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AMY MIHALJEVIC: 10-year-old kidnapped and murdered in Bay Village, OH - Oct 1989

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Amy Renee Mihaljevic (December 11, 1978 – October 27, 1989) was a ten-year-old American elementary school student who was kidnapped and murdered in the U.S. state of Ohio in 1989. Her murder case received national attention. The story of her unsolved kidnapping and murder was presented by John Walsh on the television show America's Most Wanted during the program's early years. To date, her killer has not been found, yet the case remains active; new information in 2007 and 2013 has increased hopes of resolving the case.


Disappearance and murder
On October 27, 1989, Amy Mihaljevic was kidnapped from the Bay Square Shopping Center in Bay Village, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland.[1] The abductor had contacted Mihaljevic by telephone and arranged to meet her on the pretext of buying a gift for her mother because she had recently been promoted, as he told her.[2] On February 8, 1990, the girl's body was found in a field, close to the road, off County Road 1181, Ruggles Township in rural Ashland County, Ohio.[1][3]

Evidence found at the scene of the crime suggests that Mihaljevic's body was probably dumped there shortly after her abduction. Based on findings by the Cuyahoga County coroner, Mihaljevic's last meal was some sort of soy substance, possibly an artificial chicken product or Chinese food. Other evidence includes the presence of yellow/gold colored fibers on her body.[4] It appears her killer also took several souvenirs including the girl's horse-riding boots, her denim backpack, a binder with "Buick, Best in Class" written on the front clasp, and turquoise earrings in the shape of horse heads.[5] Blood believed to be that of Mihaljevic was found in her underwear, indicating she may have been raped or sexually abused.[4] Mitochondrial DNA from the crime scene was sampled, which may be used in the future to compare to suspects.[6][7]

Investigation
The Bay Village Police and the FBI conducted an extensive investigation into her disappearance and murder. The case generated thousands of leads. Dozens of suspects were asked to take lie-detector tests, but no one has ever been charged with the crime. Law enforcement continues to pursue leads and monitor suspects to the present day. 20,000 interviews have taken place during the investigation.[6] This was described to be the biggest search in Ohio since the 1951 disappearance of Beverly Potts.[8]

In November 2006, it was revealed that several other young girls had received phone calls similar to the ones Mihaljevic received in the weeks prior to her abduction. The unknown male caller claimed that he worked with the girl’s mother and wanted help buying a present to celebrate her promotion. The girls who received these calls lived in North Olmsted, a suburb near Bay Village; some had unlisted phone numbers.[6] This new information was considered significant by investigators.[9] Mihaljevic and the others who received such calls had all visited the local Lake Erie Nature and Science Center, which had a visitors' logbook by the front door. The girls may have signed the book and added personal information including phone numbers and addresses.[6]

Bay Village police collected DNA samples from several potential suspects in the case in December 2006. As of early 2007, it was reported that a longtime suspect in the case had retained legal counsel.[9]

In late 2013, investigator Phil Torsney returned from retirement to work on the case, which he was originally assigned to after the murder.[10] Torsney is well known for aiding in the capture of Whitey Bulger, who was a long-time member of the FBI Top Ten Most Wanted.[11] Torsney stated that he believed that Mihaljevic was transported out of Bay Village after she was kidnapped, as the town is "too dense, too close-knit, to be a likely place to commit murder." However, he stated that the murder likely took place in Ashland County, which the murderer was probably familiar with.[6]

The FBI announced in March 2014 that a $25,000 reward is available to anyone who can provide information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the killer of Mihaljevic.[12] In October, it was increased to $27,000.[13]

In 2016, it was discovered that a blanket and curtain located near Mihaljevic's body had hairs on them similar to the Mihaljevic's dog. They were possibly used to conceal the victim's body before she was left in the field.[14]

In 2018, investigators were also following a potential link between Joseph Newton Chandler III and the murder of Mihaljevic.[15][16] In 2019, authorities stated that they have extensively investigated all suspects in the case and feel that if her killer would be identified, he would likely not be a part of their list.[7]


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Ok i have learned a bit more. There is a sketch of her abductor by some eye witnesses. This article is by James Renner.


Why I Can’t Be An Atheist​

April 21, 2013 admin 12 Comments
I wish I had that luxury.

That’s what I tell people now, when they ask me if I’m an atheist. I don’t mean it to sound condescending or flippant. I really do wish I had the luxury of doubt that atheists have. I wish I could forget what I experienced in Key West in 2008.

I’m a journalist. My purview is true crime. I’ve written several articles on unsolved murders, met with Death Row inmates, spoken to families of missing women. The story I’ve spent the most time on is the unsolved abduction and murder of Amy Mihaljevic. She was ten years old, my age, when a well-dressed man took her from the Bay Village shopping plaza on October 27, 1989. Her body was found a couple months later in an old wheat field in Ashland County.

Over the years, the FBI has compiled a “Top 25” list of suspects in the case, many of whom I’ve interviewed by now. In 2008, I learned of a man named Dean Runkle, who was once a teacher in the small Cleveland suburb of Amherst. On that Top 25 list, he would be the man at the top.

Runkle is an interesting suspect for many reasons. At the time of Amy’s abduction, he lived two roads away from where her body was found. He was driving the same make and model of Pontiac sedan that took Amy away. A witness to the abduction picked him out of a lineup of 30 people. We know he had an inappropriate relationship with one of his middle school students. By the time he appeared on my radar, he had quit teaching and had fled to Key West, where he lived in a homeless shelter for a few months before finding a minimum wage job.

Compelled to meet every suspect in the case, I flew to Miami on my own dime. I rented a car and drove down through the Keys. When I got there, late that first night, I stopped at the Wendy’s on the north side of the island. Back in Amherst, Wendy’s was where Runkle liked to take his “special” students after school. I figured it was worth checking out.

That was the first time I heard the voice.

It announced itself like a thought, like the voice of my conscience. What are you doing here? You’re wasting your time. What are you doing in Florida while your little boy is home without a father?

I took it as doubt. My own doubt. A bit of myself questioning whether coming to Florida was a good idea. But we know the sound of our own conscience, don’t we? This sounded different. Angry. Mean.

You think you’ll just walk in and find him at Wendy’s? The first place you stop? You’re pathetic. You’re wasting your time.

Still, full of these doubtful thoughts, I did go in. I looked for him in the crowds, eating dinner, but he wasn’t there. I returned to the car and the voice was gone.

I spent the next day searching for Runkle. I showed his photograph to people along the main road near Hemmingway’s old house. Some people recognized him as the old man who sometimes played ragtime piano at the corner bar. Yes, that’s him. Runkle had a piano at the school in Amherst and sometimes played ragtime for the kids. He kept the piano not too far from the cot he had set up in the closet off his classroom.

I knew I was close. But nobody had seen Runkle lately. And nobody knew where on the island he lived.

Finally, I visited a church on the eastern side of the island. It was dinnertime and the deacon was serving food to a line of about fifty homeless people. I showed Runkle’s picture around. One man suggested I talk to a fellow named Mr. Frisby. “If anyone knows your guy, it’s Mr. Frisby. He’s been here forever.”

They called him Mr. Frisby because he was always on the beach, tossing a Frisby to himself. That’s where I found him. “Do you know this man?” I asked.

“Sure,” said Mr. Frisby. “That’s my buddy Dean. He used to look out for me. Good guy.”

“Do you know where he is?”
“Probably at work.”

“Where’s he work?”

“Wendy’s.”

The voice returned as I neared the Wendy’s. Louder this time, almost as if it was an AM radio broadcast and my mind was the tuner and we’d just come through a tunnel.

Leave him alone. Go back to your family. Dean didn’t do it. You’re wasting your time.

This time I went straight to the register. “Is Dean Runkle here?” I asked.

“He should be,” the woman behind the counter said. “He’s the manager. But he called in sick, today. First time in like ever.”

“I’m an old friend from Amherst,” I said. “Can you tell me where he lives?”

She went to check his work documents. No luck. “He never put an address on his paperwork,” she said. “But I think he lives somewhere on the Northeastern corner of the island.”

I drove that way. But time had become an issue and there was just too much island to search. If I didn’t leave for Miami in the next thirty minutes, I would miss my flight home. Despondent, I pulled up to a stop sign and parked the car for a moment.

For the first time in many years, I sent a message out to the universe. Call it a cry for help. Call it a prayer, because that’s what it was. Help me, I asked. If I’m supposed to meet this guy, help me. Amy, if you’re listening…

At that moment, Dean Runkle walked in front of my car.

I pulled through the stop sign and parked on the curb. I jumped out of the car and yelled, “Hey Dean!” He stopped and turned and I jogged over to him. There on the street corner we spoke for several minutes and he told me some things that only implicated himself more in the murder of that little girl. Eventually, he ended the conversation and walked away. But I managed to get a picture of him. I needed that picture. Because… who the hell would ever believe that story when I got home?

I’m a smart guy. I’ve written some books. I believe in evolution. I’ve studied physics. I respect a few great scientists who are vocal atheists. They are the men who say, condescendingly, “What is your proof? Show me some proof that there is a God.”

Be careful what you wish for, is what I think.

I’ve experienced proof of the power of prayer. And that voice that turned on like a radio broadcast at Wendy’s… That teasing, degrading voice. I’d like to doubt that, I really would. I don’t want to believe that demons are real.

This is a story I’ve told a few times over the years but never published. I guess I feared what it would do to my credibility as a journalist. Or what my atheist friends might think of me. I know it sounds crazy.

But it happened. It happened just like that.

As far as a specific religion, I believe there is truth in Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. In Buddhism. In just about anything outside Scientology. Probably everybody got a piece of it right. I take my son to Christian Sunday School because I’ve benefitted from enough grace to believe that the young carpenter from Nazareth was a little more than human.

All I know for sure is that there is more going on than science alone can explain. It’s only called Faith when there is no proof so I don’t know what I’d call it. But I do know there is something… more.
Well that's different--seems more about him finding religion than about finding Amy. Glad he did though.

What did Runkle say to him that made him seem more guilty?

Runkle had inappropriate relationships with students? That's not inappropriate, that's a crime and he should have been already behind bars. add

Wendy's let him work there without an address on file?

He never calls in sick but did that day yet was not so sick he didn't walk in front of this guy's car and was out and about. I almost wonder if someone clued him in that someone was there looking for him so he called in sick.

Not sure what to make of it all.
 
Well that's different--seems more about him finding religion than about finding Amy. Glad he did though.

What did Runkle say to him that made him seem more guilty?

Runkle had inappropriate relationships with students? That's not inappropriate, that's a crime and he should have been already behind bars. add

Wendy's let him work there without an address on file?

He never calls in sick but did that day yet was not so sick he didn't walk in front of this guy's car and was out and about. I almost wonder if someone clued him in that someone was there looking for him so he called in sick.

Not sure what to make of it all.
He has written more about it in a book I believe. I haven't had time to read much more. I think he knew he was a suspect and is why he left for Florida. The sketch looks just like him.
 
Here's another similar article with a bit more info.

That was long but yeah, a lot of info in it. I wonder if LE has any DNA? Been so long since I looked at this case, not sure if that has ever come up or been answered.

He sure seems like the perfect fit and matches the sketch. His volunteering at the nature center and calling the girls who had been there is how I'it all connected Amy to those girls.

I'm not sure I knew how many kids saw her, and the one at least saw him.
 
That was long but yeah, a lot of info in it. I wonder if LE has any DNA? Been so long since I looked at this case, not sure if that has ever come up or been answered.

He sure seems like the perfect fit and matches the sketch. His volunteering at the nature center and calling the girls who had been there is how I'it all connected Amy to those girls.

I'm not sure I knew how many kids saw her, and the one at least saw him.
They do have DNA I believe but it was not previously enough to test. But now with the advances in testing of hair without a root they are hoping for a DNA match from hairs on a blanket found with Amy's body.
 
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FBI hopes DNA can solve decades-old case of Amy Mihaljevic​

The FBI is testing a hair from the decades-old murder of Amy Mihaljevic in hopes it could lead to the man who abducted and killed the 10-year-old girl.


Three hairs found on Mihaljevic’s clothes, which investigators already determined did not belong to her or her family, are being sent for testing in California.

Investigators hope that DNA can be extracted from the hairs and a profile developed to potentially locate the man who killed her.
 

FBI hopes DNA can solve decades-old case of Amy Mihaljevic​

The FBI is testing a hair from the decades-old murder of Amy Mihaljevic in hopes it could lead to the man who abducted and killed the 10-year-old girl.


Three hairs found on Mihaljevic’s clothes, which investigators already determined did not belong to her or her family, are being sent for testing in California.

Investigators hope that DNA can be extracted from the hairs and a profile developed to potentially locate the man who killed her.

DNA and Familial DNA is the best innovation in crime fighting, ever.
 
My thanks to Cousin Dupree and GrandmaBear for sharing your insight and observations re (other) potential links between the perp and families of other girls who reportedly also had received a similar call.
I think the fact that the prior calls were to girls who all lived in North Olmed is very interesting to contemplate the reason why, I mean, I think it's possible it's more than just incidental.
Now, I'd have to ponder that idea a while longer before I'd have anything more to add but thanks again for very good food for thought!
 
Well that's different--seems more about him finding religion than about finding Amy. Glad he did though.

What did Runkle say to him that made him seem more guilty?

Runkle had inappropriate relationships with students? That's not inappropriate, that's a crime and he should have been already behind bars. add

Wendy's let him work there without an address on file?

He never calls in sick but did that day yet was not so sick he didn't walk in front of this guy's car and was out and about. I almost wonder if someone clued him in that someone was there looking for him so he called in sick.

Not sure what to make of it all.
Well I think he is very likely the prime suspect IMO. Hoping the profiling nails him. This is the company mentioned upthread.

Astrea Forensics in San Jose, Ca

And here's their website.

 
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I'm finding that info re similar calls to other girls is sketchy as to how many, where, and when. Regardless, I think multiple such instances are surely of evidentiary value but needless to say, from where I sit, I'd certainly have to know a lot more about each one before I'd have any idea or any more to say about it.
 

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