• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.
I don't know anything at all about, Sharon Marshall ..
Never heard of her, what's her story?

It's actually really desperately sad - Sharon Marshall was proven to be an alias to a young woman - a mother - who was killed in a hit and run by a man believed to be her Husband but it turned out he was a kidnapper and a perv as well as a murderer , having previously been her 'step Father' from an early age. Her small Son was also killed after being taken from school by the same guy. (Turns out Delano was not the Father to the little boy .)

The whole story remained a mystery for years but she was finally identified in 2014 as Suzanne Maree Sevakis, kidnapped from her Mother as a small child.

The whole story behind the case and the man responsible is pretty sickening. I feel so sorry for that girl.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_Delano_Floyd

Edited post to adjust invalid link *
 
Last edited:
The whole story behind the case and the man responsible is pretty sickening. I feel so sorry for that girl.

"The boy's fate is unknown. Sevakis's mother attempted to file kidnapping charges, but was told by local authorities that as their stepfather, he had a right to take the children"

Wow. How the fuck. If investigators had simply done their fucking job initially so many lives and so much trauma could have been avoided. Did the mom continue looking or pursuing it? Wonder why the girl never spoke out to anyone. Bizarre.

"Floyd has a lengthy criminal record. He was first arrested in 1960 at the age of 17 after a gunfight with police following a robbery. Two years later, he was convicted of the abduction and rape of a young girl from a bowling alley. In 1973, after serving a federal prison sentence for a 1963 bank robbery conviction, Floyd fled the area while on parole, and was a fugitive at the time of the Commesso murder."

How did someone like this fly under the radar with a kidnapped kid? Such a bizarre fucking story.
 
It's actually really desperately sad - Sharon Marshall was proven to be an alias to a young woman - a mother - who was killed in a hit and run by a man believed to be her Husband but it turned out he was a kidnapper and a perv as well as a murderer , having previously been her 'step Father' from an early age. Her small Son was also killed after being taken from school by the same guy. (Turns out Delano was not the Father to the little boy .)

The whole story remained a mystery for years but she was finally identified in 2014 as Suzanne Maree Sevakis, kidnapped from her Mother as a small child.

The whole story behind the case and the man responsible is pretty sickening. I feel so sorry for that girl.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_Delano_Floyd

Edited post to adjust invalid link *

Wow - Thank you, I'm going to read up on the case ..
 
Wow - Thank you, I'm going to read up on the case ..

It's really interesting but horrible .

Sharon/Suzanne was a gifted science student and tipped to work for NASA. She gained a scholarship but was taken away and became married to Delano instead.

The police found old photographs of her aged around 3-5 being sexually abused by Delano too.

I can only say that this Young woman was incredibly strong to have got as far as she did , considering the circumstances . She probably never remembered her real Mother and Delano would have fed her a pack of lies, plus imagine her psyche after being with that maniac all her life.

And I totally agree with @JackBurton - the authorities at the time failed her and her little brother - who was never found - and the Mother did look for them for many years . Delano had an extensive history relating to kidnap and abuse and had taken spouses children before , how did he get away with everything for so long ?
 
In opposite corners of the country, two families were on flip sides of the same tragic mystery. One, in Texas, had lost a wife to suicide in 2010, then learned that she was not who she claimed. So who was she? All their digging turned up nothing.

The other, in Pennsylvania, had lost a family member, too, back in 1986. The young woman had fled abruptly, leaving no clue. Where was she? They spent 30 years hoping she was alive and safe.

Earlier this year, a former Social Security Administration (SSA) investigator, Joe Velling, became convinced the dead woman, known as Lori Ruff, and the Pennsylvania woman were one and the same.

It had been a long road to get to this point. The SSA investigates identity theft, and Lori clearly had stolen someone else’s identity — that of a 2-year-old girl from Pierce County who had died in a fire decades earlier. An aide to a Texas congressman had asked Velling to look into the case, after being contacted by the Ruff family.

There was no indication she adopted the new identity for financial gain. So why did she do it? Velling used every tool he had, but turned up nothing. This was highly unusual.

With the support of the Ruff family, Velling turned to a reporter he knew at The Seattle Times in 2013, hoping that crowdsourcing would provide an answer. Surely somebody would recognize her from years ago. The story, which ran on the front page and later in publications all around the world, captured the online imagination.

For three years, a large cadre of dogged online sleuths has been trying to solve the mystery.


Late last year, one of them called Velling with a theory: Lori Ruff came from a family back East, she said. The Cassidys. Based on the evidence she provided, Velling believed she was right. Earlier this year, he took a plane to Philadelphia to knock on the door of one member of the Cassidy family. He had no idea what he was walking into. He didn’t even know the missing woman’s name.

The Ruffs had provided him some photos, and he began laying them out on the table.

“My God,” the family member said, “that’s Kimberly!”

Kimberly McLean, who left home at 18 and never came back.

During the last three years, theories about Lori Ruff’s identity have run the gamut. Had she run away from a polygamous cult? An abusive partner? Had she committed a terrible crime? Was she in a witness-protection program? Some were even more outlandish. Did she really take her own life?

But as Velling would soon learn, the truth was much less sensational than all of the theories.

And also, in a way, even more puzzling than the mystery itself.

For most of the online sleuths,investigating the Lori Ruff case was a matter of poring through records of missing-persons photos looking for women who resembled Lori. There is no doubt they have spent thousands of hours doing this.

Colleen Fitzpatrick, a nuclear-physicist-turned-forensic genealogist, went about the investigation differently. As a scientist, she worked on lasers and optics for 25 years, often using beams of light as a yardstick for measuring something. “People used to ask what I did for a living,” she recalled. “I’d say I shine light on things.”

But in the early 2000s, she began writing a book about her hobby. “Forensic Genealogy” explained methodologies she had developed to solve different kinds of puzzles. Some have called it “CSI meets Roots.”

She has helped Holocaust survivors search for family members and adoptees find birthparents. She has helped estate lawyers track down heirs. In one case that made the news, she was able to find descendants of an unidentified child who died when the Titanic sank in 1912.

When Fitzpatrick read the story about Lori, she immediately thought about DNA. Lori and her husband, Blake Ruff, had a daughter in 2008 and that daughter shared Lori’s DNA. If the daughter provided a DNA sample, there was a way to subtract Blake’s DNA profile from the daughter’s, leaving what is essentially Lori’s.

The Ruff family sent a saliva sample to23andMe and Ancestry.com, companies that analyze DNA and provide tools to help people trace their family histories online. The family figured that the girl would one day want to know about her mother.

“We were just wanting to at least have the ability to give her the answers,” said Miles Darby, Blake’s brother-in-law.


Fitzpatrick found a number of people whose DNA matched up with Lori’s, but most of them were distant cousins. They wouldn’t be any help in identifying Lori.


Just one person came up as a first cousin: a man named Michael Cassidy. There were no other details, just a name, and there are probably thousands of people by that name in the United States. Which was the right one? Contacting him via the genealogy sites drew no response. It’s unclear if he even saw the messages.

The Ruffs, along with Fitzpatrick and Velling, had reached a dead end.

And so they waited. Fitzpatrick periodically checked back in with the sites, working other angles as they popped up. All told, she figures she spent hundreds of hours on this. There were some clues pointing to the Pennsylvania area.

But for years, there was no real breakthrough. Then, finally, the name of a third cousin came up. That was too distant of a relative to provide answers to Lori’s identity.

But she could provide some clues through her family tree.

Fitzpatrick created a family tree based on the third cousin’s ancestry, tracing her family’s roots to an Irish great-great-grandfather who was born in 1848. Then — and this is the key — she traced that family tree all the way down another branch and came to a familiar name: Michael Cassidy.


“Suddenly, I had Lori’s extended family in front of me,” Fitzpatrick realized.

With the family tree built, Fitzpatrick was able to zero in on the right Michael Cassidy, who lived in the Philadelphia area.

Between Facebook, online obituaries, public records and people-finder tools used by private investigators, she put together a picture of the Cassidy family. She gleaned from the family tree that Lori’s mother almost certainly was one of Michael’s aunts. But which one? And what was Lori’s real name? There was no way to know.

She called Velling. He was convinced she was right.

Confirmation
When Velling flew to Philadelphia in March, he decided to forgo Michael Cassidy and instead approach another family member.

But how would he introduce himself? Hi, I don’t know you and you don’t know me, but I think you’re related to this woman — who we also don’t know the name of. Can you help?


But it had to be done. “I had a boss that said, if something lands on your lap, do something,” Velling recalled. “I had news. Bad or good, I had it. And it had to get relayed.”

When he arrived at the relative’s workplace, he had no identification showing he was a federal investigator. He was just a retired government employee, after all. He wore a suit, kept a nonthreatening demeanor and hoped for the best.

“Do you have a moment for me to tell you a story?” he remembers saying to the woman before launching into the tale of Lori and the DNA and the great-great grandfather.

But the story is so convoluted, it wasn’t really getting him anywhere. Then he pulled out the photos, laying them on the table one-by-one. Finally, he got to Lori’s most recent driver’s-license picture, taken when she was around 40. That’s when it clicked. “My God, that’s Kimberly!”

“The hair on the back of my neck stood up when I realized she knew who this person was,” Velling recalls. He had fielded countless emails from well-meaning people who thought they had an answer. They were contacting him long after The Seattle Times published Lori’s story. Now, he knew the answer.

The next day, Velling spoke with the large extended family, answering as many of their questions as he could. “They were angst-ridden,” he said. One thing was certain: it was definitely Kimberly.
 
Her mother was Michael Cassidy’s aunt, Deanne. And Deanne was then married to James McLean.

Lori Ruff was Kimberly McLean.

Later, Deanne took a DNA test and confirmed the match.

Vanished
To Deanne, now 80, the news was devastating. She had last seen Kimberly 30 years ago, and now she learned her daughter was dead.

Certainly, there is much that we don’t, and can’t, know about Kimberly’s disappearance. All of these events occurred a long time ago.

Deanne declined to speak with The Seattle Times, referring questions to her brother, Tom Cassidy.


Tom Cassidy provided some additional information. Kimberly grew up in the Philadelphia suburbs, along with a sister. Deanne was a stay-at-home mom. Kimberly’s dad was a carpenter and volunteer firefighter.

Cassidy said there were rides on fire engines and a magnificent hand-built playhouse in the backyard. There were family vacations and day trips and family dinners every night.

When Kimberly was an adolescent, her parents divorced. Deanne met a man named Robert Becker, remarried and moved the girls to Wyncote, Pa., where Kimberly attended Bishop McDevitt High School.

This was around the time the troubles started, according to Cassidy.

“Kim never adjusted to the new house and the divorce,” he said. There were new rules, a new school, and at some point, it became too much for Kimberly.

In 1986, when she was 18, she moved to King of Prussia, Pa., about a half-hour away, Cassidy said. Then one day, she told her mom she was leaving for good. Don’t come after me, she warned.

The family never heard from her again. They tried everything they could think of, but Kimberly had ensured they would never find her by changing her name not once but twice.

“For the life of me, we can’t figure why,” Cassidy said.

So, Lori Ruff wasn’t in a cult, as far as anyone can tell. She wasn’t a spy. She was a teenage runaway.

After leaving home in 1986, there are two years that Velling can’t account for. Lori didn’t pick up the false identity until 1988. It’s clear she spent at least some time in Idaho, California and Las Vegas before moving to Texas, according to the investigation.

She got her GED, graduated from the University of Texas, and met Blake Ruff through church. She and Blake had a child. It was an ordinary life.

Two families connected
To Tom Cassidy, it underscores the sadness of it all, the futility.

Can you imagine, Cassidy asked? There was nobody from the family there to congratulate her on her college graduation. There was nobody there when she got married. She had a child without her mom there to help.

“Her birthday was October 16, 1968,” he repeated several times. Every year when that day came around, Lori couldn’t celebrate. “Can you imagine the burden of all that fakeness? How it all added up?”

The Ruffs saw what that entailed. They watched as Lori got progressively more troubled, culminating in her suicide.

“At least now we know her identity and know she had a family that loved her,” said Darby, Blake Ruff’s brother-in-law. Now, Lori and Blake’s daughter has a new set of grandparents on the East Coast, and a whole new batch of cousins. The two families have been connected.

To Velling, the real story of Lori Ruff is in some ways even harder to understand than any of the wild speculation.

“I wondered if she was AWOL from the Army. We wondered if maybe there was some connection to Las Vegas and she was caught up in some kind of crime-family stuff. Nothing like that ever turned up.”

As far as Velling can tell, she was never connected to any criminal investigation, as Kimberly McLean or as Lori Ruff.

Velling hopes the speculation stops with the publication of this article, but suspects it won’t.
LINK
 
It appears she couldn't live with herself after all the lies, fakes identities and what she had done. My guess is she was to humiliated to face her bio family after the way she left and it became more difficult to go back with each passing year. The stress of that building up over the years obviously took its toll. If only she had confided in her husband or someone. This may all have turned out differently. Everyone handles their fears differently. I'm glad her true identity was finally found and that her family has some answers and some closure. I have to give the husband and his family a lot of kudos for doing their best to solve this mystery all these years and for reuniting the little girl with family they never knew she had...especially before the grandma passes...she is 80 after all. Still lots of unanswered questions for every one...the answers all taken to the grave.
 
I find it highly unlikely that a new house and school would result in so much angst that she fled and never looked back.
My mind instantly went to the new step father.
 
This is so much less fun than I was hoping for. :pout: I was really hoping she was involved in some twisted murder plot and the mafia was coming for her or something.
 
I find it highly unlikely that a new house and school would result in so much angst that she fled and never looked back.
My mind instantly went to the new step father.

Heading into Grade 12 ... sure as heck would be hard to keep your angst down and leave your friends, home and fellow graduates in senior year. It quite sucks actually - I'm a military brat and had to do it. Not fun at all and that's before you even toss in new rules.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top