet Clinic, where she worked as a vet tech, on Tuesday, Aug. 21, that she was leaving Athens to drive home to Kingsland. She was driving her dark green 2008 Honda CRV, license place number AYZ-5912.

    On Aug. 23, the Good Hands clinic received a text from Merck and a request for copies of her dog’s medical records from the clinic where Merck boarded the dog until Thursday, Aug. 30.

    Merck is 5’1” tall, weighs 115 pounds, with brown eyes and dark blonde to brown hair. 

    If anyone has seen or had any recent contact with Ms. Merck please contact the Camden County Sheriff’s Office at (912) 729-1442 or (912) 510-5160 or (912) 510-5100 or report it to Broward Sheriff’s Office Det. Chris Blankenship, who is working with the Kingsland (Ga.) Police Department, at (954) 321-4268 or anonymously report information to Broward Crime Stoppers at 1-866-493-TIPS (8477) or online atwww.browardcrimestoppers.org
    Source: belowtheair
    • 8 months ago
    • 4 notes
    • #missing person
    • #personal
    • #missing
    • #girl
    • #help
    • #ivy merck
  • Missing Persons: Crystal Morrison Prentice - Kannapolis, North Carolina

    missingindividuals:

    Crystal Morrison Prentice, 31, from Kannapolis, North Carolina was last seen around 1 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 23, walking on International Drive near the intersection of Davidson Highway in Concord after leaving work at Connextions Recruiting.

    Prentice was at work when she suddenly walked out…

    Source: missingindividuals
    • 8 months ago
    • 3 notes
    • #missing person
    • #missing
    • #Crystal Marrison Prentice
    • #kannapolis
    • #north carolina
  • jalwhite:

Missing Manitoba Women: Why Are Manitoba’s Aboriginal Women Going Missing?
In October 2011, Shannon Buck’s daughter disappeared.
Fourteen-year-old Lauren had taken off for a weekend or two before, but always returned to her Winnipeg home.
“I knew that something wasn’t right,” says Buck. She filed a missing persons report with the police and created posters with an online kit.
Lauren’s photo and description appeared on the Facebook page Missing Manitoba Women. Quickly it gained hundreds of shares. Two days later, it was thousands.
Then, two weeks after Buck had last seen her daughter, the phone rang. Lauren called her mom from a hotel where a woman had recognized her from the Facebook page, and stayed with the teenager until Buck could pick her up.
“I couldn’t stop hugging her,” says Buck. “It was a big relief to be able to have someone find her, take care of her and contact us and let us know where she was.”
It was also a relief for Shelley Cook, the founder of the Facebook page, who since June 2011 has dedicated her time to tracking and sharing cases of missing people in Manitoba.
Cook started the page and a blog as a university project, but kept it going after her course ended, enlisting the help of two friends. She doesn’t even have Internet access at home, posting new cases from her phone for the page’s almost 6,000 followers to share.
“I wanted to humanize [these women],” says Cook. She says that missing aboriginal women are too often portrayed as nothing more than sex workers, addicts or otherwise ‘at-risk’ persons. Cook tries to work with families to gather personal details and images that aren’t mugshots.
Missing Manitoba Women does not restrict the cases to aboriginal women — or even solely to women — but that’s who makes up the majority of the cases.
It’s estimated that 75 aboriginal women have disappeared in Manitoba in the last two decades. Across Canada, The Native Women’s Association of Canada says more than 600 women have gone missing or been murdered since 1990.
Aboriginal women are three-and-a-half times more like to experience violence and for younger women, are five times more likely to die from violence than non-aboriginal women in Canada. And Manitoba, where the highest percentage of aboriginal women live, has seen more than its share of tragedy.
In June, Shawn Lamb was arrested and charged in the serial murders of three aboriginal Winnipeg women: Carolyn Sinclair, Tanya Jane Nepinak and Lorna Blacksmith. Lauren was missing during the time between when police allege he killed Nepinak and Sinclair.
“The community knew who this person was and that there was a serial killer,” says Buck. “They didn’t listen to us and it cost three women their lives … at least three women.”
Buck says communication between the aboriginal community and police can be shaky at best, with families of missing and murdered women sometimes hearing about the fate of a loved one from the media before police.
In May 2011, the RCMP and Winnipeg Police launched Project Devote, a joint task force that narrowed down dozens of cases to eight missing persons and 20 murders dating back to 1961 on which to focus. Twenty-seven out of 28 of these victims are women, and many are aboriginal.
While the task force identifies the common factor in these cases as “[victims] of high or extremely high risk due to lifestyle,” nowhere in Project Devote’s mission is the word “aboriginal” mentioned. This fact has not escaped the notice of the community, and criticism has been swift.
“It is our hope that these investigations will produce leads that will provide these families with much needed relief and closure,” Derek Nepinak, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, said in a news release. “Until the province of Manitoba recognizes the problem of missing and murdered people is worse and getting worse in the Indigenous community, Project Devote will remain limited in scope and outcome.”
Cook says she’s glad that something, anything, is being done, but she’s not convinced Project Devote can get the job done.
“I’m a little skeptical,” she says. “I’m hoping for the best, but I’m not thinking this will be the be all and end all.”
RCMP and police have also been quiet on the Project’s progress, denying interviews and updates to media, including the Huffington Post Canada.
Niki Ashton, MP for Manitoba’s Churchill riding and a vocal advocate for a national inquiry, says by not addressing aboriginal women specifically, we still don’t know the full scope of the problem.
“It’s completely inadequate to say a general database of missing people, which is what federal government committed to, is a response to dealing with missing and murdered aboriginal women. It simply isn’t,” says Ashton.
“Some of the positive initiatives that were part of finding a solution, like Sisters In Spirit, were not only not supported, but they were actually cut,” she says.
Sisters In Spirit, a Native Women’s Association of Canada initiative to build awareness of missing and murdered women, was working on gathering information to start a database, but was defunded in 2010.
In the mean time, grassroots initiatives like Missing Manitoba Women are gaining a wave of new voices as discussions that were once kept inside the community are erupting into a larger dialogue.
Buck says she has always been an advocate for aboriginal women, but when it hit so close to home, she found her voice.
“The line has been crossed, I can’t be silent anymore,” says Buck. “Not only for my daughter, but for all of our daughters, all of our sisters, enough is enough.”
Whether Manitoban or not, aboriginal or not, Cook says anyone can help by simply sharing the images and stories of missing women across their own Facebook pages, as hundreds of others are already doing every time a new face appears.
“One of the best ways to help is to not turn a blind eye to it anymore. Not go home to your comfortable homes and pretend it’s not there. To stand up and to say something, and to not wait for someone else to do it,” says Buck. “Because it could be their daughter next, or their sister, or their mother.”

    jalwhite:

    Missing Manitoba Women: Why Are Manitoba’s Aboriginal Women Going Missing?

    In October 2011, Shannon Buck’s daughter disappeared.

    Fourteen-year-old Lauren had taken off for a weekend or two before, but always returned to her Winnipeg home.

    “I knew that something wasn’t right,” says Buck. She filed a missing persons report with the police and created posters with an online kit.

    Lauren’s photo and description appeared on the Facebook page Missing Manitoba Women. Quickly it gained hundreds of shares. Two days later, it was thousands.

    Then, two weeks after Buck had last seen her daughter, the phone rang. Lauren called her mom from a hotel where a woman had recognized her from the Facebook page, and stayed with the teenager until Buck could pick her up.

    “I couldn’t stop hugging her,” says Buck. “It was a big relief to be able to have someone find her, take care of her and contact us and let us know where she was.”

    It was also a relief for Shelley Cook, the founder of the Facebook page, who since June 2011 has dedicated her time to tracking and sharing cases of missing people in Manitoba.

    Cook started the page and a blog as a university project, but kept it going after her course ended, enlisting the help of two friends. She doesn’t even have Internet access at home, posting new cases from her phone for the page’s almost 6,000 followers to share.

    “I wanted to humanize [these women],” says Cook. She says that missing aboriginal women are too often portrayed as nothing more than sex workers, addicts or otherwise ‘at-risk’ persons. Cook tries to work with families to gather personal details and images that aren’t mugshots.

    Missing Manitoba Women does not restrict the cases to aboriginal women — or even solely to women — but that’s who makes up the majority of the cases.

    It’s estimated that 75 aboriginal women have disappeared in Manitoba in the last two decades. Across Canada, The Native Women’s Association of Canada says more than 600 women have gone missing or been murdered since 1990.

    Aboriginal women are three-and-a-half times more like to experience violence and for younger women, are five times more likely to die from violence than non-aboriginal women in Canada. And Manitoba, where the highest percentage of aboriginal women live, has seen more than its share of tragedy.

    In June, Shawn Lamb was arrested and charged in the serial murders of three aboriginal Winnipeg women: Carolyn Sinclair, Tanya Jane Nepinak and Lorna Blacksmith. Lauren was missing during the time between when police allege he killed Nepinak and Sinclair.

    “The community knew who this person was and that there was a serial killer,” says Buck. “They didn’t listen to us and it cost three women their lives … at least three women.”

    Buck says communication between the aboriginal community and police can be shaky at best, with families of missing and murdered women sometimes hearing about the fate of a loved one from the media before police.

    In May 2011, the RCMP and Winnipeg Police launched Project Devote, a joint task force that narrowed down dozens of cases to eight missing persons and 20 murders dating back to 1961 on which to focus. Twenty-seven out of 28 of these victims are women, and many are aboriginal.

    While the task force identifies the common factor in these cases as “[victims] of high or extremely high risk due to lifestyle,” nowhere in Project Devote’s mission is the word “aboriginal” mentioned. This fact has not escaped the notice of the community, and criticism has been swift.

    “It is our hope that these investigations will produce leads that will provide these families with much needed relief and closure,” Derek Nepinak, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, said in a news release. “Until the province of Manitoba recognizes the problem of missing and murdered people is worse and getting worse in the Indigenous community, Project Devote will remain limited in scope and outcome.”

    Cook says she’s glad that something, anything, is being done, but she’s not convinced Project Devote can get the job done.

    “I’m a little skeptical,” she says. “I’m hoping for the best, but I’m not thinking this will be the be all and end all.”

    RCMP and police have also been quiet on the Project’s progress, denying interviews and updates to media, including the Huffington Post Canada.

    Niki Ashton, MP for Manitoba’s Churchill riding and a vocal advocate for a national inquiry, says by not addressing aboriginal women specifically, we still don’t know the full scope of the problem.

    “It’s completely inadequate to say a general database of missing people, which is what federal government committed to, is a response to dealing with missing and murdered aboriginal women. It simply isn’t,” says Ashton.

    “Some of the positive initiatives that were part of finding a solution, like Sisters In Spirit, were not only not supported, but they were actually cut,” she says.

    Sisters In Spirit, a Native Women’s Association of Canada initiative to build awareness of missing and murdered women, was working on gathering information to start a database, but was defunded in 2010.

    In the mean time, grassroots initiatives like Missing Manitoba Women are gaining a wave of new voices as discussions that were once kept inside the community are erupting into a larger dialogue.

    Buck says she has always been an advocate for aboriginal women, but when it hit so close to home, she found her voice.

    “The line has been crossed, I can’t be silent anymore,” says Buck. “Not only for my daughter, but for all of our daughters, all of our sisters, enough is enough.”

    Whether Manitoban or not, aboriginal or not, Cook says anyone can help by simply sharing the images and stories of missing women across their own Facebook pages, as hundreds of others are already doing every time a new face appears.

    “One of the best ways to help is to not turn a blind eye to it anymore. Not go home to your comfortable homes and pretend it’s not there. To stand up and to say something, and to not wait for someone else to do it,” says Buck. “Because it could be their daughter next, or their sister, or their mother.”

    Source: jalwhite
    • 8 months ago
    • 218 notes
    • #missing person
    • #Aborginal
    • #Aborginal women
    • #Native American
    • #Native Women
    • #violence against women
    • #genocide
  • inkytheblot:

MISSING PERSON. 

Hannah Hoffman has been missing from BOWIE MARYLAND for over a day now.  

She is the girl in the picture on the right. 

Please contact her twin Olivia Hoffman on facebook with any information. www.facebook.com/havok.personal

Please reblog this and spread the word so she can be found. Her twin sister is incredibly distraught right now and we are all very worried about Hannah.

    inkytheblot:

    MISSING PERSON.

    Hannah Hoffman has been missing from BOWIE MARYLAND for over a day now.

    She is the girl in the picture on the right.

    Please contact her twin Olivia Hoffman on facebook with any information. www.facebook.com/havok.personal

    Please reblog this and spread the word so she can be found. Her twin sister is incredibly distraught right now and we are all very worried about Hannah.

    Source: mamis
    • 8 months ago
    • 24 notes
    • #missing person
    • #bowie
    • #maryland
    • #bowie maryland
    • #signal boost
  • vampiero:


We need your help to find missing teen Nicole (Nikki) Peress. She was last seen Wednesday August 29th in Kidsville at Burning Man.  She is wearing a green shirt with midriff showing, short blue jean cutoffs, and brown shoes. She is 15 years old, is 5 feet, 6 inches tall and has a small nose ring and her belly button pierced. She is wearing a green kidsville bracelet with the word kidsville crossed out. 
Nikki is only 15-years-old but appears older, and can be mistaken for someone in her late teens or early twenties. Please, if you have any information about Nikki’s location or think you may have seen her contact the Pershing County Sheriffs Department immediately at 775-273-5111.  Or tell any Black Rock Ranger at Burning Man immediately.  
X

Please reblog to raise awareness about her disappearance! Any help is good help!

    vampiero:

    We need your help to find missing teen Nicole (Nikki) Peress. She was last seen Wednesday August 29th in Kidsville at Burning Man.  She is wearing a green shirt with midriff showing, short blue jean cutoffs, and brown shoes. She is 15 years old, is 5 feet, 6 inches tall and has a small nose ring and her belly button pierced. She is wearing a green kidsville bracelet with the word kidsville crossed out. 

    Nikki is only 15-years-old but appears older, and can be mistaken for someone in her late teens or early twenties. Please, if you have any information about Nikki’s location or think you may have seen her contact the Pershing County Sheriffs Department immediately at 775-273-5111.  Or tell any Black Rock Ranger at Burning Man immediately.  

    X

    Please reblog to raise awareness about her disappearance! Any help is good help!

    (via kelencapenis)

    Source: hlntv.com
    • 8 months ago
    • 38 notes
    • #missing person
    • #I HAVE FRIENDS WHO KNOW HER PLEASE HELP
    • #help
    • #missing
    • #missing teen
    • #important
  • Never Lose Your Flames: $25,000 REWARD FOR MISSING PERSON!!

    it-all-comes-back-full-circle:

    Guys the reward for Caroline Starkman’s return is now $25,000!!!!! PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE KEEP RE-BLOGGING, WE CAN’T LET THIS DIE OUT SHE NEEDS OUR HELP RIGHT NOW!!!! $25,000 will be paid for the safe return of Caroline, no questions asked. If you have any information you can call David 24/7 at …

    Source: stuck-self-torturing
    • 8 months ago
    • 3 notes
    • #missing person
    • #Caroline Starkman
    • #staff
  • Missing Persons: Ivy Dawn Merck - Deerfield Beach, Florida

    missingindividuals:

    Ivy Dawn Merck from Deerfield Beach, Fla., has been missing since August 23 according to a news release from Camden County Sheriff’s Office, said the Tribune-Georgian.

    Merck told her roommate and boss at the Good Hands Vet Clinic, where she worked as a vet tech, on Tuesday, Aug. 21, that…

    Source: missingindividuals
    • 8 months ago
    • 2 notes
    • #missing person
    • #missing
    • #ivy dawn merck
    • #deerfield
    • #florida
  • butt-burgers:

hey guys, girl from the coast went missing. thought i’d post this here to get the word out more

    butt-burgers:

    hey guys, girl from the coast went missing. thought i’d post this here to get the word out more

    Source: icate-ousite
    • 8 months ago
    • 1 notes
    • #missing person
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