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Author Topic: Shonda Stansbury 24, vanished Dec. 9, 2006 Roanoke Rapids NC  (Read 12432 times)
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« on: January 02, 2007, 08:50:28 AM »

911 Call About Missing Woman Concerns Authorities

Posted: Jan. 1 5:57 p.m.
Updated: Jan. 1 7:00 p.m.
Roanoke Rapids — Halifax County authorities believe a missing woman is in danger after receiving a 911 call about her.

Shonda Stansbury's family reported her missing on Dec. 9. Investigators initially thought she left on her own, but a 911 call received five days later has authorities concerned.

A woman called Warren County 911 on Dec. 14 to report that she thought she saw Stansbury in trouble near the Information Grocery store off N.C. Highway 158 in Halifax County.

"A woman, a blonde-headed woman, and I believe it was Shonda Stansbury, was running from behind the Information," the caller said before her cell phone dropped the call.

The Warren County 911 center could only trace the call to a cell tower and never got the caller's name or phone number. A dispatcher passed the information to Halifax County.

Days later, Roanoke Rapids police spoke with the same woman, who said she saw two men chasing a woman she thought was Stansbury into a wooded area near the grocery store. She told police she waited until she got home to call 911 because she was afraid to stop.

Because of that call, investigators now consider Stansbury missing and in danger. But that lead is now more than two weeks old, and there is still no sign of Stansbury.

Stansbury was last seen wearing blue jeans, a gray blouse and white tennis shoes. Authorities said they hope someone will answer their call for help in finding her.

http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/1123313/
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« Reply #1 on: January 03, 2007, 01:34:10 AM »

Family's concern grows for missing woman

Katy Nicholson Herald Staff Writer

ROANOKE RAPIDS - Gloria Bedgood is spending her holiday season knocking on doors and scouring the area for her daughter.

Shonda Stansbury, a 24-year-old mother of four, was last seen Saturday, Dec. 9, around 6 a.m. Stansbury entered Waffle House in Weldon, where her sister works, early that morning. An employee told the family she had bruises on her face and legs and a bump on her temple.

A regular customer reportedly gave her a ride to West Side Trailer Court on West 10th Street, and she has not been seen since.

Stansbury is Caucasian, stands about 5'5” and weighs 110 to 120 pounds, with brownish-blonde hair and blue eyes, and is missing her four front teeth. She was last seen wearing blue jeans, a black leather jacket and white tennis shoes.

Bedgood said she is concerned that her daughter could have amnesia or another head injury due to the bump on her head.

“Something is not right, because I've got that feeling, and I'm her momma,” Bedgood said, noting Stansbury calls her nearly every day.

Roanoke Rapids Police Chief Greg Lawson said the department has been following up on every lead, but there is still no evidence of where she could be, or of any foul play. The department also has been broadcasting missing persons information to other local agencies.

“When people voluntarily leave, it's sometimes very difficult to locate them,” he said, “but we don't suspect anything other than (Stansbury) voluntarily left.”

Anyone with information pertaining to Stansbury's whereabouts can call the Roanoke Rapids Police Department at 533-2810, Halifax Central Communications at 583-2488 or Halifax County Crimestoppers at 583-4444.

http://tinyurl.com/vww9c
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« Reply #2 on: January 07, 2007, 07:04:14 AM »

I don't get it. This young woman's mother reports her missing Dec. 9th. The first organized search for her was Friday Jan., 5th? WTH
++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Where is Shonda Stansbury?

 

Search for missing mother of four turns up no clues Friday

Katy Nicholson Herald Staff Writer

Friday's search for a missing woman didn't produce any evidence, but the Halifax County Sheriff's Office considered it a worthwhile effort.

Shonda Stansbury, a 24-year-old mother of four, was reported missing by her mother Dec. 9. At the time, the Roanoke Rapids Police Department had no reason to suspect she was in danger.

On Dec. 14 around 11:28 p.m., a woman called 911 and reported seeing Stansbury near Information Grocery at the intersection of Thelma Road and U.S. Highway 158.

The woman opened the passenger door of her car, but left the area when she saw two men chasing Stansbury. The incident led to the police department classifying Stansbury as an endangered person.

The first major search for Stansbury took place Friday from about 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., and the police department had already entered her into a national computer system.
full article..........

http://www.rrdailyherald.com/articles/2007/01/06/news/news.txt
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« Reply #3 on: January 16, 2007, 11:22:23 PM »

Halifax woman seen in Wilson again

By Rochelle Moore Daily Times Staff Writer

A Roanoke Rapids woman missing since Dec. 9 has been seen twice in the Wilson County area in a week.

Andy Jackson, administrative officer for the Roanoke Rapids police chief, said a male caller reported to the Halifax County Crimestoppers that he saw Shonda Stansbury on Monday morning walking toward Wilson from Saratoga.

Stansbury, 24, was wearing a blue jacket with a white stripe and carrying a book bag on her back. Stansbury is 5 feet 5 inches tall, weighs 110 to 120 pounds and has brownish-blonde hair and blue eyes. She is missing her four front teeth.

Stansbury was also seen in Wilson at a Tarboro Street gas station on Jan. 2.

"She's been known to walk the streets and go place to place," Jackson said. "No matter where she was or whatever condition she was in, she would call her mom. The only interesting thing this time is she hasn't called home.

"She's not in any trouble. We don't have any warrants on her, we just want to know she's breathing."

The Roanoke Rapids Police Department has been heading up the missing person investigation with the assistance of the Halifax County Sheriff's Office. Stansbury has been entered into national police databases.

Anyone with information about Stansbury can call the Roanoke Rapids Police Department at 252-533-2810 or Halifax County Crimestoppers at 252-583-4444.

http://tinyurl.com/38awn4
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« Reply #4 on: January 16, 2007, 11:29:52 PM »

Now police say this woman is considered missing and in danger . Something is strange here. Shonda Stansbury's been missing for a month, and one possible sighting had someone that resembled her , witnessed to be
in a very dangerous situation. Do police take some missing persons cases more serious than others?


SEARCH CONTINUES FOR 24 YEAR OLD MOTHER OF 4      

The search continues for a woman missing for nearly a month. The Halifax County Sheriff’s Office, Roanoke Rapids Police, and rescue units throughout the county began an intensive search Friday for Shonda Stansbury, 24. According to authorities, she’s now considered missing and in danger and was last seen December 14th in Roanoke Rapids. Family members, visibly shaken, were asked by authorities to keep their distance from rescue efforts. But Stansbury's mother, Gloria Bedgood and her sister watched from a side street through binoculars as rescue workers continued to look for the mother of four.

http://www.wnvnlocalnews.com/
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« Reply #5 on: January 17, 2007, 06:17:02 AM »

What on earth made them think she left voluntarily in the first place.  Seems to me that unless there is strong evidence that a person wants to "get lost", they should treat it as a missing persons case.
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« Reply #6 on: February 18, 2007, 01:41:50 AM »

Shonda Stansbury reportedly seen in Wilson
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Katy Nicholson Herald Staff Writer

A missing Roanoke Rapids woman has reportedly been seen by numerous people in Wilson.

According to the Roanoke Rapids Police Department, people have claimed to have seen Shonda Stansbury, 24, since a major search for her was launched by local law enforcement and rescue groups Jan. 5.

Some even claim to have confronted her, but she still has not contacted her family. Roanoke Rapids officers last went to Wilson Jan. 17 to talk to people who said they've seen her.

Because so many people claim to have seen her, police believe Stansbury really is in Wilson. But because they and the family cannot directly verify Stansbury's whereabouts, they are keeping her in their computer system as a missing person.

Jackie Stansbury, Shonda's sister, said in a phone interview that she and her family have gone to Wilson several times to look for Shonda. Though they have seen women who look like her, they have not found her, and will only believe she is in Wilson when they see her. “It would be nice if it was (Shonda), but I don't think it is,” she said.

Both the police and Stansbury's family have the same main priority: To make sure she is safe. Jackie Stansbury said that above all, she hopes her sister will contact her family at (252) 538-7352 to le them know she is OK

http://tinyurl.com/2l92nf
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« Reply #7 on: March 20, 2008, 07:17:30 PM »

This website says there was a search fplanned or her on Jan. 18, 2008. Then there is no follow-up report...strange case, indeed.

It won't allow copy/paste

http://angelsthatcare.blogspot.com/2008/01/shonda-stansbury.html
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« Reply #8 on: March 28, 2008, 03:01:42 PM »

Police: Stansbury may be in danger

 February 08, 2008

ROANOKE RAPIDS - The city's police department believes Shonda Stansbury, missing since December 2006, may be in danger.

“We are gravely concerned something serious might have happened to her,” Administrative Officer Andy Jackson told the Daily Herald Thursday.

What makes police so concerned is that records indicate she has not used her Social Security number nor has she sought public assistance in more than a year.

While there have been several sightings of a person who looks like the 25-year-old Stansbury, “No law enforcement officer has made contact and her family has not heard from her in over a year,” said Jackson.

The last search for Stansbury was conducted this past Saturday using six cadaver dogs provided by the Wilmington-based Community United Effort for Missing Persons.

That search, conducted in the Thelma area where a person matching her description was seen being chased by two men on Dec. 14, 2006, was held because law enforcement and other emergency services personnel wanted to make sure they hadn't missed anything in a similar effort last year, Jackson said.

As in the first search, those looking for signs of Stansbury Saturday found no clues. While one dog did make a hit on a scent and a backhoe was called in to dig, nothing was found.

Stansbury's mother first reported her daughter missing Dec. 14, 2006, telling authorities she had not seen or heard from her since Dec. 7 at 1 p.m. “Her mother advised she would call every day.”

The last reported sighting of the woman was on Dec. 9 of 2006, when she was seen being dropped off at Westside Grocery around 6 a.m.

Later on in the day, she was reported missing when someone using a cell phone called 911 at Information Grocery at the intersection of N.C. Highway 903 and U.S. 158. The caller reported seeing a nude white female running down the road beside the store being chased by two black males.

“She was pretty sure it could be Shonda Stansbury,” Jackson said.

The caller, who was fearful to intervene because of possible retaliation, observed blood dripping from the woman's mouth.

Checks of area hospitals turned up no results and since then there have been no confirmed sightings of her, only Halifax County Crimestoppers calls of possible sightings of her in the Wilson area.

Stansbury may have a substance abuse problem, Jackson said, which adds to the concern for her well-being. “It (substance abuse) can take you in areas where a lot of criminal activity goes on. Our concern is she may have met the wrong people.”

It is important that people be on the look-out for her, not only for her own safety but for the well-being of her family.

“The family is deserving of some type of closure,” Jackson said. “You can feel her mother's grief in wanting to know where her daughter is. Her mom just wants some closure. She (Shonda) needs to let her (family) know and if someone has seen her, the family deserves to know.”

Stansbury is Caucasian, stands about 5-feet, 5-inches tall and weighs 110 to 120 pounds, with brownish-blonde hair and blue eyes, and is missing her four front teeth.

She was last seen wearing blue jeans, a blue West Coast Choppers coat and white tennis shoes. She has a tattoo of a rose on her chest and a heart tattoo on her ankle with her daughter's name.

Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Roanoke Rapids Police Department at 533-2810 or Crimestoppers at 583-4444.

http://www.rrdailyherald.com/articles/2008/02/08/news/news2.txt
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« Reply #9 on: July 30, 2008, 02:38:43 PM »

http://ncmissingpersons.org/otrr_trip.htm

Missing Persons Tour 2008

 Thursday, August 21st 11:30AM-12:30 PM      1004 Jefferson Street (Residence)      Roanoke Rapids, NC
Shonda Stansbury
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« Reply #10 on: July 31, 2008, 06:36:08 AM »

http://ncmissingpersons.org/otrr_trip.htm

Missing Persons Tour 2008

 Thursday, August 21st 11:30AM-12:30 PM      1004 Jefferson Street (Residence)      Roanoke Rapids, NC
Shonda Stansbury

If someone goes on the whole tour, how do they get from place to place?
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« Reply #11 on: August 04, 2008, 10:02:40 AM »

National Tour Rallies North Carolina to Revive Missing Persons Cases

Advocates Are Traveling Cross-Country in the 5th Annual “On the Road to Remember” Tour

Wilmington, NC – For the fifth year, volunteers from the North Carolina-based CUE Center for Missing Persons will set out on another cross country tour to raise awareness of missing children and adults. The team is scheduled to make numerous appearances throughout North Carolina in August/September; distributing a trail of DVD’s, press kits and valuable information concerning 110 missing persons and 6 unsolved homicide cases. Many North Carolina cases are included in this year’s tour and several will be highlighted at the groups pre planned rally stops that will include participation from law enforcement agencies, advocates - organizations, families of the missing and local and state officials.

 
“After so many years, missing persons and homicide cases fade from the public’s radar, but for the families and friends left behind, the nightmare continues — every minute of every day,” said CUE Founder, Monica Caison, who is leading the caravan of volunteers”. “We make this trip each year to assure no case fades from memory and to support the families who remain searching for a resolution. They need our help and the community’s help to bring forth information.”

 The 2008 tour, On the Road to Remember will depart from Wilmington, NC on August 21st, and will end more than 5, 299 miles later returning the volunteers to their home state North Carolina, on September 2nd. Hundreds of volunteers will take part in various legs of the tour, which will include thirty rally stops, traveling thru seventeen states in an effort to promote a public awareness.

 North Carolina – RALLY STOPS

    * Family of Missing – Travis Baker – September 1st at 7:30 pm

(Across) Bunker Hill Exxon 3723 Oxford School Road Catawba, NC 28609

    *  McDowell County Sheriff Office & Family of Missing - Sheila Noblitt – Sept. 1st at 5;00 pm

Old Fort Depot 25 East Main Street Old Fort, North Carolina 28762

    * Kristen Foundation – September 2nd at 11:00 am

Frazier Park 1202 W 4th Street Charlotte, NC 28202

    * Family of Missing - Carol Batten Dowless – Septemebr 2nd at 4:00 pm

Wal-Mart (Parking Lot) 200 Columbus Corner Whiteville, NC 28472

    * Family of Missing – Shonda Stansbury – August 21st at 11:30 am

Residence 1004 Jefferson Street Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina

 

For a complete tour schedule visit CUE’s website and click on the Road Tour button; www.ncmissingpersons.org

 
National Tour Purpose and Inspiration

      The annual tour was created to generate new interest in cold cases of missing people across our nation. The inspiration came in 2004 from the case of North Carolina college student Leah Roberts, who had gone on a cross-country trip of self-exploration. Her wrecked and abandoned vehicle was found, but Leah is still missing. Leah’s case went cold and interest faded until CUE volunteers set out on a grueling 14-day trip to retrace her route and inform the media of all those who were missing in the path of the tour. In the years to follow, it only seemed right to keep hope alive after families across the country voiced the need for more help and supported the tour.

 

National Tour Objective

The national road tour, called “On the Road to Remember,” is an awareness campaign that focuses on missing persons cases that have gone cold or have not received appropriate media coverage on the local level – much less the national level.. The tour, which travels through many states annually, provides that attention.

 In all cases of missing people, it is vital to inform the public of the missing person’s circumstances quickly and to disseminate that information to the media and the public. In most cases where details are released immediately to the public through an organized campaign, the public brings forth information that aids in the investigation and or the location of the victim. The media plays a significant role in getting the word out on the behalf of the missing person and should be recognized as a vital resource to any investigation.

 Interest in many of the cases we have featured in previous tours has been renewed. The media has learned about local cases they were unaware of; case investigations have been renewed, and searches conducted. Information has resulted in new leads in some cases, and has even helped identify an unknown decedent. And finally, some of the missing have been found, which is the main reason we conduct the tour every year, despite the toll it takes on our all-volunteer staff.

 t is the belief of the CUE Center for Missing Persons that all investigations, the public, volunteers and the media should work in collaboration on cases involving missing children and adults; until this happens,  there will continue to be cases of the missing labeled “cold” or “inactive.”

http://tinyurl.com/5or6bh
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« Reply #12 on: November 01, 2008, 02:24:46 PM »



http://www.someoneismissing.com/north-carolina/shonda-stansbury.htm
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« Reply #13 on: February 20, 2009, 03:54:13 PM »

Cold cases in Roanoke Rapids
Trying to solve Shonda’s mystery

Wednesday, February 18, 2009
ROANOKE RAPIDS — Dec. 14, 2006. Two things happen that day leaving law enforcement still trying to solve the mystery and family members looking for answers. Shonda Stansbury is reported missing around 10:15 a.m. by her mother and a woman driving near Information Grocery sees a woman matching her description fleeing from two men. The chased woman is naked and appears to be bleeding. Since Dec. 14, 2006, there have been only fleeting sightings of Stansbury, who was 24 at the time, the mother of three, a woman who was trying to shake a drug addiction and alcohol problem and devote more time to her family, says Capt. Andy Jackson of the Roanoke Rapids Police Department.

Those sightings sent detectives to Wilson County only to come up with nothing.

What has happened to her?

“What bothers us,” Jackson said, “is we have contacted agencies who can check on whether a Social Security number has been used across the United States, used for welfare or in search of lawful employment. Her number has not been used since she was missing. That raises a red flag.”

Another concern: “In high crime areas you are more likely to run into the police. A police officer would have made contact. She is in (missing person and other law enforcement data banks) as missing or endangered.”

The call came in at 10:10 a.m. Shonda’s mother called to tell police she hadn’t seen or heard from her daughter since Dec. 7, at 1 p.m., unusual because Shonda would always check-in no matter the situation.

The initial investigation showed Shonda was dropped off that day at Westside Grocery around 6 a.m.

Officers checked the places she was known to frequent: The 900 block of Vance Street, Zoo Road, Great Falls Circle.

The last known sighting of her was prior to Dec. 12, when she visited friends at Great Falls Trailer Park on W. 10th Street. On Dec. 9 she was asked to leave. She overstayed her welcome, Jackson said.

Then came a call around 11:27 the evening of Dec. 14, 2006. It was a call, Jackson said, that would change the scope of the investigation.

From a cell phone a woman called 911 saying she saw Shonda running behind Information Grocery. The woman knew her, knew what she looked liked. She said it appeared Shonda had blood on her face while chased by two black males. She was screaming for help, the woman told a 911 dispatcher she thought was located in Halifax County.

The caller said she did not intervene for fear of her own life. It ended up she was talking to a dispatcher in Warren County and when her call was transferred, supposedly to Halifax, it went to Brunswick County, Va., instead. Brunswick bounced the call to Halifax, crucial minutes lost when someone is being chased. “That is the nature of cell phones,” Jackson said. “There are places close to the river here where the call goes to Northampton. The signal bounces off the closest tower.”

Once Halifax was notified, a deputy was on the scene in 8 seconds. The deputy spoke with people at Information Grocery, which is located at the intersection of N.C. 903 and U.S. Highway 158. “They hadn’t seen anything,” Jackson said. “The deputy looked around the area.” There were no signs of a disturbance.

On Dec. 22 an extensive search of the area was done with no success. A follow-up search was done Jan. 5, 2007, and again on Feb. 2, 2008, with help of three cadaver dogs, some 80 acres to the Gaston Dam area was searched.

These dogs are trained to locate human scent, even on bones. A hit was made by a trash pile. The land was excavated and investigators sifted through the earth piece by piece and came up with nothing, Jackson said. “Something used to be there.”

As Christmas of 2006 came and went there were no signs of Shonda. “She used to be a waitress,” Jackson said. “She had an outgoing personality. She had three small children who were very important to her. What really alarmed the family was when the father dropped them at the house for Christmas ... and Shonda was a no-show. She didn’t come. She didn’t call.”

One of the men the caller saw chasing Shonda was approximately 5 feet, 8 inches tall with dark skin. He was wearing a ball cap and was possibly bald. He had big arms and a stocky build and was wearing jeans and a white T-shirt and believed to be between 28 to 32 years old.

The other man was described as standing approximately 5 feet, 6 inches tall with a medium build and light skin. He wore his hair in dreadlocks and may have been wearing Timberland boots, jeans with patches on them and an oversize button-down shirt, possibly brown or light brown.

Shonda is 5 feet, 5 inches tall, and weighs approximately 120 pounds. She has brown hair and blue eyes and was last seen wearing a gray blouse, blue jeans and a blue West Coast Choppers jacket. She has a tattoo of a rose on her chest and a heart tattoo on her ankle with her daughter's name.

Jackson doesn’t buy rumors Shonda just wanted to be left alone. “She hadn’t indicated anything to the family she didn’t want to see them anymore or she wanted to be left alone. The kids were an important part of her life. She visited friends and the visits stopped.”

Shonda’s case is one of three unsolved cases the police department is investigating, Jackson said. The others are the murders of businessman Shelby Salmon and Peanut Woodley. “We’d like to see them solved in 2009,” he said. “They need to be solved this year.”

Anyone with information on the cases is encouraged to call Detective Jeff Baggett at 533-2819 or Halifax County Crimestoppers at 583-4444. All callers will be kept confidential.

comments at the link
http://www.rrdailyherald.com/articles/2009/02/18/news/doc499c57d5eca3f754336155.txt
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« Reply #14 on: June 05, 2012, 06:54:51 AM »

http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/s/stansbury_shonda.html
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