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Themis Eternal- 01-11-2006
Kristin Denise Smart ,Missing, San Luis Obispo, Ca 5/25/96
M I S S I N G__ P E R S O N KRISTIN DENISE SMART Photo Taken March 1995 DATE/LOCATION May 25, 1996 California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo, California DESCRIPTION Date of Birth: February 20, 1977 Hair: Dark Blond Sex: Female Eyes: Brown Height: 6'1" Race: White Weight: 145 pounds THE DETAILS Kristin Denise Smart was last seen at approximately 2:00 a.m., May 25, 1996, as she was walking back to her dorm room on the California Polytechnic campus, San Luis Obispo, California from an off-campus party. Kristin was accompanied by a fellow student who stated that he left her a block from her Muir Hall dorm to go to his dorm. Kristin did not return to her room and has not contacted family or friends since that time. She did not have any identification, money, or extra clothing when she disappeared. If you have seen Ms. Smart, or have any information as to her present whereabouts, contact the Los Angeles Field Office of the FBI at (805) 934-2444. You may also contact the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Department at (805) 781-4550. REMARKS Smart was last seen wearing a grey half T-shirt, black surfing shorts, and red "Puma" athletic shoes. Her hair is straight and shoulder length. REWARD A reward of $75,000 is being offered for information that helps locate Kristin. Anyone who has seen Kristin Denise Smart or has any information as to her present whereabouts is strongly urged to contact their local FBI office. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Individuals with information concerning this case should take no action themselves, but instead immediately contact the nearest FBI Office or local law enforcement agency. For any possible sighting outside the United States, contact the nearest United States Embassy or Consulate. Poster Available at: http://www.fbi.gov/mostwant/kidnap/smart.htm

Themis Eternal- 01-11-2006

Posted on Fri, Aug. 26, 2005 Kristin Smart Disappearance Flores family sues Smarts and their friend By Cynthia Neff The Tribune San Luis Obispo ------------------ Susan Flores and boyfriend Mike McConville have suffered severe emotional distress and lost income because of Dennis Mahon's investigations into the disappearance of former Cal Poly student Kristin Smart, court documents filed this week claim. The complaint, filed Tuesday in San Luis Obispo County Superior Court, asks for punitive damages. It states the actions taken by Smart's parents, Denise and Stan Smart, and Dennis Mahon, a family friend, "were undertaken with malice, fraud, and oppression" and with intent to harm. Kristin Smart, a 19-year-old freshman, disappeared after a Memorial Day weekend party in 1996. Susan Flores' son, Paul, was the last person seen with Smart. Mahon operates a Web site, www.sonofsusan.com, that publishes the Floreses' addresses and tracks Paul Flores any time he moves to a new residence. The site also includes information about Smart's disappearance. In May, Mahon was sentenced to 40 days in jail for harassing the Flores family in violation of a restraining order they have against him. Mahon's attorney, Okorie Okorocha, called the complaint filed this week "the height of frivolous." "This is just to harass the Smarts," he said. Okorocha did confirm a few points in the complaint, including that Mahon had organized and promoted a rally for 3,000 people with shovels to dig up Susan Flores' back yard in Arroyo Grande. Jeffry Radding, McConville and Flores' attorney, declined comment Thursday. http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/news/local/12483602.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp

Themis Eternal- 01-11-2006

Parents Hold Memorial Service for Missing Woman Five years ago this week, a Stockton family got the news every family dreads. The parents of Kristin Smart learned their 19-year-old daughter had disappeared while away at college. Because Kristin Smart was never located, there's never been a funeral for her. However, this weekend, her parents held a service near San Luis Obispo to remember their daughter and celebrate her short life. Many of those attending dressed in Hawaiian garb, out of respect for the young woman's love of the islands. "I see these people and the colors, it reminds me of her, I feel her being with us I really do, look at the church and all those colors, it took my breath away," said Denise Smart, the missing woman's mother. No sign of Kristin Smart has ever been found, and there are currently no suspects in her disappearance. Story updated May 20, 2001 - 6:44 pm http://www.calweb.com/kxtv/news-story/May2001/052001/missing-service.htm

Themis Eternal- 01-11-2006

The Night Kristin Vanished May 25th, 1996 The house in the photo below is where things began to go tragically wrong for Kristin. The house is only about 75 yards or so off of the CalPoly campus. On any given weekday while school is in session, Crandall Way is full of students walking back and forth from campus to the many apartment communities that serve as off campus housing for Cal Poly. Police records indicate that Ryan Fell, a student at Cal Poly was hosting his birthday party here which happened to coincide with the end of the spring semester. Many students had already left the campus and went home for vacation. Initially, this led to tremendous confusion because when Kristin was first missing, those close to her just assumed she went home for the break. Thus began an avalanche of missteps and miscues that have saturated this case from day one. Denise and Stan could hardly be any less lucky. Kristin arrived at the party around midnight and left the party around two hours later. The one recurring theme I keep being told is that Kristin arrived stone sober and just two hours later she was so drunk that she was found "passed out" on the lawn next door. Two hours! (Photo Available at: http://www.sonofsusan.com/id18.htm ) This is potentially important. In the photo on the left, 135 Crandall Way is the middle house and I took this photo so that you could see the area where Kristin was said to have passed out. (The Party was at 135 Crandall Way, 137 Crandall Way is where Kristin passed out) (Photo Available at: http://www.sonofsusan.com/id18.htm ) The photo on the right is of the same house , just taken from a different angle. The address is 137 Crandall Way. In May, 1996, I am told that the house was occupied by students who were members of the Kappa Chi fraternity. Directly across the street is the Sigma Nu Fraternity. In speaking with the head student at the home, Chad, I am told that the word on the street is that Kristin was also in the house located at 137 Crandall Way. This was news to me because that is not reflected in any of the reports I have personally seen. I told Denise this and it was news to her. This may just be a case where students are trying to get creative with their imaginations... but I heard it on two different occasions about two months apart. Why this scenario was never known to Kristin's parents is something for which I do not have an answer. Also, concerning the kids presently living in this house, something is going on because for some reason they are refusing to return my phone calls. I went to the house in person one night wanting to interview Chad, the student who told me that he heard Kristin was in the house at 137 Crandall Way. Tell me what you think. (Photo Available at: http://www.sonofsusan.com/id18.htm ) His car is parked right in the driveway. I tell another student that I would like to speak to Chad. A few moments later, the student comes out and says "he's not here". I didn't believe it. In any case, for about the third time I left my phone number and I am still waiting for Chad to return my call. Adding to the mystery is that Kristin disappeared almost six years ago, which means all the students living in this frat house have long since moved on. The current residents certainly have nothing to do with whatever happened on May 25th, 1996....so why not want to help in answering questions? At first there was nothing whatsoever suspicious about him. Now I am neutral and nothing would surprise me. Why otherwise normal, polite people suddenly act in a way that is anything other than "100%" helpful is something Denise and I speak about often. At the Party In any case, I was able to learn that upon being questioned by the sheriff's office, student's attending the party mentioned that they saw Paul and Kristin speaking to one another on more than one occasion. At one point, there was a commotion and a female student told investigators that somehow Paul and Kristin had fallen to the floor together but that it all appeared innocent and there was an exchange of light humor as they both got up off the ground. The other notable thing about the report was that the female students said that Paul was very weird because he was hitting on several girls at the party, including the gals that were at the party with their boyfriends. The party was breaking up around 2:00am and Cheryl, a CalPoly student who lived in the dorms was looking for her friends to arrange finding a way back to the dorms. She became a little miffed when she learned that her friends had already left the party without her knowledge so now she needed to change her plans as it related to getting back to the dorms. At most it is only a 15-20 minute walk, the issue was never "distance", it was just a matter of safety. A fellow student named Tim Davis who also lived in the dorms offered to walk Cheryl home and that was the plan that Cheryl decided on. It was about this time that Cheryl noticed Kristin passed out on the lawn next door at 137 Crandall Way. She went over to Kristin and woke her up. I believe that Cheryl told investigators that Kristin said she was "cold". Cheryl was not close friends with Kristin but knew her well enough to know that she also lived in the dorms. Cheryl then decided to take it upon herself to make sure Kristin got home safely. So at around 2:00am on May 25th, 1996, Tim, Cheryl and Kristin Smart began making their way back to the dorms. I have walked the route many times myself and it is less than a mile. Paul Flores (Photo Available at: http://www.sonofsusan.com/id18.htm ) Sigma Nu Fraternity opposite from 135 Crandall Way After a few moments, Tim and Cheryl reported that Paul just sort of "appeared out of nowhere" and offered to walk back to the dorms with them. At the time it seemed like no big deal and the walk continued along Crandall Way. Cheryl reported that Kristin was able to walk under her own power but that she was leaning on Paul who had his arm around her. Several times Cheryl said she did not notice Paul touching Kristin in a impolite way but even still, her radar was way up because she didn't trust Paul, especially considering the state of mind that Kristin was in. They were all walking at a slow but steady pace and made their way up Crandall and cut behind the rec center to Perimeter Avenue. At Perimeter Avenue, as I understand it, Tim Davis said goodnight and headed in a different direction. This left Paul, Cheryl and Kristin no more than 100 yds or so to walk up to the intersection of Grand Ave and Perimeter Rd. This was the last time Kristin was seen alive. Take a look at this photo. I was standing at the entrance of Santa Lucia Hall (Paul's dorm, room 128) when I took it. See the two cars at the top center of the photo...well, they are at the intersection of Grand and Perimeter. Now you have a good idea just how short of a distance Paul needed to walk to get Kristin safely home. The picture doesn't show it, but Kristin's dorm, Muir Hall is located right next door to Santa Lucia Hall. (Photo Available at: http://www.sonofsusan.com/id18.htm ) At Grand and Perimeter Cheryl needed to break off and walk up Grand Ave to her dorm at Sierra Madre. She was nervous about leaving Paul alone with Kristin. She made Paul promise to walk Kristin all the way to her dorm. He said he would, but she persisted. "Paul," if you don't want to, I will", Cheryl insisted. Paul assured her that he would definitely see to it that Kristin would get to the dorms. Believe it or not, at this point Paul asked Cheryl for a kiss. She turned that offer down quick, but Paul persisted. "C'mon, how bout just a kiss on the cheek"? Cheryl blew that off as well. Probably against her better judgment, Cheryl said goodnight and unknowingly left Kristin alone with the worst person in the world! Just so you know, Tim and Cheryl have remained strangely quiet over the years regarding Kristin. I personally knocked on Cheryl's door, she wasn't home and decided not to return my request for her to call me. Is there more to this story? There just might be. This is important so you need to really focus on what I am about to tell you. "Every opinion you may have ever formed regarding this case is based on the testimony of Tim and Cheryl." Paul's version is worthless so just discount everything out of his mouth. Tim Davis and Cheryl Anderson are the foundation of this case. From their testimony the investigators attempted to fill in the blanks. ABC's 20/20 did a national story on Kristin and the timeline of the story follows the testimony of Tim Davis and Cheryl Anderson exactly. What happens if their story isn't literally true. Personally, I wonder. There is more to this story and investigators hopefully are aware that this is an area worth looking into. Like I said in my prologue, the investigators couldn't care less about me so I do not receive invitations to their meetings on the "Kristin Smart" case. I know what I know only from personal involvement and in many hours speaking with Kristin's mom and dad. From time to time I learn facts about this case and have passed them on to both the Sheriff and the FBI. Information in the business is a one way street. I share with investigators what I have learned and they respond like a sponge. They absorb what I say without comment. Hopefully, it fits in with knowledge they already have. Truthfully, I am OK with that. In the end, this is about finding Kristin, not about me. I just have to hope and trust that they are honoring Kristin with their work ethic. 135 Crandall Correction: June, 2003: I have recently spoken with a few students who were at the party with Kristin that evening and the memories conflict with the story I have always heard so I want to make this correction and also to let you know what I have just heard. The story I have always heard was that Kristin arrived at the party around midnight and was found passed out on the neighbors lawn two hours later at 2:00am. Now I am hearing that Kristin had arrived at the party earlier in the evening. One student said that he arrived between 10:fpm - 11:00pm and that Kristin was already there. Another student confirmed this saying she was definitely there before midnight, though he didn't know exactly when. http://www.sonofsusan.com/id18.htm

Themis Eternal- 04-17-2006

Raising the stakes Sunday, Apr 16, 2006 BY KING HARRIS The man who offered $25,000 in February to anyone who finds the location of Kristen Smart’s body has upped the ante. Terry Black is now willing to pay $100,000. An ad making the announcement will appear next week. “I figure if there’s somebody out there who knows,” says Black, “$100,000 is going to motivate them.” Black, who owns an exclusive estate used as a private club and spa called Grand Island Mansion in the delta not far from Sacramento, says he doesn’t care how much money he spends. “My sole function in life is to retrieve the body for the Smart family.” Black says he got some good leads from his initial ads, but tracking those down takes time, and he wants the case solved. Kristin Smart, a 19-year-old Cal Poly freshman, vanished in the early-morning hours of May 25, 1996, and hasn’t been seen since. Most people think she was a victim of foul play—either murdered or accidentally killed, and then buried. Black says he’s hoping to attract the attention of the major news outlets and prime-time crime shows, and wants to get the word out by the end of this month, when Paul Flores, who has always been under suspicion, faces time in prison for his fourth drunk-driving arrest. Rumor has it, Black says, that some kind of plea bargain may be in the works in which Flores would trade a secret about Smart for a lighter sentence. Flores met Kristin at a party the night she disappeared and was the last person to see her alive, but police have never been able to prove a Flores link to her disappearance. Smart’s disappearance is coming up on ten years, and on May 20, a “Hope and Awareness” run will take place in Arroyo Grande to raise funds for her memorial at the Dinosaur Caves in Shell Beach. http://www.newtimes-slo.com/index.php?p=showarticle&id=1703

Themis Eternal- 04-28-2006

A Hope & Awareness Fun Run has been scheduled to remember Kristin Denise Smart on Sat. May 20th in Arroyo Grande, CA. Kristin has been missing since an off campus party on May 25, 1996. More information can be found at her website: http://www.findkristinsmart.org/

Magic407- 05-11-2006

Napa commemorates a local daughter's disappearance By MARSHA DORGAN, Register Staff Writer Thursday, May 11, 2006 1:13 AM PDT It has been 10 years since 19-year-old Kristin Smart disappeared. Smart, the daughter of then Vintage High School principal Stan Smart and now Napa Valley Unified School director of student services, was a freshman at Cal Poly University in San Luis Obispo when she vanished. She was last seen walking to her dormitory room, accompanied by a 19-year-old male student on the Friday night of the Memorial Day weekend in 1996. The pair had been to a party. Since that night, there has been no trace of Smart or explanation for her disappearance. To commemorate the 10-year anniversary of their daughter's disappearance, the Smarts, along with numerous supporters, have organized the Kristin Smart Hope & Awareness Fun Run May 20 in Arroyo Grande, just south of San Luis Obispo. "The most important thing is that Kristin will not be forgotten. We need to keep our daughter's memory alive," said Kristin's mother, Denise Smart. The proceeds benefit Kristin Smart Point of Hope Overlook at Dinosaur Caves in Shell Beach. "Kristin loved the ocean and anything to do with the sea. This place at Shell Beach is so beautiful and peaceful. She would have just loved it," Denise Smart said. http://www.napavalleyregister.com/articles/2006/05/11/news/local/iq_3427485.txt

Themis Eternal- 05-23-2006

Questions remain unanswered in Smart case May 21, 2006 By Quintin Cushner/Senior Staff Writer Ten years after Kristin Smart's disappearance, no one surrounding her case has felt anything near closure. Not Smart's family, who remember her as a loving and persistent 19-year-old, excited to be attending college at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo. They assume she is dead and buried somewhere, but cannot be certain. Not Paul Flores, a 1995 graduate of Arroyo Grande High School, who was the last person to see the young woman alive and who remains under investigation in her disappearance. Flores is out on bail facing a fourth drunken-driving conviction and continued scrutiny for his actions the night Smart vanished. Not detectives from the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Department, who still believe they can crack the case. And not Dennis Mahon or Terry Black, two men working to keep the Kristin Smart case from fading. Mahon maintains a Web site and has written a book. Black is offering a $100,000 reward to anyone with information leading to Smart. Each of these lives was altered early on May 25, 1996, after Flores walked with Smart and another student from an off-campus party onto campus. Flores and Smart apparently met at the party, where both had been drinking. The third student broke off from Flores and Smart about 2:30 a.m. Flores, then 19, told law enforcement he and Smart parted ways near his dorm, and that she returned to her Muir Hall dorm room alone. Police say there's no proof Smart ever returned to her room. Her roommate reported her missing May 27. Smart's clothing, toiletries and identification were undisturbed. Cal Poly police first interviewed Flores on May 28. He sported a black eye from what he claimed was a basketball mishap. A friend of Flores later told police the young man had arrived at the pick-up game bruised. Campus police appear to have made a crucial mistake early in the investigation. Officers failed to secure Flores' room at Santa Lucia Hall until after he vacated the dorm for the term. The Kristin Smart case was soon after turned over to the Sheriff's Department. More than a month after Smart's disappearance, cadaver dogs searching the dorm honed in on Flores' room. Once inside, the dogs zeroed in on his mattress. During a grand jury hearing convened in October 1996, Flores refused to answer questions, invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. He has never been charged in the young woman's disappearance. Later searches of Flores' family home in Arroyo Grande turned up nothing substantial. Psychics, national talk show hosts and local media all tried in vain to discern Smart's location. San Luis Obispo County Superior Court Judge Roger Piquet later declared Smart dead as of May 25, 2001, so her family could pursue a wrongful-death lawsuit against Flores. Suspect That civil case, which alleges “Flores violently assaulted and murdered Decedent Kristin Smart and disposed of her body in an unknown location, presumably in San Luis Obispo,” returns to court June 9. The civil suit has been repeatedly delayed since the Smart family filed it in 2002. The Sheriff's Department still considers its investigation open, and has refused to release any evidence to the Smarts' attorneys. Denise Smart, Kristin's mother, said she has mixed feelings about the criminal case staying open. “As long as it's still open, there's hope,” she said. “But I'm frustrated by the lack of progress.” An educator living in Stockton, Denise Smart said the slow reaction from Cal Poly police damaged the case. “It was way over their head,” she said. “When Kristin's roommate reported her missing, they didn't even go check on her. It was a total failure to respond.” In 1998, Gov. Pete Wilson signed a state law named after Smart, requiring universities and colleges to notify local law enforcement quickly if a violent crime may have occurred. “I know that members of the Smart family have complained that our police did not respond properly,” said Cal Poly Provost Bob Detweiler. “I wasn't here at the time, but I can find no evidence of us handling the case inappropriately. Because of Kristin's disappearance, we have beefed up our emphasis on alcohol awareness and sexual assault awareness on campus.” Since they took over the case, sheriff's deputies have focused on Flores, who is now a 29-year-old living in Lawndale in Los Angeles County. “Paul Flores is the only person of interest that we have not excluded as a possible suspect,” said Undersheriff Steve Bolts. “We've got several avenues we're pursuing that I can't really discuss. The case remains very active.” Bolts said Detective Dave Kenny is spending the majority of his time working on the Smart case. Kenny declined comment. Bolts had no estimate of how many hours have been spent on the case. “It's one of those cases that has the potential to be resolved,” Bolts said. “We are reasonably certain that she's deceased, and we're optimistic that her remains will be found some day.” Bolts would not comment on a specific theory about Smart's disappearance. “There's no evidence to exclude an intentional homicide,” he said. Since Smart went missing, Flores has racked up three drunken-driving convictions and a probation violation. Flores served time in 2000 at Santa Barbara County Jail for driving drunk in Santa Maria, and was sentenced again to County Jail for drinking while on probation. On Dec. 20, 2005, he was again flagged for drunken driving, this time in Los Angeles County. He is free on $100,000 bail while the case works its way through the courts. Flores could face prison time if convicted, said Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Paulette Paccione. The case returns to court June 29 for a preliminary hearing. Flores has rejected a plea deal in the latest drunken-driving charge that would have landed him in jail for a year, Paccione said. “He wants to fight the case,” she said. Bolts has several theories on Flores' battles with alcohol. “I think it's reflective of a chemical dependency that may be at the root of Kristin's disappearance,” Bolts said. “It also may be a product of a guilty conscience.” Denise Smart said Flores has negotiated in the past with law enforcement. She is certain Flores knows her daughter's whereabouts. “Do we know what he did? No. Do we know he knows where she is? Yes,” Denise Smart said. “He's kind of making his own prison. But for us there's no punishment we feel would be enough. Where she is is not where she wants to be and it's certainly not where we would want her to be.” Bolts wouldn't comment on any negotiations between law enforcement and Flores. “Even if there were negotiations,” he said, “they are privileged and are not presumed by us to be evidence.” Attempts to reach Flores were unsuccessful. Calls to his criminal and civil attorneys were not returned. His parents, Susan and Ruben, have separated and live in Arroyo Grande. Outside both of their homes is a printed flier with this message: “Notice: Please respect the privacy of the occupants of this residence. They have chosen to resolve their legal matters in the courtroom, not the media.” A man who emerged from Susan Flores' home last week snapped several pictures of a visiting reporter, but declined comment. The activists Dennis Mahon of Charlotte, N.C., has spent years tracking the case. Mahon's Web site, www.sonofsusan.com, includes his short book on Smart's disappearance and a log of Flores' legal troubles. Mahon used to park outside the Flores' home in Arroyo Grande and took to photographing Paul Flores during his court appearances. For his diligence, Denise Smart considers Mahon “a saint.” The Flores family sees it different. They have a restraining order against him. “It's a matter of not abandoning Kristin,” Mahon said. “My Web site is geared toward getting Flores to cooperate with the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Department. The crime is in the cover-up.” Terry Black, a Sacramento investor and political consultant, recently offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the location of the missing woman or her remains. Black, who believes Smart's body could be buried on the Nipomo Mesa, said he has provided police several tips received through his hotline. “I just would like to see closure to the family, and sometimes money is the only thing that motivates people to come forward,” Black said. “My sole concern is retrieval of the body. I'm not in the blame or punishment role here.” Persistence Denise Smart remembers her daughter's persistence and discipline above all else. An avid swimmer who stood more than 6 feet tall, Smart cared deeply about her health, Denise Smart said. “Before it was cool to be fit, she exercised and watched what she ate,” Denise Smart said. “She never had egg yolks.” The young woman loved Hawaii and even managed to graduate high school early to work as a camp counselor there. Originally accepted at UCSB, Smart decided to switch schools shortly before her freshman year. The prospect of transferring from her communications program into Cal Poly's elite architecture school was a lure. Denise Smart said her daughter also would have been content to work in TV. “She thought Joan Lunden had just about the best job in the world,” Denise Smart said. Ten years later, Denise Smart is still acutely aware of how her daughter's life was cut short. “She was a very loving and compassionate type of person, and it's hard to have lost her,” Denise Smart said. “Her friends are now getting married and having children.” Matt Smart was just 16 when his sister disappeared. “In a moment, your life is turned upside down,” he said. “You go from watching the news on TV to being on the news. From reading the newspapers to being in the newspapers.” His sister's disappearance inspired him to take life seriously at a young age, he said. Matt Smart threw himself into swimming competitions, eventually making it to the 2000 U.S. Olympic trials. Now a pharmaceutical representative, he tries to live well every day. Still, his sister's disappearance lingers. “It's one thing to have a death in the family,” he said. “It's another thing to not know what happened. You can't allow it to eat at you.” Tana Coates, attorney for the Smart family, said she is heartened that police continue to investigate. “I'm sure Denise thinks of this as if it were yesterday,” Coates said. “It's so important to keep the public's interest. It's a terrible mystery. The family would appreciate closure. Let's hope that happens.” Kristin Smart would have turned 29 this past February. http://www.santamariatimes.com/articles/2006/05/21/news/featurednews/news01.txt

Themis Eternal- 05-25-2006

Decade passes; pain lingers Missing teen's family continues hunt for answers Published Thursday, May 25, 2006 SCOTT SMITH Record Staff Writer STOCKTON - It was 10 years ago today that Kristin Smart, an athletic, tall and vibrant 19-year-old woman from Stockton vanished from a college campus in San Luis Obispo. Her disappearance touched off a nationwide story, and hundreds traveled to help find her. Even more have posted their own theories on Web sites speculating what happened after she left a drunken party at California Polytechnic State University. Still, no arrests have been made, and she has never been found. A decade after this high-profile case, Smart's family and friends still hope to find her. They've hired psychics, searched fields and even acted as their own detectives, interviewing Smart's friends, acquaintances and people who knew the No. 1 suspect. "It's a tough time every year when May rolls around," said Smart's father, Stan Smart, who wants justice. "It's really important to find our daughter and bring her remains home." Missing Kristin Denise Smart was last seen on campus in the early-morning hours of May, 25, 1996, after staggering away from a house party in the coastal hill town of San Luis Obispo. Paul Flores, then 19, a fellow student whom Smart first met that night, was to walk Smart to her campus dorm at Muir Hall on the way back to his own dorm. By morning, her roommate - worried Smart hadn't come in - reported her missing. Flores showed up later that day with a black eye when he met friends to play basketball. At first giving police conflicting stories, Flores quickly stopped talking and asserted his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. That's been his stance ever since. Flores and his attorney could not be reached for comment this week in Southern California. Investigators make guarded comments about Flores, saying he's at the center of a "very active" case. "He has not been excluded as a suspect. Let's put it that way," said San Luis Obispo County Undersheriff Steve Bolts. Aside from his black eye, cadaver dogs early in the investigation led police to a mattress in Flores' dorm room, but he has adamantly refused to answer questions. He dropped out of college shortly after Smart disappeared and has a drunken-driving record. In December, Flores was arrested in Los Angeles again on suspicion of driving under the influence, and this time he could go to state prison if he's convicted. Asked why Flores hasn't been arrested in connection with Smart's disappearance, Bolts said he couldn't comment. "We believe there is knowledge that somehow Paul Flores has, or may have, that he may be willing to share," Bolts said. Stan Smart, frustrated with the faltering investigation, said Flores' attorneys have twice suggested a deal in which Flores would lead them to the body in exchange for a significantly reduced charge. Both offers fell through. "It makes me further believe that he's the one," Smart said. Persistent pressure Family and friends refuse to let Kristin Smart's memory fade. Over the weekend, about 250 people gathered for the Kristin Smart Hope and Awareness Run near San Luis Obispo, marking a decade of frustration and unanswered questions. The money will help post signs asking the public for information. Matt Smart, Kristin's brother, who lives in Stockton and sells pharmaceuticals, recalled his big sister as a powerful swimmer whose eyes brightened at the thought of travel. Matt Smart, 26, was 16 when his sister vanished. An online video shows the Smarts playing together on a tropical beach in Jamaica and riding a cruise ship through the icy passages of Alaska. Another scene shows Kristin Smart graduating in 1995 from Lincoln High School. She was in her first year at Cal Poly when she vanished. Smart was declared legally dead in 2002, despite the fact that her body has never been recovered. Gov. Pete Wilson in 1998 signed the Kristin Smart Security Act into law, requiring campus police to report cases involving violence or missing students to local police. Smart's family faulted Cal Poly officers for failing to investigate the case early on. Kristin Smart's death brought together a family that was already close, Matt Smart said. Kristin Smart's mother, Denise, teaches English language learners at Lincoln Unified. Her youngest child, Lindsay Smart, is now 23. Stan Smart recalled driving down to Cal Poly to collect his daughters belongings from the Sheriff's Department and bicycle from the campus dorm where she once lived. "You're supposed to bring your child home - not her possessions," Stan Smart said. Fervent supporter Few have thrown themselves into the hunt for Kristin Smart like Dennis Mahon. The Charlotte, N.C., man isn't related to Smart and never knew her. He learned about the missing Stockton girl while searching for another girl from his hometown who vanished on vacation with her family in San Francisco. Mahon, 45, maintains an elaborate Web site dedicated to Smart. He once held a vigil in front of Paul Flores' family home in Arroyo Grande demanding answers until Flores obtained a restraining order. Mahon, a former homeless shelter manager who now works at Wal-Mart, spent 12 days in jail for continuing to harass Flores. He's agreed to take down the Web site when Flores begins to cooperate with law enforcement. "These girls, I'm just not going to abandon them, that's all," he said. There's a good reason cases like Kristin Smart's draws such strong public reaction, said Andrew Edelman, a criminal justice professor for the University of Phoenix in south Florida. "Any event that rattles our sense of safety and security gets society's attention," Edelman said. "I think it shocks." Cases like Smart's are alarming because men are expected to protect women and hold them in high esteem. Parents send their adult children to college campuses believing they're safe. Complacency sets in, Edelman said. It's particularly devastating when there's no closure, he said. What's next? In retirement, Stan Smart said he'll spend time with his family and search for Kristin. He predicts more treks down to San Luis Obispo, like before, when somebody thinks they know where she is. He's done making the talk-show circuit. He's thrashed through the surrounding hills looking for her, too often uncovering the remains of dead animals and never finding his daughter. "I'm not sure if we ever will. You know, they can't do anything more than what they've done to her. She can't be hurt any longer." http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060525/NEWS01/605250335/1001

Themis Eternal- 05-25-2006

$100,000 Reward Offered in Kristin Smart Disappearance Case Updated: 5/25/2006 web by C. Johnson It has been 10 years since the disappearance of Kristin Smart, a young college woman from Stockton. Despite a search that went national, she was never found. Now a local man hopes his $100,000 reward to help find Smart's remains will bring some closure to the case. The last time the 19-year-old Smart was seen was early on the morning of May 25, 1996. She was leaving a house party at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo in the company of a man she had met that night. Paul Flores, 19, was supposed to walk Smart to her dorm room on campus. The next morning, Smart's roommate reported her missing to campus police. Flores was seen later that day with a black eye. He first offered conflicting stories to police but soon stopped talking, invoking his Fifth Amendment right to not incriminate himself. Flores has never been charged in the Smart case. Since Smart's disappearance, her family and friends have been frustrated in their search for her and lack of progress in finding out what happened. Terry Black, who helps manage the Grand Island Mansion in the Delta, had his business post a $100,000 reward six months ago for leads to help find Smart's remains. He says the offer is not tied to the arrest or conviction of whoever may have caused harm to Smart. "We're interested solely in the location of her remains," Black told News10's Tim Daly. "So she can be returned to Stockton and buried with dignity by her family." Black himself only has a distant connection to the case. He said a relative had lived in San Luis Obispo and knew a friend of Flores. Black said he heard a story secondhand that he thought would be helpful to the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff Department's investigation. But Black claims the information wasn't followed up and he then contacted Smart's family. "As I learned about the fiasco of this crime investigation, I became more committed to family solving the problem," Black says. The $100,000 offer has brought some new information to light, Black says. He claims Flores, who has a drunk-driving record and is now facing possible prison time if convicted of a December DUI charge, has talked to others, if not detectives. "He's done a lot of talking over the years and those people have contacted me," Black says. "I would give $500,000. Flores is not going to give up the whereabouts of the body," Black says. "What I expect from $100,000, people he's been close to, gone to school with." Black says he talks to the Smart family every week. Kristin Smart's mother, Denise Smart, was not up to talking this day. She did tell News10 three years ago, though, that all her family wanted was for "just the opportunity to give her a Christian burial and lay her to rest, would bring a sense of closure to our family." The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Department says the Smart investigation is open and active. Anyone with information that could help find Kristin Smart can call Black at (219) 776-4218. http://www.news10.net/storyfull2.aspx?storyid=17783

Themis Eternal- 05-29-2006

The search for Kristin Smart never ends for her family Monday, May 29, 2006 By MARSHA DORGAN For the past 10 years, the Smart family has died a little each day. It was on Memorial Day weekend 1996 that their 19-year-old daughter Kristin Smart disappeared. For the past decade the family has been waiting for that moment when they can bring her body back for a proper burial. Kristin, a freshman at Cal Poly University in San Luis Obispo, was last seen in the early morning hours of May 25, 1996, after she left an off-campus party. Investigators believe Paul Flores, 19, also a student at the university, was the last person to see Kristin alive. She met him at the party, and the two walked together back to their dorm rooms, which were in separate buildings. Flores has always maintained he left Kristin around 2 a.m., when they reached his dorm room. He said she continued to walk the short distance to her room alone. Detectives still consider Flores as a possible suspect. For Kristin's parents, Denise and Stan Smart, and her siblings, Matt, 27, and Lindsey, 24, the ordeal has been almost more than they can bear. Stan was principal of Vintage High School at the time their daughter went missing. In 2000, he assumed the duties of Napa Valley Unified School District director of student services. He retires on June 30. "A little part of our lives dies each day. People lose someone they love each day, but it shouldn't be your children," Denise Smart said. "There is a hole in our heart that never goes away. It's not easy to move on when you don't know where your child is." The Smarts have long since given up hope their daughter will be found alive. "But to think of her somewhere in an unmarked, unknown grave ... no greater pain for a parent," Denise said. Stan Smart is frustrated the case has not been resolved. "We don't have any idea where she is," he said. Stan spent the first three summers after his daughter's disappearance combing the area around the college looking for Kristin's body. "It's very hilly, steep, wooded terrain. And we don't have any idea where to search. If we just had some direction, we could get a large number of people to search, but where do you look? It is unusual that a hiker hasn't come across her body," Smart said. "We still go down to San Luis Obispo and continue to search. We have to. But it just eats you alive." Like the police, the Smarts believe Flores knows details about what happened to Kristin. But he's not talking. Other than making a few initial statements to police when Kristin disappeared, over the past 10 years, Flores has refused to talk to investigators. He has never denied any involvement in Kristin's disappearance. "I know he killed our daughter. Kristin had been drinking that night. I think he took her to his dorm room and tried to rape her. She may have fought back, and he hit her in the head or choked her," Stan said. "He was alone in his dorm room that night. His roommate was in San Francisco. I believe he wrapped Kristin's body in a blanket and took her out the window -- his room was on the ground floor," he said. "I think he put her body in a nearby Dumpster, and she ended up in the landfill." Smart said sheriff's investigators checked the landfill, but found nothing. "Now the landfill has been closed because it has been declared a hazmat. They have covered the entire fill with a layer of dirt," he said. On one of their trips to San Luis Obispo after their daughter's disappearance, Denise confronted Flores at the gas station where he worked. "I introduced myself to him. I said, 'Paul, it's a terrible accident. We need your help to find Kristin. Please tell us what you know,'" Denise said. "He went inside and locked himself in a closet. He knows where she is and that it's a place where she doesn't want to be, and certainly a place we don't want her to be." Flores is represented by an attorney hired after the Smart's filed a wrongful death suit against him. "We are not suing for money, but for information. He knows where she is, and he needs to tell us," Stan said. The next hearing is set for early June. Twice, Flores' attorneys have presented plea bargains to the Smarts. "In return for information about Kristin, Paul wanted to be assured he would not get any jail time. But the deals fell through," Denise said. "I know he did it, and he needs to be punished." From the very beginning, the Smarts have been unhappy with the way law enforcement has handled the investigation. "She disappeared early Saturday morning, and the campus police didn't notify us until Monday night. They said she could have just taken off," Denise said. By the time campus police got around to searching Flores' dorm room, he had left for the summer and taken all of his belongings. "We wanted other law enforcement called in right away. I wanted the FBI involved because I believe Kristin was kidnapped," she said. "But all we ever got was that the case was in good hands with the campus police." About a month after Kristin's disappearance, the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's investigators were called in. They searched Flores' dorm room with cadaver dogs. The dogs picked up the scent of corpse on the edge of Flores' mattress and the telephone on the adjacent nightstand. In 1999, Gov. Pete Wilson signed what is commonly called the Kristin Smart Law, requiring universities and colleges to notify local law enforcement immediately if a violent crime may have occurred. The current provost for the university, Robert Detweiler was not at Cal Poly when Kristin disappeared. He came in 1998. "I am familiar about the Smarts' concern. I have checked with people who were here when it happened. The university believes campus police acted professionally and appropriately. We have cooperated with law enforcement from the beginning, Detweiler said. "As tragic as this is, the case has impacted the university to become more concerned in educating students, especially freshmen, about safety and sexual assault. It made us more attentive to the issue of alcohol abuse." The Smarts are also frustrated that the sheriff's department is not working closer with them. "They do not communicate with us about the case. We're not getting any information. They are accusing us of leaking information to the media. They have told us a task force made up of an officials from the FBI, the sheriff's and district attorney's office has been assigned to investigate Kristin's case. They are to work on it until the case is resolved," Denise said. "However, we do not have contact with them. I would just think law enforcement would keep us better informed." During the past 10 years, one of the bright spots in the Smart's life as been Dennis Mahon. Mahon, who is from Charlotte, NC, came to California to search for Kristen Modafferi. The 19-year-old, who is also from Charlotte and a North Carolina State University student, was last seen on June 23, 1997, leaving a San Francisco coffee shop. After Mahon arrived in San Francisco, he became interested in the Kristin Smart case and started putting information about her on his sonofsusan.com Web site. Mahon used to park outside the Flores' home in Arroyo Grande and also took photos of Paul Flores during his court appearances. "His Web site has kept Kristen's case alive. We are very thankful," Denise said. However, Mahon's involvement in the Kristin Smart case is the main reason law enforcement has been stingy in releasing information to the family, San Luis Obispo Sheriff's Undersheriff Steve Bolts said. "They have been very involved and very appreciated of Dennis Mahon, his Web site and the information he puts on it. We have asked Dennis and the Smarts to remove the information because it's inaccurate. We will not participate in providing information to them that ends up being incorrect," Bolts said. "Every time we give them information they think they are doing the right thing by putting it on the Internet. If it was accurate information, we would not have this problem. But Dennis puts his own spin on it. "We cannot maintain the credibility of the investigation if we can't validate the information on the Web site. So we don't share information with the Smarts," Bolts said. "If they would agree not to share information, we would meet with them on a daily basis if they wanted. But they have declined." In addition to the loss of her daughter, Denise struggles with the image that she believes the media has painted of Kristin the night she disappeared. "There were all kinds of stories portraying Kristin to be the drunk girl who didn't make it home from the party. I'm no Polyanna. I know college kids drink. But I don't want people to get the wrong message about my daughter. She was the girl who walked home with the wrong person. The message is we need to look out for one another," Denise said. "I know the police report said she was drunk. But wasn't as if she was passed out, lying over a beer keg. I just don't want her to be victimized again. Kristin is the one who knows what happened that night. And she is not here to tell us." As another anniversary passes of their daughter's disappearance, Stan, Denise, Matt and Lindsey refuse to give up hope that the case will be resolved and Kristen will be put to rest with dignity. "Someone asked me if I heard that they found Kristin's body would I be happy?" Stan said. "No, I wouldn't be happy. Yes, there would be some closure. But it's never a happy situation when you have to bury your child." Attempts by the Register to contact the Flores' family were unsuccessful. Paul Flores' parents, Susan and Ruben, have divorced and live in Arroyo Grande. Both have unlisted telephone numbers. Paul Flores is living in Lawndale with his ex-brother-in-law. http://www.napavalleyregister.com/articles/2006/05/29/news/local/iq_3446825.txt

Gaia- 06-18-2006

A Cold Case, a Haunting Mystery Ten years after Cal Poly freshman Kristin Smart disappeared on her way from a party, there are few clues and no body. The only suspect won't talk. By Peter H. King, Times Staff Writer June 18, 2006 SAN LUIS OBISPO — One warm Friday night in late spring 10 years ago, Kristin Denise Smart and three other young women started walking from their dorms at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. They were headed for the neighborhoods of apartment complexes and overpopulated "Animal House"-like bungalows that border the campus. They were looking for a party. It was Memorial Day weekend. Kristin's first year away at college was coming to a close. The 19-year-old from Stockton would have considered that something to celebrate. As far back as February, she'd written to another student that "school seems like it is never going to end." Kristin, who earned A's and Bs in high school, had struggled in a couple of her college courses. She had expressed doubts, in anguished conversations with her parents, about whether Cal Poly was right for her. Three weeks earlier, her mother had sent a six-page, handwritten letter urging Kristin, the oldest of three children, to "learn from your mistakes and get on with life…. Wake up and smell the roses. You have a world of opportunities at your fingertips." Later, after Kristin had failed to return to her dorm room and the searches had commenced — searches with helicopters, horses and busloads of volunteers; searches guided by ground-penetrating radar, psychics and anonymous tipsters who signed their missives with code names like "Jellybean" — her parents would be asked by reporters to describe their daughter. Kristin, they would say, was "a dreamer," a girl who would give her family bear hugs, cook them omelets and, even in her late teens, sit on her father's lap. She loved the ocean and travel and poetry. She had been a counselor at a camp on Oahu. She would call her mother every week from Cal Poly, sometimes, yes, to "whine," but also to share successes. "She wasn't one to run away from anything," her mother said, a pointed reference to the initial instinct of campus police investigators that they were dealing with another runaway — treating Kristin's disappearance, in the opinion of her parents, "like a lost bicycle." Her first choice for college had been a university on the Virgin Islands. Her parents, both educators, thought that was too far from their San Joaquin Valley home; Kristin instead picked Cal Poly, a popular state university on the Central Coast. "We thought that would be a good place for her," Kristin's father, Stan Smart, recalled not long ago. "We thought it was a safe community, you know. And it is. It just didn't work out that way for our family." Best known for its programs in agriculture, architecture and engineering, Cal Poly has long followed a hands-on educational philosophy calibrated — without apology to academia's loftier aspirations — to prepare its graduates for ready and rapid entry into the working world. "Learn by Doing" goes the campus creed. Of course, part of the learning that any freshman does at Cal Poly, or at any non-commuter college for that matter, involves lessons in how to live away from home for the first time. It can be a time for social experimentation, for tasting new things, trying out new identities. Kristin was no exception. Her e-mails, recovered after she disappeared, were signed with such aliases as Marysol, Roxie, Trixie, Kianna and punctuated with a 19-year-old's philosophical postscript: "Live your life to be an EXCLAMATION, rather than an EXPLANATION." At some point, other students said, she had dyed her naturally blond hair brunet. She also had demonstrated a flair for melodrama. It was not uncommon, a friend would tell investigators, for Kristin to act drunk at parties, even when she was sober. Still, Kristin had seemed happy when her family visited her earlier in the spring. "She was enjoying it, the social piece," said Stan Smart, a public school administrator in Napa who commutes home to Stockton for weekends. "I think she was exploring and finding her way." Kristin's appearance was striking: 6 foot 1 with a lean swimmer's physique, high cheekbones and dark, almond-shaped eyes. In high school, her mother has said, she was bothered when her good looks attracted attention. On the evening she went looking for a party, May 24, 1996, Kristin wore a short-cropped T-shirt, black running shorts and red athletic shoes. This was not an unusual ensemble for a female student at Cal Poly, especially on a day when temperatures had reached the high 80s. Sometime after 5:30 p.m. Friday, Kristin left a message on her mother's telephone, reporting, happily, that she would be allowed to make up a biology test that somehow had been lost earlier in the year. "She was very excited," Denise Smart recalled. "She said, 'Hi, good news, good news.' That was her good news: She had gotten a call from professor whatever his name was. She had been trying for so long to get that resolved." About 8:30 p.m., Kristin and her three companions were on their way from the dorms, a staggered row of brick and concrete buildings set against a steep incline known as Poly Hill. They weren't far into their walk when they flagged down a friend in a pickup truck. Kristin climbed into the cab and the others hopped into the back. For two hours, the truck trolled the surrounding neighborhoods. Finally, Kristin suggested they swing by 135 Crandall Way, an unofficial fraternity house near campus. Kristin's companions did not want to go to the party: In the course of any year, certain party venues at Cal Poly develop reputations for rowdy behavior, where the atmosphere created by the mix of testosterone and tap beer can make single, female students less than comfortable. And so they dropped her off a couple of blocks from the house and went home. It was now about 10:30 p.m. So far, none of them, including Kristin, had been drinking. "I can still see her standing there after we dropped her off, a little mad I think that I wouldn't go with her," Margarita Campos told the San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune a year later. "Someone who wasn't as independent as Kristin wouldn't have gone to a party alone. "She kept saying, 'You go with me.' But I didn't want to go. I told her, 'You better be careful,' and she said she would be fine. Then she said 'Bye.' " Unrealistic Expectations It can seem so easy on television, where the ubiquitous fictional detectives can solve complicated cases, bringing the perpetrators to justice and the victim's family to "closure," and all in less than an hour. Or, in a single segment, one of cable's nightly cavalcade of crime show hosts dissects the latest murder of the moment, debriefs the secondhand experts, consoles the survivors and then, after a short break, is back to take on the next perp waiting in the dock of presumed guilt. Expectations raised by television crime fighters can complicate things for real-world investigators: "Everybody wants an answer, right now," said a law enforcement official who has worked on the Smart investigation. "And if you can't give them an answer in 30 minutes, you are derelict in your duty." Sadly, there have been no 30-minute answers in the case of Kristin Smart. In her story, the forensic pieces do not snap neatly into place, the suspect refuses to fold in the interrogation room, and the family is left not with "closure" but with the vapor of conjecture, deprived even of a body to bury. The party at 135 Crandall Way had all the trappings of a typical Friday night beer bust. There was a keg, a stereo system and about 60 revelers, some invited, many not. There even was, late in the festivities, a fistfight — the traditional signal at such get-togethers for the scholars to stagger on home. Tim Davis, a senior who helped stage the party, would tell investigators that he was shooing away the last stragglers about 2 a.m. when he spotted the tall girl who had been calling herself Roxie sprawled on a lawn next door, apparently passed out. He roused her. She complained that she was cold. Roxie — it was Kristin — had been noticed at the party. "Her demeanor was described as 'weird,' " reported a private investigator who debriefed people who were there, "as if she was 'on something.' " She was, the investigator was told, "acting 'flirtatious' and 'highly active.' " "At one point," went another investigative report, "she dragged a student into a bathroom…. Once inside the bathroom with the door closed, Kristen began looking at herself in the mirror and saying, 'Am I ugly? Do you think I'm ugly? Am I ugly?' all the while primping." She was seen kissing a basketball player. She was heard insisting that she must apologize to the basketball player. One student said she was drinking tequila. A detective had information that she was "chugging tumblers of Vodka." There were people at the party, however, who could not recall seeing Kristin with a drink. This has led her parents to wonder if she might have been slipped one of the date-rape drugs that were just beginning to infiltrate the California college scene. The Crandall Way house is a 10-minute walk from the dormitories. Kristin, however, was in no condition to make the walk without help, and so Davis said he would do it. Another woman who lived in the dorms said she would join him. Her name was Cheryl Anderson, and her escort had disappeared. She had seen Kristin around campus but did not know her. Before they started out, yet another dorm resident appeared from "out of nowhere," as Anderson later put it, and volunteered to join them. It was Paul Flores, a 19-year-old from the nearby town of Arroyo Grande. Flores had been a mediocre student at Arroyo Grande High, with grades and SAT scores that would not seem to have made him Cal Poly material. Through a sort of good-neighbor policy, however, the university gives extra weight to applicants from the Central Coast. In the fall quarter, Flores flunked English composition and math. He received a D in an introductory course in food sciences, his major. He did earn a unit of credit in a pass-fail course: bowling. Flores' grades would not improve much in the next two quarters, and at 0.6, his freshman GPA barely showed a pulse. His troubles were not confined to academics. In December, a female student summoned San Luis Obispo police at 1 a.m.; she told dispatchers that Flores, apparently drunk, had climbed a trellis outside her apartment and was refusing to leave her balcony. He was gone by the time officers arrived. Six weeks later, Flores was seen racing his pickup through a downtown intersection. A police cruiser followed him into a gas station. Flores' speech was slurred and his eyes were bloodshot, the officer reported. He talked the officer into letting him go inside the station to pay for his gas. The policeman watched through a window as Flores purchased a pack of chewing gum and stuffed "a large quantity in his mouth." The gambit failed. Flores was ordered to spit out the gum and was given a breath test, which he flunked with a 0.13% blood-alcohol reading. He lost his license. Those who knew Flores from the dorms or back in Arroyo Grande tended to describe him the same way to investigators or in legal depositions. He was, they said with remarkable uniformity, "annoying." He would hit on their girlfriends. He could be obnoxious when drunk. At 5 foot 10 and 170 pounds, Flores was not physically imposing. His face did have a certain boyish charm. But he was not popular, and whenever he boasted about a sexual conquest, those who knew him would scoff, convinced that he was still a virgin. In the days after Kristin's disappearance, before their son was named a suspect, Flores' parents told investigators that when he was in high school they had bought a pool table, hoping to attract other students to their house. "Paul had no friends," they told a law enforcement source, who recounted the conversation. "And so they thought that" — with the pool table — "Paul at least would have somebody to talk to." At Cal Poly, Flores kept a small refrigerator in his room on the ground floor of Santa Lucia Hall: "And on weekend nights," this source said, "he'd sit in his room and drink beer, get drunk and then go wander around the outskirts of campus, looking for parties." His behavior at these parties earned him a nickname among a set of women in the dorms, Anderson would later tell investigators. She and her friends, she said, would refer to him jokingly as "Chester the Molester." Flores had seemed "very quiet" at the Crandall Way party, one student who was there told investigators: " He did not talk to people at the party." He shot a lot of pool, others recalled. He was shooed away from one cluster of partygoers, a witness said, after hitting on a girl in front of her boyfriend. Davis told investigators that, "at one point, he heard a loud noise in the hallway and saw Paul Flores on top of Kristin Smart. He didn't know if Flores had knocked Kristin Smart down on purpose or if it was an accident." They got up, Davis said, "and went their separate ways." After the party, Flores joined Davis, Anderson and Kristin as they set out for the dorms. As they entered the campus, Anderson told Davis, who lived in an opposite direction, that the three freshmen could make it the rest of the way on their own. They turned up Perimeter Road, a wide, well-lighted boulevard that cuts through the campus proper. The college was especially quiet because of the three-day weekend. Anderson would not remember seeing anyone else on the walk. In a deposition, Anderson testified that Kristin occasionally would stop. Flores, holding Kristin, would tell Anderson to "go ahead if you want." She thought this was "a little strange" and waited for them to catch up. She recalled that Kristin, still in her running shorts and T-shirt, had begun to shiver in the late-night chill. She could not remember her saying a single word. The trio reached the intersection of Perimeter Road and Grand Avenue. Anderson's dorm was half a block south down Grand. Santa Lucia, Flores' hall, was about 75 yards up Perimeter Road. Just behind it, perhaps 40 steps up a path, was Muir Hall, where Kristin lived. In her deposition, with Stan and Denise Smart present in the room, Anderson tried to explain her decision to leave Kristin in Flores' care for the final leg home: "I said, 'Will you walk her to her room?' you know, 'Will you take her back to her room?' And he said, 'Yes.' And I said something about 'Yes?' and he said — and I said, 'If you won't, I will do it. I will walk her to her room,' you know…. I didn't want to have to do it. But, you know, if he didn't want to do it I was — I was going to do it." Flores, Anderson said, promised he would see Kristin to her room. Then he asked Anderson for a kiss. She thought that was weird and declined. He asked for a hug; she turned him down again. She may or may not have shaken his hand. Flores and Kristin then began to move slowly up Perimeter Road, their dorms in view. Anderson recalled that Flores, 3 inches shorter than Kristin, had his arm around her waist. Anderson turned for her dorm. She did not look back again. Unresolved Issues Stan Smart can be animated and amiable discussing his other children, or his pending retirement, or his backyard gardening. Yet when he talks about Kristin's disappearance, he invariably will slip into a deliberate, muted monotone — a father's tool for controlling emotions that have been run through the most hellish tests. "Nothing really has changed," he said one Sunday afternoon in early May, slipping into this flat, almost detached speech pattern. "I mean, I still have a lot of anger about the situation. And my wife is a bit of an emotional wreck at times. And it hasn't been resolved. We haven't really resolved the issues as to where our daughter is, and what happened to her." Kristin's body — a judge has declared her legally dead — has not been found despite a decade of searches and sizable rewards seeking information. No arrests have been made, although early on investigators settled on Flores as their only suspect. That remains unchanged. "He is still an active suspect," said Sgt. Brian Hascall, a spokesman for the San Luis Obispo County sheriff. "He has not been eliminated." Hascall described the case as "open and active. We have never inactivated this case. We have never taken our eyes off the ball, so to speak." From the Smarts' perspective, the case is neither open nor active. They complain that law enforcement officials have all but stopped sharing meaningful information with them, leaving the parents to wonder just how much time investigators actually spend on the lingering riddle of their daughter. "They've put it on the shelf," Stan Smart said. Investigators, in turn, maintain that early leaks to the media and the Smarts' more recent relationship with an amateur sleuth who operates a website devoted to the case, have forced them to limit what they pass along. Whatever, it is clear that the Smarts were uncomfortable with the investigation almost from the start. Convinced that something terrible had happened, they ran headlong into a campus police department that did not consider it all that unusual for a 19-year-old freshman to disappear for a weekend — even though she'd left her identification, prescription medicine, cosmetics and all her clothes in her dorm room. In fact, the department declined to take a missing persons report when a dorm neighbor of Kristin's contacted them two days after the party. It was only when this first-year student persisted, calling both the Smarts and the San Luis Obispo Police Department, that campus police opened a file. The first field report, filed by a campus patrol officer a week after Kristin had vanished, concluded with an "Officer Observations" paragraph: "Smart does not have any close friends at Cal Poly. Smart appeared to be under the influence of alcohol on Friday night. Smart was talking with and socializing with several different males at the party. Smart lives her life in her own way, not conforming to typical teenage behavior." Only in the final sentence did the officer tack on a disclaimer: "These observations are in no way implying that her behavior caused her disappearance, but they provide a picture of her conduct on the night of her disappearance." And so it is perhaps understandable that the Smarts felt driven to insert themselves into the investigation. They forwarded suggestions from Napa police detectives whom Stan Smart knew from his work in the schools there. They brought lawyers onboard, befriended FBI agents, reached out for help to a state senator (who later would sponsor legislation, named after Kristin Smart, requiring campus police departments to promptly report missing students.) While Denise Smart stayed in Stockton — "They told me," she said, "to stay by the phone for when she called" — her husband all but moved to San Luis Obispo, where for months he would pursue every lead that came his way. When two San Luis Obispo women, claiming to have psychic instincts, called to tell him that Kristin could be found at a specific spot in the hills behind campus, he climbed there on a 100-degree day and came back down with only disappointment. When a self-described dowser, or water witch, told Smart that he had identified Kristin's whereabouts by dangling a weight on a string over a map, and that she was alive and living at Lake Tahoe, he jumped in his car and tore north. When that didn't pan out, the map was reconsulted, and Stan Smart was dispatched to a remote stretch of Nevada highway. And then to a public hospital in San Luis Obispo, where Stan was told Kristin had just checked herself in. "And so I spoke to the head nurse and another person" — that monotone again. "And I said, 'Look on your list for a tall, blond woman who checked in today.' And they said, 'We haven't had anybody like that come in.' They gave me this look. They said, 'Mr. Smart, we feel very sorry for you. But she is not here.' "They thought I had gone over the edge psychologically." Here the father paused for a moment. "She didn't survive," he said, his voice flatter than ever. "And that basically is what it comes down to." The D.A. Gets Involved Although the initial response seemed amateurish to the Smarts, two veteran investigators from the district attorney's office, in fact, had been called in to assist the campus police, which maintained jurisdiction on the case. And they quickly focused all their attention on Flores. They spent hours with him every day for more than a week, retracing his route home the night of the party, revisiting his initial account to Cal Poly officers, trying to build a rapport even as they chipped away at his alibi. There were inconsistencies. He had received a black eye, the result, he told campus police, of an elbow he took in a pickup basketball game the Monday after the party. The district attorney's investigators tracked down a friend of Flores who swore the black eye had been there Sunday, the day before the game. "Did you get rat-packed at the party?" this friend told investigators he had asked Flores. "I don't know how I got the black eye," he said, quoting Flores. "I just woke up with it." In his first interview with campus police, Flores said he had watched Kristin walk up the path toward her dormitory before he entered his hall. Investigators said his roommate, who had been away for the weekend, was told by Flores that "he walked the missing person home and then came back to his room." The roommate, according to a police report, "said he did joke with Flores about the case and asked Flores what he did" with Kristin. "Flores told him, 'She's home with my parents.' " This "joke," as the police report characterized it, would seem less than funny to the Smarts and their supporters, who have received and passed along to police anonymous tips about a patch of concrete being poured in the backyard of an Arroyo Grande residence owned by the Flores family after Kristin disappeared. Initially, Flores agreed to submit to a polygraph test. When prodded, he kept putting it off. Finally, the district attorney's investigators picked up Flores and told him it was time for the test. "He turned white," is how these detectives, who would not comment for this article, described Flores' reaction to others. Flores was taken to a conference room at the Arroyo Grande police station. He still balked at a lie detector test but did agree to an interview. The 90-minute session was videotaped. Bluffing, the investigators suggested to Flores that they knew he had taken a shower that night, instead of going straight to bed, as he first claimed. He admitted that, yes, he had gone into a communal shower about 5 a.m. after becoming sick. He also admitted to lying about the black eye, not wanting to "sound stupid." In truth, he said, he had whacked himself while working on a truck parked at his father's house. What was most striking about the interview, say those familiar with the tape, was Flores' body language. As the investigators pressed him, pointing out that Kristin had last been seen with him, he pulled his arms into his T-shirt, scrunched over at the waist in his chair and lifted his feet off the floor, as if moving toward a fetal position. It seemed, Smart's lawyers have been told, that "he was going to give it up." He didn't. Instead, he called the investigators' bluff. "If you are so smart," he demanded, "then tell me where the body is." They had a theory, but no body. So they didn't answer. Flores headed for the door. Shortly thereafter, his mother found him a lawyer. There would be some intriguing developments in the early investigation. A team of cadaver dogs, trained to react to wherever a dead body has been, were brought into Santa Lucia Hall. The dogs were taken one by one through the dormitory by handlers who had been given no case particulars. All three were drawn to the door of what had been Flores' room, barking and scratching to be allowed in. "She about like broke her neck," is how one handler described her dog's response to Room 128. Once inside, each of the dogs would make their way to a corner of what had been Flores' bed. Investigators were impressed but said dogs "can't testify in court." And when handlers do, their testimony can be countered by opposing experts who poke away at the scientific uncertainties about why cadaver dogs react as they do. There were searches of the Arroyo Grande residences of Flores' separated parents, Ruben and Susan Flores. A scan with ground-penetrating radar of Susan Flores' backyard produced one anomalous reading under a concrete slab, the Smarts have been told, but the detectives apparently did not believe it merited a follow-up look. An earring that seemed to resemble one Kristin had been pictured wearing turned up in a Flores driveway, but it was misplaced by a sheriff's detective before it could be examined. In the end, the black eye and bad body language and barking dogs, the radar anomalies and lost earring never added up, in the view of those who would make the decision, to a case that supported an arrest. On the one-year anniversary of Kristin's disappearance, the sheriff of San Luis Obispo County, whose department had come aboard at Cal Poly's request about a month into the investigation, made a rather staggering admission. "We need Paul Flores to tell us what happened to Kristin Smart," then-Sheriff Ed Williams told the San Luis Obispo Tribune, as the newspaper is now called. "The fact of the matter is we have very qualified detectives who have conducted well over a hundred interviews, and everything leads to Mr. Flores. There are no other suspects. So absent something from Mr. Flores, I don't see us completing this case." Even a student with an 0.6 grade-point average could grasp the implications of the sheriff's remarks. Pleading the 5th Flores invoked his 5th Amendment right against self-incrimination before a grand jury. He followed the same course in a deposition conducted by the Smarts' attorneys. He rejected a deal that had been put together in conversations between the district attorney and his lawyer. The terms required Flores to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter, reveal what happened to Kristin and lead authorities to her body. In exchange, he would receive a six-year sentence and the Smarts would agree not go after him in civil court. The Smarts, in fact, have filed a wrongful-death suit, but it has been stalled by the refusal of law enforcement officials to turn over evidence gathered in an active case. In response to the lawsuit, Flores has denied "both generally and specifically each and every allegation" raised against him. If silence has kept Flores free, as the Smarts maintain, it has been a troubled freedom. He has lost numerous entry-level jobs and was turned down when he tried to join the Navy. He has left Arroyo Grande and now lives in Lawndale, where he occupies a back house behind a back house in a neighborhood of small stucco homes and large, barking dogs. The drinking does not seem to have stopped. Two weeks before last Christmas, Flores was stopped for driving in excess of 50 mph on residential streets. A test put his blood-alcohol level at 0.08%. It was his third drunk driving arrest since Kristin Smart disappeared. And so in late May, while the Smarts were in Arroyo Grande preparing for a "fun run" in honor of their daughter, Flores was huddled with his parents in the cafeteria of a Torrance courthouse, waiting for a court appearance in his latest DUI case. Flores, dressed in corduroy pants, a sports shirt and scuffed walking shoes, sat at the corner of a table with his back to the door, one shoulder wedged against a wall. His face was pale, his fingernails overgrown. His mother sat close beside him, almost like a shield. Across the table his father, a stocky man with silver hair, kept his head on a swivel: More than once, a courtroom appearance by Flores has brought out advocates of the Smart family, or private investigators, or the media. Ruben Flores locked on a reporter as he walked toward the table. The reporter sat down and in a rush tried to explain that he would like to hear what they had to say about Kristin Smart and all the accusations. "No," Paul Flores said emphatically, maintaining eye contact only for a moment before looking down at the table. Ruben Flores said he had found a note that the reporter had left at his house: "We don't want to talk. No, thank you." Susan Flores, her face flushed, dug through her black leather purse and pulled out a pile of small pieces of paper. Here, she said, peeling one sheet from the deck, "print this." Typed in stacked and centered lines was the following: "A long time ago we chose to "Handle our legal matters in a "Court of Law "Not in the "Media Court of Public Opinion." The Strongest Theory Many theories have bubbled up over time in the case, and to spend a few weeks on the Central Coast is to hear them all: Kristin is buried somewhere in Arroyo Grande, right under everybody's nose. She was hauled off in a Cal Poly food cart that was stolen the night she disappeared, entombed under a water pipeline under construction at the time. Paul Flores had help. Didn't Scott Peterson attend Cal Poly about 10 years ago? Then there is this version, laid out by someone from law enforcement who once worked the case and knows it well: It has been the strongest working theory all along. Flores, this person said, speaking on condition of anonymity, must have taken Kristin to his room: "We know that she never got back to her dorm room. Her roommate was there. And his roommate was gone. He wasn't a cold-blooded killer. He was more like a kid in the candy store." But something went terribly wrong. Perhaps there was a struggle, which would explain the black eye. "It's also a possibility that she regurgitated on her own vomit and died," the source went on. "It could have happened when he was in the shower. In any case, he panics and decides to hide the body." This narrator discounts various theories that involve Kristin's body being conveyed off campus or buried somewhere near the dorms by Flores. It was growing too close to dawn. Toting a 6-foot-1 body across campus undetected "would have been next to impossible." The large, rectangular window of Flores' ground floor room, however, opens on a service driveway. The driveway runs between the dorm and a tree-covered rise, obscuring it from view. At the driveway's end, 30 paces from Flores' room, sit two dumpsters. At that time of the year they would have been filled with the flotsam of freshmen preparing to decamp from the dorms for good. "So he rolls her up in a blanket and carries her out." He could have bumped his eye in the process, pulling his awkward load through the window, perhaps. He deposits Kristin in one of the dumpsters and "puts some stuff over her to hide her." The garbage truck arrives, as it almost always does on Saturdays at 7:30 a.m. It rolls down the short driveway. The driver, still in his seat, grabs the dumpsters with the truck's prongs and flips them over the top one by one, dropping their contents, unseen, into the bed. "And then it's off to the dump…. " Several days after the disappearance, a dig for Kristin's remains was conducted by searchers at the Cold Canyon Landfill, where Cal Poly trash is taken. Workers burrowed 18 feet down and began to find copies of the Mustang Daily and other school documents from the last week of May 1996. The dig ended, however, without producing any sign of Kristin Denise Smart. There are those in law enforcement who insist the search was thorough. There are others who say it was cut short a day or two because of bureaucratic complications. Whatever, it's moot. Ten years and some 3 million cubic yards of refuse later, the area of landfill where the digging occurred is now buried within a sealed, 490-foot mountain of compressed garbage and soil. People in the landfill business say that to return now would be pointless. http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-kristin18jun18,0,6331732.story?page=7&coll=la-home-headlines

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