Ol’Otis
The Picasso of the Ghetto
Chilling Final Photos of Murder Victims Taken by Their Killers
just gonna leave this here
i'm thru for 2day
just gonna leave this here
i'm thru for 2day
I know what military planes look likeThat's a real military plane built for stealth and very common knowledge lol...
read about this earlierDon't know if this has been posted already or not but I was listening to the stuff you you should know podcast and they covered this unsolved mystery.
The Unsolved Mystery Disappearance of the Sodder Children
The Children Who Went Up In Smoke (Sodder Children Disappearance)
On Christmas Eve, 1945, the Sodder family home burned down. The cause was traced to defective wiring despite the fact that Christmas tree lights were still on after the fire started. The oldest two sons and daughter and the youngest daughter survived, but the five middle children were missing and no trace of their remains were found. Believing that the fire was a cover for the abduction of their children, George and Jennie Sodder spent a fortune on detectives to investigate.
Several pieces of evidence and eyewitnesses backed up George's kidnapping belief. In 1968, a photo, supposedly from Louis Sodder, was mailed to the surviving family; on the back was the message: “Louis Sodder, I love brother, Frankie. Ilil boys A90132 (or 90135)”. Detective C.C. Tinsley was hired to investigate the photo and where it came from, but he vanished and was never seen again.
A billboard describing the family mystery was erected near the site of their house. Local law enforcement did not do any investigation into the children’s whereabouts. The coroner's report declared them legally dead.
George Sodder eventually died in 1969; Jennie in 1988. The billboard now no longer stands.
Suspects: None known, but speculation suggests the kids were abducted by an illegal child-selling agency similar to Georgia Tann's with help from the local police. Two months before the fire, the Sodders had an argument with another Fayetteville resident who tried to sell them life insurance. He warned that their house would burn and the children would vanish. He was also a member of the coroner’s jury which ruled the fire accidental.
Mystery Photo
Other amateur sleuths point out that Mr. Sodder owned a coal-trucking business. The coal industry was under constant pressure from the Mafia, which may have been involved in the children's disappearance. "90132" was a postal code for Palermo, Sicily at the time. The Sodders themselves were of Italian descent; the original name was Soddu.
Extra Notes: This case has been confused with other "Unsolved Mysteries" cases. It has not been aired in any episode.
Results: Unsolved
B-2 spirit stealth bomber. Literally took 1 min or less to Google...I know what military planes look like
I swear this shyt looked weird , I regret not saving that video
I've even tried googling planes that looked like it and found nothing , it didn't look like a regular plane to me , kinda reminded me of a PlayStation controller but with LONG grip handles , shyt had me scared as fukk
B-2 spirit stealth bomber. Literally took 1 min or less to Google...
I'm not even American and I know this shyt
I know what that's isB-2 spirit stealth bomber. Literally took 1 min or less to Google...
I'm not even American and I know this shyt
HOUSTON -- The remains of a 17-year -old girl have been identified nearly 20 years after she disappeared.
Jessica Cain was last seen in 1997 after leaving a high school party in Houston.
The remains were found March 18 after investigators dug for more than three weeks in a pasture pointed out by 56-year-old William Reece. He's already serving a 60-year sentence for kidnapping one woman.
Reece also led authorities to remains identified as those of 20-year-old college student Kelli Cox, who had been missing from Denton in North Texas since 1997.
Cain's family say they are relieved to know what finally happened to her.
Investigator Audrey Carter of the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences says the remains were identified through DNA analysis.
Kathy Teague and her daughter, Vinyette Teague
Vinyette Teague`s mysterious abduction was a very brief news story in the major Chicago papers and newscasts in the summer of 1983. Vinyette was a sweet but cautious child, Kathy Teague said, and was very particular about who could hold her. On the night of June 25, 1983, she perched most of the evening in the lap of a trusted neighbor who was helping watch Teague`s four kids while Teague and Vinyette`s father, went to a drive-in movie. The air was thick and hot, and the neighbor, Kathy Teague`s mother, her two sisters and her cousin were sitting with a large group of neighbors out in a porch area playing cards and talking. The phone rang and Kathy Teague`s mother went inside the apartment. Then her sisters drifted off and the cousin left and the trusted neighbor went to do the dishes.
A short time later, Vinyette was gone. No one had seen anything. She was 18 months old and was not even wearing any shoes.
Kathy Teague arrived home at 3 a.m. The first neighbor who saw her in the parking lot screamed from a fifth-floor window, ``Kathy! Kathy! Kathy!`` Her voice echoed in the brick and asphalt canyon even as they reverberate today in memory: ``Kathy! Kathy! Kathy! Do you have your baby?`` After Vinyette disappeared, Kathy Teague searched Robert Taylor Homes building to building, floor to floor, door to door. She pawed through incinerator ashes and peered down the elevator shafts. ``In a sense, I had given up on life,`` she said. ``Everything in my mind was blank. I couldn`t even think.``
No ransom note ever arrived, no scrap of clothing was ever found. Crank callers phoned to say Vinyette`s body had turned up in a bag by the railroad tracks or cut to shreds on the roof of a nearby restaurant. Another caller put a young girl on the line and had her holler, ``Mommy, mommy, mommy!``
Kathy Teague`s best and most optimistic guess is that someone saw Vinyette at the playground the afternoon she disappeared and decided to adopt her. ``She was a really pretty child, with a big, beautiful smile,`` Teague said. ``And I`m not just saying that because I`m her mother. The feeling in my heart is that she`s alive - that someone just wanted her for their own.``She still has nightmares about Vinyette`s abduction and she feels her absence sharply around the holidays and the anniversary of the disappearance.
you'll be surprisedAuthorities identify remains of teen missing since 1997
shyt like this makes think its missing people buried everywhere
I'm a Search and Rescue Officer for the US Forest Service, I have some stories to tell • /r/nosleep
I just spent most my day reading this shyt
I dunno about all the stairs bullshyt but the rest of that shyt got a nikka looking over his shoulder at work in the broad daylight
goin be layind bed all night