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Search teams seek missing Virginia woman in Glacier National Park

Search teams seek missing Virginia woman in Glacier National Park
roanoke.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from roanoke.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Nonprofit donates baseball tickets to Danville Police officers

Nonprofit donates baseball tickets to Danville Police officers
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CASEY: 'Sleepless' Roanoke man spreads the word about missing people

Last week was busy for the folks at the nonprofit AWARE Foundation. In Las Vegas, police searched for Vance Ray Veselka, 60, a homeless man who lived (or lives) in a white van with Colorado tags. His last known sighting was June 11. Meanwhile in Ohio, Sarah Nicole Perkins, 17, went missing from her home south of Dayton on June 25. She’s 5 feet, 2 inches tall, 113 pounds, with brown hair and has an infinity symbol with the words “Love You More” tattooed on her right arm. Another 17-year-old girl, Jordan Helen Pettit, disappeared from Dresden, Tennessee, on June 29. Thursday, someone spotted her with a redheaded young woman near a Waffle House in West Nashville.

Spotsylvania mom still determined to find daughter missing since 2015

Lisa Sullivan’s latest attempt to locate her 19-year-old daughter was a bright yellow billboard bearing her image placed at a busy King George County intersection. She believes her former husband, James Branton, was probably the last person to see her daughter, Katelin Akens, on Dec. 5, 2015. She also believes Branton has additional information he still has not shared with authorities. “I was hoping [the billboard] would put him on a guilt trip, seeing her face every day,” said Sullivan. “He needs to talk; he needs to come forward. He’s got to know where she is.” For the last three months, the billboard bearing Katelin’s image was in plain view where State Route 206, or Dahlgren Road, meets U.S. 301. That billboard came down recently, but is going back up nearby. Sullivan believes Branton, who works at Naval Support Facility Dahlgren, will continue to see the billboard every day on his way to work, and so will the people he works with.

An uncertain future for a key missing persons program

This article originally appeared on Undark. Hundreds of thousands of people go missing each year in the United States. And, for more than a decade, law enforcement officers, medical examiners, volunteer sleuths, and families have been able to use the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, or NamUs, to seek answers. Established in 2007, NamUs offers public databases and free forensic services. Since its inception, according to the program s website, it has helped resolve more than 2,700 missing persons cases and identify more than 2,000 bodies. Tens of thousands of open cases remain in the system. Advertisement: I can t imagine working without it, said Bruce Anderson, a forensic anthropologist at the office of the medical examiner in Pima County, Arizona.

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