The largest "ideal robberies" that have not yet been solved (6 photos). World Secrets Still Unsolved The Ghost of Saint Mark's Episcopal Church

All about switches

Many people consider the church a sacred and very comfortable place. Some of them cannot even imagine that something terrible could happen in such a place. However, churches hold many unsolved mysteries, including murders, disappearances, supernatural events, and even inexplicable acts of "divine intervention."

1. The mysterious suicide of "Wm L. Toomey"

On December 4, 1982, a very tanned stranger walked into the Heart of Christ Catholic Church in Boise, Idaho. The man looked to be no more than forty, and he seemed to be waiting for his turn in the confessional, which at that moment was busy. Soon the man was found dead on the floor of the church.

It was later determined that he had swallowed a cyanide capsule. He did not have any documents with him, he was found with only $ 1,900 and a note saying that this money should be spent on his funeral. The signature on the note was "Wm L. Toomey", but this could not be the suicide's real name, since "Wm L. Toomey" is the name of a company that makes vestments for the clergy. All further attempts to identify the stranger have come to nothing, but there is one disturbing theory about this suicide.

On December 21, 1981, Catholic priest Patrick Ryan was killed in a motel in Odessa, Texas. He was found naked, with his hands tied behind his back. The night before, Ryan's father had a love date with a suspect named James Harry Reyos. After a drunk Reyos himself called the police and confessed everything, he was sentenced to 20 years for the murder of Ryan. However, Reyos later retracted his confession, and there is evidence that he may not even have been in Odessa on the night of the murder.

This evidence is backed up by a similar murder of a priest that took place the following year. In November 1982, another Catholic priest, Father Benjamin Carrier, was murdered at a motel in Yuma, Arizona. Like Ryan's father, he was found naked, with his hands tied behind his back.

The later "Wm L. Toomey" wore a characteristic buckle on his belt, which was bought in Arizona, in one of the gift shops. Some believe that this man was responsible for the murders of both priests. Perhaps he was going to die right in the confessional, after the absolution, but miscalculated the time it would take the cyanide to kill him.

2. The Disappearance of Father Henryk Borinsky

After leaving his native Poland and moving to Bradford, England, Father Henryk Borinsky became a Catholic priest for 1,500 members of the local Polish community. Borinsky was supposed to replace another Polish priest, Bolesław Martinellis, who had ceased to command the respect of the Polish diaspora.

Father Borinsky had served as a priest for 10 months when, on the evening of July 13, 1953, he received a mysterious telephone call. The conversation was in Polish, but Borinsky's landlady overheard him. According to her, the dialogue ended with the words "okay, I'm going." After that, Borinsky left his apartment without taking anything with him and was never seen again.

At the time, many Polish residents of Bradford were refugees who had fled their communist country. It was believed that agents of the Polish secret services were frequent visitors to Bradford, and it was well known that Borinsky's father was very outspoken in demonstrating his anti-communist views. According to one version, rumors about these views were actively spread by Martinellis, whose place was taken by Borinsky, and who was very angry because of this. It is believed that it was Martinellis who helped the Polish agents lure Borinsky out of the house, after which the priest was kidnapped and killed.

Shortly before his disappearance, Borinsky allegedly received a call from Martinellis asking for a meeting with Borinsky, however Martinellis denied that such a call ever took place. A month later, Martinellis claimed that two men attacked him in his home and ordered him to remain silent about the circumstances of Borinsky's disappearance. Two years later, Martinellis died of a heart attack, and Borinsky's disappearance remains unsolved to this day.

3. Ghost of St. Mark's Episcopal Church

St. Mark's Episcopal Church, built in 1868, is considered an architectural monument in Cheyenne, Wyoming. There are also rumors that a ghost lives there, and one very unusual story is connected with this ghost.

In 1886, it was decided to build a new tower in the church. Two Swedish masons were hired for this work, but they mysteriously disappeared before the tower was completed. Because of this incident, the tower stood unfinished until 1927. All this time, a serious problem was the inexplicable terrible events that took place in the church and were accompanied by the appearance of a mysterious ghostly figure. Every time the tower was scheduled to be completed, the workers were too scared to finish the job.

Decades later, the Reverend Eugene Todd served as pastor at St. Mark's Church. It was then that he received an unexpected explanation for all the mysterious cases. One day he was called to a nursing home in Denver, where an elderly dying patient asked to see him. The man claimed to be one of the two Swedish masons who disappeared while working on the tower many years ago. The second mason accidentally fell and crashed while working on the tower. His partner was very scared, because he thought that he could be accused of murder. As a result, he decided to wall up the body in cement in one of the wall sections of the tower, and then escaped. Although the body of the deceased stonemason was never found, many people consider the old man's story plausible and believe that the ghost of the stonemason now haunts the church.

4. The murder of Alfred Kunz's father

On March 4, 1998, the small Danish community in Wisconsin was shocked by the news that Father Alfred Kunz had been murdered. The 67-year-old priest, who had served at St. Michael's for 32 years, was found at the parochial school with his throat slit. The murder was the subject of a thorough investigation, but to this day many unconfirmed theories surround this death. One of the most incredible assumptions is that the priest was killed by a group of Satanists.

Kunz often collaborated with Malachi Martin, a renowned exorcist and author of numerous books on the subject. Martin claimed that a week before his murder, Koontz was preparing to perform an exorcism on a Wisconsin man who was believed to be possessed by demons. Martin expressed the opinion that the priest's life was in danger from that moment on. Martin also suggested that the handwriting murder is very similar to the work of devil worshipers.

Another controversial suggestion is that Father Kunz had a sexual relationship with some of his parishioners, and was possibly killed by a jealous mistress.

Despite all these theories, the Dane County Sheriff's Office claims they have a prime suspect, but he left town immediately after the crime was committed, and the police do not yet have enough evidence to charge. So the murder of Kunz's father remains unsolved to this day.

5. UFO sighting in Papua New Guinea

In April 1959, the respected Anglican priest William Gill served as a missionary in the village of Boyanay in Papua New Guinea. One day, he noticed that a strange light was crossing a distant mountain. The same light appeared later on the evening of June 26, but this time Jill's father was outside the mission building and there were many witnesses around him. As the light moved towards the people, it soon became apparent that it was a luminous object shaped like a disk, under which there seemed to be four huge legs. Witnesses also made out what could have been alien figures moving about on the "upper deck" of the facility.

People observed a strange object in close proximity for 45 minutes, then it disappeared. And when he returned an hour later, he was accompanied by other, brighter flying objects. They hovered over the mission for 4 hours and then disappeared again, but the very first object and 2 smaller objects returned to the village the next evening. This time Jill's father and one of his companions decided to wave to the aliens on the "deck". Surprisingly, the figures waved back. The next night, a total of 8 UFOs appeared over the village, and this was the last appearance. Before they disappeared, everyone heard a deafening metallic screech that seemed to be coming from the top of the mission. But no signs of damage were found on the roof. This story is corroborated by over 3 dozen witnesses, including Gill's father himself, and is one of the most plausible UFO sightings in history.

6 The Murder Of Harold And Thelma Swain

In 1985, Harold Swain served as a deacon at a Baptist church in Waverly, Georgia. On the evening of March 11, a mysterious stranger arrived at the church. When Harold met the stranger in the lobby, the man drew his weapon and fired several shots at the priest. Harold's wife, Thelma, ran into the lobby to help, but the killer shot her too. After that, he fled the scene of the crime, leaving only his glasses there.

In 2000, a suspect named Dennis Perry was convicted of the Swains' murder and sentenced to two life terms. Perry allegedly threatened to kill Harold two weeks before the crime, but some evidence suggests he may be innocent. Perry claimed that at the time of the murder, the Swains were working in Atlanta, which is a six-hour drive from the crime scene. Thus, he was physically unable to commit the murder. A witness who saw the shooter led police to another suspect named Donny Barrentine, who allegedly bragged about killing the Swains at a party. However, the police lost several key pieces of evidence, including the killer's glasses, which disappeared during the filming of one of the episodes of the TV show Unsolved Mysteries. Since Perry had excellent eyesight and never wore glasses, this piece of evidence may have exonerated him. But in order to avoid the death penalty, Perry voluntarily waived his right to appeal, so he remains in prison to this day, while the real killer may still be at large.

7 The Murder Of Jacob Gerard

During the Sunday service, which took place on February 27, 1994, at a Lutheran church in Vernon, New Jersey, a shocking find was discovered: the body of a newborn boy, lying in the snow outside one of the church windows. The unidentified child weighed approximately 3 kg, and his naked body was wrapped in a thin blanket. Unfortunately, the baby's body was completely frozen, so the autopsy was not performed until 3 days later, when the body had thawed.

Probably the child was placed near the church at night, and he died of hypothermia. The umbilical cord was still on the baby's body, but it looked like it had been torn rather than cut off, suggesting that the baby was not born in a hospital. A memorial service was held for the unidentified child, after which he was buried in North Hadiston Church Cemetery. It turned out that the body of the child was found just when a sermon was going on in the church, which told the story of Jacob (Eng. Jacob - Jacob). And Saint Gerard in the Catholic Church is considered the patron saint of newborns. So the unidentified child at the memorial service was called Jacob Gerard.

Since Jacob was perfectly healthy at the time of his birth, the case was classified as a murder. DNA samples were taken from the blanket in which the child was wrapped in order to determine who was responsible for his death. But even now, 20 years later, the murder of Jacob Gerard remains unsolved.

8 Rothwell Bone Crypt

Built in the 13th century, the Church of the Holy Trinity is a medieval architectural monument in the city of Rothwell, England. However, located directly below the church, the chapel contains one of the most eerie sights ever found in this temple: the entire chamber of the chapel is lined with human bones.

Known as the "Bone Crypt", this chapel is filled with the remains of approximately 1,500 people. Previously, the building was sealed, but the legend says that in 1700, under the gravedigger, who happened to be in the church, the floor collapsed. What he saw in the hidden chapel supposedly drove the man insane.

The bones were eventually sorted and stacked on separate shelves, and the Crypt of Bones has since become a very popular attraction. The intrigue is that no one knows the origin of the bones. The most common theory is that they belong to victims of the plague. Another theory claims that all these people were formerly soldiers who were killed during a major battle in 1645. It is also possible that many of them were originally buried in the church cemetery, but then they were moved to the crypt, because a hospital was built on the site of the cemetery in the 16th century. Scientists hope to use radiocarbon dating to determine the age and possibly even the identity of deceased people. But until that happens, the Bone Crypt remains one of England's darkest unsolved mysteries.

9 The Assassination Of Irene Garza

On April 16, 1960, 25-year-old schoolteacher and former beauty queen Irene Garza gathered for confession at the Heart of Christ Catholic Church in McCullen, Texas. She never returned home, and her body was found 5 days later in a canal outside the city. Someone hit the girl on the head with a blunt object and raped her, after which she was strangled.

Shortly thereafter, a slide-viewer was found in the same canal. It was tied to a long cord that may have also been used to tie Garza's hands. When the owner of this apparatus showed up to demand its return, the matter took an alarming turn. The device belonged to John Feith, a Christ's Heart minister who confessed to Garza before she disappeared. A month before the murder of Garza, Feith was accused of attempting to rape another young parishioner, but in that case he got off with only a $500 fine. Garza was wearing Phate's broken glasses. And on his hands were found scratches, which, according to him, he inflicted on himself by accident.

Despite such strong evidence of Feith's guilt, no one wanted to admit that a Catholic priest could be guilty of such a terrible crime, and he was eventually transferred to a monastery in Missouri. And a few decades later, there were two witnesses who said that Faith confessed to them that he killed Garza. However, the district attorney understood that there was not enough evidence to charge Feith, and one of the witnesses died suddenly. By now, Father Feith is in his 80s and has always officially maintained his innocence. However, he remains the prime suspect in the still unsolved murder of Irene Garza.

10. The mystical salvation of the choir from the West End Baptist Church

On the evening of March 1, 1950, the West End Baptist Church, located in the town of Beatrice, Nebraska, was completely destroyed by an explosion. The explosion itself was caused by a natural gas leak and there was nothing mysterious about it. Mysterious is the chain of almost unbelievable events, as a result of which the lives of 15 people were saved. Some consider these events a real miracle.

The church choir was supposed to meet for a rehearsal at 19:20. All members of the choir were very punctual, but nevertheless, all 15 people were late that evening. As a result, none of them managed to enter the church, which exploded in front of them at 19:27. The choir leader and her daughter, a church pianist, planned to arrive half an hour earlier than the others. However, the daughter fell asleep, as a result, both women were late. A church pastor and his wife arrived late after their daughter spilled soup on her dress. Two other members of the choir did not arrive on time because their cars did not want to start. Other participants were held up by routine activities such as writing a letter, listening to a radio play, completing homework. One person was late despite the fact that he lived literally across the street from the church. As a result, every member of the choir was saved by what can be called either the most amazing coincidence of our time, or divine intervention.

There are mystical stories in the world, the secrets of which have not yet been revealed. We have compiled a selection of the most interesting and mysterious of them. 13 most mystical stories with photos.

1. Mysterious murders at the Hinterkaifeck farm
In 1922, the mysterious murder of six people committed on the small farm of Hinterkaifeck shocked all of Germany. And not only because the murders were committed with horrendous cruelty.
All the circumstances associated with this crime were very strange, even mystical, and to this day it remains unsolved.
During the investigation, more than 100 people were interrogated, but no one was ever arrested. Not a single motive that could somehow explain what happened was also identified.
The maid who worked in the house ran away six months ago, claiming it was haunted. The new girl arrived just a few hours before the murder.
Apparently, the attacker was on the farm for at least a few days - someone fed the cows and ate in the kitchen. In addition, neighbors saw smoke coming from the chimney during the weekend. The photo shows the body of one of the dead, found in a barn.

2. Phoenix Lights
The so-called "Phoenix Lights" are several flying objects that on the night of Thursday, March 13, 1997 were observed by more than 1000 people: in the sky over the states of Arizona and Nevada in the USA and over the state of Sonora in Mexico.
In fact, two strange events occurred that night: a triangular formation of luminous objects that moved across the sky, and several motionless lights hovering over the city of Phoenix. However, in the latest US Air Force, they recognized the lights from the A-10 Warthog aircraft - it turned out that at that time military exercises were taking place in southwestern Arizona.

3 Solway Firth Astronaut
In 1964, the family of Briton Jim Templeton was walking near the Solway Firth. The head of the family decided to take a picture of his five-year-old daughter with Kodak. The Templetons claimed that there was no one else in these marshy places except them. And when the pictures were developed, one of them showed a strange figure peeking out from behind the girl. The analysis showed that the photo was not subjected to any changes.

4. Falling body
The Cooper family has just moved into their new home in Texas. In honor of the housewarming, a festive table was laid, at the same time we decided to take some family photos. And when the pictures were developed, a strange figure appeared on them - it seems that someone's body is either hanging or falling from the ceiling. Of course, the Coopers did not see anything like this during the shooting.

5. Too many hands
The four guys were fooling around taking pictures in the yard. When the film was shown, it turned out that one extra hand appeared on it from nowhere (peeps out from behind the back of a guy in a black shirt).

6. Battle of Los Angeles
This picture was published in the Los Angeles Times on February 26, 1942. To this day, conspiracy theorists and ufologists cite it as evidence of extraterrestrial visits to Earth. They claim that the photo clearly shows that the beams of searchlights fall on an alien flying ship. However, as it turned out, the photo for publication was pretty retouched - this is a standard procedure, which almost all published black-and-white photographs were subjected to to heighten the effect.
The incident itself, captured in the photo, was called a “misunderstanding” by the authorities. The Americans had just survived the Japanese attack, and in general the tension was incredible. Therefore, the military got excited and opened fire on the object, which, most likely, was a harmless weather balloon.

7. Lights of Hessdalen
In 1907, a group of educators, students and scientists set up a scientific camp in Norway to study a mysterious phenomenon called the Hessdalen Fires.
On a clear night, Bjorn Hauge took this picture using a shutter speed of 30 seconds. Spectral analysis showed that the object must be composed of silicon, iron and scandium. This is the most informative, but far from the only photo of the Hessdalen Lights. Scientists are still scratching their heads as to what it could be.

8. Time Traveler
This photo was taken in 1941 during the opening of the South Forks Bridge. The attention of the public was attracted by a young man who was considered by many to be a "time traveler" - because of his modern hairstyle, zip-up sweater, printed T-shirt, fashionable glasses and a soap camera. The whole outfit is clearly not from the 40s. On the left, a camera is highlighted in red, which was actually in use at that time.

9. Black knight
The first photograph of an unknown object, called the "Black Knight", was taken in 1960 by one of the first satellites of the Earth. In polar orbit, an unidentified object is clearly visible, which could not be either a satellite of the USSR or a satellite of the USA. Since then, this object has been seen repeatedly - it appears and disappears at certain time intervals. After carefully studying the images of the object, scientists are inclined to believe that this is a piece of artificial origin.

10. 9/11 attack - the woman from the South Tower
In these two shots, a woman can be seen standing on the edge of the hole in the South Tower after the plane crashed into the building. Her name is Edna Clinton and, not surprisingly, she was on the list of survivors. How she did it is beyond me, considering everything that happened in that part of the building.

11 Skunk Monkey
In 2000, a woman who wished to remain anonymous took two photographs of the mysterious creature and sent it to the Sarasota County Sheriff (Florida). The photographs were accompanied by a letter in which the woman assured that she photographed a strange creature in the backyard of her house. The creature came to her house three nights in a row and stole the apples left on the terrace.

12. UFO in the painting “Madonna with Saint Giovannino”
The painting “Madonna with Saint Giovannino” is by Domenico Ghirlandai (1449-1494) and is currently in the collection of the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence. Above Maria's right shoulder, a mysterious flying object and a man who is watching it are clearly visible.

13. Incident at Lake Falcon
Another encounter with a supposed extraterrestrial civilization took place near Lake Falcon on May 20, 1967.
Someone Stefan Michalak was resting in these places and at some point noticed two descending cigar-shaped objects, one of which landed very close. Michalak claims to have seen the door open and heard voices coming from within.
He tried to speak to the aliens in English, but there was no answer. Then he tried to get closer, but came across an "invisible glass", which, apparently, served as a protection for the object.
Suddenly, Michalak was surrounded by a cloud of air so hot that his clothes caught fire. The man suffered severe burns.

This version of the ascension of an unknown artist from the Austrian village of Ranshofen to the central figure of German National Socialism in the 1930s and ultimately the leader of the nation looks unnecessarily extravagant to most historians. But this is without taking into account the peculiarities of Hitler's preferences and his now well-known penchant for mysticism and the occult.

Supporters of the demonic origin of Hitler's energy power are inclined to believe that Adolf Hitler owes his rapid career rise to ... a deal with the devil. Allegedly, the Fuhrer sold his soul to him in exchange for the prospect of world domination. The impetus for the appearance of such an absurd, at first glance, theory was a discovery made in post-war Berlin in 1946.

The found document, which, according to the apologists of the diabolical conspiracy theory, was later studied by the churchmen of the Vatican, contains nothing less than the text of an agreement with the devil. And the person who signed this treaty is Hitler. Allegedly, Adolf Schicklgruber pawned his soul to evil spirits, and the final date of her "giving back" to the angel of hell comes in 13 years. The signature in blood on the document indicates a specific number - April 30, 1932. As you know, it was on April 30, 1945 that Hitler and Eva Braun, according to the official version, committed suicide in the bunker of the Berlin Reich Chancellery.

Supporters of this mystical hypothesis claim that the blood type on the document is identical to Hitler's blood type.

History is cyclical. In the process of development, people invented something more than once, lost these technologies, and after a while they rediscovered them. Here are four ingenious inventions of the past, the secret of which is still unraveled.

Roman concrete

Many ancient Roman temples, aqueducts and roads are still in excellent condition. And even the harbors, which are more than 2 thousand years old, are surprisingly well preserved, despite the fact that they are constantly undermined by the sea. The secret is in a special building material.

In addition to sand, water, lime, and broken earthenware, Roman concrete also contained one secret ingredient: volcanic ash. It was he, according to modern scientists, who made concrete so durable and timeless. The ash prevents cracks in the material and protects buildings from destruction. The most striking evidence of this can be considered the Pantheon, which has been in Rome since 126 AD.

Fire of Archimedes

Archimedes of Syracuse was born in 287 BC. e. and became famous as one of the most outstanding mathematicians and physicists of his time. In particular, he is credited with the invention of concave mirrors, with which it was possible to destroy ships. To do this, it was necessary to correctly direct the sun's ray onto the mirror: it was refracted and set fire to the tree.

Hosts of the MythBusters attempted to recreate Archimedes' invention, but the temperature was too low to ignite the tree.

Antikythera mechanism

This is one of the most mysterious inventions of the past. The Antikythera mechanism was discovered in 1901 off the Greek island of Antikythera. The find is a bronze mechanism with 37 gears, wheels and dials.

The researchers suggest that the device was used to determine the astronomical position of the Sun, Moon and other planets. The Antikythera Mechanism is dated to the 1st-2nd centuries. BC e. Such mechanisms began to be used again only in the XIV century, so one can only guess how scientists were able to make such a device.

"Death ray"

Renowned inventor Nikola Tesla claimed to have been developing weapons based on directed energy for 40 years. In 1937, he announced that the weapon, called the "Ray of Death", was ready and had even already been tested. It is a particle accelerator capable of firing a beam of directed energy at a distance of up to 400 km. A "death ray" can even melt an airplane engine. Fortunately, the scientist did not find the money to implement his development and the world did not receive a new type of weapon.

According to statistics, every minute on Earth a person disappears without a trace. Sounds scary. Especially if you know that some of these people will never be found, and the mystery of their disappearance will be fought over 10 years later. We remembered the loudest and strangest disappearances of people. Some of them look mystical, and some are downright scary.

Amy Lynn Bradley

23-year-old American Amy Lynn disappeared from the cruise ship on which she traveled with her parents and younger brother. She left the cabin early in the morning, presumably to smoke, as she only took cigarettes and a lighter with her and was barefoot. At five in the morning, her father saw her sleeping in the cabin, and by dawn she was no longer on the ship, although it was searched from bow to stern. Before the disappearance of Amy Lynn, her parents noticed the special attention that the men on board paid to the girl. This led to the theory that the girl was sold into sexual slavery. The theory was later confirmed: in the same year, two Canadian tourists in Curaçao recognized Amy as a girl on the beach, and in 1999, an American sailor who went to a brothel in Curaçao was approached by one of the young women who worked there. However, six years of searching yielded no results. It was not possible to find the girl at the specified address again. In 2005, Amy's parents accidentally saw a photograph that they claim showed their daughter posing in a revealing pose on a bed, while apparently being under the influence of drugs. Amy's parents believe that their daughter was kidnapped and sold into sexual slavery and promise to pay $250,000 for her return. However, the prize still remains unclaimed.

Harold Holt

Harold Holt disappeared without a trace on December 17, 1967, while swimming with friends on an Australian beach. Friends did not immediately raise the alarm: Holt was an experienced swimmer and diver who knew the local waters perfectly, and often sailed into the ocean for a long time. But soon the alarm was raised by the guards: after all, Holt was the prime minister of Australia! The disappearance of a figure of such rank is a tragedy on a national scale, so Holt's body was searched for many days with the involvement of boats, helicopters and military divers. But the search was unsuccessful. The official version says that Holt cramped his legs and drowned, and his body was carried away to the sea by the current. But even supporters of this version argue that it is too much stretch. And the true reason for the disappearance of Harold Holt is still not known to anyone.

Disappearance of the Beaumont Children

The Beaumont children, nine-year-old Jane, seven-year-old Arnna, and four-year-old Grant, took the bus to the beach as usual, but when the mother came to meet them from the return bus at twelve o'clock in the afternoon, the children did not get off and no one saw them. Many eyewitnesses stated that they saw how children willingly played on the beach with a young, slender blond. Mr. and Mrs. Beaumont described their children as extremely shy and incapable of playing so confidently on the beach with a stranger. Then the police suggested that the blonde described by the witnesses was already familiar with the children.

This theory was confirmed by the fact that the mother of the children remembered: shortly before the disappearance, Arnna told her that Jane had made a friend on the beach. Also, the owner of a small shop near the beach said that Jane bought cookies and meat pie from him for an amount that she could not have - parents always gave the children the same amount as pocket money. But the kidnapping theory was shattered when a local postman testified that he saw the children heading home at around 3pm. According to him, the Beaumonts were in high spirits and no man was with them.

Tara Kaliko

In 1988, 19-year-old Tara Kaliko left the house for a little bike ride - and disappeared. One of the witnesses stated that she saw a van driving down the street behind Tara, but the police could not find out anything else. But a year later, in 1989, the police got a strange photograph found in the parking lot of a supermarket. It showed two children or young people bound, their mouths taped shut, in a windowless room (perhaps in the back of a van). There was fear in the eyes of the children. Tara's parents saw the photo and recognized it as their daughter. Who and where took the picture, however, could not be found out. And still, Tara's parents continue to believe that she will return home.

Louis Macherlay

Nlo-mir.ru

Seven-year-old Louis Macherlay disappeared in Allentown, Pennsylvania on June 7, 1984. On this day, he decided to visit an elderly neighbor, whom he often visited with the permission of his parents. However, he did not reach his house. The police searched everything, but to no avail. It wasn't until a month later that Luis's parents remembered a story that had long been considered a childish fantasy. A month before the disappearance, the boy complained to his parents and the school psychologist that some gentleman and his companion were pestering him. But in telling, Louis always mixed up the details of the story and changed the details, so that it was considered an ordinary childhood fantasy. Whether the boy really invented it is still unknown. But his parents are still holding out hope for his return, putting up missing person posters with an identikit of Luis as he might have been in his 30s.

Natalie Holloway

Natalie Holloway disappeared in 2005 while on a trip with her senior class to Aruba. On the eve of departure, she and her girlfriends went to a club where Natalie met three guys. She was seen getting into the car with them, after which she did not appear at the hotel. The trio were interrogated, but they firmly maintained their innocence and demonstrated a completely reliable alibi. However, Natalie's mother did not believe them. Perhaps not in vain, because one of the trio, Joran van der Sloot, was arrested for the brutal murder of another young girl, which he committed exactly on the anniversary of Natalie's murder. However, even behind bars, van der Sloot did not confess to anything, and the fate of Natalie Holloway is still a mystery.

Paula Weldon

fishki.net

The simplest stories are sometimes the most mysterious. Paula Weldon, a college student from Vermont, went for a walk in a nearby wooded area after class. She was seen several times on the way to the favorite park routes for tourists. Finally, she entered the forest ... and no one else saw her. Several days of searching yielded no results. Paula took no documents, no money, no spare clothes with her, so it was impossible to assume that she had run away. Paula's parents, very wealthy people, were also not approached for a ransom. The girl has not been found to this day.

springfield trio

livejournal.com

On July 7, 1992, Susan Streeter, her mother Cheryl Elizabeth Lewitt, and friend Stacey McCall disappeared from Cheryl and Susie's home in Springfield, Missouri. The night before, Susan and Stacey had a big graduation party and went to sleep together at Susan's house. Her mother should have been to bed by now, without waiting for them. However, no one was in the house the next morning. It was just empty. There were no signs of a struggle, no missing things - everything was in its place, including money and documents, without which none of the three would obviously set off on a long journey. The women seem to have vanished into thin air. Nobody knows about their fate until now.

girls,missing in dunes park

Globalscience.ru

Forty-nine years ago, on a sunny Saturday afternoon, three girls left their belongings on a crowded beach and, in their swimsuits, went for a walk on Lake Michigan, an hour southeast of Chicago. It happened on the afternoon of July 2, 1966, in Dunes National Park, Indiana. From that day on, they are considered missing - no trace of the girls has ever been found.

Rebecca Coriam


Rebecca Coriam worked on a cruise ship that ran children's cruises under the auspices of Disney. On March 22, 2011 at 6:00 a.m., CCTV cameras last caught Rebecca talking on the phone in the lobby. Then she went out of there - and no one else saw her. Disney said during the investigation that its experts are sure that Rebecca was washed away by a wave at the moment when she tried to swim in the pool for crew members. However, this version is not confirmed by objective evidence: the pool for the crew is located in such a way that only a huge tsunami can wash away a person from there - and on that day the sea was completely calm. Rebecca's parents claim that the company is hiding something, besides constantly denying them information. Maybe he really hides, but there are simply no other versions of Rebecca's disappearance.

The Mysterious Disappearance of Marian Carver


In 2004, housewife Marian Carver secretly bought herself a ticket for an expensive cruise without telling anyone in her family. Her path on the Mercury liner lay to the coast of Alaska. The cruise was supposed to last a week. But, as it turned out later, according to one of the stewards, Carver's bed remained untouched, at least from the second day of the cruise. When the ship returned to port, the crew simply packed up Carver's belongings, and no one - neither the police nor her family members - was informed of her disappearance. Carver's family, trying to trace her path, came across a mass of suspicious details surrounding her disappearance. For three days, the ship's crew could not answer whether Carver had even boarded the ship. CCTV footage that could shed light on Marian Carver's fate was erased before investigators could see it. The disappearance of Marian Carver has remained a mystery.

George Smith disappeared on honeymoon


Jennifer Hagel and George Smith married in July 2005 in a grand wedding in Rhode Island. Immediately after the party, they went on a honeymoon trip, which was for them a cruise on the liner "Brilliance of the Seas". According to eyewitnesses, the couple had a great time all the way to Turkey. But one evening, the newlyweds had a great drink, which, by the way, was very strange for them, since none of them had a penchant for alcohol. But Jennifer Hagel claims that it all started with drinking. According to her, she and her husband drank so much that she could not get to the cabin, falling asleep in one of the inner corridors of the ship. Arriving at the cabin, however, she did not find a trace of Smith. Searching for her husband to no avail, she raised the alarm, telling rescuers that Smith may have fallen off the ship while drinking on deck or on the cabin balcony.

Despite the search, Smith was never found, and the inconsolable Jennifer received more than a million dollars in compensation from the company. In court, the widow (in the photo she is in black) looked very convincing.

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Subsequently, evil tongues claimed that the whole story looked like a hell of a scam, perhaps even aggravated by murder. But it seems that the shipping company was easier to hush up the scandal than to inflate it, and Jennifer Hagel with a million dollars moved on with her life.

Madeline McCann

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On May 3, 2007, 3-year-old Madeline McCann slept in her hotel room in the Portuguese resort of Praia da Luz, sharing a room with her two-year-old twin brothers. Her parents were nearby, having dinner with friends at the hotel restaurant. Once every half an hour, her mother went up to the room to check if everything was in order. But during the next visit, she found that the bedroom window was open, but the girl was not in the room. The searches made there and then did not yield any results. No one saw near the hotel either a child or suspicious strangers. The police carefully checked the McCanns themselves and were convinced of their innocence. Madeline's parents still spend a lot of money on private investigators trying to find their daughter, but so far without success.

Zeb Quinn

One day in January 2000, student Zeb Quinn arranged with a friend, Robert Owens, to go together to look for a new car for Zeb. Each of the young men drove to the place in their own car, but in the middle of the road, Zeb suddenly informed Robert that he had to leave urgently because of an urgent matter. Then he turned around and left - and they never saw each other again. At least that's what Robert said. Investigators were unable to find any trace of the young man. But there were plenty of mysteries. As it turned out, Zeb's phone did indeed receive a call from his aunt's house. However, the aunt herself and her relatives were not at home at that moment. When they returned, they found traces of forced entry, but nothing was missing. It seemed that the intruder had purposely come into someone else's house to call Zeb. Three weeks later, Zeb's car was discovered, on which female lips were painted in red lipstick, and inside was a Labrador puppy. Further business did not move almost 15 years. Only in 2015 was Robert Owens arrested for the murder of a married couple. After that, everyone decided that it was Owens who killed Zeb Quinn. However, he himself does not admit this, and the fate of Zeb remains unknown.