COLLEEN PERRIS - 18 yo (2000) - Plantation FL
2 posters
Justice4Caylee.org :: MISSING/EXPLOITED CHILDREN :: MISSING CHILDREN LONG TERM CASES (Over one year)
Page 1 of 1
COLLEEN PERRIS - 18 yo (2000) - Plantation FL
Nick and Nancy Perris are not like other parents.
They barely got a chance to marvel at how quickly their daughter Colleen grew up.
Instead, when they look back, they find a decade of torment since Colleen, 18, vanished, the apparent victim of foul play.
She disappeared the afternoon of Sept. 30, 2000, after she received a mysterious cell phone call and left the family's Plantation Acres house.
"The worst is always in the back of my mind," Nick Perris said. "I have thoughts and visions of someone doing something to her."
Plantation police Detective Joe Messina has similar thoughts, often using the word "catastrophic" to describe what he thinks happened to Colleen.
He's been the lead detective on the case from the beginning, enlisting help from the FBI, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, TV's "America's Most Wanted" – it aired a segment on Colleen in 2004 -- and other investigators.
No one has been able to identify a suspect.
"It's very frustrating as a police officer, and as a parent," Messina said. "I wish there was something more we could do."
Despite all those efforts, the Perrises find that 10 years after Colleen went missing, they are no closer to learning what may have happened to her than they were the day she disappeared.
Police immediately ruled the teen's disappearance suspicious because she left so much behind.
Colleen had gone to school that summer and was days away from receiving her diploma from Plantation High School.
She had more than $1,000 saved from working as a hostess at a chain restaurant, and she was looking forward to an upcoming family trip to Colorado. Colleen also adored her boyfriend and her longtime best friend, both of whom helped search everywhere in the days just after she vanished.
A family friend found Colleen's white, 1994 Mazda MX-6 parked outside an out-of-business Wendy's in Tamarac at the intersection of McNab and Pine Island roads. But it was six days after her disappearance, and by then rain had washed away any fingerprints from the car's exterior. The inside of the car was also devoid of clues.
Although the investigation remains active, there have been no significant developments in several years.
The Perrises had their daughter declared legally dead in 2007 and the next year offered $20,000 from her Florida prepaid college fund as a reward for anyone who could lead them to Colleen. The October 2008 announcement generated only three tips, none of which panned out, Nick Perris said.
"So few tips have come in," Nick Perris said. "At this point, we're waiting for something. We're waiting for the phone call."
He means the call from authorities if they were to find Colleen alive and determine that she had run away. Or, more likely, the Perrises realize, it would be police calling to say that someone has come forward with new information. That someone has made a confession. That someone found some bones.
Adding to the pain and frustration felt by the Perrises and police are the major advancements in technology in the past decade that, had they been available in 2000, might have helped solve the mystery.
Colleen had an AT&T cell phone, but back then obtaining call logs, even with a subpoena, was a weeks- or even months-long task. By the time the phone company processed a request from Plantation police, it was too late to trace the signal on Colleen's phone or get a record of incoming calls to her phone, Messina said.
Facebook and MySpace, now often used by police to track a person's travels and identify their associates, weren't around in 2000; they didn't launch until 2004.
The Perrises said they cope with the pain and frustration through activities including supporting other families of missing children.
Nick Perris, 63, also works days in his Central Park Postal store in Plantation. Nancy Perris, 62, works at Kemper National Services, a large auditing company for medical bills and insurance claims.
"Keeping busy is key," Nancy Perris said. "You need to think about something else."
Police ask that anyone with information about Colleen Perris' disappearance contact Plantation police Detective Joe Messina at 954-797-2100, or Broward Crime Stoppers, anonymously, at 954-493-TIPS (8477).
They barely got a chance to marvel at how quickly their daughter Colleen grew up.
Instead, when they look back, they find a decade of torment since Colleen, 18, vanished, the apparent victim of foul play.
She disappeared the afternoon of Sept. 30, 2000, after she received a mysterious cell phone call and left the family's Plantation Acres house.
"The worst is always in the back of my mind," Nick Perris said. "I have thoughts and visions of someone doing something to her."
Plantation police Detective Joe Messina has similar thoughts, often using the word "catastrophic" to describe what he thinks happened to Colleen.
He's been the lead detective on the case from the beginning, enlisting help from the FBI, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, TV's "America's Most Wanted" – it aired a segment on Colleen in 2004 -- and other investigators.
No one has been able to identify a suspect.
"It's very frustrating as a police officer, and as a parent," Messina said. "I wish there was something more we could do."
Despite all those efforts, the Perrises find that 10 years after Colleen went missing, they are no closer to learning what may have happened to her than they were the day she disappeared.
Police immediately ruled the teen's disappearance suspicious because she left so much behind.
Colleen had gone to school that summer and was days away from receiving her diploma from Plantation High School.
She had more than $1,000 saved from working as a hostess at a chain restaurant, and she was looking forward to an upcoming family trip to Colorado. Colleen also adored her boyfriend and her longtime best friend, both of whom helped search everywhere in the days just after she vanished.
A family friend found Colleen's white, 1994 Mazda MX-6 parked outside an out-of-business Wendy's in Tamarac at the intersection of McNab and Pine Island roads. But it was six days after her disappearance, and by then rain had washed away any fingerprints from the car's exterior. The inside of the car was also devoid of clues.
Although the investigation remains active, there have been no significant developments in several years.
The Perrises had their daughter declared legally dead in 2007 and the next year offered $20,000 from her Florida prepaid college fund as a reward for anyone who could lead them to Colleen. The October 2008 announcement generated only three tips, none of which panned out, Nick Perris said.
"So few tips have come in," Nick Perris said. "At this point, we're waiting for something. We're waiting for the phone call."
He means the call from authorities if they were to find Colleen alive and determine that she had run away. Or, more likely, the Perrises realize, it would be police calling to say that someone has come forward with new information. That someone has made a confession. That someone found some bones.
Adding to the pain and frustration felt by the Perrises and police are the major advancements in technology in the past decade that, had they been available in 2000, might have helped solve the mystery.
Colleen had an AT&T cell phone, but back then obtaining call logs, even with a subpoena, was a weeks- or even months-long task. By the time the phone company processed a request from Plantation police, it was too late to trace the signal on Colleen's phone or get a record of incoming calls to her phone, Messina said.
Facebook and MySpace, now often used by police to track a person's travels and identify their associates, weren't around in 2000; they didn't launch until 2004.
The Perrises said they cope with the pain and frustration through activities including supporting other families of missing children.
Nick Perris, 63, also works days in his Central Park Postal store in Plantation. Nancy Perris, 62, works at Kemper National Services, a large auditing company for medical bills and insurance claims.
"Keeping busy is key," Nancy Perris said. "You need to think about something else."
Police ask that anyone with information about Colleen Perris' disappearance contact Plantation police Detective Joe Messina at 954-797-2100, or Broward Crime Stoppers, anonymously, at 954-493-TIPS (8477).
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: COLLEEN PERRIS - 18 yo (2000) - Plantation FL
Ten years after 18-year-old Colleen Perris disappeared after leaving her Plantation Acres home, her mother and father are praying this case can be solved and are asking for the public's help.
"She was our baby, our only child," said Nancy Perris, Colleen's mother. "She was a joy. She was always singing. She was so happy."
Now, Nancy and her husband Nick cherish the memories of their child: photographs of her child that adorn the walls of their home including a family portrait and a picture before her senior prom.
Nick and Nancy Perris last saw their daughter at 3 p.m. on Saturday, September 30th, 2000, when she left their home. She had received a cell phone call that Police were not able to trace and had said she would return within hours so she and her parents could go to a Florida Marlins baseball game.
Colleen's white, 1994, Mazda MX-6 was found by a friend six days later at a Wendy's restaurant that was out of business. It was located at a strip mall at Pine Island and McNab Roads in Tamarac.
"There were no fingerprints on that car," said lead Detective Joe Messina. "And there was no evidence inside that car. I've been on this case since the beginning for 10 years. And we just hope someone will come forward to help the parents of Colleen Perris. It would be tremendous to resolve this."
Messina reported that there are no suspects and there was no surveillance tape at the strip mall where the Mazda was found.
Lately, there have been very few tips. The F.B.I. and the F.D.L.E. have been involved in the case. TV's "America's Most Wanted" even aired a segment in 2004 about the disappearance.
"It's something that we think about day and night," said Nick Perris. Even though it's been this long, it does not get any easier. We think about the places we've been. We did everything for her and she did everything she could with us. It is hard to believe that someone could do something like this. How could someone do this to another human being."
Nick and Nancy Perris say the reward in this case is $30,000. They say $4,000 is being offered by Broward Crimestoppers and they are offering $26,000.
"We think about her all the time," Nancy Perris lamented. "We think about her every day. We loved her very much. We wonder would she be living here, would she have children, where would they be? It is so hard not knowing."
"That's what is so hard," said Colleen's mother. "Somebody knows something about this. Somebody knows who called her. Who was that person who called her?"
Nick and Nancy Perris had their daughter declared legally dead in 2007 and are using $20,000 from her Florida prepaid college fund as a reward for anyone who could lead them to their daughter.
They said their daughter had a great deal to look forward to. She was about to receive an early high school diploma and had saved $1,000 from a part-time job and was about to take a trip to Colorado with him to see his family.
"She was adopted by us," said Nancy Perris of her daughter. "And we loved her very much."
"At first we wondered if she ran away but then we though with each passing year, this was not what happened," said Nick Perris. "And then it sets in that maybe something terrible has happened. You hope you can find some answers. If you don't get bad news, you hope for some good news."
"She meant so much to us," said Colleen's father.
If you have any information about Colleen Perris's disappearance, contact Detective Messina at (954) 797-2100 or Broward CrimeStoppers, anonymously, at (954) 493-TIPS (8477).
Now, Nancy and her husband Nick cherish the memories of their child: photographs of her child that adorn the walls of their home including a family portrait and a picture before her senior prom.
Nick and Nancy Perris last saw their daughter at 3 p.m. on Saturday, September 30th, 2000, when she left their home. She had received a cell phone call that Police were not able to trace and had said she would return within hours so she and her parents could go to a Florida Marlins baseball game.
Colleen's white, 1994, Mazda MX-6 was found by a friend six days later at a Wendy's restaurant that was out of business. It was located at a strip mall at Pine Island and McNab Roads in Tamarac.
"There were no fingerprints on that car," said lead Detective Joe Messina. "And there was no evidence inside that car. I've been on this case since the beginning for 10 years. And we just hope someone will come forward to help the parents of Colleen Perris. It would be tremendous to resolve this."
Messina reported that there are no suspects and there was no surveillance tape at the strip mall where the Mazda was found.
Lately, there have been very few tips. The F.B.I. and the F.D.L.E. have been involved in the case. TV's "America's Most Wanted" even aired a segment in 2004 about the disappearance.
"It's something that we think about day and night," said Nick Perris. Even though it's been this long, it does not get any easier. We think about the places we've been. We did everything for her and she did everything she could with us. It is hard to believe that someone could do something like this. How could someone do this to another human being."
Nick and Nancy Perris say the reward in this case is $30,000. They say $4,000 is being offered by Broward Crimestoppers and they are offering $26,000.
"We think about her all the time," Nancy Perris lamented. "We think about her every day. We loved her very much. We wonder would she be living here, would she have children, where would they be? It is so hard not knowing."
"That's what is so hard," said Colleen's mother. "Somebody knows something about this. Somebody knows who called her. Who was that person who called her?"
Nick and Nancy Perris had their daughter declared legally dead in 2007 and are using $20,000 from her Florida prepaid college fund as a reward for anyone who could lead them to their daughter.
They said their daughter had a great deal to look forward to. She was about to receive an early high school diploma and had saved $1,000 from a part-time job and was about to take a trip to Colorado with him to see his family.
"She was adopted by us," said Nancy Perris of her daughter. "And we loved her very much."
"At first we wondered if she ran away but then we though with each passing year, this was not what happened," said Nick Perris. "And then it sets in that maybe something terrible has happened. You hope you can find some answers. If you don't get bad news, you hope for some good news."
"She meant so much to us," said Colleen's father.
If you have any information about Colleen Perris's disappearance, contact Detective Messina at (954) 797-2100 or Broward CrimeStoppers, anonymously, at (954) 493-TIPS (8477).
TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: COLLEEN PERRIS - 18 yo (2000) - Plantation FL
Nothing new found 5-11-12
Watcher_of_all- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
Similar topics
» JASMINE COLLEEN-ILA FIKE - 15 yo - Aurora CO
» "Baby Jane" McMILLAN - 2 Months - Perris (SE of Riverside) CA
» ZACHARY BERNHARDT - 8 yo (2000) - Clearwater FL
» CAROLINE TURNER - 14 yo - Plantation FL
» COLLEEN ORSBORN - 15 yo (1984)/ Suspect: Christopher Wilder (Serial killer - deceased) - Orange County FL
» "Baby Jane" McMILLAN - 2 Months - Perris (SE of Riverside) CA
» ZACHARY BERNHARDT - 8 yo (2000) - Clearwater FL
» CAROLINE TURNER - 14 yo - Plantation FL
» COLLEEN ORSBORN - 15 yo (1984)/ Suspect: Christopher Wilder (Serial killer - deceased) - Orange County FL
Justice4Caylee.org :: MISSING/EXPLOITED CHILDREN :: MISSING CHILDREN LONG TERM CASES (Over one year)
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum