summer_breeze
02-18-2010, 08:13 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,586577,00.html
A Brooklyn, New York, woman vanished after leaving a party on Feb. 6 and has not been seen or heard from since, The Brooklyn Paper reported.
Marion McCleneghan, 40, left a party at 14th Street and Seventh Avenue around 2 a.m., according to a neighbor who was the last person to see her, the paper reported.
“This is totally out of character for her,” Ben Sodo, McCleneghan’s husband, told the paper.
The couple recently separated, but Sodo said they were in friendly, daily contact with each other before McCleneghan disappeared.
“She just got a new job, she’s extremely happy, and she wouldn’t just pack up and leave,” Sodo said, according to the paper.
Sodo said he became concerned after he couldn’t get in touch with her and her phone kept going straight to voicemail.
“She was at a neighbor’s house, a few blocks from where she lives,” Sodo said, referring to where McCleneghan was last seen the night she vanished.
“Something must have happened if she disappeared in that short distance.”
An NYPD detective called McCleneghan’s case a priority, the paper reported.
She is described as 5-foot-10, 150 pounds with brown hair and blue eyes, according to the paper.
Police are asking anyone with information about McCleneghan’s whereabouts to contact Detective Gibbons at (718) 636-6483 and reference case 109.
http://www.brooklynpaper.com/stories/33/9/33_09_ac_missing_slope_woman.html
http://www.brooklynpaper.com/assets/photos/33/9/33_09_psmissingwoman_i.jpg
Park Slope woman, 40, disappears
By Andy Campbell
The Brooklyn Paper
Park Sloper Marion McCleneghan, 40, has disappeared. She was last seen leaving a party in the neighborhood on Feb. 6.
The 40-year-old 14th Street woman was last seen leaving a party at 14th Street and Seventh Avenue on Feb. 6 and hasn’t called friends or family since.
Now her husband, brother and sister-in-law have begun a frantic search including cold calls and fliers all over the neighborhood.
“This is totally out of character for her,” said Ben Sodo, McCleneghan’s husband, who said the two were recently separated and living apart, but were in daily, friendly contact.
“She just got a new job, she’s extremely happy, and she wouldn’t just pack up and leave,” he said.
A neighbor who last saw McCleneghan told Sodo that the missing woman left the party at around 2 am. When Sodo couldn’t reach her for days and her phone went straight to voicemail, he knew something was up.
“She was at a neighbor’s house, a few blocks from where she lives,” Sodo said. “Something must have happened if she disappeared in that short distance.”
He said McCleneghan was seeing a therapist who was treating her minor anxiety problems, but that the condition and medication didn’t affect her “extremely smart, alert, well-spoken” demeanor.
An NYPD detective on the case said he could not comment, except to say that McCleneghan’s case is a priority. She’s described as 5-foot-10, 150 pounds with brown hair and blue eyes.
Anyone with information on McCleneghan’s whereabouts is asked to call Det. Gibbons at (718) 636-6483. Give case number 109 for reference.
A Brooklyn, New York, woman vanished after leaving a party on Feb. 6 and has not been seen or heard from since, The Brooklyn Paper reported.
Marion McCleneghan, 40, left a party at 14th Street and Seventh Avenue around 2 a.m., according to a neighbor who was the last person to see her, the paper reported.
“This is totally out of character for her,” Ben Sodo, McCleneghan’s husband, told the paper.
The couple recently separated, but Sodo said they were in friendly, daily contact with each other before McCleneghan disappeared.
“She just got a new job, she’s extremely happy, and she wouldn’t just pack up and leave,” Sodo said, according to the paper.
Sodo said he became concerned after he couldn’t get in touch with her and her phone kept going straight to voicemail.
“She was at a neighbor’s house, a few blocks from where she lives,” Sodo said, referring to where McCleneghan was last seen the night she vanished.
“Something must have happened if she disappeared in that short distance.”
An NYPD detective called McCleneghan’s case a priority, the paper reported.
She is described as 5-foot-10, 150 pounds with brown hair and blue eyes, according to the paper.
Police are asking anyone with information about McCleneghan’s whereabouts to contact Detective Gibbons at (718) 636-6483 and reference case 109.
http://www.brooklynpaper.com/stories/33/9/33_09_ac_missing_slope_woman.html
http://www.brooklynpaper.com/assets/photos/33/9/33_09_psmissingwoman_i.jpg
Park Slope woman, 40, disappears
By Andy Campbell
The Brooklyn Paper
Park Sloper Marion McCleneghan, 40, has disappeared. She was last seen leaving a party in the neighborhood on Feb. 6.
The 40-year-old 14th Street woman was last seen leaving a party at 14th Street and Seventh Avenue on Feb. 6 and hasn’t called friends or family since.
Now her husband, brother and sister-in-law have begun a frantic search including cold calls and fliers all over the neighborhood.
“This is totally out of character for her,” said Ben Sodo, McCleneghan’s husband, who said the two were recently separated and living apart, but were in daily, friendly contact.
“She just got a new job, she’s extremely happy, and she wouldn’t just pack up and leave,” he said.
A neighbor who last saw McCleneghan told Sodo that the missing woman left the party at around 2 am. When Sodo couldn’t reach her for days and her phone went straight to voicemail, he knew something was up.
“She was at a neighbor’s house, a few blocks from where she lives,” Sodo said. “Something must have happened if she disappeared in that short distance.”
He said McCleneghan was seeing a therapist who was treating her minor anxiety problems, but that the condition and medication didn’t affect her “extremely smart, alert, well-spoken” demeanor.
An NYPD detective on the case said he could not comment, except to say that McCleneghan’s case is a priority. She’s described as 5-foot-10, 150 pounds with brown hair and blue eyes.
Anyone with information on McCleneghan’s whereabouts is asked to call Det. Gibbons at (718) 636-6483. Give case number 109 for reference.