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Over the years New Hampshire State Police have got hundreds of leads in this case. Investigators distributed composite drawings of the victims throughout the Northeast and Quebec, and several people in the town of Allenstown said the woman resembled someone who had left town with several children a few years earlier before. The woman was tracked down in two weeks and was found alive and living in Arizona with the children. New Hampshire State Police got another lead about A mother and daughter who had vanished from a Maine Indian reservation. Their descriptions and the time of their disappearance seemed a perfect match, but several days later, they found the woman and child in another town in Maine. Investigators checked every elementary school in the state of New Hampshire and medical records of missing persons from Cape Cod to California but got nowhere. One of the major roadblocks in this case is the fact the most law enforcement agencies do not provide or keep adequate information on missing persons cases.<br />
 
Over the years New Hampshire State Police have got hundreds of leads in this case. Investigators distributed composite drawings of the victims throughout the Northeast and Quebec, and several people in the town of Allenstown said the woman resembled someone who had left town with several children a few years earlier before. The woman was tracked down in two weeks and was found alive and living in Arizona with the children. New Hampshire State Police got another lead about A mother and daughter who had vanished from a Maine Indian reservation. Their descriptions and the time of their disappearance seemed a perfect match, but several days later, they found the woman and child in another town in Maine. Investigators checked every elementary school in the state of New Hampshire and medical records of missing persons from Cape Cod to California but got nowhere. One of the major roadblocks in this case is the fact the most law enforcement agencies do not provide or keep adequate information on missing persons cases.<br />
 
In 2000, the case took another turn when the case reassigned to another New Hampshire stae trooper. The officer returned to the area where the bodies would found and 700 yards away found an other 55-gallon drum. Inside that drum were the remains of two little girls that DNA linked to the adult woman. The first new remains were that of a white female child (1-3 years old) and the fourth was also a white female child (4-8 years old). In 2010 the New Hampshire State Police and New Hampshire Attorney General office credted the state's first cold case unit and has put this case on there list of cases they are working on. The New Hampshire Cold Case unit has been using an new technique that links isotopes found in drinking water to different regions of the country by using hairs from the unidentified female with the hopes of find where they may have came from.<br />
 
In 2000, the case took another turn when the case reassigned to another New Hampshire stae trooper. The officer returned to the area where the bodies would found and 700 yards away found an other 55-gallon drum. Inside that drum were the remains of two little girls that DNA linked to the adult woman. The first new remains were that of a white female child (1-3 years old) and the fourth was also a white female child (4-8 years old). In 2010 the New Hampshire State Police and New Hampshire Attorney General office credted the state's first cold case unit and has put this case on there list of cases they are working on. The New Hampshire Cold Case unit has been using an new technique that links isotopes found in drinking water to different regions of the country by using hairs from the unidentified female with the hopes of find where they may have came from.<br />
To date no one has been able to come up with the identities of these individuals.
+
To date no one has been able to come up with the identities of these individuals. <br />
 
Update
 
 
New DNA testing in 2011 has shown the older Jane Doe is not the biological mother of any of young Jane does and the middle child is not biological related to any of the other Jane does in this case<br />
 
 
'''Suspects: '''New Hampshire State Police in 2000 looked at serial killer John Edward Robinson in this case because of his M.O. matched this case but he was rule out. There have been theories that this crime was the work of a serial killer or an organized crime member but never pan out because of the area some believe the killer was someone who was local or know the area well because it was not close to any main highways. One possible theory is that the victims would have been killed by a boyfriend or husband.<br />
 
'''Suspects: '''New Hampshire State Police in 2000 looked at serial killer John Edward Robinson in this case because of his M.O. matched this case but he was rule out. There have been theories that this crime was the work of a serial killer or an organized crime member but never pan out because of the area some believe the killer was someone who was local or know the area well because it was not close to any main highways. One possible theory is that the victims would have been killed by a boyfriend or husband.<br />
 
'''Extra Notes:''' This case has yet to be featured on ''Unsolved Mysteries.''<br />
 
'''Extra Notes:''' This case has yet to be featured on ''Unsolved Mysteries.''<br />
 
'''Results:''' Unsolved, New DNA testing in 2011 has shown that the older Jane Doe is not the biological mother of any of young Jane does and the middle child is not biological related to any of the other Jane does in this case<br />
'''Results:''' Unsolved<br />
 
 
'''Links:'''
 
'''Links:'''
 
* [http://doj.nh.gov/criminal/cold-case/victim-list/allenstown.htm Allentown Victims]
 
* [http://doj.nh.gov/criminal/cold-case/victim-list/allenstown.htm Allentown Victims]

Revision as of 17:28, 14 February 2012

Allenstown 1yearold01
Allenstown 4yearold01
Allenstown 5yearold01

Allenstown1

Allenstown 23yearold01

yOUNG adult

19013292

Allenstown NH

Real Name: Unidentified Female and Three Children
Nicknames: No known nicknames
Location: Allenstown, New Hampshire
Date: November 1985-May 2000

Case

Details: On November 10, 1985, A hunter came across a tipped-over, 55-gallon drum and trash near Bear Brook State Park, not far from a burned-down convenience store that burned down in the 80s. Inside the 55-gallon drum, he found what would become one of New Hampshire's most haunting and bizarre crimes to date. The remains of an adult woman (23-33 years old) and a little girl (8-10 years old) were found wrapped within plastic inside the drum. The New Hampshire State Police looked at missing peoples from the 70s to to the 80s but were unable to identify the bodies, but they were able to rule out some of New Hampshire's most famous missing peoples in this case, such as Tammy Belanger and Page Jennings. In 1986 the New Hampshire State Police got their first major tip when they looked into the disappearance of Grace Reapp and her five year old daughter, Gracie Reapp, from the state of Vermont. It is believed Grace Reapp and her daughter, Gracie, were killed by Michael Reapp, the husband and father, but they would rule them out through their New Hampshire dental records. Michael Reapp was killed when he committed suicide while police were trying to arrest him for an armed carjacking in 1997. The remains of Grace Reapp or her daughter Gracie Reapp would never found.
Over the years New Hampshire State Police have got hundreds of leads in this case. Investigators distributed composite drawings of the victims throughout the Northeast and Quebec, and several people in the town of Allenstown said the woman resembled someone who had left town with several children a few years earlier before. The woman was tracked down in two weeks and was found alive and living in Arizona with the children. New Hampshire State Police got another lead about A mother and daughter who had vanished from a Maine Indian reservation. Their descriptions and the time of their disappearance seemed a perfect match, but several days later, they found the woman and child in another town in Maine. Investigators checked every elementary school in the state of New Hampshire and medical records of missing persons from Cape Cod to California but got nowhere. One of the major roadblocks in this case is the fact the most law enforcement agencies do not provide or keep adequate information on missing persons cases.
In 2000, the case took another turn when the case reassigned to another New Hampshire stae trooper. The officer returned to the area where the bodies would found and 700 yards away found an other 55-gallon drum. Inside that drum were the remains of two little girls that DNA linked to the adult woman. The first new remains were that of a white female child (1-3 years old) and the fourth was also a white female child (4-8 years old). In 2010 the New Hampshire State Police and New Hampshire Attorney General office credted the state's first cold case unit and has put this case on there list of cases they are working on. The New Hampshire Cold Case unit has been using an new technique that links isotopes found in drinking water to different regions of the country by using hairs from the unidentified female with the hopes of find where they may have came from.
To date no one has been able to come up with the identities of these individuals.
Suspects: New Hampshire State Police in 2000 looked at serial killer John Edward Robinson in this case because of his M.O. matched this case but he was rule out. There have been theories that this crime was the work of a serial killer or an organized crime member but never pan out because of the area some believe the killer was someone who was local or know the area well because it was not close to any main highways. One possible theory is that the victims would have been killed by a boyfriend or husband.
Extra Notes: This case has yet to be featured on Unsolved Mysteries.
Results: Unsolved, New DNA testing in 2011 has shown that the older Jane Doe is not the biological mother of any of young Jane does and the middle child is not biological related to any of the other Jane does in this case
Links: