AR AR - Cleashindra Hall, 18, Pine Bluff, 9 May 1994

Monday Night Mystery: Cleashindra Hall | KLRT - FOX16.com

KARK 4 News is diving into a Monday Night Mystery.

This Monday, the mystery surrounding Cleashindra Hall.

The then 18-year-old was last seen in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.

Hall hasn’t been home with her family since disappearing from her part-time job in 1994. Her boss, Dr. Larry Amos, said she left without telling him where.
 
Where is Cleashindra Hall? An Arkansas Mystery

On the evening of Monday, May 9, when after leaving her workplace at an office in town, Cleashindra Hall disappeared.

That Monday was the family’s first day back to their normal routine following an exciting weekend; Cle’a’s prom had been that Friday, she attended a sorority ball on Saturday, and celebrated Mother’s Day on Sunday.

Cle’a had an afterschool job doing clerical work at the home office of Dr. Larry Amos, who wrote grants allocating resources for childcare facilities. Once Cle’a was done with helping out around his office, she would always call her mom to come pick her up. Only that evening, Cle’a didn’t call.

Laurell Hall, Cleashindra’s mother, waited for the house phone to ring that night and when it didn’t, her mother called Dr. Amos’ office. He said that Cle’a clocked out at 8:30 p.m. and was picked up by an unknown individual.


Although Cleashindra was 18 when she vanished, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is still involved with her case due to a provision of the PROTECT Act of 2003 known as “Suzanne’s Law.” Named after missing 19-year-old college student Suzanne Lyall from Albany, NY in 1998, this law extends to missing young adults 18-20 the same reporting and law enforcement response requirements already provided for children younger than 18. Thanks to Suzanne’s Law, NCMEC is able to use our resources like poster creation, media distribution, family advocacy services, and age progression technology to aid in missing young adult cases.

Each year on Cleashindra’s birthday: March 30, her missing date: May 9, and Labor Day, Cleashindra’s friends and family release pink balloons to keep her case in the public’s eye, and to let everyone know that they’re still searching.
 
Cle’a had an afterschool job doing clerical work at the home office of Dr. Larry Amos, who wrote grants allocating resources for childcare facilities. Once Cle’a was done with helping out around his office, she would always call her mom to come pick her up. Only that evening, Cle’a didn’t call.


Laurell Hall, Cleashindra’s mother, waited for the house phone to ring that night and when it didn’t, her mother called Dr. Amos’ office. He said that Cle’a clocked out at 8:30 p.m. and was picked up by an unknown individual.

What time did Cleashindra usually get done helping out at Dr. Amos’ office?
Was 8:30pm not out of the norm?
Seems a little late, IMO.
 
The Missing Valedictorian: What Happened to Cleashindra Hall?

Feb 2, 2021
A teenager just weeks away from graduation never made it home from work, and more than 25 years later her family is still searching for her.

According to this link:
•Clea had a part-time job working for Dr. Larry Amos doing clerical work on weekends and after school.
•was scheduled to work at 5:00 pm on Monday, May 9, 1994
•although only a few blocks away, someone always drove & picked her up. Her mother drove her this day.
•Around 8:00 pm, Clea called home and spoke to her mother. She wanted to know if anyone had called for her. Nobody had.
•told her mother she’d call once done with work
•Clea never worked past 10:30 pm, but as time went by her mother fell asleep.
•her mother woke up at 12:45 am, realized Clea wasn’t home, and called Dr Amos.
•Dr. Amos picked up on the first ring; he said that Clea had signed out of work at 8:30 pm; he had seen her getting into a car w/ an unknown person.
•The next day her bro called from school stating she was nowhere to be found
•PBPD made the family wait 24 hrs before filing a missing persons report
•Her purse, identification, and all her belongings were still in her bedroom
•male student (possibly bf) was interviewed and took a polygraph test (inconclusive)
•Dr. Amos was interviewed 2 weeks later & refused to take a polygraph test
•another employee was interviewed & had a diff story; Clea signed out 8:25, employee offered her a ride but she declined saying she’d walk home
•March 2012, 4 bags of evidence was gathered at Amos’s home; it’s been questioned whether this evidence ever made it to the crime lab initially.


Sources:

www.arkansasonline.com/news/2012/may/10/pb-police-investigate-delay-missing-teens-case/

charleyproject.org/case/cleashindra-denise-hall

www.namus.gov/MissingPersons/Case#/1142
 
El Dr. Amos tiene todas las cartas para sospechar, tal vez fue insinuado sexualmente, ella lo rechazó y tuvo una mala reacción.
 
*in depth article

Pine Bluff Deputy Police Chief Terry Hopson has been involved in the case on and off since it all began. He admits that all these years the case is still cold, with leads that have led nowhere.

"Not a trace," Hopson said. "I wish we could find out what happened to her."

Clea worked for a man named Larry Amos at his Pine Bluff office that doubled as his residence. He ran a food program through a federal grant and Clea helped him with clerical work.

Clea worked weekends and evenings during the week. In 1994, May 9 was a Monday.

Laurell, Clea's mother, remembers the day her daughter went missing. "Just like yesterday."

Just before 5 p.m. that day, Clea asked if her mom could pick her up after work whenever she was finished for the day.

Three hours later, she called to ask if she had any messages and to tell her mom that she was going to work a little longer, that she'd call when she was ready to be picked up.

Just before 1 a.m., Laurell was woken up by her husband to tell her Clea hadn't called, and worse— that she hadn't come home.

She immediately called Larry Amos, Clea's boss.

"When I called him at 12:45, he picked up the phone on the first ring," Laurell said. "He said she had left, but he didn't know who she left with."…

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Mar 11, 2022



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Sept. 6, 2023

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LITTLE ROCK (KATV) —
The Pine Bluff Police Department is asking the public for assistance in solving a 29-year-old cold case.
The department stated in the video that Hall has been missing since May 9, 1994. She left her workplace on May 9 and disappeared.

 

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