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The Dispatch found police failed to enter the names of hundreds of Ohioans missing for a year to a database that has helped solve thousands of cases.
A look at how The Dispatch conducted its groundbreaking missing persons investigation VANISHED. Here's how Dispatch reporters uncovered Ohio police failures in missing persons cases Skip to main ...
Family and friends are asking for the public's help in locating University of Texas doctorate student Frank Guzman, who along with his wife, Caroline Katba, has been missing since late July ...
The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) is a national clearinghouse and resource center for missing, unidentified, and unclaimed person cases throughout the United States. NamUs is funded and administered by the National Institute of Justice through a cooperative agreement with the University of North Texas Health Science ...
Per a 2017 report, the U.S. states of Oregon, Arizona, and Alaska have the highest numbers of missing-person cases per 100,000 people. [6] In Canada—with a population a little more than one tenth that of the United States—the number of missing-person cases is smaller, but the rate per capita is higher, with an estimated 71,000 reported in ...
Date Person(s) Age Country of disappearance Circumstances Outcome Time spent missing or unconfirmed 1950 J.K. Rideout: 37–38 China J.K. Rideout, a British linguist and professor of Oriental Studies at both the University of Sydney and the University of Hong Kong, disappeared on 16 February 1950.
Those 689 cases were found through a Dispatch analysis of missing persons data from the Ohio Attorney General's Office, which lists missing Ohioans using information pulled from the FBI's National ...
Lists of solved missing person cases include: List of solved missing person cases: pre-1950; List of solved missing person cases: 1950–1999;