Disappearance of Lauren Spierer

Lauren Spierer
Born (1991-01-17)January 17, 1991[1]
Disappeared June 3, 2011 (aged 20)
Bloomington, Indiana, U.S.
Status Missing for 4 years and 11 months
Home town Greenburgh, New York[2]

Lauren Spierer (born January 17, 1991) is an American woman who disappeared on June 3, 2011, after a night of partying at a bar in Bloomington, Indiana. At the time, she was a 20-year-old college student at Indiana University. Her disappearance generated national press coverage and remains unsolved.[3][4][5]

History

Lauren Spierer was born in 1991 to Charlene and Robert Spierer, an accountant. She grew up in Greenburgh, New York, a town in lower Westchester County.[6][7][8] Spierer graduated from Edgemont High School in 2009 and enrolled at Indiana University studying textiles merchandising.[9][10]

Spierer was active in the Jewish community at IU and had spent the previous spring break planting trees in Israel on behalf of the Jewish National Fund.[11]

Spierer met her boyfriend Jesse Wolff and her friend Jay Rosenbaum years earlier at Camp Towanda, a summer camp in Pennsylvania. It was there that she also met various other future IU students who later became her circle of friends when she enrolled in that college, in 2009.[12][13]

Disappearance

On the night she disappeared, Spierer was partying with several male friends. Her boyfriend, Jesse Wolff, said he did not go out with Spierer or her friends that evening. He said he was texting back and forth with Spierer before going to bed.[14] According to witnesses, Spierer was very intoxicated.[12] Using video surveillance footage and witness statements, Bloomington police were able to create a timeline of Spierer's whereabouts before her disappearance.[15]

Timeline

The timestamps in bold indicate surveillance footage. The other times mentioned are on the basis of witness statements.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Investigation

In August 2011, police conducted a nine-day search of the Sycamore Ridge Landfill in Pimento, Indiana, south of Terre Haute, for clues in the disappearance. The landfill is where trash from Bloomington gets hauled after a stop at a transfer station. The Bloomington Police Department, the Indiana University Police Department, and the FBI took part in the search.[20][21] As of May 24, 2013, investigators had received 3,060 tips on Spierer's disappearance, 100 of them received during the first half of 2013.[22]

On January 28, 2016, the FBI conducted a raid of a home in Martinsville, Indiana approximately 20 miles (32 km) north of Bloomington, connected to a man suspected of exposing himself to numerous women. The FBI and other police agencies converged on the home, with Bloomington Police confirming they were involved in the search. Investigators sifted dirt removed from a barn near the property after cadaver dogs finished their work. Searcher would not discuss whether anything significant was found. Investigators towed a white truck from the property.The truck may be connected to 35-year-old Justin Wagers, who lived here with his mother and stepfather until his last arrest.[23][24]

Speculation

A number of theories have emerged regarding that evening. Lauren's parents have stated that they believe Lauren is deceased. Based on her level of intoxication, they also felt that she may have been drugged while at the bar. "We felt somebody could have slipped something into her drink at Kilroy's," said Robert Spierer. The Spierer family have voiced suspicions about the men she was with that evening as well as her boyfriend, since they refused to take police-issued polygraphs and retained lawyers soon after Spierer's disappearance. While they have not made any specific accusations, they do believe the two know more than they have told police so far.[25]

The men respond that they have taken privately administered polygraphs, as well as one from the FBI.[8] Since they do not trust the Bloomington police, they say, they have retained lawyers.[26]

Regarding Spierer's level of intoxication, Lauren's friends and boyfriend told police that in addition to alcohol, she used drugs on the night in question as well as regularly leading up to her disappearance. Wolff's mother alleged that Lauren was asked to leave the summer camp where she met her son and Rosenbaum years earlier because of drug use. "This poor little girl is not with us today because of her drug abuse," Nadine Wolff said.[26]

Rosenbaum told investigators that Spierer snorted cocaine and crushed up Klonopin tablets that evening, in addition to consuming alcohol. Adding to the danger of drug use was Spierer's rare heart conditionlong QT syndrome.[27] Police addressed rumors that implied Spierer may have overdosed and those with her may have hidden the body to avoid criminal charges, acknowledging that they have not ruled it out, but they stressed that there were other possibilities, such as abduction by a stranger.[28]

Bo Dietl, a private investigator hired by the Spierer family, is dubious that a drug overdose death could be enough motive to hide her death, citing the prevalence of drug abuse on the IU campus. "Every kid's buying pot, cocaine, drinking, pills," he said. “I mean, it's all over the place. So that really can't be the motive behind it."[12][27]

Missing white woman syndrome

The heavy press coverage of the disappearance has been dubbed an example of missing white woman syndrome, a phenomenon wherein the news media disproportionately covers missing person cases that involve young, white, upper-middle class females.[29][30] The Indiana University paper ran a story documenting the disparity between their own coverage of Spierer's (who was enrolled at the university) disappearance and their coverage of another local disappearance, a woman named Crystal Grubb (who was not a student of The university). Grubb, 29, is also Caucasian, but came from a working-class family wherein many relatives had criminal histories. Following Grubb's disappearance in 2010, the student paper ran a total of seven stories on the case compared to multiple front page articles and the extensive volunteer presence and national awareness of the Spierer case.[31] An acquaintance of Grubb's commented: "When Crystal went missing, it was in the newspaper like once. For Spierer's disappearance, everyone's here and there's posters everywhere, people walking around. Definitely nothing like that was afforded Crystal. I don't want to say it's because she was of a lower economic class, but that's what it seems to me."[32]

Civil suit

Lauren Spierer's parents filed a civil suit against Cory Rossman, Jay Rosenbaum, and Michael Beth. The suit accused the men of negligence, alleging that Rossman and Rosenbaum supplied Spierer with alcohol after she was already "visibly intoxicated," and then neglected to assure she returned safely to her apartment, which likely led to her death. The family has stated that they hope the lawsuit will lead to the men's coming forward with more information about what occurred that night. "I truly don't think it was a random abduction, I think that somebody that Lauren knew was responsible for the events of that evening," Charlene Spierer said. Spierer's parents also told Katie Couric, in December [year?], that only one of the men had agreed to meet with them. As part of the suit, Spierer's parents subpoenaed private cell phone and academic records spanning 134 days before and after the night their daughter disappeared, a move that the men have called a "fishing expedition".[33] None of the men has been named as suspects in her disappearance.[34]

Federal Judge Tanya Pratt dismissed the suit against all three men. In 2013, Pratt dismissed the suit against Beth, ruling that he had no duty to care for Spierer. Spierer's parents had alleged in the suit that Beth had assumed “duty of care” for her when he offered her a place to sleep and then escorted her to Jason Rosenbaum’s apartment. “The judge said on public policy that it would dissuade people from rendering assistance to someone that’s obviously sick on the side of the road, that’s lost in the street,” said Beth’s attorney Greg Garrison. “You dissuade folks from being involved at all by punishing them if somebody decides later on that they didn’t do enough.”[35] In 2014, she dismissed the suit against the other two, stating: "Unfortunately, there could be any number of theories as to what happened to Lauren and what, if any, injuries she may have sustained. Without evidence to prove these theories, it would be impossible for a jury to determine if whatever happened to Lauren was a natural and probable consequence of her intoxication, without any other intervening acts that would break the causal chain."[36] Spierer's parents have appealed the ruling.[37]

Lawyers for the men have stated that their clients have cooperated fully with police and the private investigators hired by the Spierer family, and that all of them have passed private polygraphs. “They’ve been interviewed and interviewed and interviewed, and to say they’ve been less than forthcoming is just not accurate,” said Chapman, who represents Beth and Rohn.[12][14]

Further investigation

In April 2015, the Bloomington Police Department announced that they were investigating a possible link between Lauren's disappearance and the murder of another IU student, Hannah Wilson. Wilson went missing on April 24, 2015 after visiting the same bar that Lauren was at the night she disappeared. Wilson was last seen getting into a taxi in front of Kilroy's and driving away. Her body was found the next morning in Brown County, Indiana. A local man named Daniel Messel was arrested for the murder after his cell phone was discovered near the body.[38] Spierer's parents have previously stated that they do not believe Lauren's disappearance was a random abduction.[39] In July 2015, private investigator Bo Dietl concluded that the two cases are unrelated and any similarities between the two cases are coincidental.[40]

On January 28, 2016, the FBI and other police agencies investigated a property in the 2900 block of Old Morgantown Road in Martinsville, Indiana. According to a statement released by the FBI, the investigators were "following up on leads and tips in Morgan County today regarding the disappearance of Lauren Spierer". Investigators searched the property with cadaver dogs, which indicated potential evidence. Anthropologists conducted a dig, but found nothing.[41][42]

See also

References

  1. Tonsing, Abby (February 24, 2012). "Lauren Spierer case: Parents offering $250,000 reward for information". Herald Times Online.
  2. Wilson, Charles D. (April 22, 2014). "Lauren Spierer case: Men say parents' requests too broad". The Journal News.
  3. "No new leads for missing IU student Lauren Spierer". The Herald Times (Bloomington, IN). 4 June 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  4. "Indiana Police Search for Missing College Student Lauren Spierer". FoxNews.com. Fox News. 6 June 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  5. Ng, Christina (6 June 2011). "Fashion Student Lauren Spierer Missing From Indiana University Since Friday". abcnews.com. ABC News. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  6. http://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/greenburgh/2014/04/22/lauren-spierer-case-men-say-parents-requests-broad/8010441/
  7. http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/06/01/two-years-later-mystery-surrounds-disappearance-indiana-university-student/
  8. 1 2 West, Evan (2012-05-30). "The Lauren Spierer Mystery, Unraveled". Indianapolis Monthly.
  9. Brice, Diana (10/4/11). "Edgemont Still Hopes Lauren Spierer Will Be Found". The Greenburgh Daily Voice. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. Lohr, David (6/3/2013). "Lauren Spierer Update: Two Years, 3,060 Tips And No Sign Of Missing College Student". Huffington Post. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. Tobin, Andrew (June 16, 2011). "Jewish Groups Spearhead Effort To Find Missing Indiana University Student". The Jewish Daily forward.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Cohen, Shawn (June 4, 2012). "Lauren Spierer mystery: New accounts say she staggered away after night of heavy drinking, drug use". The Journal News.
  13. "Friends of Lauren Spierer Refect, Take Action". USA Today. November 10, 2011.
  14. 1 2 Cohen, Shawn (June 3, 2011). "Missing student's beau's parents fume at cops, media". USA Today.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Tonsing, Abby (June 16, 2011). "Lauren Spierer search: Timeline, map of missing IU student's last known whereabouts released by Bloomington police". Hearald Times Online.
  16. Corbin, Cristina (June 1, 2013). "Two years later, mystery surrounds disappearance of Indiana University student Lauren Spierer". Fox News.
  17. Mascia, Kristen (January 21, 2013). "Missing Student Investigation: Life Without Lauren". People.
  18. Tonsing, Abby (16 June 2011). "Lauren Spierer search: Timeline, map of missing IU student's last known whereabouts released by Bloomington police". The Herald Times (Bloomington, IN). Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  19. Wang, Stephanie (May 31, 2013). "Timeline: The search for Lauren Spierer". Indianapolis Star.
  20. Tonsing, Abby (16 August 2011). "Lauren Spierer search: Landfill search started by Bloomington police". The Herald Times (Bloomington, IN). Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  21. Tonsing, Abby (26 August 2011). "Lauren Spierer case: No clues found as landfill search concludes". The Herald Times (Bloomington, IN). Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  22. lohr, david (06/03/2013). "Lauren Spierer Update: Two Years, 3,060 Tips And No Sign Of Missing College Student". huffington post. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  23. http://www.idsnews.com/article/2016/01/fbi-confirms-link-to-spierer-case-in-martinsville-raid
  24. http://www.theindychannel.com/news/local-news/fbi-investigating-house-in-martinsville
  25. Cohen, Shawn (4/24/12). "Parents believe missing Indiana student is no longer alive". USA Today. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  26. 1 2 "Lauren Spierer's family outraged as boyfriend's parents say she was a drug user on second anniversary of student's disappearance". Daily Mail UK. 3 June 2013.
  27. 1 2 Tonsing, Abby; Mullins, Christy (July 18, 2011). "Police: Cocaine use a problem, and not just among IU students". Hearld Times.
  28. "Did Lauren Spierer die of a drug overdose?". WDRB. June 13, 2011.
  29. Davis, Victoria (June 19, 2014). "Hidden Identities". Indianapolis Reporter.
  30. Barton, Robin (August 22, 2011). "The "Missing White Woman Syndrome"".
  31. Majchrowicz, Michael (November 9, 2011). "Beyond the posters: How demographics factored in Spierer, Grubb cases". Indiana Daily Student.
  32. Cohen, Shawn (June 8, 2011). "Another Bloomington mystery: Killer never found for other woman who went missing". The Journal News.
  33. Wilson, Charles D. (April 22, 2014). "Spierer friends say parents' request was too broad". WTHR Indianapolis.
  34. "Lauren Spierer's Parents' Lawsuit Against Men Last Seen With Daughter Goes To Federal Court". Huffington Post. 2013-06-27.
  35. Lin, Jashin (December 2, 2013). "Judge Dismisses Case Against One Man In Lauren Spierer Suit". Indiana public media.
  36. Nguyen, Hoa (October 1, 2014). "Lauren Spierer's parents' suit tossed out by federal judge". The Journal News.
  37. Guerra, Kristine (October 3, 2014). "Lauren Spierer's parents appeal negligence suit in daughter's disappearance". Indianapolis Star.
  38. "Police probe link between murdered student, disappearance of Lauren Spierer". Fox News Chicago. April 28, 2015.
  39. Truesdell, Jeff (2015-04-27). "Murder of Indiana University Student and Lauren Spierer Mystery 'Eerily Similar,' Cops Say". People.
  40. "Beau Dietl & Associates Investigates Speculated Similarities Between Two Homicide and Disappearance Cases at Indiana University". Virtual Strategy Magazine. Jul 8, 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  41. "FBI raid of properties in Martinsville and Trafalgar connected to Lauren Spierer investigation". WTHR. 28 January 2016. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  42. "FBI, Bloomington police investigate Martinsville property in ongoing Lauren Spierer investigation". FOX 59. 28 January 2016. Retrieved 29 January 2016.

External links

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