ShowerSinger found this great article on Regina Bos.
~~~~~
I know what happened to that woman. The singer who disappeared outside that bar. I know how she died.
The phone calls began a year after Gina Bos disappeared from outside of Duggan's Pub. The 40-year-old mother of three performed at open mic night, stashed her guitar in the trunk of her green Saturn and vanished before she could close the lid.
Sometimes it's smack that killed her.
Sometimes it's meth.
Sometimes it's the Mexican Mafia, silencing her because she knew too much about the drug trade.
"It's never first-hand information," says Lincoln Police Detective Greg Sorensen. "But it keeps going around and around in a vicious circle."
Four years after Gina's disappearance, the detective contends with a case as baffling as any in his 25 years on the force.
He has no evidence to make him believe the rumors are true. But he will say this: Gina knew the person she left with that night. And Gina is dead.
"We don't have enough information to say who killed Gina, but I don't think Gina just walked away."
Some of the rumors came from busted drug dealers, bartering with the cops.
Sometimes people called to say they knew the truth and just wanted to clear their consciences.
"At the time one of the rumors was coming in we were having heroin overdoses in the city and that was the link," says Sorensen.
"A couple of times I thought, This is it.'"
And then it wasn't. People lied. Trails dead-ended.
But, someone out there knows, he says.
They know where her body is. They know how she died.
The rest of the Story is here
~~~~~
I know what happened to that woman. The singer who disappeared outside that bar. I know how she died.
The phone calls began a year after Gina Bos disappeared from outside of Duggan's Pub. The 40-year-old mother of three performed at open mic night, stashed her guitar in the trunk of her green Saturn and vanished before she could close the lid.
Sometimes it's smack that killed her.
Sometimes it's meth.
Sometimes it's the Mexican Mafia, silencing her because she knew too much about the drug trade.
"It's never first-hand information," says Lincoln Police Detective Greg Sorensen. "But it keeps going around and around in a vicious circle."
Four years after Gina's disappearance, the detective contends with a case as baffling as any in his 25 years on the force.
He has no evidence to make him believe the rumors are true. But he will say this: Gina knew the person she left with that night. And Gina is dead.
"We don't have enough information to say who killed Gina, but I don't think Gina just walked away."
Some of the rumors came from busted drug dealers, bartering with the cops.
Sometimes people called to say they knew the truth and just wanted to clear their consciences.
"At the time one of the rumors was coming in we were having heroin overdoses in the city and that was the link," says Sorensen.
"A couple of times I thought, This is it.'"
And then it wasn't. People lied. Trails dead-ended.
But, someone out there knows, he says.
They know where her body is. They know how she died.
The rest of the Story is here