Holidays hurt for those who mourn the missing
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Holidays hurt for those who mourn the missing
For some, the holidays are not happy times. Instead, it is time to remember and mourn friends and relatives who have vanished without a trace. Perhaps, we can help change that for one family this week.
The Charley Project profiles approximately 10,000 missing person cold cases in the United States. The non-profit does not actively investigate cases; it is merely a publicity tool that allows relatives to report loved ones who have been missing over a year.
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Detectives in Livingston Parish are still searching for a 33-year-old Albany woman reported missing on August 17, 2015. Stacy Renee Baham, a Caucasian female 5′ 5″ tall, weighed almost 130 lbs when she disappeared. She had brown hair and brown eyes with a tattoo of a butterfly on her left shoulder. She also has tattoos on her lower back, right arm, and left breast, and her ears are pierced.
Police found that her Facebook Profile identified her as Stacy Cook. According to that Profile, she was from Saint Matthews, South Carolina, studied Health Care Management at Colorado Technical University, and worked at the Hammond Nursing Home until April 2015. Facebook videos show her with her son and step-son at the Livingston Parish Fair and the Albany Christmas Parade.
Stacy’s father reported her missing after she left her son with a friend without returning to pick him up. Her boyfriend told LPSO Detectives that he and Stacy had just broken up and that she had left with his vehicle.
Stacy Renee Baham was seen in Holden on August 10, 2015; in Gonzales, August 11, 2015; and then driving through Maurepas at 5:00 AM, August 12. Her boyfriend’s vehicle was found abandoned—out of gas—near LA 22 in Maurepas on August 29, 2015.
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