An NPE is a non-paternity event. That means that the person who is her father may not actually be her father.what's a(n) NPE?
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An NPE is a non-paternity event. That means that the person who is her father may not actually be her father.what's a(n) NPE?
An NPE is a non-paternity event. That means that the person who is her father may not actually be her father.
Sounds like they're close, but perhaps a NPE in the tree (which sounds to be quite large) is throwing things off. Hopefully someone who those surnames sound familiar to may provide them a lead that will allow them to zero in on an identity. That being said, it's looks like it's pretty important that this update gets shared and disseminated in the Alabama area.
DDP's Facebook page gained 1,000 likes since Loveless's press conference and Kraig King's identification.Fingers crossed the recent MSM interest over the Loveless case will improve the chances of media reporting in the geographic areas mentioned.
DDP's Facebook page gained 1,000 likes since Loveless's press conference and Kraig King's identification.
Possibly but they usually just release as soon as LE allows them to.Fantastic new @Liv27 Do you know if DDP are strategic in release of cases/IDs? It seems to me, if I wanted a case to get more publicity and attention (so I could solve it) that it would make commonsense to release a highly marketable and attention-grabbing case (like Loveless) just beforehand. Raise the profile, get MSM and the public interested. Then in quick succession put out a really hard one. Leverage off the earlier hype as much as possible to try and solve the harder case (Grundy).
Did not know, or must have forgotten that Seneca Doe had a bottle of wine in her pocket.Here is a recent report which I think is about this case:
The Quest to Identify ‘Jane Seneca Doe’ in Grundy County
Did not know, or must have forgotten that Seneca Doe had a bottle of wine in her pocket.
''In the fall of 1976, the body of a young African American woman was found on the shoulder of a rural highway near downstate Seneca. She was wearing a colorful red sweater, with a bottle of wine in the pocket. It was believed she may have been in her twenties, but she had no ID.''