bessie
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[...]
Orcutt was stabbed multiple times in the chest and might have been sexually assaulted. Her decomposing body — clothed in underpants, socks and shoes — was discovered Jan. 28, 1990, in a palmetto thicket about 100 feet off South Lee Drive and Florida 21 near Black Creek in Middleburg. Two boys riding an all-terrain vehicle near their home made the grisly find. Because of the decomposition, detectives can’t say for sure whether Orcutt was sexually assaulted.
The discovery came seven days after sheriff’s deputies found Orcutt’s red Ford Thunderbird with its engine running and headlights on parked on the shoulder of Clay County Road 218 West, also in Middleburg — about five miles from where her body was dumped.
Her purse containing cash and credit cards were near a spilled cup of soda inside the car. Deputies found Orcutt’s prescription eyeglasses, which she always wore, about 50 feet from the vehicle, according to her family and Sheriff’s Office officials at that time.
Afraid of the dark, the petite 26-year-old bank manager lived with her mother, Rosie Robinson. Orcutt was en route to their Clay Hill home when she disappeared after leaving her boyfriend’s Jacksonville residence about 5 a.m. Jan. 21, 1990. Orcutt, described as “fun, loving and kind” with no known enemies by those who knew her, would be found a few miles away from her mother’s home.
[...]
Detectives investigated and cleared Orcutt’s boyfriend. Also ruled out as a suspect was Orcutt’s former husband, said Lt. Wayne McKinney of the Clay County Sheriff’s Office, who supervises its robbery/homicide/special victims section.
McKinney along with eight detectives and two sergeants make up the section. The two squads of four investigators each work on the unsolved homicides as well as current cases.
Orcutt’s slaying is the oldest case among four unsolved homicides Sheriff’s Office detectives continue actively investigating, using new technology and old-fashioned shoe-leather to search for evidence and check out persons of interest.
The Sheriff’s Office is the lead agency investigating the cases that occurred in unincorporated areas of Clay County.
cont. at the link
http://jacksonville.com/news/crime/2015-02-06/story/still-searching-justice
Orcutt was stabbed multiple times in the chest and might have been sexually assaulted. Her decomposing body — clothed in underpants, socks and shoes — was discovered Jan. 28, 1990, in a palmetto thicket about 100 feet off South Lee Drive and Florida 21 near Black Creek in Middleburg. Two boys riding an all-terrain vehicle near their home made the grisly find. Because of the decomposition, detectives can’t say for sure whether Orcutt was sexually assaulted.
The discovery came seven days after sheriff’s deputies found Orcutt’s red Ford Thunderbird with its engine running and headlights on parked on the shoulder of Clay County Road 218 West, also in Middleburg — about five miles from where her body was dumped.
Her purse containing cash and credit cards were near a spilled cup of soda inside the car. Deputies found Orcutt’s prescription eyeglasses, which she always wore, about 50 feet from the vehicle, according to her family and Sheriff’s Office officials at that time.
Afraid of the dark, the petite 26-year-old bank manager lived with her mother, Rosie Robinson. Orcutt was en route to their Clay Hill home when she disappeared after leaving her boyfriend’s Jacksonville residence about 5 a.m. Jan. 21, 1990. Orcutt, described as “fun, loving and kind” with no known enemies by those who knew her, would be found a few miles away from her mother’s home.
[...]
Detectives investigated and cleared Orcutt’s boyfriend. Also ruled out as a suspect was Orcutt’s former husband, said Lt. Wayne McKinney of the Clay County Sheriff’s Office, who supervises its robbery/homicide/special victims section.
McKinney along with eight detectives and two sergeants make up the section. The two squads of four investigators each work on the unsolved homicides as well as current cases.
Orcutt’s slaying is the oldest case among four unsolved homicides Sheriff’s Office detectives continue actively investigating, using new technology and old-fashioned shoe-leather to search for evidence and check out persons of interest.
The Sheriff’s Office is the lead agency investigating the cases that occurred in unincorporated areas of Clay County.
cont. at the link
http://jacksonville.com/news/crime/2015-02-06/story/still-searching-justice