Post by LadyBlue on Dec 11, 2012 15:04:04 GMT -5
Dorothy Eyvonne Rosier - Body Found
ALEXANDRIA, La. (AP) - Human remains found last month in LaSalle Parish have been identified as those of Dorothy Eyvonne Rosier a young central Louisiana woman who disappeared almost three years ago. The woman was 25 when she was reported missing in January of 2010. She lived in Pineville at the time. Hunters found her remains Nov. 21. Authorities in Rapides and LaSalle parishes continue to investigate the death as a homicide. No cause of death has been released. Rapides Sheriff William E. Hilton issued a statement encouraging anyone with knowledge about Rosier's disappearance or death to come forward. According to a flier released when Rosier disappeared, she was just under 5 feet tall and weighed about 110 pounds. She had brownish-blonde hair- and hazel eyes.
www.katc.com/news/25-year-old-pineville-woman-s-body-found-3-years-after-being-reported-as-missing/
Background Info
She had just bought a new car and was enjoying the job she`d had for a bit more than a year as a pharmacy technician. A friend even says Julie recently met a man who put a smile on her face. March 26th, 2010, is the last time anyone has seen that smile.
March 26th, 2010, Julie went to her estranged husband`s house to pick up their then 2-year-old daughter. The two shared custody. But according to the husband, George Dela Cruz, something was off with Julie. She seemed spaced out and kind of down.
Allegedly she made a request that her family says seems out of character. She asked Dela Cruz to keep their daughter through the weekend so she could spend some time alone.
She was making plans Friday. She said she was going to run errands. That`s her day off. She made plans to go see the baby-sitter to pay the baby-sitter. She made plans to go to a baby shower we were going to be having on Sunday.
Just a few hours after the last sighting of Julie Ann, the estranged husband is captured on video with the 2-year-old at a Wal-Mart buying a video with Julie Ann`s debit card. On March 28th, her car is found abandoned in a nearby Walgreen`s parking lot.
transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1103/14/ng.01.html
LYNN: OK. Could she dropped the baby off and then went and got the baby`s medicine?
GRACE: Good question. Let`s go to her mother. Julie Ann Gonzalez`s mother, Sandra Soto is with us. Miss Soto, what can you tell us about the meds for the little baby?
SOTO: The medicine was purchased a day before, and it`s asthma medicine. So, it`s medicine that she has to have with her all the time because she has a nebulizer, and she gets treatment. So, it`s not like, you know, it was medicine that, you know, she could take off and on only as needed. It`s medicine that she has to have with her at all times.
GRACE: Miss Soto, I want to go back over what Deborah Norville asked you earlier. And let`s just take it from the beginning on. What do you know happened the day she went missing and what do you believe happened?
SOTO: I think that Julie Ann never really made it. Maybe never made it to George`s house. Or if she did, she wasn`t there for very long. George could not have done this by himself. I think that maybe he involved some other people. The car -- Julie`s car was found four blocks away from George`s house at the Walgreens parking lot. And when we told him that we found the car, the look on his face was priceless. He went white. Like he had just seen a ghost.
And I was watching him. I was looking at his reactions. And I noticed that he also had scratches on his face. All these things that happened within those, you know, first 24 hours that we reported Julie Ann missing, we would tell the police, [glow=red,2,300]but they just wouldn`t listen[/glow]
The statement in red really hits me today. I've been saying in so many missing persons cases that LE just doesn't listen, we are a throw away society, one less person to worry about. Today as I say this, I'm about ready to give up. Throw in the towel on missing persons, even after I've been keeping up on all these cases for so many years. It's a fruitless effort I'm afraid. Totally fruitless.
ALEXANDRIA, La. (AP) - Human remains found last month in LaSalle Parish have been identified as those of Dorothy Eyvonne Rosier a young central Louisiana woman who disappeared almost three years ago. The woman was 25 when she was reported missing in January of 2010. She lived in Pineville at the time. Hunters found her remains Nov. 21. Authorities in Rapides and LaSalle parishes continue to investigate the death as a homicide. No cause of death has been released. Rapides Sheriff William E. Hilton issued a statement encouraging anyone with knowledge about Rosier's disappearance or death to come forward. According to a flier released when Rosier disappeared, she was just under 5 feet tall and weighed about 110 pounds. She had brownish-blonde hair- and hazel eyes.
www.katc.com/news/25-year-old-pineville-woman-s-body-found-3-years-after-being-reported-as-missing/
Background Info
She had just bought a new car and was enjoying the job she`d had for a bit more than a year as a pharmacy technician. A friend even says Julie recently met a man who put a smile on her face. March 26th, 2010, is the last time anyone has seen that smile.
March 26th, 2010, Julie went to her estranged husband`s house to pick up their then 2-year-old daughter. The two shared custody. But according to the husband, George Dela Cruz, something was off with Julie. She seemed spaced out and kind of down.
Allegedly she made a request that her family says seems out of character. She asked Dela Cruz to keep their daughter through the weekend so she could spend some time alone.
She was making plans Friday. She said she was going to run errands. That`s her day off. She made plans to go see the baby-sitter to pay the baby-sitter. She made plans to go to a baby shower we were going to be having on Sunday.
Just a few hours after the last sighting of Julie Ann, the estranged husband is captured on video with the 2-year-old at a Wal-Mart buying a video with Julie Ann`s debit card. On March 28th, her car is found abandoned in a nearby Walgreen`s parking lot.
transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1103/14/ng.01.html
LYNN: OK. Could she dropped the baby off and then went and got the baby`s medicine?
GRACE: Good question. Let`s go to her mother. Julie Ann Gonzalez`s mother, Sandra Soto is with us. Miss Soto, what can you tell us about the meds for the little baby?
SOTO: The medicine was purchased a day before, and it`s asthma medicine. So, it`s medicine that she has to have with her all the time because she has a nebulizer, and she gets treatment. So, it`s not like, you know, it was medicine that, you know, she could take off and on only as needed. It`s medicine that she has to have with her at all times.
GRACE: Miss Soto, I want to go back over what Deborah Norville asked you earlier. And let`s just take it from the beginning on. What do you know happened the day she went missing and what do you believe happened?
SOTO: I think that Julie Ann never really made it. Maybe never made it to George`s house. Or if she did, she wasn`t there for very long. George could not have done this by himself. I think that maybe he involved some other people. The car -- Julie`s car was found four blocks away from George`s house at the Walgreens parking lot. And when we told him that we found the car, the look on his face was priceless. He went white. Like he had just seen a ghost.
And I was watching him. I was looking at his reactions. And I noticed that he also had scratches on his face. All these things that happened within those, you know, first 24 hours that we reported Julie Ann missing, we would tell the police, [glow=red,2,300]but they just wouldn`t listen[/glow]
The statement in red really hits me today. I've been saying in so many missing persons cases that LE just doesn't listen, we are a throw away society, one less person to worry about. Today as I say this, I'm about ready to give up. Throw in the towel on missing persons, even after I've been keeping up on all these cases for so many years. It's a fruitless effort I'm afraid. Totally fruitless.