Tag Page MissingPersons

#MissingPersons
The Roundup Review

🚨Missing Person Alert Robert “Bob” Joseph Crean, age 45, was last seen on October 26, 2025, at the NJ PATCO Speedline, a rapid transit route operated by the Port Authority Transit Corporation connecting Philadelphia, PA, with Lindenwold in Camden County, New Jersey. At the time, he was reportedly heading toward Philadelphia when he disappeared. Robert is approximately 5’11” tall and weighs around 170 pounds. He has gray hair that is shoulder-length, typically worn in a ponytail, with slight balding on the top, and blue eyes. He may have a beard and mustache with partial gray facial hair. When last seen, Robert was wearing a Polo shirt, blue jeans, a black Carhartt zip-up hoodie, and a black winter jacket. He is currently struggling with alcohol addiction and unemployment and may be among the homeless population in Philadelphia. If you have any further information, please contact the Cherry Hill Police Department at 856-665-1200. 🙏📞 #MissingPerson #MissingPersons #HomelessCrisis #Homeless #Philadelphia #RobertCrean

The Roundup Review

Please help our family find my sister. We have so many loved ones missing her ❤️ Name: Tristen Mary Clacherty Age: 29 D.O.B. December 18, 1996 (born in Dover, NH) Height: 5ft. 7in. Weight: 150lbs (likely less now) Hair: dark blonde/light brown but could be dyed differently now Eyes: hazel/green Previously lived Mesa, AZ area (homeless) and recently relocated to San Diego Identifiable tattoos: -full floral sleeve on her right arm -“I love you” on her right clavicle -“Jacob” on her right side of her neck -Black broken heart under her left eye -Pinkish/red “brat” under right eye -1996 on her chest Last seen: June 23, 2025 in Clairemont/Kearny Mesa area. Spotted in City Heights in July 2025 and December 2025 Reported as missing person. Case #265000042 #MissingPerson #TristenClacherty #MissingPersons #SanDiego

The Roundup Review

Ali L’isha Gilmore was a 30-year-old woman who went missing from Tallahassee, Florida on February 3, 2006. She was last seen at her home in the 200 block of Lorraine Court. Her family reported that she had never gone missing before and it was out of character for her. At the time of her disappearance, she was separated from her husband and was seeing another man. She became pregnant, but she was unsure who the father was. Ali and her husband James were attending counseling and trying to work things out. Her husband has cooperated with the police and his alibi checked out during the time of her disappearance. No one was named as a suspect until 15 years later, in 2021, when police named 40-year-old Dwight Aldridge as a suspect and as the man whom Ali was dating at the time. On the day she went missing, she had the initials D.W. circled on a notepad, which is believed to refer to Dwight Aldridge. He also lied about his alibi at the time. While he initially cooperated early in the investigation, he stopped cooperating later. Ali is described as 5’6”, 180 pounds, with black hair, brown eyes, and a scar on her abdomen. Her ears are pierced, and the word “Ali” is tattooed on the right side of her chest. The police are asking for anyone who may have known Dwight to come forward with any information that can help solve this cold case. If you have any information on the disappearence of Ali Gilmore to please contact the Tallahassee Police Department at (850) 891-4200, or to make an anonymous tip to Crimestoppers at (850) 574-TIPS., #UnsolvedMysteries #unsolved #AliGilmore #FBIWatchlist #MissingPersons

A.R_Writer

The Man Who Answered a Call at Midnight — and Was Never Found Again Some mysteries feel distant, wrapped in old legends. But then there are stories so ordinary, so painfully simple, they linger long after the last line. This one belongs to that kind. In 2013, Daniel Reeve lived a quiet life in a small Oregon town. No fame, no enemies. He worked at a hardware shop, came home early, watered his plants, watched documentaries, and called his sister every Sunday. Nothing unusual. On a cold December night, Daniel received a phone call at 12:17 a.m. He was seen on his couch, TV still playing softly. Caller ID: Unknown Number. Neighbors later said they heard his phone ring, then heard the front door open. It closed gently… then silence. Next morning, the door was unlocked. Lights on. TV running. Jacket, wallet, keys — all untouched. But Daniel was gone. Police checked his phone logs — the call didn’t exist. No record. No signal. Yet neighbors swear they heard it. CCTV added something eerie: Daniel steps onto the porch, looks at the empty street… and smiles, like he recognizes someone. Then he walks out of view. He never returns. If he left willingly, why leave everything behind? Why keep the house running? And how does a call vanish from every record? The case went cold. Some say he left on purpose. Some say he met someone he trusted. Others believe he stepped into something far stranger than a human explanation. The scariest part? How normal everything was… until it wasn’t. A quiet house, a midnight call, a man stepping outside for “a moment” — and a whole life disappearing. Mysteries don’t always hide in shadows. Sometimes they hide in the everyday things we never question. #Mystery#UnsolvedDisappearances#TrueCrimeStories#StrangeCases#UnexplainedEvents#RealLifeMysteries#MissingPersons#CreepyStories#MidnightIncident#UnansweredQuestions

A.R_Writer

The Forest That Eats People: Inside the Bennington Triangle’s Strange Vanishings A peaceful Vermont forest where five people walked in and never came back. The Bennington Triangle looks like any peaceful Vermont forest—green trails, quiet trees, gentle light—but its history carries a strange heaviness. Between 1945 and 1950, five people entered these woods and never came back. No bodies, no evidence, not even a scrap of clothing. It began with 74-year-old guide Middie Rivers. He walked ahead of a hunting group on a familiar trail, rounded a bend, and simply vanished. Search teams covered the entire area, finding nothing. A year later, 18-year-old Paula Welden went for a walk on the Long Trail wearing a red coat witnesses easily remembered. Somewhere along the path she disappeared, triggering Vermont’s largest search operation—but the forest stayed silent. Things grew stranger in 1948 when veteran James Tedford vanished from a moving bus. Passengers saw him during the ride, but when the bus reached Bennington, his seat held only his belongings. Then came the case of eight-year-old Paul Jepson, whose scent trail ended abruptly on a hillside, and experienced hiker Frieda Langer, who left to change clothes and never returned. Her body surfaced months later in an area previously combed by search teams, with no clear cause of death. Five unexplained vanishings in five years—different ages, different situations, no common thread. And then, just as suddenly, it all stopped. Theories range from hidden terrain and wildlife to human foul play or something more uncanny. None explain everything. Today the forest stands calm again. Hikers pass through unaware, while those who know the stories feel a shift in the air. The Bennington Triangle remains a quiet reminder that even in a mapped world, some places hold on to their mysteries. #benningtontriangle#unsolved#forestmysteries#truecrime#missingpersons https://vocal.media/criminal/the-digital-ghost-of-tokyo-tracking-the

Lashaun 🏳️‍🌈

Murder of Danielle van Dam, ( HER UNFORGOTTEN STORY ). Danielle van Dam (September 22, 1994 – February 2002 was an American girl from the Sabre Springs neighborhood of San Diego, California, who disappeared from her bedroom during the night of February 1–2, 2002. Her body was found by searchers on February 27 in a remote area. Police suspected a neighbor, David Alan Westerfield, of the killing. He was arrested, tried, and convicted of kidnapping and first-degree murder. Westerfield was sentenced to death and is currently incarcerated at High Desert State Prison. On the evening of Friday, February 1, 2002, Danielle van Dam's mother Brenda and two friends went out to a bar, called Dad's, in Poway. Danielle's father, Damon, stayed at home with Danielle and her two brothers. Damon put Danielle to bed around 10:30 p.m., and she fell asleep. Damon also slept until his wife returned home at around 2:00 a.m. with four of her friends. Brenda noticed a light on the home's security alarm system was flashing, and discovered that the side door to the garage was open. The six chatted for approximately half an hour, then Brenda's friends went home. Damon and Brenda went to sleep believing that their daughter was sleeping in her room. About an hour later, Damon awoke and noticed that an alarm light was flashing. He found the sliding glass door leading to the back yard open, so he closed it. The next morning, Danielle was discovered missing, and her parents called the police at 9:39 a.m on February 27, two searchers found her nude, partially decomposed body near a trail in Dehesa, California, an unincorporated town east of San Diego. The penalty phase ended on September 16 when the jury rendered a verdict of death against Westerfield. In January 2003, Judge William Mudd sentenced Westerfield to death. #MissingChild #ChildGoneMissing #MissingPersons #FyP #CaliforniaTravel #MissingKids