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Author Topic: 20 year old unsolved crime gets new lead  (Read 18605 times)
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Edward
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« on: August 29, 2009, 11:02:58 AM »

PORT ST. JOE, Fla. —  A mysterious photo of a young boy sent to police and media here has rekindled interest in a 20-year-old mystery surrounding a Polaroid of a young boy and girl, seemingly bound behind their backs, their mouths covered with tape.

The recently received picture shows a young boy with black marker etched across his mouth and face, as if it had been taped shut. The boy is similar in appearance to one of the youths in a Polaroid found here in 1989 that spawned national attention from police and the media.

"I think we were just dumbfounded," said Gulf County Sheriff Joe Nugent, who was a deputy 20 years ago when the Polaroid was found. "It is kind of weird these photos came in near the anniversary of the original case, but if somebody is trying to send us a clue, send us one we can act on."

The development sparked memories for many and revived several unanswered questions: Who are the children in the pictures, are they dead or was it a hoax, and what is the connection to Port St. Joe?

"It obviously is two kids with terror written all over them," Nugent said of the 1989 Polaroid. "It's kind of a bad time when you have to look at something like that."

Port St. Joe Police Chief David Barnes received two letters, postmarked June 10 and Aug. 10 from Albuquerque, N.M. The children in the 1989 picture are believed by some to be two children Tara Calico and Michael Paul Henley reported missing in New Mexico.

One letter contained a photo, printed on copy paper, of a young boy with sandy brown hair. Someone had drawn a black band in ink on the photo, over the boy's mouth, as if it were covered in tape like the 1989 picture. The second letter contained an original image of the boy.

On Aug. 12, The Star newspaper in Port St. Joe received a third letter, also postmarked in Albuquerque on Aug. 10 and depicting the same image, of a boy with black marker drawn over his mouth.

None of the letters contained a return address or a note indicating the child's identity.

Nugent said investigators as recently as this spring had looked at the case file again, so he immediately made the connection between the latest picture and the Polaroid photo found June 15, 1989, in Port St. Joe.

A witness at the time noticed the photo on the ground in the parking lot of a convenience store a Junior Food Store at the time, now an Express Lane after a white van, driven by a man with a mustache, thought to be in his 30s, exited the parking lot.

Although the witness did not know if the photo dropped from the late 1980s Toyota cargo van, and there remains no substantive proof it did, Nugent said, police staged an unsuccessful road block to intercept the vehicle.

Nugent remembers the case causing a stir in Port St. Joe, the region and the country.

"I'd just started and that was the biggest thing we worked around here," Nugent said. "Months and months of people calling and giving tips, and psychics calling, and we were never able to track anything down for sure."

The case file contains "stacks and stacks" of letters and clues gathered during the investigation.

The original Polaroid received national attention when it aired on the television program "America's Most Wanted." Two stories about it appeared in The News Herald in August 1989.

A mystery lives on

Though the Federal Bureau of Investigation never positively identified the young girl and boy in the photo, they were initially thought to be Calico and Henley.

Calico, then 19, was last seen on the morning of Sept. 20, 1988, riding a pink bicycle in Valencia County, N.M.

Henley, 9, also of New Mexico, disappeared in April 1988, while hunting with his father in the Zuni Mountains in northwestern New Mexico.

Henley's parents believed the boy in the 1989 photo might be their son, but his remains were found the next year not far from where he disappeared, and there were no signs of foul play.

With the arrival of the Internet era, the mystery not only has lived on, it has become the subject of numerous discussion boards and Web sites, particularly as it relates to Calico.

One site, forthelost.org, talks about Henley and Calico, and suggests another missing boy is actually the person in the picture. Another site, charleyproject.org, makes the case that Calico is the girl and talks about two other disturbing pictures that cropped up over the years with a girl resembling Calico in distress.

There even is a Wikipedia page dedicated to Calico and this case.

Albuquerque, where the latest letters were mailed from, is about 35 miles from Calico's hometown of Belen, N.M., and 111 miles from the Zuni Mountains, where Henley's body was recovered.

A real look of fear'

Nugent could not tell whether the boy in the photos sent in the recent letters is the same boy in the 1989 Polaroid, and it's just another mystery for investigators to solve.

"Unless something just pops up (from the investigation of the recent letters), I don't know why these letters were mailed here," Nugent said.

He does believe the letters' New Mexico postmark and arrival near the 20th anniversary of the day the original Polaroid was found might be more than a coincidence.

Nugent also is intrigued with the timing of a phone call received the same day The Star turned over its letter to the Sheriff 's Office. A woman claimed she had been having visions about the case over the years and said she believed Calico to be buried in California. Nugent said the woman related that she worked with a runaway in a strip club in California and that the runaway was later reported murdered and buried.

Nugent said the woman described seeing a light blue Oldsmobile car and the name of Tara Calico in a vivid dream she has had over the years.

Thus far, California authorities have dismissed the woman's claims, Nugent said, but added the timing of her call and the letters is strange.

"It's all just very weird," Nugent said.

All the letters have been placed in evidence bags and have been sent to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement lab in Pensacola where they will be submitted to testing for fingerprints and DNA. The FBI is not involved in the latest development.

Nugent said those tests likely will take at least a month and any new evidence gleaned from the letters would be passed on to New Mexico authorities where the case of the missing children remains open.

"If anybody has any information, we'd be happy to contact the New Mexico authorities and pass it on to them," Nugent said. "Somebody somewhere knows something about it."

And he hopes someone is finally willing to share what they know.

"Nobody knows for sure if it was a setup," Nugent said. "Some people think it was a staged photograph, but it was a real look of fear to me."

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,544305,00.html?test=latestnews
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Edward
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« Reply #1 on: August 29, 2009, 11:06:47 AM »

Here is a link that shows the photo in question..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tara_Calico
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Edward
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« Reply #2 on: August 29, 2009, 11:48:48 AM »

Twenty years after her disappearance, Rene Rivera, sheriff of Valencia County announced that he knew what happened to Tara Calico. According to Rivera, boys who knew her from school drove up behind her in a truck and some form of accident followed. Tara later died and those responsible covered up the crime. Rivera states he knows the names of those involved, but that, without a body, he cannot make a case. He has not released whatever evidence has led him to this conclusion. No arrests have been made, and the case remains open.[1]

Tara Leigh Calico would today be 40 years old.

The boy in the photo has never been identified....

Her mom would know without a doubt IF that was Tara in that photo..Mom would know the eyes.


Charley Project did some good work on photos..

http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/c/calico_tara.html


It is just terrible....
 Both her mom and dad have died since her disappearance.

The Step Father is still alive and living in ....Florida, Very interesting as that is where the photo first shows up.


I have no problem with police naming suspects in there theory of the boys hitting her with the truck..
I would like to see what they have been up to in the 20 years since her disappearance.
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cartfly
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Thanks Brandi!


« Reply #3 on: August 31, 2009, 01:24:15 AM »

Thanks Edward for bringing this over. I have always been intrigued by this mystery photo. I wonder if they will release the other photo recently received.
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My angels on earth, the Shriners-every thing they do is for the children and they never ask for anything in return. What a concept.....
http://www.shrinershq.org/Hospitals/Main/
Catbert
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« Reply #4 on: August 31, 2009, 10:57:03 AM »

It is a facinating story - very upsetting that it continues to go unsolved
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Nut44x4
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« Reply #5 on: November 24, 2009, 01:07:24 PM »



Investigators: No clues from new Calico, Henley mailings

November 19, 2009 06:00:00 AM
By TIM CROFT | Florida Freedom Newspapers
PORT ST. JOE — Photos and envelopes that revived a 20-year-old mystery after they arrived at a Florida Freedom newspaper in August provided no additional clues, investigators said this week.

Testing by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement crime lab in Pensacola uncovered no useable DNA on the photos, which were sent to The News Herald’s sister paper, The Star, in Port St. Joe; Port St. Joe Police Department; and, investigators ultimately learned, another law enforcement agency and several churches.

The photos were in envelopes postmarked in Albuquerque, N.M., and several of those were postmarked June 10, the 20-year anniversary of the discovery of a disturbing Polaroid photo in a Port St. Joe convenience store parking lot.

The photo showed a young woman, believed by some to be Tara Calico, and a young boy identified as Michael Henley. Their hands were tied behind them and they were gagged with duct tape.

The photo was discovered shortly after a white-paneled van had left the parking lot. Police never made a connection between the van and the disturbing image.

The most recent photos, at least one of which was postmarked in August, were of a boy resembling Henley, with a gag-looking ink stain over his mouth. None of the letters contained a return address or a note indicating the child’s identity.

With the discovery of the latest photos, Calico’s mother renewed her insistence that it was her daughter in the original photo, even though FBI analysts ruled out Calico as the woman in the Polaroid. Calico’s mother insisted Calico and the woman in the Polaroid had the same birthmark, according to a television news station in New Mexico.

Local investigators sent the photos and envelopes to be tested. The only DNA found, in trace amounts, was on the photo received by The Star, and was from an unidentified female, likely the reporter who opened the letter, said Jake Richards with the Port St. Joe Police Department.

The original Polaroid had received national attention when it aired on the television program “America’s Most Wanted.”

Calico, then 19, was last seen the morning of Sept. 20, 1988, riding a pink bicycle in Valencia County, N.M.

Henley, 9, also of New Mexico, disappeared in April 1988 while hunting with his father in the Zuni Mountains, in northwestern New Mexico. Henley’s remains were found in the Zuni Mountains in 1990; Calico’s body never was recovered. Albuquerque is about 35 miles from Calico’s Belen, N.M., hometown and 111 miles from the Zuni Mountains, where Henley’s body was recovered.

As with 20 years ago, local authorities still have nothing to go on in the case, let alone what kind of case it might be. Investigators in Port St. Joe and in New Mexico have said they would follow any reliable tip they receive in the case.

http://www.newsherald.com/news/mailings-79217-calico-new.html
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One who doesn't trust is never deceived...

'I remained too much inside my head and ended up losing my mind' -Edgar Allen Poe
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