Olga Khaleel, who has been missing since January 9, 2006 according to police has been found alive. The last time she was seen she was headed to make a deposit at a local bank.
”We’re not disclosing her location at this time,” Bamford said Monday.
Davie police said Khaleel left “of her own accord … and found her to be healthy and safe.”
Her husband, Andre Khaleel, said he received a call from detectives in Davie on Sunday night.
When asked of her whereabouts, Andre Khaleel said police had not told him.
”I’m not sure. I’m still left in the dark,” he said.
(Miami Herald)
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Olga Khaleel Missing, Last Seen on Monday, January 10
February 7th, 2006 at 01:42am
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Five months later after Hurricane Katrina and about 2,500 people remain missing and the trail is going cold. As the evacuation of hurricane Katrina took place, 750,000 families along the Gulf Coast split up and scattered across the United States in the frenzied anticipation of the storm.
Thousands of people have been reunited. But as time drags on, hope is turning to fear that loved ones may never be found, or in some cases don’t want to be found or that a few may even have since died.
“Did you forget how much YOU loved your grandmother and how much SHE loved you,” an unidentified person wrote last week on one of the many Web sites set up to help Katrina victims search for the missing.
As difficult as it is to locate the many missing people, there are also reports that some of the missing take this opportunity to go missing.
“It’s a huge difficulty to try to track these people down,” Robert Johannessen, a spokesman for the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, told Reuters.
“You have to believe that there are people who used this as an opportunity to go missing.”
The Find Family National Call Center, set up to help people search for Katrina missing, listed 2,508 people missing as of the end of January. The actual number could be smaller as some people may have found relatives without informing the center, Johannessen said, but new cases are still coming up — about 80 just in the past week.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children lists 254 children as still missing related to Katrina and Hurricane Rita that blew through the same area weeks later.
(Reuters)
February 7th, 2006 at 01:26am
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An American visitor, Gregory Grethen, who was vacationing at Grand Lido, Negril (Jamaica) may have drowned after he went scuba diving with a friend. Gregory Grethen went missing after he and a friend went scuba diving and he failed to surface.
The missing man has been identified as Gregory Grethen 55 years old sales representative of Statles, St Claire Shore Michigan, United States.
According to Constable Odean Dennis, Constabulary Communication Network Liaison Officer for Westmoreland, around 9:30 am Friday, Gregory Grethen who was vacationing at Grand Lido, Negril went missing after he and a friend went scuba diving.
It is reported that Grethen failed to surface after a dive nearly a mile out at sea.
The Negril marine police continue investigations.
An extensive underwater and surface search by divers from several hotels in the Negril resort area, the Jamaica Defense Force (JDF) Coast Guard and the Negril marine police, failed to detect the missing man.
(CDNN)
February 7th, 2006 at 01:06am
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Missing, Missing Adult |
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