Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Prior to 2009, Detective Ida Lopez constructed a list of missing Albuquerque women with ties to prostitution and drug addiction who had gone missing between 2001 and 2006; ten were later found buried at West Mesa although nine women with similar backgrounds remain missing, raising concern that there might be more victims: [14] [15] [16] [17]
A Sindhi nationalist politician, who went missing on February 24, 2011, and was found dead on May 22, 2012, at a roadside near Hatri bypass. [308] Murdered 1 Year 3 months 2011 Maddy Scott: 20 Vanderhoof, Canada Scott went missing after a birthday party at Hogsback Lake 25 miles (40 km) southeast of Vanderhoof, British
Feb. 18—Alan Carabajal waited a long time. In April 2017, his 19-year-old son was found face-down beside his truck near Stardust Skies Park in Albuquerque's Northeast Heights. Jon Paul Carabajal ...
List of kidnappings; List of murder convictions without a body; List of people who disappeared mysteriously: 1990–present; List of people who disappeared mysteriously: 1910–1990; List of people who disappeared mysteriously: pre-1910; List of unsolved deaths; Lists of unsolved murders
Alexander Ortiz, a 21-year-old charged with murder, was attacked by his alleged victim's uncle and another man in an Albuquerque, New Mexico courtroom. 'Worth every moment': Video shows victim's ...
May 30—The Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office is investigating a death of a 16-year-old boy in Southwest Albuquerque. BCSO spokeswoman Jayme Gonzales said in a news release that the case is ...
Lists of people who disappeared include those whose current whereabouts are unknown, or whose deaths are unsubstantiated: Many people who disappear are eventually declared dead in absentia . Some of these people were possibly subjected to enforced disappearance , but there is insufficient information on their subsequent fates.
Per a 2017 report, the U.S. states of Oregon, Arizona, and Alaska have the highest numbers of missing-person cases per 100,000 people. [6] In Canada—with a population a little more than one tenth that of the United States—the number of missing-person cases is smaller, but the rate per capita is higher, with an estimated 71,000 reported in ...