RPPaolin
New Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2004
- Messages
- 223
- Reaction score
- 6
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 don't think the Wilde and Chuprevich cases are connected. The women disappeared five years apart, they were a decade apart in age, not the same race, etc. Furthermore, one of Chuprevich's relatives seems to be the prime suspect in her case, whereas it seems like the police think Wilde's boyfriend was involved in her case. Unless the boyfriend is also Chuprevich's stepson-in-law I don't see where the similaries come in. The only common factors are missing women, the state of Wisconsin and the way their cars were both found abandoned at bar parking lots.
http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/c/chuprevich_areerat.html
I don't think the Wilde and Chuprevich cases are connected. The women disappeared five years apart, they were a decade apart in age, not the same race, etc. Furthermore, one of Chuprevich's relatives seems to be the prime suspect in her case, whereas it seems like the police think Wilde's boyfriend was involved in her case. Unless the boyfriend is also Chuprevich's stepson-in-law I don't see where the similaries come in. The only common factors are missing women, the state of Wisconsin and the way their cars were both found abandoned at bar parking lots.
Anyone able to connect (Karl W.) McLeod with the Morrison area or southeastern Brown County is asked to call the Brown Sheriff’s Department at (920) 448-4226, Sanborn said. Investigators are trying to establish if McLeod had connections to people or property in that area.
http://www.htrnews.com/article/20081203/GPG0101/81203020/1978
"Authorities found her car a week after she vanished in the parking lot of a sports bar near Lambeau Field. Her purse was in the trunk, and the keys were in the ignition with the driver's seat rolled back - too far, they say, for Wilde to have been able to reach the pedals."
"Areerat Chuprevich’s Jeep Liberty was found April 28, 2003 locked and parked in the lot of St. Michael’s Pub on Riverside Drive in Allouez, a few blocks from the Mariner Motel where she lived with her husband. Described as a quiet, hardworking woman trying to learn English, Chuprevich didn’t frequent bars."
The primary suspect was Karl McLeod, who committed suicide by hanging while in a prison facility in Oshkosh on May 16, 2006. McLeod was Chuprevich's step son-in-law.
While the case might appear to be closed, Gossage said it is not.
"Anyone with any information tying Areerat Chuprevich or Karl McLeod to the southern region of Brown County, it would be very helpful for Brown County investigators to have this information," Gossage said.
McLeod had no ties to the Morrison area that detectives know of. He lived on an old farm in the Town of Pensaukee in Oconto County.
The person who buried a body in the thickly wooded marsh likely has ties to the Morrison area, according to Capt. Jeff Sanborn, the county's top investigator.
"Somebody usually, if they do dump a corpse, percentages are that they dump them in a place that they're familiar with themselves," Sanborn said. "That's why we're asking for help from the community that can link Karl McLeod or the family to the southern end of Brown County and why he would possibly have gone there."
Sanborn said the case is not closed. He said someone in addition to McLeod could have been involved in the murder or in the disposal of the body.
"Nothing limits this to just one person being involved," Sanborn said. "We are going back to reinterview people we interviewed back in 2003."
He said the investigation would focus on determining if anyone else was involved in the Chuprevich murder and if McLeod might have been responsible for other unsolved missing persons cases.
The grave was on an 80-acre tract of low-lying woodlands owned by the Jo Ann Hogan Marital Trust, according to Brown County online property tax records.
GREEN BAY -- Green Bay Police are shedding new light on the 15 year-old cold case involving Amber Wilde, who went missing on September 23, 1998.
On Monday, police and Wilde's family will meet to talk about new information surrounding the case.
The Green Bay Police Department says a search related to the disappearance of a woman missing since 1998 is being conducted in Portage County near Waupaca. Investigators were searching an area near Durant Road north of Highway 54 Wednesday afternoon.
Police said the search involved an area that had been searched in 2000, but were not releasing further details. The property is owned by a relative of a person who knew Wilde, the official said.