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Gaia- 11-17-2005
Shannon Sherrill Abduction 10/05/86 IN
SHANNON SHERRILL DOB: Aug 12, 1980 Missing: Oct 5, 1986 Age Now: 25 Sex: Female Race: White Hair: Brown Eyes: Blue Height: 3'0" (91 cm) Weight: 30 lbs (14 kg) Missing From: THORNTOWN IN United States Shannon's photo is shown age-progressed to 23 years. She was last seen at 1:30 p.m. playing in her yard with several other children. She was wearing a white dress with blue trim. She has a 4 inch scar on her abdomen, pierced ears, and is extremely shy. ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION SHOULD CONTACT National Center for Missing & Exploited Children 1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Thorntown Police Department (Indiana) 1-765-436-7677 http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PubCaseSearchServlet?act=viewPoster&caseNum=601901&orgPrefix=NCMC&searchLang=en_US

Gaia- 11-17-2005

Details of Disappearance Sherrill was last seen at her family's residence in the 600 block of Plum Street in Thorntown, Indiana on October 15, 1986. She was playing a game of "Hide and Seek" with several other children at approximately 1:30 p.m. Sherrill disappeared from their yard and has never been heard from again. An extensive search of the area produced little evidence as to her whereabouts. A 35-year-old Topeka, Kansas woman named Donna Lynette Walker claimed to be Sherrill in July 2003. A photograph of Walker is posted below this case summary. She telephoned and emailed Sherrill's family, sending them photographs of herself and claiming to be the missing girl. Sherrill's loved ones initially believed her, but the claim turned out to be a hoax and Walker was charged with a dozen felony counts of identity deception and false informing. She has a criminal record for involvement in similar hoaxes, including calling in bomb threats and falsely reporting fires. Sherrill's parents sued Walker in October 2003. They are seeking unspecified damages, alleging that Walker violated Sherrill's privacy and deliberately, maliciously caused her family emotional distress when she assumed her identity. They seek to prevent Walker from profiting from what she was done. Walker accepted a plea agreement for the criminal charges in April 2004 and was sentenced to 18 months in prison after pleading guilty but mentally ill to felony attempted identity deception and misdemeanor false reporting. Ten other charges were dropped. She could have gotten four years if convicted of all charges. Once Walker is released from prison she will be on probation and have to comply with any mental health treatment recommended by the court. The prosecutor admitted that Walker suffers from a mental disorder that compels her to invent grand hoaxes in order to get attention. Walker told the judge that at the time she claimed she was Sherrill, she had been adjusting to some new medication for her mental illness and really believed she was Sherrill. Sherrill remains missing. Her case is unsolved. If you have any information concerning this case, please contact: Thorntown Police Department 317-436-7677 OR Federal Bureau Of Investigation (FBI) 202-324-3000 Last updated February 11, 2004 Updated 2 times since October 12, 2004. Charley Project

Themis Eternal- 06-16-2006

Hope lives Organization’s rallies spark new interest in disappearances. Published: June 15, 2006 By Meghan Durbak/For The Lebanon Reporter TIPTON - “It could have been me.” The sign was in the hands of 6-year-old Angi Jackson, who bore a slight resemblance to a girl who went missing 20 years ago. Shannon Sherrill was a shy, frail little girl with big blue eyes, who’d hide behind her father every time a stranger approached. In her arms she’d carry her favorite doll, the same doll her father, Mike Sherrill, was holding when he made another plea to the community Tuesday to keep looking for his daughter. “She was a total daddy’s girl. She’d go everywhere with me and do whatever I did,” he said. Behind him was a small crowd holding a rally at the Sherrills’ gas station off of Ind. 28 and U.S. 31. They were there to support not only him and his family, but all the missing who’ve been forgotten. Joined by Community United Effort Center for Missing Persons (CUE), the crowd held signs with Shannon’s pictures before she disappeared and pictures that showed what she’d look like now, at age 26. Shannon Sherrill was 6 years old when she was reported missing Oct. 5, 1986, from her Thorntown home. In 2003, a Kansas woman, Donna L. Walker, claimed to be Shannon Sherrill before police discovered it was a hoax. Walker served nine months in the Boone County Jail before returning to Kansas. She is on probation until 2008 after pleading guilty to one felony count of attempted identity deception and one misdemeanor count of false reporting. Monaco Caison, founder and director of CUE since 1994, has seen some rallies like Tuesday’s trigger new searches that solved missing-person cases. After starting the rallies three years ago, there were five cases solved in the first year, she said. As Mike’s stepdaughter, Kelly Clark has a personal connection to the case. She’s seen the toll it’s taken on Mike since her mom, Becky Sherrill, married him more than 10 years ago. Clark said she’d want to help him, even if she didn’t know him. “Having kids of my own that are that age, I just don’t know what I would do if that happened to me,” Clark said. Most parents don’t. “With parents, it’s not anybody giving them false hope, it’s just that that’s all they have,” CUE’s founder, Caison said. Mike has never given up hope, his neighbor Donna Bagley said. Bagley believes they’ll find Shannon. “I hope and pray that it is soon,” she said. “To lose a child to death is one thing, but to lose a child and not know is entirely different,” Bagley said. Those same reasons have compelled Caison and her fellow volunteers from CUE to help the Sherrills find their loved one, even after two decades. “I believe there is an opportunity for everyone someday, somewhere to be found,” Caison said. “And with new talents and new technology, I believe it’s very possible.” The Sherrills’ investigators believe it’s possible, too. The public relations director for Mja Inc., an investigative and search group that works for rewards, wrote their group was notified of an out-of-state inmate that has information on Shannon. They’re working on the lead. It’s tips like these that may help Mike find his daughter and finally gain some closure. That’s why the Sherrills are asking the community to provide them with any information they may know, no matter how obscure it may seem. Tips can be sent to ShannonTips@aol.com. The Sherrills would also welcome any additional help. After all, as another line on Angi Jackson’s sign read, “It could be your child.” http://www.reporter.net/local/local_story_166104854.html

Themis Eternal- 06-26-2006

Thorntown Family in Missing Girl Hoax Want Letter Investigated June 23, 2006 The father of a six-year-old Thorntown girl who disappeared nearly 20 years ago says he's frustrated that police aren't doing more about an Ohio prison inmate's claim that he has information about the case. A prison investigator told the Kokomo Tribune that the inmate's information in other instances has led to the discovery of bodies. Shannon Sherrill vanished in 1986 near her mother's home about 30 miles northwest of Indianapolis. The case gained national attention in 2003 when a Kansas woman impersonated the missing girl. Thorntown Marshal Jeff Woodard says he's investigating the letter from inmate Jeffrey Sunnycalb, but hasn't called the State Police for help. Shannon's father, Mike Sherrill, says police should do more to investigate the claim. http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=5069413

Themis Eternal- 06-27-2006

New lead in 20-year-old disappearance? June 27, 2006 04:53 AM CDT 6 year-old Shannon Sherrill Jeff Sunnycalb Thorntown - In the nearly 20 years since six-year-old Shannon Sherrill vanished from her Thorntown home, hundreds of leads have turned into hundreds of disappointments for her family. "I just want to bring my daughter home." Mike Sherrill hopes the latest tip into Shannon's disappearance will finally bring her home. This one is from 44-year-old Jeff Sunnycalb, an inmate of an Ohio prison who wrote a letter nearly seven months ago to Thorntown's town marshal. Marshal Jeff Woodard says, "The only contact we got from this guy was a letter in December. He just asked this department a question. That's all he was doing." But the question had to do with Shannon Sherrill. Sunnycalb, a convicted child rapist and prison informer helped Texas police solve a series of child murders based on information he turned over that led to the arrest of his former cellmate. Mark Stegemoller with the Warren Correctional Institution says Sunnycalb "has been credible working with Texas law enforcement with missing child cases." A private investigator working for the Sherrills is meeting with Sunnycalb hoping to learn more. "The town marshal's got his own ideas," says Mike Sherrill, "and is going in one direction and our investigator is going in another direction. So this is more than what's happened in the past." Prison investigators say it's unlikely that the inmate is pulling a hoax, urging Indiana investigators to take whatever leads Sunnycalb can give them seriously in the hope of solving a nearly 20-year-old crime. http://www.wthr.com/Global/story.asp?S=5080732

Magic407- 10-05-2006

20 Years Pass Since Thorntown Girl Vanished It is 20 years to the day since a six-year-old Thorntown, Indiana, girl vanished from her mother's yard. Shannon Sherrill was last seen October 5th, 1986, in the small town about 30 miles north of Indianapolis. The case returned the news in 2003 when a Kansas woman faked being the girl before the Sherrill family's hopes were crushed within days by the hoax. Shannon's father, Mike Sherrill, continues to look for answers. He says he still holds out hope that she might be alive. Indiana State Police say the girl's disappearance is still an open case. The family recently pushed authorities to investigate tips from an Ohio prison inmate who claimed to have information on the case. http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=5501210

Magic407- 10-31-2006

Shannon Sherrill's family encouraged by reward Oct 30, 2006 04:48 PM CST Cold case reward increased Shannon Sherrill was six years old when she disappeared from her Thorntown home 20 years ago. The case made headlines in 2003 when an imposter, Donna Walker, claimed to be the missing girl. It was a hoax. Since then, only anniversaries of the missing child's disappearance made news - until now. "We're just so excited over this. First time we've been excited over anything in years," said Becky Sherrill, Shannon's stepmother. The family is hopeful after Philadelphia businessman Joe Mammana offered a $100,000 reward for information that could solve the case. The millionaire is known for putting up reward money in missing persons cases, including Natalee Holloway, the 18-year-old from Alabama who disappeared in Aruba last year. "Forget $2,500 rewards. Forget $5,000 rewards. When you start throwing a $100,000 reward out there, mothers turn against sons, fathers turn against brothers. It changes the whole scope of everything," said Mammana. For 20 days in November, Mammana is offering rewards totaling $2 million for 20 missing people, including seven in Indiana. The rewards are for so-called cold cases like Karen Jo Smith of Indianapolis. Her ex-husband was found guilty of her murder but her body's not been recovered. Patti Bishop is the woman's stepmother. "I hope and pray that we'll be able to bring our missing home because the reward is $100,000 for the recovery of the missing person or the arrest and conviction of the persons responsible," she said. Mike Sherrill hopes the reward posted and circulated on flyers will solve the disappearance of his daughter. "Nobody's ever done this kind of thing for me before. I hope it brings closure to the whole thing," he said. Now 20 families anxiously wait to see if a benefactor's big reward can break cases going nowhere. http://www.wthr.com/Global/story.asp?S=5609955&nav=9Tai

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