Showing posts with label Kentucky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kentucky. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2011

Jane Shively Doe

Do you ever think about how great life is? Do you ever ponder the benefits you receive on a daily basis? Life’s benefits could be major like you won the lottery, or met the love of your life. Life’s benefits could be simple like a walk in the park, or hot cup of coffee on a cold day. On those days you realize that life truly is a blessing. Don’t take that blessing for granted.

Once upon a time I was enjoying the beauty of nature, the sounds of music and the gentle breeze of the winds. That day was a very long time ago. That day might have been my last day to ever enjoy those benefits, at least, in the way you enjoy them now. On July 21, 2005, I was discovered and it was clear I would never enjoy those benefits again. My human remains were found that day. Yes, I was dead. I had been killed; however, not on that day. I may have been killed years earlier. It’s estimated up to fifteen years earlier.

I was hidden in a crawl space. Bulldozers were tearing down an old building at 3600 block of Seventh St in Shively, Kentucky when my remains were found. The building was previously used as an old ice cream supply house. After that it was used as a junkyard, some referred to it as a dump. There I was in a crawl space waiting for someone to find me. And they did! They found me.

Now they have to identify me. It’s been six years since I was found. I think law enforcement can use some help from the public. So here is some information that might help you:
I’m a white female, somewhere between twenty and forty years old. I stood about 5’2 to 5’4. And the most significant piece of information is that I have a very distinctive nose.

Some say my nose alone should get me identified. Well so far that hasn’t happened. Maybe I just haven’t had a chance to have the right people see me. Can you help me find the right people? You know the more people who see me, the better chance I have at finding that one person, who knows me. I think you can help. I want you to help me. Will you help me?


If you have any information about this woman, please call:

Jefferson County Coroner
502-574-6262
Case# FA-2005-41

Kentucky Medical Examiner Office
502-564-4545
Case# ME05-751

HER PROFILE DATA AT A GLANCE: Jefferson Kentucky Jane Doe July 2005

Monday, May 30, 2011

You can call me Rose!

My story is not unlike many featured here on this site. If you’ve read any of them you probably have a good idea what mine is about. Not unlike a couple of the others it appears I’m married, but my husband seems to be MIA. Not unlike another here I seemed to end up at the bottom of an embankment.

The bottom line is I’m dead and they don’t know who I am. Like I said not unlike many featured here. So how do I differ? Let’s find out.

Hello. I have no name. I could be a victim of foul play. I sound like I’m attending one of those anonymous meetings. Well, we are sort of anonymous now, aren’t we? Well much like the others I’m tired of being anonymous. I’m ready for you to know my name.

So let’s get down to business. I’m a white female twenty five to thirty five years old. I stood about five feet six inches to seven inches tall, maybe a little taller. I had reddish brown hair twelve to fourteen inches in length. I might have weighed ninety to one hundred and thirty pounds. My teeth were in very poor condition. I had two healed fractures one to a rib and the other to my upper right arm near by shoulder. It’s possible I had chronic back pains. I had a very distinctive rose tattoo on my left breast. The tattoo was an outline of the rose. I also had a distinctive ring. It was silver trimmed with blue painted enamel background with flowers. Plus, I had a gold wedding band.

I was found on October 9, 2001, deceased. I had been dead for a few weeks, possibly a few months. A road crew discovered me off an embankment of Interstate 65 in Simpson County, Kentucky. It’s speculated I was thrown over the guardrail; after which, I came to rest next to some trees at bottom of the embankment.

Now you know what I looked like and how I was killed. Now you just need to know my name. Everyone needs to know my name. I’m ready for you to know my name. What’s my name?

If you have any information please contact:

Kentucky State Police
Detective Michael May
270-782-201

Simpson County Coroners Office
270-586-7118

Case # FA-2001-44

VIEW HER PROFILE DATA AT A GLANCE: Simpson Kentucky Jane Doe October 2001

Monday, February 21, 2011

GINNY DOE - It’s Not Fair!


People are not supposed to die unless they are very, very old or very, very sick. So what am I doing with my picture on this blog, dead without anyone knowing who I am? It’s not fair! They think I was somewhere between 10 and 14 years old. Stuff like this isn’t supposed to happen! I should be looking forward to my first date, dreaming about prom or maybe still playing with Barbies. So what happened to me?

On April 3, 1985, someone found my remains (yuck - I hate that word) just off of Big Wheel Gap Road, four miles southwest of Jellico in Campbell County, Tennessee. The investigators think I was killed one or two years earlier on the edge of the strip mine and then tossed down the slope. So unfair!

They found a pair of size 5 hiking boots near my remains but they are unsure if they belonged to me. I had a bracelet and a necklace that were made of plastic buttons. Those investigating say I may have been from the Appalachian area, possibly Kentucky or Tennessee. So there you have it other than this information, an approximate age and the fact that I was a young white female, they know nothing about me.

They’ve compared my DNA and dental records to quite a few young girls who could possibly fit my description but so far there has been no match.

A forensic artist was kind enough to create a reconstruction of my face. Please take a close look at it and send it to your friends. Someone must know who I am! Somewhere, someone must be missing me!


If you have any information about this case please contact:

University of TN Forensic Anthropology Center
865-974-4408
Agency Case Number:
UT85-6F
NCIC Number:
U-130022868


VIEW HER PROFILE DATA AT A GLANCE HERE: Campbell Tennessee Jane Doe April 1985

Sunday, November 14, 2010

FLYER Kentucky John Doe December 2009



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