Found Deceased NC - Ann Carter, 34, Winston-Salem, 27 Dec 2017

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(Date missing should be Dec 27, 2017! (Don't know how to correct title.)

Winston-Salem police were trying to find a missing woman Wednesday night.

34-year-old Ann Carter was last seen at Salem Valley Road in Winston-Salem, according to officers.

Police said a Silver Alert was issued Wednesday because Carter has serious mental health problems. She left on Sunday in an orange, 2005 Chevy Cobalt, without telling anyone where she was going, according to officers.

The car has a North Carolina license plate with the number DBX2439.

Carter is five feet, seven inches tall and weighs 170 pounds.

She was last seen wearing blue jeans and a gray pullover with "Florida" printed on the front.

Anyone with information regarding Carter's whereabouts was asked to call the Winston-Salem Police Department at 336-773-7700.


http://www.wxii12.com/article/police-trying-to-find-missing-winston-salem-woman/14508596
 

Found deceased [emoji20]. Homicide investigation underway: http://myfox8.com/2018/01/10/winsto...ting-homicide-after-missing-woman-found-dead/

Around 3 a.m. on Saturday, while investigating an unrelated matter in the area of 3420 Old Greensboro Road, Winston-Salem police officers located Carter’s body.

Evidence located at the scene indicated that the body had been purposely concealed.

An autopsy conducted Wednesday positively identified the body as Carter’s.

In the early afternoon Saturday, Carter’s 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt was recovered in the 1600 block of East 25th Street. Evidence suggested the vehicle had been driven very recently and the license plate for the vehicle, DBX-2439, was stolen.

Because Carter was last known to have been in the company of Anton Thurman McAllister, detectives with the Winston-Salem Police Department have been actively seeking to locate and interview McAllister.

More at link.

RIP, Ann.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Police needs public's help to find man linked to woman's death

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A woman reported missing on Christmas Eve was found dead Saturday and police have issued a warrant for the man with whom she was last seen.


Police Lt. Michael Cardwell said that investigators are in the early stages of their probe into the death of Ann Marie Carter, 34, of Dobson. Officers found Carter's body near 3420 Old Greensboro Road, police said.

Police are treating Carter's death as a homicide.
Detectives are looking for McAllister to interview him, police said.

A Forsyth County magistrate has issued an arrest warrant for McAllister, charging him with conspiracy to commit a felony, Cardwell said. He declined to discuss the details of the charge against McAllister.
McAllister lives in Winston-Salem, but he has no permanent address, police said. Cardwell also described McAllister as a homeless man who often sleeps in a white 1991 Jeep Cherokee.

Officers are looking for that vehicle. McAllister is described as 5 feet 10 inches tall, and he weighs about 180 pounds, police said.

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Read more: http://www.journalnow.com/news/loca...cle_b3b536ae-14de-5f34-a386-e49f0f40bd06.html
 
Before woman's death in Winston-Salem, she and husband conspired to sell drugs, investigators say
http://www.greensboro.com/news/crim...cle_26aadac4-9bfb-504a-afe7-1a814c8a46dd.html
A Dobson man who reported his wife missing, launching a search that would end with her body being discovered 13 days later, is now accused of conspiring with her and another man to sell a controlled substance around the time of her disappearance.

Carl Lewis Carter, 48, was charged March 10 with conspiracy to commit a felony, court records show.

[...]
 
APRIL 3, 2018
Strangled, beaten and left in a garbage can: Grisly details from the autopsy of Dobson woman found dead in Winston-Salem
Manual strangulation — meaning someone used his or her hands — killed Carter, according to the autopsy report released Tuesday.

Dr. Patrick Lantz, the Forsyth County medical examiner who conducted the autopsy, also found head trauma and nasal fractures on her body, as well as injuries to her stomach and back.

Carter’s partially clothed body was found inside a garbage can, according to the report.

The autopsy also found bruises and abrasions on Carter’s neck and jaw, as well as bruises on her upper chest and right upper inner arm. Her left upper chest was swabbed for DNA, according to the autopsy.

Carter, 34, who lived on Bandy Knoll Lane in Dobson, was found dead on Jan. 6. She was last seen alive on Christmas Eve. Her body was found near 3420 Old Greensboro Road by Winston-Salem police officers who were in the area on another call.
 
APRIL 3, 2018
Husband charged with conspiracy to commit felony with wife before she disappeared
Evidence at the scene indicated that the body had been purposely concealed.

On Jan. 11, Winston-Salem police arrested McAllister in connection to Ann Carter's death and charged him with conspiracy to commit a felony and concealment of a death resulting from unnatural causes.

Regarding the conspiracy charge, police said that on the morning of Dec. 24, 2017, McAllister and Ann Carter were planning to sell a controlled substance.

Court documents show that in March, Carl Lewis Carter was also charged with conspiracy to commit a felony. An arrest warrant shows he was planning to sell a controlled substance with his wife, Ann Carter, and McAllister.

In an interview, Cark Carter revealed to WXII that he and his wife, Ann Carter, met McAllister at a gas station on Dec. 23, 2017. He said the couple offered him a ride and they ended up at his friend’s house.
 
JULY 24, 2018
Death of homicide victim’s husband leaves parts of investigation uncertain in Winston-Salem
A man whose wife was found dead earlier this year has passed away, leaving two teenagers without parents and the investigation into his wife’s death uncertain.

Carl Carter, 49, died Sunday at his home on Bandy Knoll Lane in Dobson. The cause is currently unknown. His death comes seven months after he reported his wife, Ann Marie Carter, 34, missing.

She was found dead in Winston-Salem in January. No one has been charged in her death.

However, Carl Carter and another man were each charged with conspiracy to commit a felony in connection with another crime that Winston-Salem police allege occurred the day Ann Carter was last seen alive.

Carl Carter was scheduled to appear in court this week on that charge.
 
So did they not match the DNA on her body to either McAllister or her husband? They seem confident McAllister disposed of her body so I always figured he did it. Maybe her husband was present and didn't stop him and couldn't live with that.
 
JULY 24, 2018
Death of homicide victim’s husband leaves parts of investigation uncertain in Winston-Salem
A man whose wife was found dead earlier this year has passed away, leaving two teenagers without parents and the investigation into his wife’s death uncertain.

Carl Carter, 49, died Sunday at his home on Bandy Knoll Lane in Dobson. The cause is currently unknown. His death comes seven months after he reported his wife, Ann Marie Carter, 34, missing.

She was found dead in Winston-Salem in January. No one has been charged in her death.

However, Carl Carter and another man were each charged with conspiracy to commit a felony in connection with another crime that Winston-Salem police allege occurred the day Ann Carter was last seen alive.

Carl Carter was scheduled to appear in court this week on that charge.

This is all very suspicious. JMO.
 
Also from the article, dated JAN 5, 2019:

Police have said Ann and Carl Carter conspired with Anton Thurman McAllister to sell the prescription pain medication Percocet. Lt. Gregory Dorn said the trio was trying to sell the prescription medication for another narcotic. This may have been what ultimately led to Ann Carter’s death, though the exact details before her final hours are unclear.

Now, 12 months later, one person remains charged in Ann Carter’s death.

McAllister, 42, of no permanent address, has been in the Forsyth County Jail since he was arrested on Jan. 11, 2018. He is charged with concealment of a death resulting from unnatural causes and conspiracy to commit a felony.

Carl Carter was charged on March 10 with conspiracy. Three months later, on July 22, he was dead. Autopsy and toxicology results haven’t been completed by the medical examiner’s office, but Surry County EMS Director John Shelton said at the time that officials were called to Carl Carter’s house for a cardiac arrest. He could not be revived.

Carl Carter had said he and Ann met McAllister at a gas station. Carl Carter said the couple gave McAllister money to buy a beer, then gave him a ride to what they thought was McAllister’s girlfriend’s apartment on Salem Valley Road. However, search warrants in the case reveal a different story.

The court documents say that when Carl Carter reported his wife missing, he said told police he and his wife came to Winston-Salem to buy pain pills for Ann. They went to a strip club at 400 Peters Creek Parkway on Dec. 23 and an unknown man came up to them and directed them to McAllister, who Carl Carter said they hadn’t previously met. The trio went to several places to try to find pain medication, before going to an apartment on Salem Valley Road. The club is about a mile from the apartment.

Carl Carter stayed at the apartment when Ann and McAllister left again to find pills, the search warrant says. He stayed in touch with his wife for several hours, with his last contact being about 4 a.m. Ann Carter said she was at a gas station on Waughtown Street and was on her way back to the apartment. That was the last time Carl talked to Ann.
 
JAN 10, 2019

Autopsy reveals how husband of homicide victim died
A Surry County man who died six months after his wife’s body was found in a trash can in Winston-Salem died from a drug overdose, according to autopsy results released by the state.

According to an autopsy from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, Carl Carter died from fentanyl and pregabalin toxicity.

Pregabalin, which has a brand name of Lyrica, is typically used to treat neuropathic pain. It’s often used for diabetes or fibromyalgia.

In addition, Carter’s right arm had evidence of what appeared to be needle track marks, according to the autopsy report.

The report said Carter was found unresponsive on a living room couch. Earlier in the day he had gone to Winston-Salem and obtained heroin, the report said. His family gave him naloxone, a drug that can counter the effects of heroin, before paramedics arrived.

Carter had several other significant health issues, including hypertensive cardiovascular disease and morbid obesity, the autopsy report said. He also had diabetes.

The toxicology report showed caffeine, pregabalin, naloxone, opiates and quinine/quinidine, which is typically used to treat abnormal heart rhythms, in his system.

An unlabeled prescription bottle with red and white pills inscribed with “Pfizer PGN300” was in Carter’s pocket.

According to medical websites, they are Lyrica 300 milligram pills.

Carter did not have a prescription for Lyrica, Lt. Gregory Dorn of the Winston-Salem Police Department said Thursday.
 

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