AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
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AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Monday, July 13th 2009 marks five long months that 15-year old Amber Dubois of Escondido, California has been missing.
She was last seen on North Broadway, in the area of
Escondido High School, on Friday, February 13th 2009. This was in the
morning, at approximately 7:10 a.m.
The last time anyone saw Amber, she was wearing black pants, a black hooded sweatshirt, and black sneakers.
It is hard to imagine what this must be like for her
family. Sadly, Amber is one of thousands of missing people in the
United States, but her story is striking because of the senseless
tragedy and the relatively recent time frame.
Her family explains that she wrote a short story at
the age of twelve, titled "Ookume". It was about a young girl who was
in peril and ultimately rescued by wolf pups.
Her grandmother says that as a teen, Amber took up the
wolf as her "cause" and learned about their habits, behavior, packs,
dens, marking territory, reactions to other animals and their place in
the ecosystem.
"She was impressed by the dedication of the wolf to
its family life. As Amber's family, we are proud that she has the
tenacity and courage to stand up for an animal species that, clearly,
has not been favored by our country as a whole."
"Amber still must wait until she is 16 to attend the
intensive wolf seminars at, but, we were scheduled to visit Yellowstone
to at least see the wolves this past August."
"The next program is in June. The wolves are waiting for us Amber."
Amber's 'Grandmom' is an environmental attorney.
If anybody knows what happened to Amber Dubois, they
need to come forward and tell police what they know. Her family remains
hopeful and determined that Amber may be alive and unable to make
contact.
* There is a sizable reward of $60,000 for anyone
whose information can bring Amber home safe and also bring the person
or people responsible for her disappearance to justice.
You can just leave a tip at 760-743-TIPS (8477) or you could always call 911.
Her family says you can learn details and ask questions about the rewards by calling 1-562-360-5162.
* $50,000 for information leading to the safe return of Amber
* $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of person(s) responsible for her disappearance
===============================================
This video was produced by Amber's family:
http://vimeo.com/4848395
Light a Candle for Amber Dubois |
She was last seen on North Broadway, in the area of
Escondido High School, on Friday, February 13th 2009. This was in the
morning, at approximately 7:10 a.m.
The last time anyone saw Amber, she was wearing black pants, a black hooded sweatshirt, and black sneakers.
It is hard to imagine what this must be like for her
family. Sadly, Amber is one of thousands of missing people in the
United States, but her story is striking because of the senseless
tragedy and the relatively recent time frame.
Her family explains that she wrote a short story at
the age of twelve, titled "Ookume". It was about a young girl who was
in peril and ultimately rescued by wolf pups.
Her grandmother says that as a teen, Amber took up the
wolf as her "cause" and learned about their habits, behavior, packs,
dens, marking territory, reactions to other animals and their place in
the ecosystem.
"She was impressed by the dedication of the wolf to
its family life. As Amber's family, we are proud that she has the
tenacity and courage to stand up for an animal species that, clearly,
has not been favored by our country as a whole."
"Amber still must wait until she is 16 to attend the
intensive wolf seminars at, but, we were scheduled to visit Yellowstone
to at least see the wolves this past August."
"The next program is in June. The wolves are waiting for us Amber."
Amber's 'Grandmom' is an environmental attorney.
If anybody knows what happened to Amber Dubois, they
need to come forward and tell police what they know. Her family remains
hopeful and determined that Amber may be alive and unable to make
contact.
* There is a sizable reward of $60,000 for anyone
whose information can bring Amber home safe and also bring the person
or people responsible for her disappearance to justice.
You can just leave a tip at 760-743-TIPS (8477) or you could always call 911.
Her family says you can learn details and ask questions about the rewards by calling 1-562-360-5162.
* $50,000 for information leading to the safe return of Amber
* $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of person(s) responsible for her disappearance
===============================================
This video was produced by Amber's family:
http://vimeo.com/4848395
Last edited by TomTerrific0420 on Tue Oct 26, 2010 1:21 pm; edited 4 times in total
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
The bidding kept going and going.
Nicki Horton stood in the ring in disbelief. The price for the lamb she had devotedly raised over the
past six months continued to climb.
Two dollars a pound ... $3 a pound ... $5 a pound ---- typically the top of the market for lambs at
the San Diego County Fair's Junior Livestock Auction. Nine dollars a
pound ... $10 a pound, beyond even the $11 a pound commanded by the
grand champion, and still no end in sight.
Tears began to run down young Nicki's face as the bidding jumped into the teens, and she
glanced into the crowd at two people for whom the lamb had special
significance.
Maurice Dubois and Carrie McGonigle had tears in
their eyes as well. For the lamb had been named by their daughter Amber
Dubois, the 14-year-old Escondido High School student who disappeared
Feb. 13 on her way to school.
In Amber's pocket that morning was a check to cover the deposit to obtain the lamb she planned to raise
for the fair. She was going to call the lamb Nenette, which means
"little animal" in French ---- Amber's heritage on her father's side.
After her disappearance, Amber's family told Marc Reyburn, the school's
agricultural instructor and FFA adviser, they wanted to sponsor someone
to carry on Amber's plan to raise her lamb.
Nicki didn't have the money to care for a lamb of her own, so she gladly volunteered to
raise a lamb in Amber's name. She fed, watered, groomed and walked
little Nenette daily at the farm on the high school grounds. Some
donated supplies helped Nicki bring the lamb to a solid 135 pounds as
she walked her into the ring at the fair on Saturday.
The fair auctioneer shared Amber's story with the crowd as Nicki showed off the
tan and black Hampshire Cross lamb. Proceeds from the auction would go
to the Amber Dubois Trust Fund, the auctioneer said, to help in the
search for the missing teenager.
"As soon as people heard that, they kept bidding and bidding," said Nicki. "I was amazed."
A $12 bid was heard. Then $13. And still the total kept climbing. It
wasn't until the bidding reached $16 a pound that Mary Matav, founder
of Agri Service Inc. in Vista, was proclaimed the auction winner.
But it wasn't over. Members of the crowd began raising their paddles to add
another dollar or two a pound to the bid. More add-ons followed. Soon
fair officials couldn't keep up with the demand from spectators to
contribute to the cause.
Nicki, 15, already had taken Nenette back to the barn, not knowing that contributions were still rolling in.
Tears were falling as she and McGonigle said goodbye to the lamb.
"I told her to stop crying," McGonigle said. "She said, 'I can't. It's so sad.' We were both crying the whole time."
The regular auction continued while the fair's livestock office officials
set up a table where people could add their donations to the price for
the lamb. The fair tallied $7,365, a cool $54.55 a pound, while
McGonigle said that $8,370 came in for the Amber fund.
"It's just awesome to see so much support for trying to find Amber," McGonigle said. "It was very emotional."
The funds raised will be used by the family to hire a private investigator
and perhaps a public relations firm to keep up the search for Amber.
But the story doesn't end there.
When Nicki returns to Escondido High School for her sophomore year in the fall, she'll have a sponsor
for her next animal-raising effort.
"She wants to raise a steer, and we're going to sponsor her," McGonigle said.
Information on the Amber Dubois search and trust fund can be found at bringamberhome.com.
Nicki Horton stood in the ring in disbelief. The price for the lamb she had devotedly raised over the
past six months continued to climb.
Two dollars a pound ... $3 a pound ... $5 a pound ---- typically the top of the market for lambs at
the San Diego County Fair's Junior Livestock Auction. Nine dollars a
pound ... $10 a pound, beyond even the $11 a pound commanded by the
grand champion, and still no end in sight.
Tears began to run down young Nicki's face as the bidding jumped into the teens, and she
glanced into the crowd at two people for whom the lamb had special
significance.
Maurice Dubois and Carrie McGonigle had tears in
their eyes as well. For the lamb had been named by their daughter Amber
Dubois, the 14-year-old Escondido High School student who disappeared
Feb. 13 on her way to school.
In Amber's pocket that morning was a check to cover the deposit to obtain the lamb she planned to raise
for the fair. She was going to call the lamb Nenette, which means
"little animal" in French ---- Amber's heritage on her father's side.
After her disappearance, Amber's family told Marc Reyburn, the school's
agricultural instructor and FFA adviser, they wanted to sponsor someone
to carry on Amber's plan to raise her lamb.
Nicki didn't have the money to care for a lamb of her own, so she gladly volunteered to
raise a lamb in Amber's name. She fed, watered, groomed and walked
little Nenette daily at the farm on the high school grounds. Some
donated supplies helped Nicki bring the lamb to a solid 135 pounds as
she walked her into the ring at the fair on Saturday.
The fair auctioneer shared Amber's story with the crowd as Nicki showed off the
tan and black Hampshire Cross lamb. Proceeds from the auction would go
to the Amber Dubois Trust Fund, the auctioneer said, to help in the
search for the missing teenager.
"As soon as people heard that, they kept bidding and bidding," said Nicki. "I was amazed."
A $12 bid was heard. Then $13. And still the total kept climbing. It
wasn't until the bidding reached $16 a pound that Mary Matav, founder
of Agri Service Inc. in Vista, was proclaimed the auction winner.
But it wasn't over. Members of the crowd began raising their paddles to add
another dollar or two a pound to the bid. More add-ons followed. Soon
fair officials couldn't keep up with the demand from spectators to
contribute to the cause.
Nicki, 15, already had taken Nenette back to the barn, not knowing that contributions were still rolling in.
Tears were falling as she and McGonigle said goodbye to the lamb.
"I told her to stop crying," McGonigle said. "She said, 'I can't. It's so sad.' We were both crying the whole time."
The regular auction continued while the fair's livestock office officials
set up a table where people could add their donations to the price for
the lamb. The fair tallied $7,365, a cool $54.55 a pound, while
McGonigle said that $8,370 came in for the Amber fund.
"It's just awesome to see so much support for trying to find Amber," McGonigle said. "It was very emotional."
The funds raised will be used by the family to hire a private investigator
and perhaps a public relations firm to keep up the search for Amber.
But the story doesn't end there.
When Nicki returns to Escondido High School for her sophomore year in the fall, she'll have a sponsor
for her next animal-raising effort.
"She wants to raise a steer, and we're going to sponsor her," McGonigle said.
Information on the Amber Dubois search and trust fund can be found at bringamberhome.com.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Amber Dubois
I was looking at the website and today they are having a big gathering for three missing children. Check out the website.
http://bringamberhome.com/
http://bringamberhome.com/
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
A young local author is reaching out to the family of missing teenager Amber Dubois. Jenna
Cooper, 17, is a senior at Santana High School. She signed copies of
her novel, "Turned," at the Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore in Kearny Mesa. Ten percent of Cooper's royalty from the book will be used to create a trust fund to bring Amber home. Dubois' family was at the signing. Dubois, 14, was last seen Feb. 13 in Escondido while on her way to school.
Cooper, 17, is a senior at Santana High School. She signed copies of
her novel, "Turned," at the Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore in Kearny Mesa. Ten percent of Cooper's royalty from the book will be used to create a trust fund to bring Amber home. Dubois' family was at the signing. Dubois, 14, was last seen Feb. 13 in Escondido while on her way to school.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
This is the Official FBI release
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
February 13, 2009 Escondido, California | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AMBER LEEANNE DUBOIS | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
DEscriptION
THE DETAILS On February 13, 2009, Amber Dubois (age 14) disappeared while walking from her home in Escondido, California, to her nearby high school. At approximately 7:10 a.m., someone saw Amber walking hurriedly toward her school in the direction of the school's athletic practice field. Shortly thereafter, Amber was seen walking about a block further at a normal pace. She was in the company of an unknown male. It is possible that this male may have been the last person to see Amber before her disappearance. Additionally, there was a red pickup truck that pulled into a parking lot on the school grounds near where Amber was last seen. This truck was parked only for several minutes before leaving the area. Law enforcement is interested in interviewing the driver of the truck. The truck is described as a newer model, possibly a Ford, GMC, or Toyota, with chrome both above and below the grill. The vehicle is a full size, four-door crew cab pickup truck, red or maroon in color. The truck has chrome wheels and running boards and may be equipped with chrome rails or caps along top of the bed sides. The truck may also have a fifth-wheel trailer hitch. REMARKS Amber was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt and black pants. Her jewelry consisted of a blue sapphire ring worn on her middle left finger. She was also wearing a silver claddagh ring, which is a traditional Irish ring given in friendship or worn as a wedding ring. It is described as two hands clasping a heart, and the heart is surmounted by a crown. Amber was carrying a black shoulder bag, which is similar in appearance to a computer laptop carrying case. PERSON OF INTEREST The unidentified male reportedly seen with Amber immediately prior to her disappearance is not a suspect in this case, but is someone that law enforcement would like to interview. This individual is described below.
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Individuals with information concerning this case should take no action themselves, but instead immediately contact the nearest FBI Office or local law enforcement agency. For any possible sighting outside the United States, contact the nearest United States Embassy or Consulate. |San Diego Field Office | Kidnapping and Missing Persons Investigations | | FBI Home Page | FBI Field Offices | |
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Six months after Amber Dubois disappeared, pictures of the
bookish, blue-eyed 14-year-old are still posted across Escondido
and across Southern California.
Banners reading "Help Us Find Amber" still line fences along
North Broadway near Escondido High School. Her name is still part
of the family's answering machine greeting at their home, just a
few blocks from the campus.
Amber was last seen Feb. 13 walking to school. No trace of how
or why she disappeared has been found.
Her family, despite a tortured spring and summer of searches
that turned up nothing, has not given up hope. It recently hired a
new private investigator and will fly in specialized search dogs
from Maine later this month.
This week, Amber's mother and father, Carrie McGonigle and Moe
Dubois, traveled to New York City for a national media blitz. Her
mother and father desperately hope the larger stage, including
interviews on network TV shows, will make the difference in a case
that has frustrated and puzzled police and left a gaping hole in
the family's heart.
"All it takes is one person to crack this case open," the teen's
father said. "All it takes is one pair of eyes."
Missing Amber
The door to Amber's bedroom is kept open inside the family's
two-story north Escondido home. The teen's black and gray cat,
Robin, often slumbers on Amber's bunk bed.
Her watercolor paintings of wolves (she adores wolves), her
"Twilight" movie poster and vast array of books, including her
Harry Potter collection, remain as she left them.
"I usually have panic attacks when I come up here," said
McGonigle, standing in her daughter's small room, her voice
breaking.
Amber's mother moved out of the home six weeks after the teen
disappeared, in part, she said, because the reminders of what she's
lost are all around. She now lives with a friend just a few blocks
away.
McGonigle's former boyfriend, David Cave, and the couple's
6-year-old daughter, Allison, remain at the home. Amber's father
lives in Orange County.
Family and the teen's close friends describe Amber as a model
student, a girl who was looking forward to raising a baby lamb
through her school's agriculture program and who never once spoke
of running away.
Her parents are convinced she was abducted by a stranger.
Police, without evidence to prove either theory, have classified
Amber's disappearance as a "suspicious missing person" case.
Sheila Welch, the teen's maternal grandmother, has paid for
public relations help for the family and recently hired Lawrence
Olmstead, a Los Angeles-based private detective. Olmstead follows
San Diego-based private investigator Bill Garcia, who worked for
the family early on. Welch emphasized the new investigator's work
is meant to complement, not compete with, local police efforts.
Welch, an attorney who lives in Paramount, north of Long Beach,
also has spent months arranging for the specialized search hounds
from VK9 Scent Specific Search Recovery of Brewer, Maine. The
company's canines can track a scent months after a person has
disappeared, Welch said.
The grandmother, who family say inspired Amber's love for
animals and reading, said she'll "never stop" looking for her
granddaughter.
Case remains a mystery
Escondido police have received and investigated more than 1,100
tips in the case. They've interviewed more than 550 people,
including Amber's family, friends, neighbors, sex offenders who
live near the family's Escondido home and every classmate she had
this past spring and fall, said Lt. Bob Benton. More than two dozen
police investigators and support staff worked on the girl's case
shortly after she vanished. Three full-time investigators are still
assigned to it, he said.
After all their work, however, they still have no idea what
happened to the shy and sheltered girl.
"We all wake up in the middle of the night just pondering, 'What
did we miss?'" Benton said. "That takes a toll on us."
In most missing-person investigations, police have something to
start with ---- the description of a suspect or perhaps a car
involved. With Amber's, they have next to nothing.
Police are still not sure whether the driver of a maroon pickup
seen on school surveillance video was involved in Amber's
disappearance. The truck was seen exiting the school's maintenance
yard at roughly the same time Amber was spotted walking nearby.
"In this case, we're just going down dead end after dead end,"
said the lieutenant, flanked by more than a dozen thick binders
containing interview transcripts, photographs and other original
case documents. "It's been so frustrating."
Police do not have any suspects, nor have they ruled anyone out,
including family members.
Amber's parents say they want police to explore all
possibilities.
"At this point, they're not looking at us as possible suspects,"
Amber's father said. "If something points in that direction (toward
a family member), I would want them to look there."
Amber's father, mother and the mother's longtime boyfriend all
voluntarily took polygraph tests shortly after the teen
vanished.
Escondido police have worked with agents from the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, investigators with the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children, contacted law enforcement in Canada
(Amber has extended family in Montreal), Mexico and across the
globe.
"It's been an important case for all of us," said Escondido
police Investigator Beverly Marquez. "We want to find this girl and
bring her home."
Marquez serves as a liaison between the family and the
department. In her 15 years working missing-person cases, she said
couldn't recall one as involved as Amber's or with so few
clues.
She said that Amber's case will remain open as long as it
takes.
"She's not home yet ---- it's an active case," the investigator
said.
Family's anguish
The pain surrounding Amber's loss never truly subsides, family
members say.
Amber's father still has not been able to resume his job at
Netcom Technologies, where he's a senior estimator for the company.
Her mother just returned to work last month at a local printing
company, she said.
When despair hits, it's often a phone call from one of the
committed volunteers that lifts them, they say. Many of the
volunteers started as strangers and have become the family's
closest supporters.
Outside observers say Amber's mother and father have worked
diligently to find their daughter.
"I'm incredibly impressed by Moe and Carrie," said Marc Klaas,
whose daughter, Polly, was kidnapped and murdered in Northern
California in 1993. "As long as they can continue to be proactive
and as long as they can continue to be busy, I think they can hold
the fear at bay."
Klaas, through his Klaas Kids Foundation, has supported the
family's efforts.
When asked why they keep searching, family members say they
can't imagine doing anything else.
They want the girl who loved to collect seashells on the beach,
who made her mother breakfast on Mother's Day, who would hide under
the covers of her bed with a book and flashlight and read late into
the night, back home.
"I know that someone out there knows something," said Amber's
mother. "And I would just beg them to call anonymously. No one
needs to know who they are."
bookish, blue-eyed 14-year-old are still posted across Escondido
and across Southern California.
Banners reading "Help Us Find Amber" still line fences along
North Broadway near Escondido High School. Her name is still part
of the family's answering machine greeting at their home, just a
few blocks from the campus.
Amber was last seen Feb. 13 walking to school. No trace of how
or why she disappeared has been found.
Her family, despite a tortured spring and summer of searches
that turned up nothing, has not given up hope. It recently hired a
new private investigator and will fly in specialized search dogs
from Maine later this month.
This week, Amber's mother and father, Carrie McGonigle and Moe
Dubois, traveled to New York City for a national media blitz. Her
mother and father desperately hope the larger stage, including
interviews on network TV shows, will make the difference in a case
that has frustrated and puzzled police and left a gaping hole in
the family's heart.
"All it takes is one person to crack this case open," the teen's
father said. "All it takes is one pair of eyes."
Missing Amber
The door to Amber's bedroom is kept open inside the family's
two-story north Escondido home. The teen's black and gray cat,
Robin, often slumbers on Amber's bunk bed.
Her watercolor paintings of wolves (she adores wolves), her
"Twilight" movie poster and vast array of books, including her
Harry Potter collection, remain as she left them.
"I usually have panic attacks when I come up here," said
McGonigle, standing in her daughter's small room, her voice
breaking.
Amber's mother moved out of the home six weeks after the teen
disappeared, in part, she said, because the reminders of what she's
lost are all around. She now lives with a friend just a few blocks
away.
McGonigle's former boyfriend, David Cave, and the couple's
6-year-old daughter, Allison, remain at the home. Amber's father
lives in Orange County.
Family and the teen's close friends describe Amber as a model
student, a girl who was looking forward to raising a baby lamb
through her school's agriculture program and who never once spoke
of running away.
Her parents are convinced she was abducted by a stranger.
Police, without evidence to prove either theory, have classified
Amber's disappearance as a "suspicious missing person" case.
Sheila Welch, the teen's maternal grandmother, has paid for
public relations help for the family and recently hired Lawrence
Olmstead, a Los Angeles-based private detective. Olmstead follows
San Diego-based private investigator Bill Garcia, who worked for
the family early on. Welch emphasized the new investigator's work
is meant to complement, not compete with, local police efforts.
Welch, an attorney who lives in Paramount, north of Long Beach,
also has spent months arranging for the specialized search hounds
from VK9 Scent Specific Search Recovery of Brewer, Maine. The
company's canines can track a scent months after a person has
disappeared, Welch said.
The grandmother, who family say inspired Amber's love for
animals and reading, said she'll "never stop" looking for her
granddaughter.
Case remains a mystery
Escondido police have received and investigated more than 1,100
tips in the case. They've interviewed more than 550 people,
including Amber's family, friends, neighbors, sex offenders who
live near the family's Escondido home and every classmate she had
this past spring and fall, said Lt. Bob Benton. More than two dozen
police investigators and support staff worked on the girl's case
shortly after she vanished. Three full-time investigators are still
assigned to it, he said.
After all their work, however, they still have no idea what
happened to the shy and sheltered girl.
"We all wake up in the middle of the night just pondering, 'What
did we miss?'" Benton said. "That takes a toll on us."
In most missing-person investigations, police have something to
start with ---- the description of a suspect or perhaps a car
involved. With Amber's, they have next to nothing.
Police are still not sure whether the driver of a maroon pickup
seen on school surveillance video was involved in Amber's
disappearance. The truck was seen exiting the school's maintenance
yard at roughly the same time Amber was spotted walking nearby.
"In this case, we're just going down dead end after dead end,"
said the lieutenant, flanked by more than a dozen thick binders
containing interview transcripts, photographs and other original
case documents. "It's been so frustrating."
Police do not have any suspects, nor have they ruled anyone out,
including family members.
Amber's parents say they want police to explore all
possibilities.
"At this point, they're not looking at us as possible suspects,"
Amber's father said. "If something points in that direction (toward
a family member), I would want them to look there."
Amber's father, mother and the mother's longtime boyfriend all
voluntarily took polygraph tests shortly after the teen
vanished.
Escondido police have worked with agents from the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, investigators with the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children, contacted law enforcement in Canada
(Amber has extended family in Montreal), Mexico and across the
globe.
"It's been an important case for all of us," said Escondido
police Investigator Beverly Marquez. "We want to find this girl and
bring her home."
Marquez serves as a liaison between the family and the
department. In her 15 years working missing-person cases, she said
couldn't recall one as involved as Amber's or with so few
clues.
She said that Amber's case will remain open as long as it
takes.
"She's not home yet ---- it's an active case," the investigator
said.
Family's anguish
The pain surrounding Amber's loss never truly subsides, family
members say.
Amber's father still has not been able to resume his job at
Netcom Technologies, where he's a senior estimator for the company.
Her mother just returned to work last month at a local printing
company, she said.
When despair hits, it's often a phone call from one of the
committed volunteers that lifts them, they say. Many of the
volunteers started as strangers and have become the family's
closest supporters.
Outside observers say Amber's mother and father have worked
diligently to find their daughter.
"I'm incredibly impressed by Moe and Carrie," said Marc Klaas,
whose daughter, Polly, was kidnapped and murdered in Northern
California in 1993. "As long as they can continue to be proactive
and as long as they can continue to be busy, I think they can hold
the fear at bay."
Klaas, through his Klaas Kids Foundation, has supported the
family's efforts.
When asked why they keep searching, family members say they
can't imagine doing anything else.
They want the girl who loved to collect seashells on the beach,
who made her mother breakfast on Mother's Day, who would hide under
the covers of her bed with a book and flashlight and read late into
the night, back home.
"I know that someone out there knows something," said Amber's
mother. "And I would just beg them to call anonymously. No one
needs to know who they are."
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Six months ago today, 14-year-old Amber Dubois disappeared while walking to Escondido High School.
There has been no break in the case, and no lead that has proved
fruitful since she vanished Feb. 13, seemingly without a trace.
“We're really frustrated,” said Amber's father, Maurice Dubois.
“Every day gets tougher and tougher. I would never, ever have imagined
us getting to a six-month point.”
Escondido police have asked the Governor's Office for $40,000 from
a special fund set up for missing-persons cases to add to a reward that
sits now at $60,000 for information.
Police and Amber's family hope that the increased reward will shake something loose. Someone knows what happened to her.
Police are still actively investigating, but there has been no
progress, said Lt. Bob Benton. The department has three officers
assigned full time to the case, Benton said.
“We investigate these kind of cases as worse-case scenarios,”
Benton said. “We've never investigated a case of this magnitude with as
many dead ends as we've had.
“We're hoping a larger reward will bring somebody forward with information that will help us solve the case.”
Amber's parents were in New York City yesterday trying to drum up more national attention to their search.
Maurice Dubois said he and Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, will appear on several national television shows this week.
A candlelight vigil is scheduled for 8 tonight in front of
Escondido High. Several other vigils also are planned in other parts of
the country to draw national attention to Amber's plight.
An examination of Amber's Internet activity has shown only that she
visited sites that any normal 14-year-old girl would, Benton said. Some
records still have not been obtained because the Web-site operators are
based outside the United States. The FBI has been helping with the
Internet side of the investigation.
In addition, Benton said, his department has contacted more than 20
other police agencies around the country as they check out and
eventually dismiss one false lead after another.
Officially, Amber is classified as an “at-risk missing child.”
Benton said everything they have developed confirms her family's
initial description of her as a somewhat shy, bookish teen who would
not run away.
Amber was last seen by two witnesses walking along Escondido
Boulevard near the high school at 7:10 a.m. One of those witnesses said
she was walking with a tall, lanky boy who has yet to be identified.
All other possible sightings have been dismissed as untrue or
unreliable.
There has been no break in the case, and no lead that has proved
fruitful since she vanished Feb. 13, seemingly without a trace.
“We're really frustrated,” said Amber's father, Maurice Dubois.
“Every day gets tougher and tougher. I would never, ever have imagined
us getting to a six-month point.”
Escondido police have asked the Governor's Office for $40,000 from
a special fund set up for missing-persons cases to add to a reward that
sits now at $60,000 for information.
Police and Amber's family hope that the increased reward will shake something loose. Someone knows what happened to her.
Police are still actively investigating, but there has been no
progress, said Lt. Bob Benton. The department has three officers
assigned full time to the case, Benton said.
“We investigate these kind of cases as worse-case scenarios,”
Benton said. “We've never investigated a case of this magnitude with as
many dead ends as we've had.
“We're hoping a larger reward will bring somebody forward with information that will help us solve the case.”
Amber's parents were in New York City yesterday trying to drum up more national attention to their search.
Maurice Dubois said he and Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, will appear on several national television shows this week.
A candlelight vigil is scheduled for 8 tonight in front of
Escondido High. Several other vigils also are planned in other parts of
the country to draw national attention to Amber's plight.
An examination of Amber's Internet activity has shown only that she
visited sites that any normal 14-year-old girl would, Benton said. Some
records still have not been obtained because the Web-site operators are
based outside the United States. The FBI has been helping with the
Internet side of the investigation.
In addition, Benton said, his department has contacted more than 20
other police agencies around the country as they check out and
eventually dismiss one false lead after another.
Officially, Amber is classified as an “at-risk missing child.”
Benton said everything they have developed confirms her family's
initial description of her as a somewhat shy, bookish teen who would
not run away.
Amber was last seen by two witnesses walking along Escondido
Boulevard near the high school at 7:10 a.m. One of those witnesses said
she was walking with a tall, lanky boy who has yet to be identified.
All other possible sightings have been dismissed as untrue or
unreliable.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Two specialized dog teams based in Virginia are in the North County
this morning to renew a search for missing teenager Amber Dubois who
vanished more than six months ago.
The 14-year-old was last seen Feb. 13 about 7:10 a.m.
while walking to Escondido High School with a tall teenager who has
never been identified. Despite widespread publicity and numerous
searches, no trace of the girl has been found.
The dogs belong to the VK9 Scent Specific Search and
Recovery Unit, a nonprofit organization, said Sarah Platt who is the
officer in charge of the group. They arrived with their handlers at
Lindbergh Field about 10 p.m. Tuesday.
The canines, a 5-year-old yellow Labrador retriever named
Quincy and an 8-year-old German shorthaired pointer named Jack, are
trained to follow the odor of a specific person to the exclusion of all
others and are often deployed on cases that have gone cold, Platt said.
On Wednesday, the dogs will be searching in areas Platt
declined to specify and will have a dual purpose - to confirm whether
Amber was actually at any of the places she may have been sighted and
to develop new leads - “ideas perhaps they never thought of,” Platt
said.
The team will be in Escondido until Saturday, Platt said.
The VK9 SSSAR Unit is conducting the search at no charge to the family
in return for reimbursement for travel expenses, Platt said.
They teams support law enforcement and assist in criminal
and missing persons cases and also work with emergency management
agencies across the country.
this morning to renew a search for missing teenager Amber Dubois who
vanished more than six months ago.
The 14-year-old was last seen Feb. 13 about 7:10 a.m.
while walking to Escondido High School with a tall teenager who has
never been identified. Despite widespread publicity and numerous
searches, no trace of the girl has been found.
The dogs belong to the VK9 Scent Specific Search and
Recovery Unit, a nonprofit organization, said Sarah Platt who is the
officer in charge of the group. They arrived with their handlers at
Lindbergh Field about 10 p.m. Tuesday.
The canines, a 5-year-old yellow Labrador retriever named
Quincy and an 8-year-old German shorthaired pointer named Jack, are
trained to follow the odor of a specific person to the exclusion of all
others and are often deployed on cases that have gone cold, Platt said.
On Wednesday, the dogs will be searching in areas Platt
declined to specify and will have a dual purpose - to confirm whether
Amber was actually at any of the places she may have been sighted and
to develop new leads - “ideas perhaps they never thought of,” Platt
said.
The team will be in Escondido until Saturday, Platt said.
The VK9 SSSAR Unit is conducting the search at no charge to the family
in return for reimbursement for travel expenses, Platt said.
They teams support law enforcement and assist in criminal
and missing persons cases and also work with emergency management
agencies across the country.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Two specialized dog teams based in Virginia are in North County
until Saturday to renew a search for missing teenager Amber Dubois, who
vanished more than six months ago.
The 14-year-old was last seen about 7:10 a.m. Feb. 13 while walking
to Escondido High School with a tall teenager who has never been
identified. Despite widespread publicity and many searches, no trace of
the girl has been found.
The dogs belong to the VK9 Scent Specific Search and Recovery Unit,
a nonprofit organization, said Sarah Platts, the officer in charge of
the group. They arrived with their handlers at Lindbergh Field about 10
p.m. Tuesday.
The canines, a 5-year-old yellow Labrador retriever named Quincy
and an 8-year-old German shorthaired pointer named Jack, are trained to
follow the odor of a specific person to the exclusion of all others and
are often deployed on cases that have gone cold, Platts said.
She declined to specify where the dogs were searching yesterday,
but said there is a dual purpose: to confirm whether Amber was actually
at any of the places where she may have been sighted, and to develop
new leads — “ideas perhaps they never thought of.”
Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, said she was very anxious but
also “absolutely hopeful” that something would turn up. She said that
although search dogs had already scoured the area for her daughter, she
thinks these dogs, with their special training, might be the key to
finding Amber.
The organization is conducting the search at no charge to the
family in return for reimbursement for travel expenses, Platts said.
It supports law enforcement and assists in criminal cases including
arson, assault, rape, homicide and missing-persons cases, and works
with emergency-management agencies across the country.
It also partners with Project Lifesaver, a rapid-response program
that deploys specially trained teams to locate wandering children and
adults suffering from diseases such as Alzheimer's, Down syndrome and
autism.
The group's work has earned accolades from law enforcement. The
police chief in Kenton, Ohio, credits the dogs for tracking the exact
location and movements of a homicide suspect weeks after crimes were
committed. The man was arrested and later confessed to three killings,
Police Chief John Vermillion said on the group's Web site.
until Saturday to renew a search for missing teenager Amber Dubois, who
vanished more than six months ago.
The 14-year-old was last seen about 7:10 a.m. Feb. 13 while walking
to Escondido High School with a tall teenager who has never been
identified. Despite widespread publicity and many searches, no trace of
the girl has been found.
The dogs belong to the VK9 Scent Specific Search and Recovery Unit,
a nonprofit organization, said Sarah Platts, the officer in charge of
the group. They arrived with their handlers at Lindbergh Field about 10
p.m. Tuesday.
The canines, a 5-year-old yellow Labrador retriever named Quincy
and an 8-year-old German shorthaired pointer named Jack, are trained to
follow the odor of a specific person to the exclusion of all others and
are often deployed on cases that have gone cold, Platts said.
She declined to specify where the dogs were searching yesterday,
but said there is a dual purpose: to confirm whether Amber was actually
at any of the places where she may have been sighted, and to develop
new leads — “ideas perhaps they never thought of.”
Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, said she was very anxious but
also “absolutely hopeful” that something would turn up. She said that
although search dogs had already scoured the area for her daughter, she
thinks these dogs, with their special training, might be the key to
finding Amber.
The organization is conducting the search at no charge to the
family in return for reimbursement for travel expenses, Platts said.
It supports law enforcement and assists in criminal cases including
arson, assault, rape, homicide and missing-persons cases, and works
with emergency-management agencies across the country.
It also partners with Project Lifesaver, a rapid-response program
that deploys specially trained teams to locate wandering children and
adults suffering from diseases such as Alzheimer's, Down syndrome and
autism.
The group's work has earned accolades from law enforcement. The
police chief in Kenton, Ohio, credits the dogs for tracking the exact
location and movements of a homicide suspect weeks after crimes were
committed. The man was arrested and later confessed to three killings,
Police Chief John Vermillion said on the group's Web site.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Special Dogs have not sniffed out any new breaks
No significant breaks in the search for missing
teen Amber Dubois were reported Friday, two days after specialized
search dogs began scouring a local area looking for any trace of
the 14-year-old girl.
The dogs, said by their handlers to be able to track the scent
of a person missing for weeks or even months, are part of VK9 Scent
Specific Search Recovery of Brewer, Maine.
Escondido police Lt. Craig Carter said Friday morning that a
police canine officer was shadowing the dogs, Quincy, a Labrador
retriever, and Jack, a German short haired pointer, and their
handlers.
Carter said, however, there was nothing significant to report at
that time. He could not be reached Friday afternoon.
Moe Dubois, Amber's father, said he understood the dogs had been
helpful though, following the suggestion of local police, he said
he could not elaborate on the search.
The Escondido High School freshman was last seen at about 7:10
a.m. Feb. 13 walking to the school on North Broadway.
Anyone with information about Amber's disappearance is urged to
call Escondido police at 760-743-8477
teen Amber Dubois were reported Friday, two days after specialized
search dogs began scouring a local area looking for any trace of
the 14-year-old girl.
The dogs, said by their handlers to be able to track the scent
of a person missing for weeks or even months, are part of VK9 Scent
Specific Search Recovery of Brewer, Maine.
Escondido police Lt. Craig Carter said Friday morning that a
police canine officer was shadowing the dogs, Quincy, a Labrador
retriever, and Jack, a German short haired pointer, and their
handlers.
Carter said, however, there was nothing significant to report at
that time. He could not be reached Friday afternoon.
Moe Dubois, Amber's father, said he understood the dogs had been
helpful though, following the suggestion of local police, he said
he could not elaborate on the search.
The Escondido High School freshman was last seen at about 7:10
a.m. Feb. 13 walking to the school on North Broadway.
Anyone with information about Amber's disappearance is urged to
call Escondido police at 760-743-8477
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
A teenage LDS author is donating 10 percent of her book sale profits to the search for a missing California teenager.
Jenna
Cooper, author of "Turned," is a 17-year-old Santana High School senior
from Santee, Calif. When she heard of the plight of Amber Dubois, a
14-year-old Escondido High School student who has been missing since
Feb. 13, Cooper wanted to give her family a copy of her book so it
would be the first book she read upon her return.
After discussion with the family, she decided instead to donate 10 percent of the royalties to the "Bring Amber Home" fund.
"Turned" is available on Amazon.com.
Jenna
Cooper, author of "Turned," is a 17-year-old Santana High School senior
from Santee, Calif. When she heard of the plight of Amber Dubois, a
14-year-old Escondido High School student who has been missing since
Feb. 13, Cooper wanted to give her family a copy of her book so it
would be the first book she read upon her return.
After discussion with the family, she decided instead to donate 10 percent of the royalties to the "Bring Amber Home" fund.
"Turned" is available on Amazon.com.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
REGION: Vigil to mark 200th day since teen disappeared
| Posted: Monday, August 31, 2009 10:20 pm | No Comments Posted
A vigil marking the 200th day since Escondido teen Amber Dubois disappeared will be held in San Diego at 7 p.m. Tuesday, the teen's family said.
Dubois was last seen Feb. 13 at 7:10 a.m., walking on North Broadway on her way to class at Escondido High School. Her family believes she was abducted by a stranger, though police have found no evidence to prove what happened to the bookish 14-year-old girl.
Despite help from private investigators, highly-trained search dogs and a team of police detectives, no trace of the teen has been found in six months.
The vigil will be held to discuss ongoing search efforts, upcoming fundraisers and ways the public can help search for Amber, according to a news release distributed by the family.
The vigil will be held at Cafe Coyote, 2461 San Diego Ave. in the Old Town neighborhood of San Diego. Ten percent of participants' food purchases will be donated to the search efforts for Amber. The family asks that you notify your server that you are there for the vigil.
More information about Amber Dubois is available at www.bringamberhome.com.
Anyone with information about the teen's disappearance is asked to call Escondido police at 760-743-8477.
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Seven months after their daughter disappeared without a trace,
Amber Dubois' parents criticized the Escondido Police Department's
investigation, saying detectives have failed to follow through on
significant leads quickly, and called for outside eyes to review
Escondido's investigation.
"Our daughter is not getting what she needs to be recovered"
said Amber's father Moe Dubois at a Sunday prayer vigil at
Escondido High School, where the 14-year-old was last seen before
school on Feb. 13.
It was the first time the family has expressed public
frustration with Escondido police.
Police spokesman Lt. Bob Benton responded that Escondido had
launched "One of the most extensive investigations our department
has handled," with the help of several outside agencies.
He said that two investigators still worked on the case full
time, and that several agencies, including the Sheriff's
Department, the FBI and the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children, had joined the search.
However, Moe Dubois said Sunday that police had, "dropped the
ball," with he and ex-wife Carrie McGonigle, Amber's mother, citing
several alleged delays that may have hurt Amber's chances of being
found.
On Aug. 24, the family received a tip from someone who reported
seeing Amber at a business, McGonigle said, declining to say where
the sighting happened. Police were notified of the tip and made
aware that the business kept surveillance video, she said. Police
never tried to get the tape, and after almost two weeks, the
business erased it, McGonigle said.
Benton said the department had received more than 1,000 tips and
credible sightings were followed up on quickly. He said he did not
immediately know what McGonigle was referring to, but he said he
would check with investigators and respond Monday.
Amber's parents also said police had delayed for weeks after an
important scent trail picked up by a team of highly trained East
Coast search dogs brought by the family to search the area in
August.
Benton said an Escondido officer who accompanied the outside
searchers followed the trail with the searchers and interviewed
people at its end. The officer got no leads from the interviews,
but police distributed fliers in the area, which both Benton and
the family declined to specify.
McGonigle said there needed to be more "outside eyes," on the
case, and was requesting that Escondido police allow a retired law
enforcement officer hired by the family to review the entire
investigation.
Benton said that both the FBI and the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children had reviewed Escondido's
investigation and told the department it was unusually
thorough.
He said Escondido detectives were open to allowing a person
hired by the family to look at their investigative files, but other
agencies involved in the investigation would also have to
approve.
"Because there are many other agencies involved it would have to
be a unanimous decision," Benton said.
Amber's case is still classified as a "missing person"
investigation, because police do not know whether she left
voluntarily or was kidnapped. Family members believe the girl they
describe as a bookish and loving was abducted by a stranger and is
being held against her will.
The parents have conducted extensive efforts to find Amber,
bringing in search experts from around the county, organizing
weekend searches, hiring a series of investigators and continually
spreading the word of Amber's disappearance with fliers,
fundraisers, press conferences and television appearances.
Benton said police have been working closely with Amber's family
and planned to meet with McGonigle again this week.
Amber Dubois' parents criticized the Escondido Police Department's
investigation, saying detectives have failed to follow through on
significant leads quickly, and called for outside eyes to review
Escondido's investigation.
"Our daughter is not getting what she needs to be recovered"
said Amber's father Moe Dubois at a Sunday prayer vigil at
Escondido High School, where the 14-year-old was last seen before
school on Feb. 13.
It was the first time the family has expressed public
frustration with Escondido police.
Police spokesman Lt. Bob Benton responded that Escondido had
launched "One of the most extensive investigations our department
has handled," with the help of several outside agencies.
He said that two investigators still worked on the case full
time, and that several agencies, including the Sheriff's
Department, the FBI and the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children, had joined the search.
However, Moe Dubois said Sunday that police had, "dropped the
ball," with he and ex-wife Carrie McGonigle, Amber's mother, citing
several alleged delays that may have hurt Amber's chances of being
found.
On Aug. 24, the family received a tip from someone who reported
seeing Amber at a business, McGonigle said, declining to say where
the sighting happened. Police were notified of the tip and made
aware that the business kept surveillance video, she said. Police
never tried to get the tape, and after almost two weeks, the
business erased it, McGonigle said.
Benton said the department had received more than 1,000 tips and
credible sightings were followed up on quickly. He said he did not
immediately know what McGonigle was referring to, but he said he
would check with investigators and respond Monday.
Amber's parents also said police had delayed for weeks after an
important scent trail picked up by a team of highly trained East
Coast search dogs brought by the family to search the area in
August.
Benton said an Escondido officer who accompanied the outside
searchers followed the trail with the searchers and interviewed
people at its end. The officer got no leads from the interviews,
but police distributed fliers in the area, which both Benton and
the family declined to specify.
McGonigle said there needed to be more "outside eyes," on the
case, and was requesting that Escondido police allow a retired law
enforcement officer hired by the family to review the entire
investigation.
Benton said that both the FBI and the National Center for
Missing and Exploited Children had reviewed Escondido's
investigation and told the department it was unusually
thorough.
He said Escondido detectives were open to allowing a person
hired by the family to look at their investigative files, but other
agencies involved in the investigation would also have to
approve.
"Because there are many other agencies involved it would have to
be a unanimous decision," Benton said.
Amber's case is still classified as a "missing person"
investigation, because police do not know whether she left
voluntarily or was kidnapped. Family members believe the girl they
describe as a bookish and loving was abducted by a stranger and is
being held against her will.
The parents have conducted extensive efforts to find Amber,
bringing in search experts from around the county, organizing
weekend searches, hiring a series of investigators and continually
spreading the word of Amber's disappearance with fliers,
fundraisers, press conferences and television appearances.
Benton said police have been working closely with Amber's family
and planned to meet with McGonigle again this week.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
REGION: Golf tournament fundraiser set for missing teen
A golf tournament fundraiser to aid the search for missing teen Amber Dubois is set for Monday Oct. 5, the Escondido girl's father said Tuesday.
The event will be held at the San Juan Hills Golf Club in San Juan Capistrano, with check-in starting at 10 a.m. and a shotgun tee-off at 12:30 p.m., said Moe Dubois.
Amber, 14, disappeared Feb. 13 on her way to class at Escondido High School. She was last seen walking north on Broadway near the school's football stadium, police have said.
Her family believes Amber was abducted by a stranger. Police, however, have classified hers as a missing person case, saying they do not have evidence to say whether she was abducted or ran away.
To pay for private search efforts, the family and its supporters have organized numerous fundraisers across the region.
The cost of October's golf tournament is $150 per person or $550 per foursome. All proceeds will benefit the Amber Dubois Search Fund, said the teen's father.
For more information about the tournament, contact Bob Welch at 949-370-1337. To register online, visit https://event-manager.compete-at.com/bobwelch.
For more information about the search for Amber, visit www.bringamberhome.com .
The event will be held at the San Juan Hills Golf Club in San Juan Capistrano, with check-in starting at 10 a.m. and a shotgun tee-off at 12:30 p.m., said Moe Dubois.
Amber, 14, disappeared Feb. 13 on her way to class at Escondido High School. She was last seen walking north on Broadway near the school's football stadium, police have said.
Her family believes Amber was abducted by a stranger. Police, however, have classified hers as a missing person case, saying they do not have evidence to say whether she was abducted or ran away.
To pay for private search efforts, the family and its supporters have organized numerous fundraisers across the region.
The cost of October's golf tournament is $150 per person or $550 per foursome. All proceeds will benefit the Amber Dubois Search Fund, said the teen's father.
For more information about the tournament, contact Bob Welch at 949-370-1337. To register online, visit https://event-manager.compete-at.com/bobwelch.
For more information about the search for Amber, visit www.bringamberhome.com .
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Reward increases to $100k
A reward for information about the whereabouts of missing Escondido 14-year-old Amber Dubois is now up to $100,000.
At the request of the Escondido Police Department, the office of Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has added $40,000 to an already established
reward it was announced Thursday.
Amber disappeared Feb. 13 when she was last seen walking to Escondido High School.
Escondido Police Chief Jim Maher requested that the Governor's Office
offer the reward as part of the Governor's Reward Program, which has
existed since 1967. The office has offered rewards in 258 cases and
paid out in 19 of those.
Amber's family and friends already had established a
$60,000 reward of which $50,000 was earmarked for information leading
to Amber's safe return and $10,000 for information leading to an arrest
of whoever is responsible for her disappearance.
Anyone with information is encouraged to call (760) 743-TIPS (8477).
At the request of the Escondido Police Department, the office of Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has added $40,000 to an already established
reward it was announced Thursday.
Amber disappeared Feb. 13 when she was last seen walking to Escondido High School.
Escondido Police Chief Jim Maher requested that the Governor's Office
offer the reward as part of the Governor's Reward Program, which has
existed since 1967. The office has offered rewards in 258 cases and
paid out in 19 of those.
Amber's family and friends already had established a
$60,000 reward of which $50,000 was earmarked for information leading
to Amber's safe return and $10,000 for information leading to an arrest
of whoever is responsible for her disappearance.
Anyone with information is encouraged to call (760) 743-TIPS (8477).
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Gov Schwarzenegger Offers Rewards for Information in Two Unsolved Cases
SACRAMENTO /California Newswire/ — Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger today offered rewards for information leading to the arrest and conviction in a California court of the person or persons responsible for the following two unsolved cases in California. The following is a brief description of each crime and the reward amount offered:
On February 2, 2009, 49-year-old Elizabeth Palmer and 42-year-old Matthew Scott were found murdered at their place of employment, Golden Sun Homes in Stanton. The Governor is offering a reward in the amount of $50,000. It was requested by Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens.
On February 13, 2009, 14-year-old Amber Dubois was last seen walking to school in Escondido before she disappeared. The Governor is offering a reward in the amount of $40,000. It was requested by Escondido Police Chief Jim Maher.
Under the Governor’s Reward program, 258 rewards have been offered since 1967 and 19 have been paid. The reward process is initiated when the Governor receives a written request from the chief of the law enforcement agency with investigatory jurisdiction over the matter. This request informs the Governor that (1) those responsible for the investigation have pursued all leads and believe, in their independent judgment, that a reward will help them in their efforts, (2) the crime is one for which a reward may be offered under California law and (3) the victims’ families support the reward. The Governor’s legal affairs unit processes the request and ensures statutory compliance. The Governor makes the final determination regarding the request.
Rewards may be offered for specified crimes under the California Penal Code and subject to statutory maximums. Rewards do not expire and are only paid if the information leads to the arrest and conviction in a California court of the individual or individuals charged with the crime.
On February 2, 2009, 49-year-old Elizabeth Palmer and 42-year-old Matthew Scott were found murdered at their place of employment, Golden Sun Homes in Stanton. The Governor is offering a reward in the amount of $50,000. It was requested by Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens.
On February 13, 2009, 14-year-old Amber Dubois was last seen walking to school in Escondido before she disappeared. The Governor is offering a reward in the amount of $40,000. It was requested by Escondido Police Chief Jim Maher.
Under the Governor’s Reward program, 258 rewards have been offered since 1967 and 19 have been paid. The reward process is initiated when the Governor receives a written request from the chief of the law enforcement agency with investigatory jurisdiction over the matter. This request informs the Governor that (1) those responsible for the investigation have pursued all leads and believe, in their independent judgment, that a reward will help them in their efforts, (2) the crime is one for which a reward may be offered under California law and (3) the victims’ families support the reward. The Governor’s legal affairs unit processes the request and ensures statutory compliance. The Governor makes the final determination regarding the request.
Rewards may be offered for specified crimes under the California Penal Code and subject to statutory maximums. Rewards do not expire and are only paid if the information leads to the arrest and conviction in a California court of the individual or individuals charged with the crime.
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Dugard surprise reunion adds urgency to Amber Dubois case
When 29-year-old Jaycee Dugard was reunited with family last month, Moe Dubois felt a rush of fear, anxiety and grief.
Dugard was kidnapped when she was 11, held captive, raped, and fathered two of her kidnapper’s children before the nearly two-decade old case came to an end.
“I don’t want Amber to suffer through something like that …” said Dubois, whose 14-year-old daughter Amber has been missing for more than seven months. “But our hope, our faith, won’t diminish until we find Amber.”
Since Dugard’s return, investigators have worked to piece together the details of the girl’s 18-year ordeal. And parents with missing children — like Dubois — have grappled with the mixed emotions a case like Dugard’s re-introduces.
On Sept. 13 — seven months after Amber went missing, and weeks after Dugard was found — family and friends gathered to pray for Amber’s safe return. The Escondido girl was last seen Feb. 13 walking near Escondido High School in black jeans, and a black-hooded sweatshirt.
Last week, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced a $40,000 increase to a reward for information leading to Amber’s safe return, and the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for her kidnapping.
The added reward — and a degree of hope inspired by Dugard’s return - is reason for Amber’s family and friends to stay optimistic. But a gamut of feelings creeps in too: the fear for what Amber may have to — or have had to — endure; anxiety for every day that passes not knowing where she is, or if she is alive; and grief for every missed holiday, and milestone, and memory longed to be shared with her.
Dubois felt sick reading news about Dugard’s kidnapping and captivity; he felt sad for the Dugards, who lived 18 years not knowing where Jaycee was, if she was safe, if she was alive.
“The whole ‘not knowing’ is the worst thing a family goes through,” Dubois said. “There is no closure. Every day of your life is a nightmare.”
“In reality, what a parent wants is for the whole world to stop and find your child — but that’s impossible … There’s always a feeling something else can be done that’s not being done,” he added.
Rather than dwell on the anxiety, fear and grief, though, Dubois chooses to see the happy — albeit bittersweet — ending: Dugard is reunited with her family, and rebuilding her life. Regardless the amount of time that passes, Dugard’s case gives Dubois hope that Amber will be home safe; he prays it’s sooner rather than later. Dugard’s case motivates him to work harder, scheduling searches and fundraisers and television appearances — all with the hope Amber’s case doesn’t fade from the public’s mind.
He does not want to wait 18 years to know what’s happened to his daughter.
“When you see a case like (Jaycee’s) in the news, it reaffirms the need to hold on to any hope you can get and keep up the search,” said Lt. Craig Carter, with the Escondido Police Department’s investigative division. “You start looking at every little piece of evidence and every tip; you never want to miss something that would bring Amber home earlier.”
The Escondido Police Department asks anyone with information on Amber’s location or tips regarding the case to call (760) 743-8477. For volunteer and search information, visit www.bringamberhome.com.
“Every day it wears on the investigators, and for the parents there is no waking moment they aren’t thinking about Amber,” Carter said. “A lot of people love that girl, and their only interest is finding her and bringing her home safely.”
Dugard was kidnapped when she was 11, held captive, raped, and fathered two of her kidnapper’s children before the nearly two-decade old case came to an end.
“I don’t want Amber to suffer through something like that …” said Dubois, whose 14-year-old daughter Amber has been missing for more than seven months. “But our hope, our faith, won’t diminish until we find Amber.”
Since Dugard’s return, investigators have worked to piece together the details of the girl’s 18-year ordeal. And parents with missing children — like Dubois — have grappled with the mixed emotions a case like Dugard’s re-introduces.
On Sept. 13 — seven months after Amber went missing, and weeks after Dugard was found — family and friends gathered to pray for Amber’s safe return. The Escondido girl was last seen Feb. 13 walking near Escondido High School in black jeans, and a black-hooded sweatshirt.
Last week, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced a $40,000 increase to a reward for information leading to Amber’s safe return, and the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for her kidnapping.
The added reward — and a degree of hope inspired by Dugard’s return - is reason for Amber’s family and friends to stay optimistic. But a gamut of feelings creeps in too: the fear for what Amber may have to — or have had to — endure; anxiety for every day that passes not knowing where she is, or if she is alive; and grief for every missed holiday, and milestone, and memory longed to be shared with her.
Dubois felt sick reading news about Dugard’s kidnapping and captivity; he felt sad for the Dugards, who lived 18 years not knowing where Jaycee was, if she was safe, if she was alive.
“The whole ‘not knowing’ is the worst thing a family goes through,” Dubois said. “There is no closure. Every day of your life is a nightmare.”
“In reality, what a parent wants is for the whole world to stop and find your child — but that’s impossible … There’s always a feeling something else can be done that’s not being done,” he added.
Rather than dwell on the anxiety, fear and grief, though, Dubois chooses to see the happy — albeit bittersweet — ending: Dugard is reunited with her family, and rebuilding her life. Regardless the amount of time that passes, Dugard’s case gives Dubois hope that Amber will be home safe; he prays it’s sooner rather than later. Dugard’s case motivates him to work harder, scheduling searches and fundraisers and television appearances — all with the hope Amber’s case doesn’t fade from the public’s mind.
He does not want to wait 18 years to know what’s happened to his daughter.
“When you see a case like (Jaycee’s) in the news, it reaffirms the need to hold on to any hope you can get and keep up the search,” said Lt. Craig Carter, with the Escondido Police Department’s investigative division. “You start looking at every little piece of evidence and every tip; you never want to miss something that would bring Amber home earlier.”
The Escondido Police Department asks anyone with information on Amber’s location or tips regarding the case to call (760) 743-8477. For volunteer and search information, visit www.bringamberhome.com.
“Every day it wears on the investigators, and for the parents there is no waking moment they aren’t thinking about Amber,” Carter said. “A lot of people love that girl, and their only interest is finding her and bringing her home safely.”
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Missing girl's parents to appear on TV shows
ESCONDIDO — The parents of Amber Dubois will appear on two previously taped national TV shows as part of the effort to keep the Escondido teenager's case in the public eye.
Maurice Dubois and Carrie McGonigle will be on the Steve Wilkos Show today (the show airs locally at 11 a.m. on KTLA Chn. 14), and on the Tyra Banks Show on Oct. 14 (the show airs locally at 3 p.m. on XETV Chn. 6).
The couple taped the shows in August during a trip to New York City.
Amber, 14, disappeared Feb. 13 while walking to Escondido High School.
Police have classified her as an at-risk missing juvenile. They say there is not enough evidence to categorically say whether she was abducted or ran off.
A $100,000 reward is being offerred for information — $50,000 for information leading to the girl's safe return and $50,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible for her disappearance.
Anyone with information is asked to call an anonymous tip line at (760) 743-8477.
For more information go to bringamberhome.com .
Maurice Dubois and Carrie McGonigle will be on the Steve Wilkos Show today (the show airs locally at 11 a.m. on KTLA Chn. 14), and on the Tyra Banks Show on Oct. 14 (the show airs locally at 3 p.m. on XETV Chn. 6).
The couple taped the shows in August during a trip to New York City.
Amber, 14, disappeared Feb. 13 while walking to Escondido High School.
Police have classified her as an at-risk missing juvenile. They say there is not enough evidence to categorically say whether she was abducted or ran off.
A $100,000 reward is being offerred for information — $50,000 for information leading to the girl's safe return and $50,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible for her disappearance.
Anyone with information is asked to call an anonymous tip line at (760) 743-8477.
For more information go to bringamberhome.com .
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Missing-girl sightings hard for police
ESCONDIDO, Calif., Oct. 20 (UPI) -- The intensive police search for a missing California girl has been on an emotional roller coaster in light of the many leads they get, an officer said.
Police say they are inundated with information and sightings of Amber Dubois, 14, the Escondido, Calif., high school student who was last seen walking to school Feb. 13, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported Monday.
"Talk about your coincidences. We thought for sure it was her," Escondido Police Lt. Bob Benton said of a girl they had tracked 700 miles away, whom they were all but certain was Amber. "That's been the toughest part in the emotional roller coaster of getting what we believe are very credible tips and that Amber would be coming home, to the realization that it's not her."
Dubois' mother, Carrie McGonigle, and father, Maurice Dubois, are working to keep public focus on their daughter's disappearance to continue generating more leads, the newspaper said. They plan to hold a vigil Sunday, her 15th birthday.
The parents recently got significant media attention when they blamed police for not working hard enough on the case, but have since toned down their criticism.
"There were some miscommunications," Maurice Dubois said. "We were not told specifics about the case at the time. It's an open investigation, so we can't be told everything. We know that."
Police say they are inundated with information and sightings of Amber Dubois, 14, the Escondido, Calif., high school student who was last seen walking to school Feb. 13, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported Monday.
"Talk about your coincidences. We thought for sure it was her," Escondido Police Lt. Bob Benton said of a girl they had tracked 700 miles away, whom they were all but certain was Amber. "That's been the toughest part in the emotional roller coaster of getting what we believe are very credible tips and that Amber would be coming home, to the realization that it's not her."
Dubois' mother, Carrie McGonigle, and father, Maurice Dubois, are working to keep public focus on their daughter's disappearance to continue generating more leads, the newspaper said. They plan to hold a vigil Sunday, her 15th birthday.
The parents recently got significant media attention when they blamed police for not working hard enough on the case, but have since toned down their criticism.
"There were some miscommunications," Maurice Dubois said. "We were not told specifics about the case at the time. It's an open investigation, so we can't be told everything. We know that."
tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
The family of missing teen Amber Dubois is
planning a vigil and picnic for Sunday, her 15th birthday.
Family members invite people to bring their own food and drinks
or to bring food to share in a potluck lunch at the Dixon Lake
Recreation Area.
The lunch is planned for 1:30 p.m., with a lakeside vigil at 6
p.m., the family said in a written statement.
Along with picnic areas and barbecues, people can fish, hike,
throw horseshoes, use the playground or rent a boat, the family
said.
Amber was last seen Feb. 13 walking to school near Escondido
High.
Her family believes she was abducted. Police, despite an
extensive investigation, say they have no leads on her
disappearance.
The Dixon Lake Recreation Area is at 1700 N. La Honda Drive in
Escondido. The picnic and vigil will be at shelters two and
four.
For more information, visit the family's Web site at
www.bringamberhome.com.
planning a vigil and picnic for Sunday, her 15th birthday.
Family members invite people to bring their own food and drinks
or to bring food to share in a potluck lunch at the Dixon Lake
Recreation Area.
The lunch is planned for 1:30 p.m., with a lakeside vigil at 6
p.m., the family said in a written statement.
Along with picnic areas and barbecues, people can fish, hike,
throw horseshoes, use the playground or rent a boat, the family
said.
Amber was last seen Feb. 13 walking to school near Escondido
High.
Her family believes she was abducted. Police, despite an
extensive investigation, say they have no leads on her
disappearance.
The Dixon Lake Recreation Area is at 1700 N. La Honda Drive in
Escondido. The picnic and vigil will be at shelters two and
four.
For more information, visit the family's Web site at
www.bringamberhome.com.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
There was cake, balloons and a picnic lunch.
But with the birthday girl missing for more than eight months,
no one really expected a happy birthday.
Still, about 50 family members, friends and a handful of
well-wishers from the community attended a celebration and prayer
vigil at Escondido's Dixon Lake Recreation Area on Sunday to mark
Amber Dubois' 15th birthday.
"Sitting at home at a time like this is the last thing we want
to do," said Maurice Dubois, Amber's father.
Dubois said the company of others who care about his daughter
was some comfort during the painful birthday milestone. And
although she is missing, suspending the family's tradition of a
party and cake on Amber's birthday might have been more painful, he
said.
"We want to try to keep things as normal as we can," Dubois
said. "It's been hard enough changing everything in our lives."
Dubois, who is divorced from Amber's mother, lives in Orange
County. He recently returned to work after taking eight months off
to concentrate on the search for Amber, though he plans to continue
his efforts, he said.
A poster and a photo album that circulated at Sunday's gathering
showed pictures of Amber at her past birthday parties.
On her first birthday, Amber already had a full head of brown
hair and ate cake in a high chair. On her third birthday, she wore
a court jester's cap. At her 14th birthday party last year, she
jumped into a swimming pool at her mom's house.
"This is a great album," said Amber's aunt, Stacy Harker.
Harker said her niece would have loved the birthday picnic, set
overlooking a bright blue Lake Dixon under a clear sky. The park,
along with adjacent Daily Ranch were places where search and rescue
operations concentrated in the early days of Amber's disappearance.
Harker couldn't help entertaining a fantasy.
"I'd love to see her come walking up here right now so we could
have a happy party rather than a sad party," the Corona relative
said.
Amber was last seen Feb. 13 walking near Escondido High School,
on her way to class. Despite an investigation that police describe
as one of the most intense they've done, her disappearance remains
a mystery. Her parents believe she was abducted and is being held
by a stranger.
Family friend Joe Peters said he hoped Amber would be able to
see pictures of the cake and party she missed.
"Hopefully we'll share the event with her soon," he said.
Carrie McGonigle, Amber's mother, said Sunday's gathering gave
her some respite from a grief that grows every day.
"I'm not crying right now," she said.
She noted that the birthday cake did not say, "Happy
Birthday."
"I don't even know if she knows it's her birthday," she said,
speculating that Amber may be learning a new life from whoever is
holding her.
Because they think she is alive, Amber's family believes
publicity is the key to finding her. Next week, the family will
send a mailer to about 27,000 law enforcement agencies asking for
help, McGonigle said. The mailer includes a removable poster and an
introduction by Escondido police Lt. Bob Benton, she said.
Moe Dubois said the recently publicized case of a teenager with
amnesia found in New York City who responded to the name of
"Amber," showed him publicity is working.
While Dubois' hope when he first learned of the New York City
teen was short-lived ---- a quick Web search showed pictures of a
girl who was not his daughter ---- he said more than 80 people from
across the country e-mailed or called him about the case.
"It's good to know there are so many people who are aware of
Amber and who will actually get in touch with us," he said.
But with the birthday girl missing for more than eight months,
no one really expected a happy birthday.
Still, about 50 family members, friends and a handful of
well-wishers from the community attended a celebration and prayer
vigil at Escondido's Dixon Lake Recreation Area on Sunday to mark
Amber Dubois' 15th birthday.
"Sitting at home at a time like this is the last thing we want
to do," said Maurice Dubois, Amber's father.
Dubois said the company of others who care about his daughter
was some comfort during the painful birthday milestone. And
although she is missing, suspending the family's tradition of a
party and cake on Amber's birthday might have been more painful, he
said.
"We want to try to keep things as normal as we can," Dubois
said. "It's been hard enough changing everything in our lives."
Dubois, who is divorced from Amber's mother, lives in Orange
County. He recently returned to work after taking eight months off
to concentrate on the search for Amber, though he plans to continue
his efforts, he said.
A poster and a photo album that circulated at Sunday's gathering
showed pictures of Amber at her past birthday parties.
On her first birthday, Amber already had a full head of brown
hair and ate cake in a high chair. On her third birthday, she wore
a court jester's cap. At her 14th birthday party last year, she
jumped into a swimming pool at her mom's house.
"This is a great album," said Amber's aunt, Stacy Harker.
Harker said her niece would have loved the birthday picnic, set
overlooking a bright blue Lake Dixon under a clear sky. The park,
along with adjacent Daily Ranch were places where search and rescue
operations concentrated in the early days of Amber's disappearance.
Harker couldn't help entertaining a fantasy.
"I'd love to see her come walking up here right now so we could
have a happy party rather than a sad party," the Corona relative
said.
Amber was last seen Feb. 13 walking near Escondido High School,
on her way to class. Despite an investigation that police describe
as one of the most intense they've done, her disappearance remains
a mystery. Her parents believe she was abducted and is being held
by a stranger.
Family friend Joe Peters said he hoped Amber would be able to
see pictures of the cake and party she missed.
"Hopefully we'll share the event with her soon," he said.
Carrie McGonigle, Amber's mother, said Sunday's gathering gave
her some respite from a grief that grows every day.
"I'm not crying right now," she said.
She noted that the birthday cake did not say, "Happy
Birthday."
"I don't even know if she knows it's her birthday," she said,
speculating that Amber may be learning a new life from whoever is
holding her.
Because they think she is alive, Amber's family believes
publicity is the key to finding her. Next week, the family will
send a mailer to about 27,000 law enforcement agencies asking for
help, McGonigle said. The mailer includes a removable poster and an
introduction by Escondido police Lt. Bob Benton, she said.
Moe Dubois said the recently publicized case of a teenager with
amnesia found in New York City who responded to the name of
"Amber," showed him publicity is working.
While Dubois' hope when he first learned of the New York City
teen was short-lived ---- a quick Web search showed pictures of a
girl who was not his daughter ---- he said more than 80 people from
across the country e-mailed or called him about the case.
"It's good to know there are so many people who are aware of
Amber and who will actually get in touch with us," he said.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
She has been missing since right before Valentine's Day. Now Amber
Dubois' family is hoping that a new feature in People magazine will
help bring the missing teenager home.
Every month, candles are lit at Escondido High School to show
support in the ongoing pursuit to find 15-year-old Amber Dubois. While
the vigils are good, they do little to reach out to millions of
households outside of the News 8 viewing area who don't see our stories
of the ongoing hope held by this community to find Amber.
The family hopes Amber's inclusion in a People magazine article changes all of that.
Amber's father Maurice Dubois says People magazine and the Center
for Missing and Exploited Children worked together to showcase six
young people who disappeared this year without a trace, including Amber.
"They really didn't actually say [why]. I'm assuming it's because of
the circumstances of the case, how there really are no leads to go on,"
Maurice said.
Though leads have popped up, they never really seem to go that far.
Now with front page exposure, Amber's father is cautiously optimistic
about finding his little girl.
"All the leads tend to fizzle out. We're hoping this People magazine
article will bring in some more significant leads that they can follow
up on," Maurice said.
With nearly four million subscribers, it could just be the best
resource yet to bring Amber home and finally blow out the candles at
the monthly vigils.
Dubois' family is hoping that a new feature in People magazine will
help bring the missing teenager home.
Every month, candles are lit at Escondido High School to show
support in the ongoing pursuit to find 15-year-old Amber Dubois. While
the vigils are good, they do little to reach out to millions of
households outside of the News 8 viewing area who don't see our stories
of the ongoing hope held by this community to find Amber.
The family hopes Amber's inclusion in a People magazine article changes all of that.
Amber's father Maurice Dubois says People magazine and the Center
for Missing and Exploited Children worked together to showcase six
young people who disappeared this year without a trace, including Amber.
"They really didn't actually say [why]. I'm assuming it's because of
the circumstances of the case, how there really are no leads to go on,"
Maurice said.
Though leads have popped up, they never really seem to go that far.
Now with front page exposure, Amber's father is cautiously optimistic
about finding his little girl.
"All the leads tend to fizzle out. We're hoping this People magazine
article will bring in some more significant leads that they can follow
up on," Maurice said.
With nearly four million subscribers, it could just be the best
resource yet to bring Amber home and finally blow out the candles at
the monthly vigils.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
The family of missing teen Amber Dubois will hold a walk-a-thon
next month to mark the one-year anniversary of her disappearance
and to raise funds to continue the search.
Amber was 14 when she was last seen walking to school Feb. 13
near Escondido High School, where she was a freshman. Her
disappearance has garnered national attention, including a
front-page article on People magazine.
"We want as many people as possible to attend," said Amber's
mother, Carrie McGonigle.
The walk-a-thon will be held Feb. 13 at the Escondido High
School track. There also will be a silent auction and raffle
prizes, according to the family.
Proceeds will go to The Amber Leeanne Dubois Trust Fund. The
fund has been used to pay for search-related expenses, including
27,000 pamphlets sent to local law enforcement agencies throughout
the country, McGonigle said.
Escondido police said the pamphlets have generated praise from
other departments and some tips in the case. But the girl's
disappearance remains unsolved.
Her parents believe she was abducted and is being held by a
stranger.
Police say they have no evidence to support that she was
abducted or ran away from home. That is why police have classified
the case as a suspicious missing person.
Amber's mother said she believes that publicity is the key to
finding her daughter. McGonigle said she plans to print thousands
of posters to send to high schools all over the country in hopes
that someone might recognize Amber.
The event starts at 8 a.m. at Escondido High School, 1535 N.
Broadway. For more information, visit www.BringAmberHome.com or
www.AmberLeeanneDubois.com .
Donations, which are not tax-deductible, can be sent to The
Amber Leeanne Dubois Trust Fund, P.O. Box 1557, Paramount, CA
90723.
next month to mark the one-year anniversary of her disappearance
and to raise funds to continue the search.
Amber was 14 when she was last seen walking to school Feb. 13
near Escondido High School, where she was a freshman. Her
disappearance has garnered national attention, including a
front-page article on People magazine.
"We want as many people as possible to attend," said Amber's
mother, Carrie McGonigle.
The walk-a-thon will be held Feb. 13 at the Escondido High
School track. There also will be a silent auction and raffle
prizes, according to the family.
Proceeds will go to The Amber Leeanne Dubois Trust Fund. The
fund has been used to pay for search-related expenses, including
27,000 pamphlets sent to local law enforcement agencies throughout
the country, McGonigle said.
Escondido police said the pamphlets have generated praise from
other departments and some tips in the case. But the girl's
disappearance remains unsolved.
Her parents believe she was abducted and is being held by a
stranger.
Police say they have no evidence to support that she was
abducted or ran away from home. That is why police have classified
the case as a suspicious missing person.
Amber's mother said she believes that publicity is the key to
finding her daughter. McGonigle said she plans to print thousands
of posters to send to high schools all over the country in hopes
that someone might recognize Amber.
The event starts at 8 a.m. at Escondido High School, 1535 N.
Broadway. For more information, visit www.BringAmberHome.com or
www.AmberLeeanneDubois.com .
Donations, which are not tax-deductible, can be sent to The
Amber Leeanne Dubois Trust Fund, P.O. Box 1557, Paramount, CA
90723.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Children's advocates looking to rescue underage prostitutes
during the Super Bowl in Miami on Sunday will be carrying pictures
of Amber Dubois, the Escondido teen missing for nearly a year.
Dozens of volunteers are set to spend the weekend in Miami
looking for teenage girls who have been trafficked to work in the
sex trade, Amber's family members said. Each year, advocates
blanket the Super Bowl host cities looking for missing teens.
Last year, more than 45 volunteers took part in the effort in
Tampa Bay, Fla. Their work developed several leads regarding the
sex trafficking of minors, according to the Klaas Kids Foundation,
an advocacy organization founded by Marc Klaas, father of Polly
Klaas, a young girl who was abducted and murdered in 1993.
The organization has been involved in the search for Amber in
Escondido.
Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, said that she has not ruled
out any possibilities on what may have happened to her daughter.
McGonigle said she helped put together a 24-page booklet with
pictures of missing teens from across the country, including Amber,
that will be used by volunteers to identify the children.
The booklet includes a message from Sheila Welch, Amber's
grandmother.
"I am a football fan, but this Super Bowl, the champions will
not be the Colts or the Saints for me," the message reads. "It will
be your search team. For every girl you find and rescue, it will be
a game-winning touchdown all over again."
Amber, 15, was last seen Feb. 13 walking to school. No clue as
to how or why she disappeared has been found.
Banners reading "Help Us Find Amber" still line fences along
North Broadway near Escondido High School.
Police, who say they have no clear evidence that Amber either
ran away or that she was abducted, have classified the case as a
suspicious missing person. The investigation into her disappearance
is ongoing, with detectives working the case full time.
Lt. Bob Benton said police have no indication that Amber might
be in Miami or working as a prostitute. He said police hope that
the attention this effort generates may lead to tips that will help
them find her.
"We have not ruled out anything," Benton said. "But we do not
have any information that Amber might be in the Miami area. What
helps is the national media attention for her."
during the Super Bowl in Miami on Sunday will be carrying pictures
of Amber Dubois, the Escondido teen missing for nearly a year.
Dozens of volunteers are set to spend the weekend in Miami
looking for teenage girls who have been trafficked to work in the
sex trade, Amber's family members said. Each year, advocates
blanket the Super Bowl host cities looking for missing teens.
Last year, more than 45 volunteers took part in the effort in
Tampa Bay, Fla. Their work developed several leads regarding the
sex trafficking of minors, according to the Klaas Kids Foundation,
an advocacy organization founded by Marc Klaas, father of Polly
Klaas, a young girl who was abducted and murdered in 1993.
The organization has been involved in the search for Amber in
Escondido.
Amber's mother, Carrie McGonigle, said that she has not ruled
out any possibilities on what may have happened to her daughter.
McGonigle said she helped put together a 24-page booklet with
pictures of missing teens from across the country, including Amber,
that will be used by volunteers to identify the children.
The booklet includes a message from Sheila Welch, Amber's
grandmother.
"I am a football fan, but this Super Bowl, the champions will
not be the Colts or the Saints for me," the message reads. "It will
be your search team. For every girl you find and rescue, it will be
a game-winning touchdown all over again."
Amber, 15, was last seen Feb. 13 walking to school. No clue as
to how or why she disappeared has been found.
Banners reading "Help Us Find Amber" still line fences along
North Broadway near Escondido High School.
Police, who say they have no clear evidence that Amber either
ran away or that she was abducted, have classified the case as a
suspicious missing person. The investigation into her disappearance
is ongoing, with detectives working the case full time.
Lt. Bob Benton said police have no indication that Amber might
be in Miami or working as a prostitute. He said police hope that
the attention this effort generates may lead to tips that will help
them find her.
"We have not ruled out anything," Benton said. "But we do not
have any information that Amber might be in the Miami area. What
helps is the national media attention for her."
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: AMBER DUBOIS - 15 yo (2009) - Escondido CA
Saturday marks the year anniversary of the disappearance of Amber Dubois.
On Feb. 13, 2009, everything changed for the Amber's family.
She was 14 years old when she left to walk a few blocks to Escondido High School
from her home. Two witnesses said they saw her on the
sidewalk just a few hundred yards from the school's main entrance.
She never made it.
A walk-a-thon is being held for the missing girl on Saturday.
The event begins at 8 a.m. at Escondido High School and runs until noon.
All proceeds go to the Amber Dubois Trust Fund, which has been set up to
help pay for the continuing search for her.
Her parents, Carrie McGonigle and Maurice Dubois,
have spent numerous hours and thousands of dollars looking for their daughter.
Even after a nationwide search, there has been no sign of the missing girl.
On Feb. 13, 2009, everything changed for the Amber's family.
She was 14 years old when she left to walk a few blocks to Escondido High School
from her home. Two witnesses said they saw her on the
sidewalk just a few hundred yards from the school's main entrance.
She never made it.
A walk-a-thon is being held for the missing girl on Saturday.
The event begins at 8 a.m. at Escondido High School and runs until noon.
All proceeds go to the Amber Dubois Trust Fund, which has been set up to
help pay for the continuing search for her.
Her parents, Carrie McGonigle and Maurice Dubois,
have spent numerous hours and thousands of dollars looking for their daughter.
Even after a nationwide search, there has been no sign of the missing girl.
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
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