http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/414ufms.html
I couldn't really find anymore info about her other than on doe network.
I couldn't really find anymore info about her other than on doe network.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I have several questions regarding this case. First off, do they know for sure she was a transient? Did they report any drugs found in her system? Just because she was found in an area frequented by addicts and transients doesn't necessarily mean she IS/WAS a transient/addict. Unless they have some proof that she was....which I only have read about the assumption that she was.
the Doe Network page says she had been seen at truck stops in Louisiana so we can all draw our own conclusions from that.
Thanks! Always a good idea to re-read the info :blushing:
I guess it depends on what she was "seen" doing while at the truck stops then. Fair enough...
That, sadly, makes me worry that maybe they didn't try all that hard to find out who she is. Middle-aged prostitute with a drug problem, happens all the time, too bad but here comes the next case...
I found the whole report to be shockingly cruel honestly; which is why I suppose how I missed the part about her being seen at truckstops. I was shocked by the numerous mentions to transients and addicts...not necessarily in regards to where she was found, but regarding who she was.
Any reason she is called "Rosa Doe"? Is she of Hispanic decent...or am I missing something. (an assumption I make when I hear the name Rosa)
This is local to me, so I can answer this one. I've worked at the NASA site for years now, and when Rosa was found, I worked at the local newspaper (though I was not the reporter on this story).
When NASA Stennis Space Center was constructed in the early 1960s, several small towns were located within the area that would become known as the "buffer zone" (the area around the site where no habitation is allowed). The towns are all gone now, but they still use the names of them to refer to some areas.
Rosa Doe was found in an area that was once the town of Santa Rosa, hence her name. No hispanic heritage that I'm aware of.
side by side; she certainly looks like a possibility to me. Timeline and general stats fit.
Wow, thank you so much for the insight!
Are you, by chance, aware of any of those articles being available on-line? I did attempt a search but came up empty.
What do you guys think of Janice Matney? History of mental illness, drug use, and transient living? I am at work so I'm unable to do a side-by-side of the recon and her photos...
http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/m/matney_janice.html