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The Circleville letters: Anonymous letters threaten to expose an Ohio town s rumored secrets
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The Circleville letters: You ve got hate mail
cbsnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbsnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Circleville letters: You ve got hate mail
cbsnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbsnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Unsolved Mysteries.
NBC
A man sits next to you on an airplane. He looks familiar is he an amnesiac who’s wandered miles from home?
A woman in line at the grocery store seems to be stealing furtive glances. Could she be the missing heir to a fortune . or a murderer?
Some people would call these paranoid thoughts. But this behavior probably seems pretty normal if you grew up watching
Unsolved Mysteries. The primetime show used creepy music, spooky lightning, and sometimes-questionable acting in an effort to crack vexing cases, both legal and metaphysical. Join us. Perhaps you can help solve a mystery or at least dive into the mysteries behind
December 10, 2020
Allegations of an affair led to a series of threatening letters that puzzled authorities in Ohio for years.
Photo by Calvin Hanson from Pexels
Mary Gillispie had seen enough.
It was the afternoon of February 7, 1983, and Gillispie, a school bus driver for the Westfall School District in Circleville, Ohio, had just dropped off one group of children and was headed to pick up another at Monroe Elementary School when she spotted the sign. It had been placed along her bus route at the intersection of Scioto-Darby Road and Five Points Pike.
Gillispie parked the bus, exited, and approached the handwritten sign, which made an obscene remark about her young daughter, Traci. Gillispie had been receiving such harassment for years, typically via letters in the mail, and she knew the sign was the work of the same anonymous perpetrator. In the letters, the person had warned her that messages would be posted publicly.