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10Mar/101

Police probing other missing person cases across North County

Police across North County are reviewing missing person cases this week after the recent discoveries of two missing teens in separate shallow graves, officials said Tuesday.

Given those grim finds, Escondido police Chief Jim Maher said his department needs to further probe the disappearance of a 71-year-old Escondido woman who vanished a year and a half ago.

Sheila Lopes, who suffered from Alzheimer's disease, wandered away from her Escondido home at the Emerald Heights subdivision in August 2008. She hasn't been seen since, despite extensive terrain searches and numerous fliers posted about her disappearance.

Lopes is one of more than 20 missing people last seen in North County. Many vanished on their own, other cases remain a mystery, according to a state list of missing persons.

Lopes had wandered from her home twice before, family said in 2008.

"In light of what's happened in the last two weeks, I think we need to take another look at that. She's another missing female," Maher said after his speech in front of the Escondido Rotary Club on Tuesday.

A body believed to be Chelsea King's, 17, of Poway, and the skeletal remains of Amber Dubois, 14, of Escondido, were found in recent days. Registered sex offender John Albert Gardner III, 30, was arrested and charged with murder in Chelsea's case. Escondido police said Monday that Gardner is "a focus" of the probe into Amber's death.

Speaking after a court hearing Tuesday for Gardner in San Diego, Amber's father, Moe Dubois, asked the public to focus its efforts on another missing North County teen: Mickey James Guidry, 16, who was last seen in San Marcos on Nov. 25, 2009. The boy is listed as a "runaway juvenile" by the California Office of the Attorney General's state list of missing people.

Police in Carlsbad and Oceanside said Tuesday they've started checking missing persons files to see if there are any similarities between them and those of Chelsea or Amber.

"Certainly, we're reviewing everything," said Lynn Diamond, spokeswoman for the Carlsbad Police Department. "I think all departments are."

"We have someone going through all of those (missing person cases) to see if there's anything we need to be alarmed about," added Oceanside police Sgt. Jeff Brandt, spokesman for that agency.

San Diego County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Jan Caldwell said she would ask department officials whether she was authorized to speak about that topic. She did not call back.

Family members for Lopes, the missing Escondido woman, could not be reached Tuesday.

The initial search for Lopes was led by the Sheriff's Department and its volunteer search and rescue team. It started the day she disappeared and lasted four days.

Dogs, helicopters, police officers, residents and volunteers from five counties scoured challenging terrain around the 700-home Emerald Heights development where she lived.

In an e-mail shortly after a subsequent search in 2008, Paul Menth, Lopes' son-in-law said:

"We watched as the sheriff's helicopter swept the entire community ... about 100 feet (above) the scrub brush. He could not possibly miss spotting Sheila."

Missing from North County

The California Office of the Attorney General lists 88 missing people in San Diego County. A wide range of categories is used to describe their vanishing, from "stranger abduction" to "runaway juvenile" to "unknown circumstances."

The list below includes people who were last seen in North County. It includes their name, age when they went missing, the city or town where they were last seen, the date they vanished and the category assigned to their disappearance:

-- Jazmin Arevalo, 13, Oceanside, Sept. 26, 2006; runaway juvenile;

-- Ryan Sergio Ballew, 15, Valley Center, March 24, 2007; runaway juvenile;

-- Jeffrey Paul Bohl, 43, Pauma Valley, Feb. 27, 2005; voluntary missing adult;

-- Nancy Ann Crouch, 59, Poway, June 10, 1998; voluntary missing adult;

-- Douglas Alan Davis, 39, San Marcos, March 21, 1995; voluntary missing adult;

-- Mickey James Guidry, 16, San Marcos, Nov. 25, 2009; runaway juvenile;

-- Gary Lee Humphrey, 50, Warner Springs, Feb. 25, 1991; suspicious circumstances;

-- George Harry Lachance, 61, Escondido, Nov. 28, 1995; unknown circumstances;

-- Sheila Ann Lopes, 71, Escondido, Aug. 27, 2008; dependant adult;

-- Hector Javier Lopez-Ruiz, 20, Vista, Oct. 15, 1997; voluntary missing adult;

-- David Matecki, 32, Oceanside, Aug. 9, 1995; voluntary missing adult;

-- McStay family: Joseph Sr., 41; Summer, 44; Gianni, 4; Joseph Mateo, 3; Fallbrook, Feb. 1, 2010; unknown circumstances;

-- Alan Joseph Olds, 36, Warner Springs, Oct. 28, 1995; voluntary missing adult;

-- Mary E. Rico, 50, Oceanside, April 2, 1992; unknown circumstances;

-- Elaina Eugenia Rivera, 13, Ramona, June 26, 1987; unknown circumstances;

-- Julio Sagredo Sagredo, 33, Oceanside, June 11, 2004; voluntary missing adult;

-- Jordan Reed Smith, 25, Cardiff, April 25, 1994; voluntary missing adult;

-- Maribel Valdez, 35, Vista, Feb. 11, 2000; voluntary missing adult; and

-- Denise Abigail Vasseur, 31, Sept. 22, 2000; suspicious circumstances.

Call staff writer Chris Nichols at 760-740-5426.

http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/sdcounty/article_965d125e-d067-503f-a68c-f38ad22aa26d.html

16Oct/090

Tennesse Silver Alert Program

Amy Cox spends her days caring for senior citizens in East Tennessee, and recently, she spent her time at home doing the same.

Cox cared for her grandmother, Evelyn Baucum, for about two years. Baucum suffered from dementia and, every now and then, took the opportunity to slip away.

"With a senior adult, it's just like with a child, you can go upstairs for a minute to take a shower, and they can be out the door," Cox said. "I mean, she would get out and be heading down the neighborhood."

Baucum never wandered far, but if she had, Cox said she would have liked to have some sort of alert system to help find her.

Now, there is.

Back in August, Gov. Phil Bredesen signed legislation that creates an alert system, known as Silver Alert, that acts much like the Amber Alert system.

The alert would go into effect for a missing person over the age of 60 who has some sort of mental impairment and is believed to be in danger.

"When it comes to seniors, it is critically important to find those that may have wandered off within the first 24 hours - that seems to be the real window of opportunity - and that means you have to get the word out quickly to law enforcement, to media, to the general public, and get everyone involved in trying to find those who have, for some reason, not found their way home," said State Sen. Doug Overbey, R-Maryville, who co-sponsored the bill.

The Alzheimer's Association estimates around 100,000 Tennesseans are living with Alzheimer's Disease.

Six out of ten of them will likely wander away at some point. Of those, half will be found within five miles from home; if the others are not found within 24 hours, half will be seriously injured or die.

That's why Cox is thankful for the Silver Alert system.

"I think it should have been done a long time ago," she said. "There again, I think it goes hand in hand with the Amber Alert - we protect those in our population who are vulnerable, which, automatically, you would think of children and the elderly, particularly those with cognitive loss who cannot protect themselves. It makes perfect sense to me."

The Alzheimer's Association is reaching out to East Tennessee law enforcement agencies to help with training and to help develop protocols for using the system.

http://www.wbir.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=101959&provider=gnews