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View Full Version : Colorado teen never returned from morning jog



RaVen Blackehart
January 20th, 2009, 09:23 AM
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Beth Miller, a high school student on summer break, went out for a morning jog on a bright August morning more than 15 years ago and never returned home.
Beth Miller was 14 in August 1983, when she went out for a jog and never returned.

Beth Miller was 14 in August 1983, when she went out for a jog and never returned.

The 14-year-old left her home in Idaho Springs, Colorado, around 10 a.m. on August 16, 1983. When she wasn't back that afternoon, her family called police.

Miller normally jogged in a nearby park. Investigators say she may have been seen last talking with a man who was behind the wheel of a red pickup truck with a white camper top and out-of-state license plates.

Immediately after Miller's disappearance, many red pickups were stopped but none could be linked to Miller's disappearance.

Miller was not carrying any cash or personal belongings. Family and friends say she always left a note for her parents if she planned to be gone long.

But on the day she vanished, Miller left no note, her family told police. She didn't take the money she earned babysitting with her. Her parents insisted she would not have left intentionally for such a long time.

Over the years, the Beth Miller case has taken many twists and turns. Most recently, a grand jury investigation was called in 2007 but no indictments were returned.

Several theories are still being investigated, but over the years no clues have surfaced. No remains have been found that could be identified as Miller's.

Police had suspicions that an Ohio man may have been involved in Miller's abduction, but he was never charged.

A serial killer from Mississippi claimed he had killed Beth Miller, but police dismissed the lead because his story didn't add up.

The most credible lead focused on a New Mexico man named Edward Apodaca, who is now dead. His former girlfriend claimed that she had helped him bury Miller in the mountains near Idaho Springs, but when police searched with cadaver dogs and excavated the area, no remains were found.

Several sightings of women thought to be Beth Miller have been reported. In 1995, a woman who was picked up by police in Tampa, Florida, claimed she was Beth Miller. Miller's family flew down to meet the woman only to find that she was not their daughter.

Bone fragments, deteriorated cloth and a single blond hair were found in Empire, Colorado, in 1994. These items could not be identified. When newer forensic techniques were developed along with DNA testing a decade later, police sent the evidence to the FBI lab.

"Those results were inconclusive and the bone fragments were identified as animal, not human remains," said Eagle County District Attorney Mark Hurlbert. "It is an open investigation and with help from the public or tips, we may still be able to solve this case," Hurlbert said. continued at link......

http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/01/20/grace.coldcase.miller/index.html

malq
January 21st, 2009, 03:26 AM
she would be around 40 now. Would it not be interesting if she surfaced? It is good to revisit these.