CANADA Canada - Lori Kasprick, 15, Hilliard, AB, September 1976

Was thinking more along the lines of could someone Lori was associated with help identify 'Sam'. Was she seeing someone who also happened to disappear?
 
These are the two pictures....
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https://identifyus.org/cases/1513
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Lori Kasprick.
https://www.google.ca/search?q=Lori...sAQINQ&biw=1366&bih=659#imgrc=uxNuH56XhFbOzM:
 

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Rbbm.
Wondering if the Aunt has a photo of the ring she gave Lori?
Thinking that maybe Nevada might hold some connection to Lori, the " modelling job" that Lori said she had may have morphed into some other job, maybe a clue in this case?imo, speculation.

http://nationalpost.com/news/canada...rs-before-she-was-officially-declared-missing
2015
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Amber Bracken / Edmonton Journal
Rick Kasprick didn’t know a track meet would be the last time he saw his sister. She said ‘I have to go.’ And she left. It was 1976. She never came back
EDMONTON – The last time Rick Kasprick saw Lori, it was spring. May, maybe June. Rick was at a track meet when she showed up. She asked him how everything was, and they chatted. Then she said, “I have to go.” And she left.

The other details of that moment — what his sister was wearing, who she was with, what kind of car they were in — are all lost to time and memory. It was 1976. Rick was a teenager. He didn’t know then that it was the last time he would see his sister, or that it would take decades for anyone to fully realize she was missing.
Their aunt, Mavis Neil, remembers Lori as a “happy-go-lucky kid” who started to rebel as a teen.

“She was the only girl at that time. She was just a hard kid to manage,” Neil says. “She wanted to do what she wanted to do, and she was going to do it.”

Neil remembers Lori sometimes came to see her on weekends, and during one visit Neil gave her a ring.
She called the first Christmas after she left. Rick remembers her saying she was working as a model in Lake Tahoe, Nev., but they didn’t know if she was telling the truth. There was no caller ID then, no way to trace the call.
But investigating a four-decade-old case is difficult, especially since there was so little investigation done at the time. After talking to about 80 people over the course of a year, Coleman says he knew only a little more than he did at the beginning. He now knows she was in Edmonton for a while, maybe hanging around a park on Jasper Avenue. He says he can put her on a bus to Winnipeg in 1977, where she used to hang out in the East Kildonan neighbourhood, and the area around Portage and Main. Her nickname was Lovey.
 

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Canada's Missing | Case details
3557DFAB - Lori Lee Kasprick

3557DFAB - Lori Lee Kasprick
3557DFAB.jpg

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Name: Lori Lee Kasprick
Case Classification: Missing
Missing Since: September 1, 1976
Location Last Seen: Tofield, Mundare Area, Alberta, Canada

Physical Description
Date of Birth: circa 1961
Age: 14 years old
Race: Aboriginal
Gender: Female
Height: "5'11"
Weight: Unknown
Hair Color: Black
Eye Color: Brown
Distinguishing Marks/Features: She has a large scar above her eyes and crooked teeth. She also went by the names Lovey and Laurie.

Identifiers
Dentals: Unavailable
Fingerprints: Unavailable
DNA: Available

Clothing & Personal Items
Clothing: Unknown
Jewelry: Unknown
Additional Personal Items: Unknown

Circumstances of Disappearance
Originally from Manitoba, Lori and her family moved to Hilliard, Alberta, east of Edmonton, in the early 1970s. She ran away several times. Her family last spoke to her by phone at Christmas of 1976. Recent police investigations uncovered she was Edmonton for a while, then Winnipeg in 1977, where she used to hang out in the East Kildonan neighbourhood, and the area around Portage and Main.

Investigating Agency(s)
Agency Name: Tofield RCMP
Agency Contact Person: Unknown
Agency Phone Number: 780-662-3353
Agency E-Mail: Unknown
Agency Case Number: 20131027365

NCIC Case Number: N/A
NamUs Case Number: N/A
 
The Disappearance of Lori Lee Kasprick
September 3, 2021

EARLY LIFE:
Lori Lee Kasprick was born in 1961. One of seven kids, her upbringing was difficult. Her mother wasn’t always around, and according to her brother, Rick, their father struggled to raise the children by himself.

The Kasprick family lived in Winnipeg and Vogar, Manitoba before relocating to Hilliard, Alberta. Despite being a happy-go-lucky child growing up, Lori began to rebel once the family moved to Alberta. She would disappear for days at a time, until either her father or the Royal Canadian Mounted Police found her and brought her back home.

DISAPPEARANCE:
According to Rick, the last time he saw his sister was in the spring of 1976. She’d shown up at a track meet he’d been competing at to ask how things were going and to chat. She left not long after.

He remembers RCMP officers coming to speak with their father at some point after Lori was last seen, but they told him there was nothing they could do, as she was 16 and legally of age. They did, however, say they would bring her home if they found her.

The last time the Kasprick family spoke with Lori was during Christmas 1976. She’d called home and told them she was working as a model in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. Unfortunately, there was no way to know if she was telling the truth, as caller ID didn’t exist at the time.

SEARCH:
There wasn’t a big search for Lori when she disappeared, as the family assumed she would come back home or call with her whereabouts. It was the belief of some that she may have made acquaintances with individuals her age while visiting her grandparents in Holden, Alberta and gone somewhere with them.

Rick did much of the leg work in the search for his sister. He kept in constant contact with the local RCMP detachment, spoke to the Red Cross and to social workers he knew, and even considered hiring a private investigator. However, it was too expensive, and the PI said it would be hard to find Lori, as she could have married and legally changed her last name.

There have been a few instances that have falsely gotten the family’s hopes up over the years. The first was a woman who called in the middle of the night to say she was Rick’s sister – it turned out she was a half-sister who had been put up for adoption. The family also found out there was a Lori Kasprick living in Ontario, but she turned out to be another woman with the same name as the missing girl.

At one point, one of Lori’s aunts thought she’d seen her on TV, while another relative believed they’d seen her at the local bus depot. Neither sighting has been confirmed.

Lori’s DNA is currently available for comparison, should her remains be located. Around 2006, a police officer from British Columbia contacted the family to ask if they had any items that may contain samples of her DNA, as he was working on the investigation into the murders committed by serial killer Robert Pickton. No matches were made to the items Rick provided, and in the fall of 2013 Lori’s file was shipped back to the RCMP detachment in Tofield, Alberta, where she was first reported missing in 1976.

Despite her father making inquiries into her disappearance in the 1970s, Lori wasn’t officially named a missing person until the Robert Pickton murders. The possible association spurred the RCMP to speak with friends and associates of the missing girl. Unfortunately, many of those they spoke with weren’t aware Lori was missing, and after speaking with 80 individuals, they were no further than they were at the beginning of their investigation.

Lori has ties to Tofield and Ryley, Alberta. According to the RCMP, she had previously spoken of interest in relocating to Calgary or the United States.

Recently, investigators were able to uncover she’d stayed in Edmonton for a while, where she may have spent time at a park on Jaspar Avenue. She travelled to Winnipeg in 1977, where she visited the East Kildonan neighbourhood, as well as the area around Portage and Main Streets.

To help progress the case, the RCMP has released an age-progression image of what Lori would look like in the mid-2010s. They’ve acknowledged she may wish to stay missing and if that’s the case they would like her to contact them, so they can let her family know she is okay.

In June 2015, speculation arose that Lori could be a woman who went by the name Lori Kennedy. Kennedy had died by suicide on December 24, 2010 in Texas, after which it was discovered she wasn’t who she’d said she was and that she’d taken the identity of someone else.

Online sleuths were struck by the similarities between the two. They both had dark hair and slight gaps in their teeth, along with similar heights and birthdates. However, there were also noticeable differences. The deceased had brown eyes and was white, while Lori’s eyes are Hazel and she is of Métis descent. As well, she has a scar above her eyes, something which the woman calling herself Lori Kennedy didn’t.

It was eventually discovered the deceased was Kimberly Maria McLean of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She’d run away from home at 17 years old after constantly butting heads with her parents, after which she’d stolen the identity of a deceased 2-year-old by the name of Becky Sue Turner. She’d used the child’s birth certificate to create a new identity for herself: Lori Erica Kennedy.

AFTERMATH:
Lori’s father died in 2006. According to Rick, he continued to carry her school identification in his wallet up until his death.

Rick now has a family of his own, with two grown children.

CASE CONTACT INFORMATION:
Lori Lee Kasprick went missing from Tofield, Mundare Area, Alberta in 1976. At the time of her disappearance, she was 14 years old, and what she was last wearing in unknown. At the time of her disappearance, she stood between 5’11” and 6’0″. Her weight is unknown, but she is described as having a slender build. She has long, straight black hair and brown eyes, a large scar over both of her eyes, and crooked teeth.

She’s known to go by the names “Lovey” and “Laurie”.

Currently, the case is classified as a missing persons investigation. If alive, she would be either 59 or 60 years old.

Those with information regarding the case are asked to contact the Tofield detachment of the RCMP at 780-662-3353. Tips can also be submitted anonymously via Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

The Disappearance of Lori Lee Kasprick
 
Anyone know if that tooth gap would close up at that age? If so, and with brown hair dye, she looks a lot like Ramsey County Jane Doe. upload_2021-12-2_20-44-25.png
 
Anyone know if that tooth gap would close up at that age? If so, and with brown hair dye, she looks a lot like Ramsey County Jane Doe. View attachment 324955
What Parents Should Know About Diastema
''What Parents Should Know About Diastema
7-2018-GOPD-2.jpg
Diastema, which is more commonly known as a gap in the teeth, most often occurs in between the two front top teeth. In fact, almost half of all kids under age six will have a diastema between the front teeth. This gap will usually close by itself by the time your child turns eight or nine, but if the gap hasn’t closed on its own once the adult canines and incisors have erupted, your child may need assistance in closing it.''
 

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