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In a message dated 10/01/2000 12:36:25 PM Mountain Daylight Time, MEGHouston
writes:
> Continued:
>
> Theresa Andrews is described as white, 5 feet 3 inches tall, weighing 150
> pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes. Anyone with information about her
> disappearance is asked to call Ravenna Police at 330-296-6486.
>
> Phone Records Checked
>
> The best hope for a break in the case may come from phone records, Francis
> said.
>
> The police said Jon Andrews told them Wednesday afternoon - when he came
> home from work and found that his wife and their 1999 Jeep Wrangler were
> missing - that his wife had told him she had received a call Wednesday
> morning from a woman who said she worked in the Ravenna area, had seen a
"for
> sale" sign on the Jeep and wanted to see it.
>
> The police, working with telephone companies, said they were trying to
trace
> calls to the couple's residence.
>
> Francis said Theresa Andrews had paged her husband about 9 am Wednesday to
> tell him of the woman's call. Jon Andrews had advised her to show the Jeep
> to the woman.
>
> Theresa also told her husband that she might run errands after meeting
with
> the prospective buyer, Francis said.
>
> Jon called his wife about noon Wednesday but got no answer, Francis said.
> He continued calling throughout the afternoon, but his wife never picked up
> the phone.
> Francis said that did not arouse the husband's suspcion that anything
might
> be wrong.
>
> "She had told him that she might run errands," Francis said. "She was
> pregnant and had been feeling tired. She could have been taking a nap and
> not (been) answering the phone. He had no reason to rush home right away."
>
> Purse is not taken
>
> Jon notified the police of his wife's disappearance about 4:30 pm
Wednesday.
>
> Detective Francis siad Theresa's purse was not taken, and there was no
sign
> of a struggle in thehome, although Jon told police that the front door was
> open when he arrived home.
>
> Ninety minutes later, Patrolman Craig Wilmington, cruising through a
parking
> lot about 200 feet south of the couple's home, found the black Jeep. The
> parking lot is used by Protage County Admin Building workers.
>
> The Jeep's doors were unlocked, and the keys were missing, Francis said.
> There was no sign of a struggle inside the vehicle, he said. Crime scene
> technicians from the Ohio Bureau of Criminal ID and Investigation searched
> the Jeep yesterday for fingerprints and other possible evidence.
>
> Community Reacts
>
> The case was the talk of this town of about 12,500. At the county
> courthouse on Main Street, construction workers paused on their lunch break
> to watch television news crews broadcast live reports.
>
> At City Hall, Mayor Paul Jones reflected on the impact at sensational
crime
> has on a small town. "We just hope, on behalf of the community, that she's
> ok," Jones said. "In this town, people know each other, and people are
> fearful that she may have been abducted."
>
> The missing woman's parents and Jon Andrews were comforted yesterday by
> friends and members of the Streetsboro Congregatin of Jehovah's Witnesses,
> Timothy Dryhurst, a church elder, stepped outside Jon and Theresa
Andrewses'
> home to say that friends of the family were, at the suggestion of police,
> walking n area shopping malls looking for the missing woman or people who
> might have seen her.
>
> The couple had moved to Ravenna from Lakewood in Cuyahoga County in June,
> Dryhurst said, to be closer to her parents in Streetsboro.
>
> Dryhurst, noting that he has known Theresa's family for 20 years, said she
> was looking forward to being a mother, and there had been no indication
that
> she was unhappy about being pregnant or dissatisfied with her marriage.
>
> "When you go into the baby's room and see everything decorated, you know
she
> wasn't thinking of going anywhere," Dryhurst said.
>
> No link to Brimfield case
>
> The police said there is no apparent link between the disappearance of
> Theresa and that of a 32 year old Brimfield Township woman.
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Full-name: MEGHouston
Date: Sun, 1 Oct 2000 14:36:25 EDT
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To: RBHouston@aol.com
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From Zorawms at aol.com
Full-name: Zorawms
Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 20:37:34 EDT
Subject: Fwd: (no subject)
To: POTA2@aol.com, MEGHouston@aol.com, Carolutly@aol.com
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From Zorawms at aol.com
Full-name: Zorawms
Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2000 20:25:07 EDT
Subject: (no subject)
To: BBakermic@aol.com
Continued:
Theresa Andrews is described as white, 5 feet 3 inches tall, weighing 150
pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes. Anyone with information about her
disappearance is asked to call Ravenna Police at 330-296-6486.
Phone Records Checked
The best hope for a break in the case may come from phone records, Francis
said.
The police said Jon Andrews told them Wednesday afternoon - when he came home
from work and found that his wife and their 1999 Jeep Wrangler were missing -
that his wife had told him she had received a call Wednesday morning from a
woman who said she worked in the Ravenna area, had seen a "for sale" sign on
the Jeep and wanted to see it.
The police, working with telephone companies, said they were trying to trace
calls to the couple's residence.
Francis said Theresa Andrews had paged her husband about 9 am Wednesday to
tell him of the woman's call. Jon Andrews had advised her to show the Jeep
to the woman.
Theresa also told her husband that she might run errands after meeting with
the prospective buyer, Francis said.
Jon called his wife about noon Wednesday but got no answer, Francis said. He
continued calling throughout the afternoon, but his wife never picked up the
phone.
Francis said that did not arouse the husband's suspcion that anything might
be wrong.
"She had told him that she might run errands," Francis said. "She was
pregnant and had been feeling tired. She could have been taking a nap and
not (been) answering the phone. He had no reason to rush home right away."
Purse is not taken
Jon notified the police of his wife's disappearance about 4:30 pm Wednesday.
Detective Francis siad Theresa's purse was not taken, and there was no sign
of a struggle in thehome, although Jon told police that the front door was
open when he arrived home.
Ninety minutes later, Patrolman Craig Wilmington, cruising through a parking
lot about 200 feet south of the couple's home, found the black Jeep. The
parking lot is used by Protage County Admin Building workers.
The Jeep's doors were unlocked, and the keys were missing, Francis said.
There was no sign of a struggle inside the vehicle, he said. Crime scene
technicians from the Ohio Bureau of Criminal ID and Investigation searched
the Jeep yesterday for fingerprints and other possible evidence.
Community Reacts
The case was the talk of this town of about 12,500. At the county courthouse
on Main Street, construction workers paused on their lunch break to watch
television news crews broadcast live reports.
At City Hall, Mayor Paul Jones reflected on the impact at sensational crime
has on a small town. "We just hope, on behalf of the community, that she's
ok," Jones said. "In this town, people know each other, and people are
fearful that she may have been abducted."
The missing woman's parents and Jon Andrews were comforted yesterday by
friends and members of the Streetsboro Congregatin of Jehovah's Witnesses,
Timothy Dryhurst, a church elder, stepped outside Jon and Theresa Andrewses'
home to say that friends of the family were, at the suggestion of police,
walking n area shopping malls looking for the missing woman or people who
might have seen her.
The couple had moved to Ravenna from Lakewood in Cuyahoga County in June,
Dryhurst said, to be closer to her parents in Streetsboro.
Dryhurst, noting that he has known Theresa's family for 20 years, said she
was looking forward to being a mother, and there had been no indication that
she was unhappy about being pregnant or dissatisfied with her marriage.
"When you go into the baby's room and see everything decorated, you know she
wasn't thinking of going anywhere," Dryhurst said.
No link to Brimfield case
The police said there is no apparent link between the disappearance of
Theresa and that of a 32 year old Brimfield Township woman.
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