Unsolved or Cold Cases


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Diane Agat


It was in a convenience store in Odessa, Florida, that 40-year-old Diane Agat was last seen in 1988. Three days later, her mother received a call from a woman who sounded like Diane, crying, "Help, help, let me out." She tried to call the number back, but got no response. Days later, one of Diane's fingertips was found in the same convenience store. Two weeks later, her folded clothes were found. The rest of her belongings were eventually found in a bag labelled "Diane."


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Maura Murray


A nursing student at University of Massachusetts Amherst, Maura Murray ditched class one day to drive off campus. She crashed her car somewhere in New Hampshire. The last person to see her was someone living in the area who asked Murray if she should call the police. By the time police arrived, Murray had disappeared forever.



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 De Simone


Police search for 1979 murder jewellery

By Ben Mitchell

She had been raped and strangled, and her jewelry had been stolen.rt Police are taking part in the search on land next to the main Portsmouth to London railway line near Copnor Bridge, Portsmouth.
The move comes after police named David Lace, who committed suicide in 1988, as the likely murderer.

Specialist search offiers from Hampshire police and British Transport Police are taking part in the search on land next to the main Portsmouth to London railway line near Copnor Bridge, Portsmouth.

The half-naked body of gas board clerk Miss De Simone was found on December 5 1979 in her car parked at the rear of the Tom Tackle pub in Commercial Road, Southampton.

She had been raped and strangled, and her jewellery had been stolen.
Police were carrying out a search today for jewelry stolen from murdered gas board clerk Teresa De Simone when she was killed 30 years ago.

Lace was 17 at the time of the murder and was living in his home city of Portsmouth.
He took his own life in December 1988 when he was living in Brixham, Devon, and did not feature as part of the original police investigation.

The murder investigation was re-opened when DNA evidence proved that the man jailed for 27 years for the crime, Sean Hodgson, was innocent.

Lace's body was exhumed last month from a cemetery in Portsmouth and DNA testing on his body was a billion-to-one match for samples found at the original crime scene, according to Hampshire police.

Detective Chief Inspector Philip McTavish, the senior investigating officer, said: "We now know the suspect's identity and the fact that he may have discarded or concealed items belonging to the victim at this location.

"Whilst I would not want to raise any expectation that we would recover any such items after nearly 30 years, it is important that we explore this opportunity as far as we possibly can.

"Careful consideration has been given as to whether this search is a viable process and it is being undertaken by specially trained and equipped officers.

"It provides the investigation team with an opportunity to be sure that every possible effort has now been made to recover items belonging to Teresa De Simone.

"We will provide any result of the search in due course."

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