1.Annette Sagers Korrina Lynne Sagers Malinoski left Mount
Holly Plantation in South Carolina on November 21, 1987, between 11 and 11:30 pm.
Korrina and her husband Stephen had just had a fight and Korrina said she was going for
a drive to calm down.
The next morning, Korrina missed her shift at the convenience store in Summerville that
she'd been employed at for the past six months.
Her boss went looking for her and found her abandoned car just outside the entrance to
the plantation.
She was never seen or heard from again.
Korrina left behind her husband Stephen, and three kids: 11-year-old Annette from a previous
marriage, and sons Thomas and James (fathered by Stephen).
It was hard to believe that Korrina, a devoted mother, would leave her children, but the
town barely had time to recover when nearly a year later, there was another disappearance.
On October 4, 1988, Annette Sagers was waiting at the bus stop just outside the entrance
of Mount Holly Plantation—the same spot her mother disappeared from.
A bus driver drove past Annette's stop at 7 am and reported seeing her waiting for her
school bus with her dog.
At 7:20 am, Annette's bus arrived but no one was there.
Her stepfather Stephen did not know Annette had disappeared until the afternoon, when
she didn't come home from school.
He called the police, telling them he'd found a note at the bus stop.
It read "Dad, momma came back.
Give the boys a hug."
The boys she referred to were her brothers, still too young to be knowledgeable about
the disappearances.
No one saw Annette being picked up at the bus stop in the 20 minutes between the buses.
Handwriting experts confirmed the note was written by Annette.
In 2000, an anonymous caller told police to search for Korrina's body in Sumpter County.
Police took a cadaver-sniffing dog to the heavily wooded area and found nothing.
Was it Stephen who killed his wife and her daughter?
Did Korrina escape a bad marriage and return later for her daughter?
If so, why not take her boys as well?
After the disappearances, Stephen moved to Florida, remarried and had more children.
But Thomas and James bounced around in foster homes before getting adopted.
Stephen relinquished his rights to the boys in 1988, just after Annette disappeared.
To this day Thomas and James have hopes of finding their mother.
At the time of her disappearance she was 26.
She would be 56 today and Annette would be 40.
2.Gary Grant Jr On January 12, 1984, seven-year-old Gary Grant
Jr., the son of a New Jersey police detective, left his Atlantic City home and told his mother
he had an "appointment" with someone.
Given that seven-year-olds aren't exactly known for their business acumen, his mother
thought that was strange, but figured the kid was being silly and let him out to play
with his friends.
He never came back, and two days later he was found bludgeoned to death with a metal
pipe.
The investigation soon turned to Gary's 12-year-old friend Carl "Boo" Mason, who was reportedly
the last person to have seen Gary alive.
After an interrogation, Carl allegedly admitted being with Gary Jr. on the day of his disappearance,
even going as far to confess murdering him, though he retracted his confession numerous
times.
Boo was arrested for the crime and sent to a juvenile detention center.
But the thing is Boo was mentally challenged.
He was given polygraph test 2 times both of which were inconclusive.
The admission was ruled inadmissible, Boo was released, and the cops were left without
a lead ... until two years later, when someone wrote an seeming confession on the side of
a patrol car.
It read: "Gary Grant's dead.
I am living.
Another will die on January 12th if all goes right."
Thankfully, it looks like all did not go right, because nobody was killed on January 12.
Instead, another message was written on a sidewalk, saying, "Gary Grant Jr. lives.
I still killed him.
Son of a pig officer.
Payback is a M.F."
They never tracked down whoever was leaving the messages, and the case went cold for 30
years.
But, Nearly three decades later, in December 2015, the now-retired Gary Grant Sr. was going
through a bunch of old evidence when he came across an audio recording from 1986.
It was an anonymous caller admitting responsibility for Gary's murder to a police dispatcher,
which for some reason was never pursued as a lead.
Take a listen Of course, it could have been a prankster.
This call took place on March 8, 1986, which would have been Gary's 10th birthday, and
it occurred around the same time those cryptic messages appeared on the police car and the
sidewalk.
However, there was one more caller who kept his identity secret, but shockingly mentioned
a possible suspect that curiously confessed to brutally murdering Gary Jr. by saying,
"Because of his father.
The cops know what he looks like."
Gary Sr. noted he knows the unidentified suspect but has no recollection of having any problem
with him in the slightest.
As of 2017, there have been no prominent suspects in the case.
3.Diane Augat Diane Louise Augat was born February 21st,
1958.
The date of her disappearance occurred on April 10th, 1998, in Odessa, Florida.
She was 40 years old at the time.
Approximately 11 a.m. in the morning Diane was seen leaving her home on the 10th of April.
There wasn't anything out of the ordinary happening.
However, she never came back home later that evening.
The following day on the 11th, a witness reported seeing Diane walking north on U.S. Route 19
in Hudson, Florida.
This is where it starts to become a little bit strange.
Diane's mother noted that her daughter was diagnosed with Bipolar in the mid-1980's,
but didn't take her medication on a routine basis.
Adding to that, Diane was a wife that got divorced early in the 90's, along with having
her three children taken from her custody in 1988.
With ever increasing stress building up into her, along with her disorder and depression,
Diane began committing various minor offenses that lead to her arrest multiple times within
the span of 6 years.
It was later confirmed that Diane hadn't taken her medication on the day[s] of her disappearance.
Although missing, her mother and the police considered it being an episode of her Bipolar.
Those thoughts eventually became much more terrifying.
Days later on April 13th, Diane's mother received a phone call from her daughter.
Unfortunately, she wasn't home at the time so her message went to the answering machine.
According to Diane's mother, she heard the words, "Help!
Help!
Let me out"!
She also stated that in the background there seemed to be scuffling taking place, as if
-somebody- was trying to take the phone away from her.
Just before the call ended, Diane said, "Hey, give me that!" and suddenly the line went
dead.
Thankfully, the Caller ID pinpointed the [possible] location of where this call took place, which
came from "Starlight" around the Odessa area.
Panicking, Diane's mother tried contacting the business but nobody answered the phone.
On April 15th, two days following the bizarre phone call, a shocking discovery was made.
Around the vicinity of the witness relating the sighting of Diane on U.S. Route 19, the
severed tip of Diane's right middle finger with the nail being red from paint was found.
Two weeks pass by and there are still no conclusive updates of Diane and where she could possibly
be.
Then, a break in the case happened when a perplexing discovery was uncovered.
At a nearby convenience store, a bag was found inside a freezer containing bags of ice for
the customers just outside of the store.
Inside were clothes of diane that were folded neatly, but nothing else that proved beneficial.
The story doesn't end there, however.
In the year 2000, two years after the initial bag was found, the girlfriend of Diane's brother
unearthed another bag in Pasco, Florida, at the convenience store Circle K.
In this case, this was a ziplock bag that had the name "Diane" written on it with a
permanent marker.
Inside, there was a pink lipstick in a tube, eyeliner, and perfume of the brand "Taboo"
[Tabu?].
Diane's mother told investigators that those items are something she would have used, but
there hasn't been any form of confirmation whether or not these items belonged to Diane.
Eventually, another witness came forward stating that Diane was spotted at a location named
"Coral Sands Motel."
This information became very important and useful because the manager, Gary Robert Evers,
was apprehended and charged with murdering another male in a heated argument in 2001.
Gary is considered as a possible suspect relating to Diane Augat, but there hasn't been any
solid tips or evidence regarding the matter.
Still to this day, no promising leads have panned out and Diane is unfortunately nowhere
to be found.
4.The Lead Masks Case On August 20, 1966, a young man was flying
a kite on Vintem Hill in a suburb of Rio de Janeiro, when he spotted the bodies of two
men farther up the hill.
He reported the matter to police who weren't able to reach the bodies until the following
day due to rough terrain.
When they did arrive, they found a truly bizarre scene.
The two men were stretched out side by side, dressed for their funerals in fancy suits
and impermeable coats.
There were no signs of violence on either of them.
So Why is it called the "Lead Masks Case"?
Well, that's the baffling part.
The dead men wore lead masks, a type used to protect against radiation.
The pair was identified as Manoel Pereira da Cruz and Miguel José Viana.
Alongside their bodies authorities found a water bottle, two wet towels, and a notebook.
The police gathered evidence and eventually created a reconstruction of the day of their
deaths.
In it, the men buy their raincoats and go to a bar to buy bottled water.
Whatever the reason, one of the men appeared rather nervous, and when they left the bar
they went straight to the hill the boy found them at, then spontaneously dropped dead.
But this is where it gets wierder The notebook found contained lists of parts
and other information related to their occupations as electronic technicians.
One page, however, contained cryptic instructions that seemed to relate to the their mysterious
deaths.
The instructions inside translate to: 16:30 be at the agreed place.
18:30 swallow capsules, after effect protect metals wait for the mask sign
Well, they swallowed "capsules," so obviously that's what killed them, right?
The problem is the note seems to imply they were waiting for something to happen after
the capsules took effect, which means if they were poison, the two guys didn't know they
were.
Also, the men had a coupon to return the water bottle when they were finished with whatever
they were doing, which also seems to imply they didn't plan on dying on that hill.
Toxicology tests could not be taken due to the victims' organs not being properly preserved.
So, what in the hell convinced them to go out to a hill, strap on radiation protection
and swallow some strange capsules?
What effect were they waiting for?
What were the masks protecting them from?
Was there some third party who convinced them to do all of this, saying the pills would,
what, make them travel back in time?
Or give them super powers?
One explanation is that the men were meeting someone for a clandestine deal involving radioactive
material.
However, that would not explain the capsule mention, the towels or the jackets.
Another explanation is that they were conducting an experiment, but there is no evidence of
an experiment leading to their death, such as materials for said experiment.
They may have been duped, murdered and dumped on the hill, though there was no evidence
of violence or violent injuries.
They also may have been waiting for an intergalactic ride.
What the two men hoped to accomplish that night on Vintem Hill will likely never be
known.
5.
Cindy James
In June 1989, the quiet Vancouver, British Columbia, suburb of Richmond was shocked when
a body was found lying in the yard of an abandoned house.
The victim was a forty-four-year-old nurse named Cindy James.
She had been drugged and strangled, and her hands and feet had been tied behind her back.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police believed that her death was either an accident or suicide.
In the seven years before she died, Cindy reported nearly a hundred incidents of harassment
beginning four months after she left her husband, a psychiatrist named Roy Makepeace.
Cindy started receiving a series of harassing phone calls from an unknown male, who would
sometimes stay silent and sometimes whisper threats.
A few witnesses (including some police officers) were present to hear some of Cindy's silent
phone calls, but never heard anyone's voice on the line.
-as the months went on, Cindy started finding creepy threatening notes on her property and
her phone lines often got cut.
During a one-month period, she found three different dead cats in her yard with threatening
notes attached to them saying, "You're next"
-the first alleged physical attack occurred in January 1983, when one of Cindy's friends,
Agnes Woodcock, discovered that she was lying on the ground outside her house with a nylon
stocking tied around her neck.
Cindy claimed she was attacked, but couldn't provide any details about her assailant.
Police felt she was withholding something and Cindy later told her family that her attacker
held a knife to her throat and threatened her mother and sister if she talked
-Cindy hired a private investigator named Ozzie Kaban to watch over her, who provided
her with a two-ray radio.
One night in January 1984, Kaban heard strange noises on the radio and ran to Cindy's house
to investigate.
He busted down the locked door when he saw Cindy lying on the floor through the window.
A threatening note had been pinned through Cindy's hand with a paring knife.
Cindy claimed she had seen a man entering through her house's front gate before she
was struck from behind on the head with an object.
In spite of this, there were no signs of forced entry into the home and Kaban never saw anyone.
-police would frequently put surveillance on Cindy's house for days or weeks at a
time and nothing would happen, but whenever they pulled their surveillance and left, Cindy
would get attacked again almost immediately.
This led to suspicion that Cindy was staging all the attacks against herself
-in December 1985, Cindy disappeared and was found in a ditch six miles from her home.
She had a black nylon stocking wrapped around her neck, cuts and bruises all over her body,
and was suffering from hypothermia.
When she recovered, Cindy claimed to have no memory of what happened
-somedays later,Cindy moved to a new house, painted her car, and changed her last name.
One night, Agnes Woodcock and her husband, Tom, were staying at Cindy's house when
the burglar alarm went off and they discovered the glass window from Cindy's basement door
had been removed.
The Woodcocks claimed that Cindy was with them when the alarm went off, so she couldn't
have staged this incident herself.
-in April 1986, the Woodcocks were staying at Cindy's house and were woken up after
Cindy discovered the basement was on fire.
Since the phone lines were cut, Tom Woodcock went to a neighbour to call the fire department
and saw a man standing outside.
When Tom asked the man to call for help, he took off.
In spite of this sighting, police still believed that Cindy started the fire, as there were
no signs of forced entry and undisturbed dust and fingerprints on the outside windowsill.
In spite of the threats on her life, Cindy had also made the strange decision to take
her dog for a walk at 3:00 AM -after this incident, Cindy had a months-long
stay in a psychiatric ward, where a psychotherapist examined the possibility that she was suffering
from multiple personality disorder.
He did not believe this was the case and believed that Cindy was genuinely terrified about what
was happening to her -after her release from the hospital, Cindy
started accusing her ex-husband, Roy Makepeace, of being her tormentor.
Shortly thereafter, Roy received a creepy anonymous answering machine message from a
raspy-voice caller.
Here's a audio of the phone call, take a listen.
Eventually Police found no evidence that Roy was responsible for tormenting Cindy.
Roy testified that he thought the voice was of a male.
I don't know about you guys but to me it sounds like a woman trying to mask her voice and
making it deeper.
-Anyways, on October 26, 1988, two weeks after Roy received the message, Cindy was found
unconscious in her car in a hogtied position with her hands and feet tied behind her back.
She was naked from the waist down, had a nylon stocking tied around her neck, and had no
memory of what happened.
On May 25, 1989, six years and seven months after the first threatening phone call, Cindy
disappeared.
On the same day, her car was found in a neighborhood parking lot.
Inside were groceries and a wrapped gift.
There was blood on the driver's side door and items from her wallet were under the car.
Two weeks later, her body was found at the abandoned house.
It looked like she had been brutally murdered.
Her hands and feet were bound together behind her back.
A black nylon stocking was tied tightly around her neck.
Yet, an autopsy revealed that she died from an overdose of morphine and other drugs.
The police believed that Cindy staged her disappearance and committed suicide by ingesting
all the drugs.
A knot expert demonstrated that it was possible to hogtie yourself in the 15-20 minutes it
would take for those drugs to take effect.
However, there appeared to be an injection mark in Cindy's arm, though no syringe was
found at the scene.
If Cindy had injected morphine into her bloodstream, she would have been rendered unconscious immediately
-Cindy's family argued there was no way her body could have been in the yard the entire
two weeks she was missing, as it was located next to a road with constant traffic, so it's
likely she would have been seen.
An entomologist testified that Cindy's body had likely been at the scene since around
June 2, which still left one week when her whereabouts were unaccounted for
In Vancouver, the coroner ruled that her death was not suicide, an accident, or a murder.
They determined that she died of an "unknown event."
Cindy's parents never doubted that their daughter was murdered.
Otto believed the police did not investigate the possibility of homicide or of somebody
murdering her, instead zeroing in on trying to prove that she committed suicide.
They believe someone in Vancouver is getting away with murder.
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