Post by LadyBlue on Jul 23, 2013 15:32:42 GMT -5
This woman is why I decided to finally create this thread. I can not imagine anyone sitting in the drivers seat of their own vehicle lost and alone for 20 years. She just went for a drive.
The remains of a woman who had been missing since 1993 were found in a car submerged in a Punta Gorda, Fla. canal.
WFTX reported on Monday that the Charlotte County Medical Examiner’s Office concluded from dental records that the bodily remains came from Frances Hendrickson.
The Herald Tribune reports that Hendrickson was 64-years-old when she went for a drive on June 30, 1993 in her blue Buick station wagon.
The case was known as the “SNOBURD case," a reference to Hendrickson's vanity license plate.
Police do not suspect foul play, although the case remains open.
Hendrickson was reportedly a mediocre driver and police thought there was a strong chance her car was sunken somewhere in the waterways, according to the Tribune. But for years, searches by air and water that included the use of sonar equipment turned up nothing.
The Punta Gorda Police department found the vehicle with a robotic camera earlier this month during another search for the long-lost woman, according to the Bradenton Herald.
A crane hoisted it out of the 18-foot trench blocks from where Hendrickson lived, My Sun Coast reported.
“We are glad to bring closure to her family and to the community” Capt. Tom Lewis told the Herald.
www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/29/frances-hendrickson-found_n_2576590.html
On June 30, 1993, Frances Hendrickson, 64, from Punta Gorda, Fla. told her son that she was planning on going to the grocery store and the bank the following day. On July 1, she was seen by a neighbor leaving her home in her 1987 light blue Buick station wagon with vanity plates "SNO BURD" around 10 a.m. She was never seen again.
Hendrickson seemingly disappeared from the face of the earth, but new sonar technology proved what authorities believed all along, that she had accidentally driven her car into a canal.
"I walked seawalls looking for marks, oil slicks, looking for a glint in the water. It never came up," recalled Charles Gibbs, the first police officer to investigate Henrickson's disappearance, reports NBC2.
www.examiner.com/article/remains-of-woman-missing-for-20-years-found-submerged-car
The remains of a woman who had been missing since 1993 were found in a car submerged in a Punta Gorda, Fla. canal.
WFTX reported on Monday that the Charlotte County Medical Examiner’s Office concluded from dental records that the bodily remains came from Frances Hendrickson.
The Herald Tribune reports that Hendrickson was 64-years-old when she went for a drive on June 30, 1993 in her blue Buick station wagon.
The case was known as the “SNOBURD case," a reference to Hendrickson's vanity license plate.
Police do not suspect foul play, although the case remains open.
Hendrickson was reportedly a mediocre driver and police thought there was a strong chance her car was sunken somewhere in the waterways, according to the Tribune. But for years, searches by air and water that included the use of sonar equipment turned up nothing.
The Punta Gorda Police department found the vehicle with a robotic camera earlier this month during another search for the long-lost woman, according to the Bradenton Herald.
A crane hoisted it out of the 18-foot trench blocks from where Hendrickson lived, My Sun Coast reported.
“We are glad to bring closure to her family and to the community” Capt. Tom Lewis told the Herald.
www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/29/frances-hendrickson-found_n_2576590.html
On June 30, 1993, Frances Hendrickson, 64, from Punta Gorda, Fla. told her son that she was planning on going to the grocery store and the bank the following day. On July 1, she was seen by a neighbor leaving her home in her 1987 light blue Buick station wagon with vanity plates "SNO BURD" around 10 a.m. She was never seen again.
Hendrickson seemingly disappeared from the face of the earth, but new sonar technology proved what authorities believed all along, that she had accidentally driven her car into a canal.
"I walked seawalls looking for marks, oil slicks, looking for a glint in the water. It never came up," recalled Charles Gibbs, the first police officer to investigate Henrickson's disappearance, reports NBC2.
www.examiner.com/article/remains-of-woman-missing-for-20-years-found-submerged-car