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Gaia- 11-17-2005
Amber Swartz Abduction 6/3/88 CA
AMBER SWARTZ-GARCIA DOB: Aug 19, 1980 Missing: Jun 3, 1988 Age Now: 25 Sex: Female Race: White Hair: Blonde Eyes: Blue Height: 4'0" (122 cm) Weight: 62 lbs (28 kg) Missing From: PINOLE CA United States Amber's photo is shown age-progressed to 22 years. She disappeared while she was playing in her front yard. She has very poor hearing if she does not wear a hearing aid. When she was last seen, she was missing her right front tooth. ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION SHOULD CONTACT National Center for Missing & Exploited Children 1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pinole Police Department (California) - Missing Persons Unit http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PubCaseSearchServlet?act=viewPoster&caseNum=767759&orgPrefix=NCMC&searchLang=en_US

Gaia- 11-17-2005

Distinguishing Characteristics: Blonde hair, blue eyes. Amber's upper right front tooth was missing at the time of her 1988 disappearance. Her teeth were also crooked. Her ears are pierced. Amber sucked her thumb when she was tired or nervous at the time of her disappearance. She has a fair complexion. Some agencies refer to her as Amber Swartz or Amber Garcia Swartz. Clothing Description: A short-sleeved white shirt with teal bands around the bottom of the shirt, the neck, and the bottoms of both sleeves and images of multicolored sunglasses printed on it; purple corduroy pants, pink socks, brand-new white LA Gear tennis shoes with pink or white laces, and earrings with gold and emeral posts. Medical Conditions: Amber has a hearing impairment and uses a hearing aid and/or reads lips. She has a speech impediment due to her impaired hearing. She also suffers from migraine headaches due to a concussion she sustained in 1984. The headaches cause loss of balance and vomitting. She took the prescription medication Fiornal for them at the time she disappeared. Amber had neither her hearing aid nor her medicine with her when she vanished. Details of Disappearance Amber was last seen jumping rope at approximately 4:15 p.m. in the front yard of her family's Pinole, California residence on June 3, 1988. She was not usually allowed to play in the yard alone but her mother, Kim Swartz, made an exception that day because their neighbors would be arriving home soon. Kim checked outside approximately 15 minutes after Amber left the house and noticed she had disappeared. The child has never been heard from again. She may have been holding a leather jump rope with wooden handles at the time of her disappearance. Authorities did discover a pair of pink socks near Amber's residence on June 4, the day after her disappearance. The socks were found on a baseball diamond by the creek that flows behind Amber's house. Kim believes that the socks may have belonged to her daughter, but she is uncertain and additional clues, including the jump rope Amber carried, were never located. The socks were located after the area had been searched once already; it is believed that they were left after the initial search. A day after Amber disappeared, a witness reported having seen someone matching her description at Alvarado Park sometime between 4:45 and 5:00 p.m. on June 3. The girl was being roughly handled by an adult white man and was thrown into a car by him at the park entrance. The witness described the girl's assailant was being about forty years old, 5'7, and 160 pounds. He was driving an older model four-door General Motors car, full-sized, and tan in color. Authorities have never been unable to identify the man and are not sure if the girl who was seen was in fact Amber. Two men have been named as possible suspects in Amber's case. Authorities announced that Timothy James Bindner had a possible connection to her disappearance, as well as the disappearances of Michaela Garecht, Ilene Misheloff, Tara Cossey and Amanda Campbell. A photo of Bindner is posted below this case summary. He maintains his innocence and successfully sued Campbell's hometown of Fairfield, California in 1997 for defamation of character. Bindner, a married sewage treatment plant worker, came to authorities' attention after he began sending birthday greetings and gifts of money to young girls in the East Bay area. One child's parents contacted authorities and handed over a letter Bindner had written to their daughter. The note was printed backwards and could only be deciphered by holding it up to a mirror. Bindner claimed he sent the cards as a kind gesture because the girls were "lonely." Bindner also visited the Oakmont Cemetery gravesite of Angela Bugay, a five-year-old girl girl who was abducted and murdered in Antioch, California in 1983. A photograph of Bugay is posted below this case summary. Bindner was never considered a suspect in her murder and another man has since been convicted in that case. Bindner approached many of the mothers of missing girls from the East Bay area offering his assistance, including Amber and Garecht's families. He introduced himself to Kim three days after Amber vanished. He bore a striking resemblance to the man who was seen throwing the girl into the tan car on the day of Amber's disappearance. Investigators asked Kim to maintain a quasi-friendship with Bindner in hope of learning if he was connected to any of the girls' cases. She and authorities agreed that Bindner appeared to playing mind games with victims' loved ones and law enforcement. Many people theorize that he enjoyed taunting families into thinking that he may have been involved in the presumed abductions. He was once arrested for annoying two little girls whom he was trying to lure into his van, but the charges were later dropped. Bindner often drove around in a light blue Dodge van with a license plate that said "Lov You." Inside the van was wallpapered with many pictures of children. A photograph of the van is posted below this case summary. Bindner refers to himself as a "good Samaritan." He asked Linda Golston, a reporter for The San Jose Mercury News, to interview him at Oakmont Cemetery at 4:30 a.m. He played his favorite song on her car stereo, "Jesus, Here's Another Child To Hold." Bindner told Goldston that he thought of the missing girls as "his children." She asked him how he believed the abductions occurred and he said one child was submissive, but another fought back against her assailant. Bindner added that he was "guessing" about the girls' reactions. Bindner wrote a letter to a law enforcement agency in the late 1980s, stating that he believed the next girl who would be abducted from the area would be nine years old. Garecht disappeared shortly thereafter; she was nine at the time of her abduction. Bindner also sent a holiday card to a profiler for the Federal Bureau Of Investigation (FBI) in 1990. The card depicted an image of a young Russian girl holding up four fingers. Campbell vanished in 1991 at the age of four; she bore a striking resemblance to the girl in the card. Search dogs traced both Campbell and Amber's scents to Bugay's grave. Authorities never had enough evidence to prove Bindner was connected to their cases, although he was known for visiting the cemetery on occasion. Bindner was given a heroism award by the California State Patrol after assisting victims in the 1989 San Francisco earthquake. He has never been charged in any of the cases. Curtis Dean Anderson, who was convicted of the 2000 kidnapping and molestation of a young California girl, was also mentioned as a possible suspect in Amber's case. Investigators searched Anderson's mother's residence in June 2001 for evidence linking him to other missing girls' cases, but nothing was located. James Daveggio has been considered as a possible suspect since the early 1990s. He and his former girlfriend, Michelle Michaud, were charged with the 1997 abduction, rape and murder of Vanessa Swanson. Swanson's remains were discovered approximately five miles from the site of Jaycee Lee Dugard's 1991 California abduction. Photos of Daveggio and Michaud are posted below this case summary. They were also charged with additional counts of sexual assault in unrelated cases in the mid-1990s. Michaud claims that she met Daveggio in 1996 and therefore was not involved in Dugard's abduction. There are striking similarities between Michaud and the female suspect in Dugard's case. Daveggio is also considered a possible suspect in Garecht and Misheloff's disappearances. Neither he nor Michaud has been charged in connection with any of the cases. Kim received a phone call from a resident of the Pinole area in 1991. The man said that he was in a park near her home on the day of Amber's 1988 disappearance. He stated that he saw an unidentified bearded man force a young girl into a vehicle in the park and drive away. The witness said that he copied down the car's license plate and contacted authorities shortly afterwards. He believed that the child matched Amber's description. Investigators stated that they did not believe the possible suspect was Bindner, as he did not have a beard at the time of the incident. The vehicle's license plate was traced to an impounded car in the Los Angeles area. Authorities have never confirmed if the child in the park was Amber. A defrocked priest named Stephen Kiesle became a suspect in Amber's case in mid-2002. He was suspected because he lived in Amber's neighborhood, one block away from her home, at the time of her disappearance and because he has since been arrested and charged with molesting three girls at the Santa Paula Catholic Church in Fremont, where he worked from 1968 to 1971. The victims of the alleged molestations physically resembled Amber. Kiesle did not know Amber and denies any involvement in her case. Police searched his yard three times, using cadaver-sniffing dogs, radar, and a backhoe. They were looking not only for evidence in Amber's disappearance but also evidence in Dugard's kidnapping. They found no clues pertaining to either case and the searches concluded in July 2002. Kim founded The Amber Foundation For Missing Children after Amber's 1988 disappearance. A photo of Kim is posted below. She was married to Amber's father, police officer Floyd "Bernie" Swartz, when he was killed in the line of duty in May 1980. A photograph of Floyd is posted below this case summary. Amber was born three months after her father's death. Any connection between her and James Richard Odle, the man who murdered her father, was ruled out. He was on death row in in 1988. Kim Swartz was the victim of a break-in and theft in 2000. She was attending a fund-raiser benefit for another missing child, Xiana Fairchild, with her fiancee. When she left the benefit she found her car's front passenger window had been smashed and some things were missing from inside. No other vehicles in the lot were damaged. The items taken from Kim's car included a laptop computer, a briefcase containing pictures of Amber, and a list of missing-child activists and their phone numbers. A very expensive pair of sunglasses in the car was not stolen. Kim believes she was targeted due to her high-profile involvement in the search for Amber and many other missing children. Amber's case remains unsolved. If you have any information concerning this case, please contact: Pinole Police Department 510-724-8950 Charley Project

Magic407- 08-18-2006

PINOLE PARK TO BE DEDICATED TO MISSING GIRL 08/18/06 12:25 PDT PINOLE (BCN) A park created in memory of a Pinole girl missing since the summer of 1988 will be dedicated in her name on her birthday on Saturday, community organizer Chris Campbell said Thursday. The Amber Swartz Park was created in memory of Amber, who disappeared from her front yard June 3, 1988, when she was 7 years old, and who has never been found. Hundreds of hours of volunteer labor from neighborhood children, their parents, local hospitals, service organizations, labor unions, and local construction and landscaping firms over 16 years helped make the park a reality, according to Campbell. The park is on the site of what was once an open field and has plants and landscaping and brickwork donated by local construction companies, Campbell said. Amber Swartz Park is next to Amber's former home on Savage Avenue and Moraga Drive in Pinole. http://cbs5.com/localwire/localfsnews/bcn/2006/08/18/n/HeadlineNews/PARK-DEDICATION/resources_bcn_html

Themis Eternal- 08-19-2006

Amber Jean Swartz Classification: Nonfamily Abduction Date of Birth: August 19, 1980 Date Missing: June 3, 1988 From City/State: Pinole, CA Age at Time of Disappearance: 7 Gender: Female Race: White Height: 48 inches Weight: 62 pounds Hair Color: Blonde Eye Color: Blue Complexion: Medium Identifying Characteristics: Pierced ears, possibly has crooked teeth, suffers from migraine headaches causing loss of balance and vomiting, severe hearing impairment and was not wearing her hearing aid when abducted, sucks her thumb when she is tired or nervous. Clothing: Purple corduroy pants, white short sleeved shrit with a teal colored band around the sleeves and neck with multicolored sunglasses printed on the front, brand new white L.A. Gear tennis shoes with white laces. Jewelry: Emerald earrings with gold posts. Circumstances of Disappearance: Unknown. Amber was last seen jumping rope in her front yard. Investigative Agency: Pinole Police Department Phone: (510) 724-8950 Investigative Case #: 88-1501 NCIC #: M-305024999 Poster Available at: http://www.theyaremissed.org/ncma/gallery/ncmaprofile_all.php?C200300099W

Themis Eternal- 08-20-2006

Posted: Sunday, 20 August 2006 10:50AM Emotions Run High As Park Dedicated To Missing Child PINOLE, Calif. (KCBS) -- More than 18 years after her disappearance, a park in Pinole was dedicated in the name of Amber Schwarz. “Today is her 26th birthday, and I just wish she could be here to actually be a part of this whole celebration,” said her mother Kim, at a ceremony on Saturday that drew about 100 to a small park on Savage Avenue adjacent to the Schwartz home. KCBS’s Tim Ryan reports that most who attended hailed from the community where the 7-year-old daughter of a slain police officer disappeared while playing in front of her home. “It's just a beautiful, serene area. You'd never think that a child would disappear from around here, but it's a double-edged sword,” said Schwartz. “You know she's not here. I wish she was. It's been too long.” That disappearance on June 3, 1988 ultimately prompted the state to name its missing child alert system of highway signs, radio and television announcements, and now cell phone text messages, after the child. That system has led to the recovery of every missing child whose disappearance qualifies for the Amber System to be activated, according to a recent report by the California Highway Patrol. But the case of Amber Schwartz remains unsolved. Kim Schwartz realizes her daughter is probably never coming home. “She hasn't been located,” Schwartz said, who believes her child was abducted. “I don't think that they took her for good reasons, and I'm thinking after 18 years, we probably may not find her alive, but it's still very important for my family that we find her.” Pinole police commander Phil Pollard was one of the first on scene when Amber’s disappearance was reported. “This one will never leave me personally, and I'm sure any officer that was working at the time that day will always remember that,” said Pollard. Many of those officers knew Amber because they worked with her slain father. Pollard remained vigilant during the dedication, eyeing the crowd as the Star Spangled Banner was sung, wondering if Amber’s alleged abductor might have chosen to attend the ceremony. (jro) Copyright 2006, KCBS. All Rights Reserved. http://kcbs.com/pages/71478.php?contentType=4&contentId=191384

Magic407- 08-21-2006

Posted: Saturday, 19 August 2006 10:15PM East Bay Park Dedicated in Name of Missing Girl Pinole, Calif. (KCBS) -- Amber Schwartz Park was dedicated Saturday in Pinole, the day the little girl who went missing in 1988 would have turned 26-years-old. KCBS reporter Tim Ryan said the park is right next door to the home where the 8-year-old girl disappeared from the yard where she was playing. "On June 3rd, 1988 a parent's worst nightmare occurred," said one speaker. It's a nightmare relived by Kim Schwartz, the missing girl's mother, who realizes her daughter is not coming home. "It's such a beautiful serene area and you would never think that a child would disappear from around here. It's a double edged sword. It's been too long, she's not here," she said. The park, several acres large, is located on Savage Avenue. Among the 100 or more people on hand for the park dedication was Phil Pollard, one of the first officers on the scene of the kidnapping so many years ago. To this day, the search for clues continues. He surveyed the crowd closely. "I'm watching but so far everybody I see here we know," he said. http://kcbs.com/pages/71410.php?contentType=4&contentId=191301

Magic407- 08-23-2006

Posted on Wed, Aug. 23, 2006 Small town won't forget missing girl PINOLE: Volunteers drive park dedication, 18 years after abduction By Tom Lochner CONTRA COSTA TIMES Remembrance. Amber Swartz is still missing. Anyone with information is urged to contact the Pinole Police Department. 510-724-8950. The words are recited, like a mantra, at every Pinole City Council meeting. It has been that way for 18 years. The abduction of 7-year-old Amber Swartz on June 3, 1988, has been a defining event in the collective psyche of this small city of about 20,000 inhabitants on the eastern shore of San Pablo Bay. Pinole's mayor, Betty Boyle, believes Pinole stands for all small-town America and its innocence lost over a generation. "We're a great community, and we're a safe community," Boyle said, "but we're aware of the world around us." Amber was playing in her front yard on Savage Avenue when she disappeared. Boyle, who was a teacher at Ellerhorst Elementary School at the time, remembers vividly the impact the little girl's disappearance had on the entire city -- not just the neighbors, schoolchildren, police and people who knew Amber. "It affected everybody," Boyle said, "and I think it still does." On Saturday, Amber's 26th birthday, volunteers and city officials dedicated Amber Swartz Park next to the house where Amber lived with her family. It was the culmination of a more than 12-year-long volunteer effort. Kim Swartz, Amber's mother, moved to Martinez some years ago. She occupied a huge place in Pinole's heart years before her daughter's disappearance left its tragic mark. In 1980, while Kim was pregnant with Amber, her husband, Pinole Police Officer Bernie Swartz, was shot to death near the creek behind their home by a fugitive wanted on suspicion of killing a young woman, Rena Aguilar. James Odle was sentenced to death in 1983 for murdering Swartz and Aguilar. A judge ruled last year that Odle is entitled to a hearing to determine if he was competent to stand trial because he had a lobotomy as the result of a brain injury several years before the murders. "What a great birthday present for Amber," Swartz said at Saturday's park dedication. "I only wish she could be here to see it. "It was beautiful before there was a park here, and it's even more beautiful now," Swartz said. "I hope this can be a healing for this community, because Lord knows we need it after 18 years. "If she is dead, we will bury her with her father. I hope to God someday that happens so we can all be at peace." Pinole Police Cmdr. Phil Pollard said there is hope, albeit faint, that Amber could turn up alive. Steven Stayner, who was 7 when he was kidnapped off a Merced Street in 1972, walked into a Ukiah police station in 1980 after escaping from his kidnapper. "You just never know," Pollard said. Swartz recounted that during her days, weeks, months and years searching for Amber, she neglected her sons, now both adults. "I want to take this time to tell them how much I love them." Saturday's event should not be solely about Amber, but also serve as a forum for information to prevent future missing children incidents, Swartz said. Soon after Amber's disappearance, Swartz formed the Amber Swartz Foundation for Missing Children. Its volunteers have helped recover children and keep others from being kidnapped, she said. Last summer, another crime occurred that proved to be a defining element in the city's psyche. The July 30, 2005, killing of Darren Kretchmar and Dave Gregory at the edge of Fernandez Park, allegedly by a man who mistakenly believed at least one of the victims to be a member of a rival gang, produced intense soul-searching. It culminated in an increased awareness of crime and a show of community solidarity at a memorial ceremony a year later. "It takes something shocking to remember that we're not always the safe community we think we are," Boyle said. "People say, 'it can't happen in Pinole' -- but it does." Mary Horton, the longest-tenured member of the Pinole City Council, described reactions similar to Boyle's on the June afternoon more than 18 years ago. "When Amber was kidnapped, it was like my personal world went dark. It was like the bowl was shattered," said Horton, who graduated with Swartz, the former Kim Morgan, as part of Pinole Valley High School's Class of '75. Horton said the park reminded her of a Civil War battlefield park, its bucolic setting belying the tragic event that occurred there. "This park, one of the most tranquil, peaceful places, in front of a beautiful, natural ridge line -- that's where Amber was actually kidnapped," Horton said. "It's a testament from the volunteers, from the community, that we will never forget, and that we'll always be dedicated to the safety of the children of the area." http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/news/local/states/california/15339538.htm

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