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Gaia- 06-22-2006
Teekah Lewis Abducted 1/23/99 WA
TEEKAH LEWIS DOB: Jul 4, 1996 Missing: Jan 23, 1999 Age Now: 9 Sex: Female Race: Black Hair: Black Eyes: Brown Height: 3'0" (91 cm) Weight: 35 lbs (16 kg) Missing From: TACOMA WA United States Age Progressed Teekah's photo is shown age-progressed to 8 years. She was last seen on January 23, 1999 at approximately 10:30 p.m. at the New Frontier Lanes bowling alley in Tacoma, Washington. She was wearing a Tweety Bird T-shirt, white sweat pants and Air Jordan sneakers. Teekah has eczema, with a skin discoloration on her face and left side of her buttocks. She also has asthma which may require medical attention. ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION SHOULD CONTACT National Center for Missing & Exploited Children 1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tacoma Police Department (Washington) 1-253-798-4721 http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PubCaseSearchServlet?act=viewPoster&caseNum=859446&orgPrefix=NCMC&searchLang=en_US

Gaia- 06-22-2006

Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance Missing Since: January 23, 1999 from Tacoma, Washington Classification: Endangered Missing Date Of Birth: July 4, 1996 Age: 2 years old Height and Weight: 3'0, 35 pounds Distinguishing Characteristics: Black hair, brown eyes. Lewis has a large-sized birthmark on her left buttock and red natural highlights in her hair. She has patches of light discoloration on her face and the left side of her buttocks as the result of eczema. Lewis has facial dimples and pierced ears. She is of Caucasian, Native American and African-American descent. Clothing Description: A green Tweety Bird sweatshirt or t-shirt, white sweatpants and black and white Air Jordan sneakers, hair pulled into ponytails. Medical Conditions: Lewis is asthmatic and requires medical supervision, as well as usage of an inhaler and/or ventilator. Lewis received medical care prior to her 1999 disappearance at Indian Health Practioners in Puyallup, Washington, a nationwide clinic available for Native Americans. Details of Disappearance Lewis and nearly a dozen of her family spent the evening of January 23, 1999 at New Frontier Lanes bowling alley on Center Street in Tacoma, Washington. Lewis was last seen playing a race car video game in the arcade section of the alley between 10:00 and 10:15 p.m. She was a few feet from her family members and approximately six feet from the building's exit. Lewis's mother, Theresa English, said that she turned away for a moment and the child vanished. She has never been seen again. Lewis was carrying a clear purse with a fish design and an attached shoulder strap at the time of her disappearance; the purse contained Starburst candy. An extensive search of the area produced few clues as to her whereabouts. A witness at the bowling alley told authorities that an unidentified maroon Pontiac Grand Am sped out of the parking lot during the night Lewis disappeared. The vehicle may have had four doors and was possibly a late 1980s or early 1990s model with dark-tinted windows and a large spoiler. A photograph of a similar car is posted below this case summary. Another witness stated that an unidentified Caucasian man may have followed a child to one of the alley's exits during the night. The individual is described as being in his thirties with shoulder-length brown hair, facial pockmarks, a moustache and a large-sized nose. Investigators do not know if the vehicle or the unidentified man are connected to Lewis's case. Lewis's family supported the creation of the Teekah Lewis Bill in Washington shortly after she disappeared. The bill created a missing and exploited children's task force, allowing the Washington State Patrol to assist local authorities in the search for a missing child. There were possible sightings of Lewis in New Hampshire several years after her disappearance. The child was accompanied by a Caucasian woman with dyed blonde hair at the time. These sightings have not been confirmed. Lewis's biological father was imprisoned at the time of her disappearance and has been ruled out as a suspect in her case. The headless body of a young African-American girl was discovered in Kansas City, Missouri on April 28, 2001, more than two years after Lewis disappeared from Washington. The child's head was located in a garbage bag approximately 100 yards from the body shortly after the initial discovery. DNA tests were performed on Lewis's relatives in May 2001 and compared with the unidentified child's remains, but the results were negative. In 2005, Precious Doe was identified as Erica Michelle Maria Green, a three-year-old who had never been reported missing. Lewis is described as having a quiet, shy personality. She enjoys eating candy, her favorite brand being Starbursts. Foul play is suspected in her case, which remains unsolved. Investigating Agency If you have any information concerning Lewis' case, please contact: Tacoma Police Department 253-798-4721 OR Federal Bureau Of Investigation 202-324-3000 Last updated April 8, 2006; clothing description, distinguishing characteristics and details of disappearance updated. http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/l/lewis_teekah.html

Themis Eternal- 06-26-2006

Woman believes Texas girl is her missing daughter; FBI is dubious Published: April 26th, 2006 PAUL SAND; The News Tribune The mother of Teekah Lewis thinks a girl in Texas is her daughter, who disappeared in 1999, but the fbi doesn’t agree. DNA tests are pending. All Theresa Lewis needed to see was the young girl’s right ear.It’s pointy, she said Wednesday, and looks similar to that of Teekah, her 2-year-old daughter who went missing from a Tacoma bowling alley in 1999. “In my heart ... this is my daughter,” said Lewis, 35. FBI investigators, however, aren’t convinced the young girl they interviewed last week near Dallas is Teekah Lewis. The toddler was last seen playing near the video games at the now-defunct New Frontier Lanes on Center Street about 10:15 p.m. on Jan. 23, 1999. “It’s fairly certain that it is not Teekah Lewis,” said Melissa Schuler, spokeswoman for the FBI’s Seattle office. Schuler, who referred to the girl in Texas as “a look-a-like,” said the girl’s birthmarks don’t match Teekah’s. She declined to say what else convinced investigators the girl isn’t Teekah. A private investigator hired by Theresa Lewis contacted her April 15 to tell her he’d found a home-schooled girl he thought was Teekah. She was living in an RV park in Texas, Lewis said. He would not tell her how he got the tip, she said, but he did e-mail her a photo of the girl and a woman. “The minute I saw the picture, my heart told me it was mine,” she said. Lewis said she’s compared the girl’s photo to those of her 8-year-old and 15-year-old daughters and sees similarities. She also said she recognizes the woman in the photo from the bowling alley where Teekah was last seen. The FBI will compare DNA collected from the girl and Theresa Lewis to see whether any connection exists. Results could take weeks to get, Lewis said. Tacoma police helped the FBI collect the evidence, said spokesman Mark Fulghum. In 2001, DNA testing proved the body of a girl found in Kansas City, Mo., was not Teekah. “That will be the ultimate determination, but we’re fairly certain it is not Teekah Lewis,” FBI spokeswoman Schuler said. http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/updates/story/5695413p-5103808c.html

Themis Eternal- 06-26-2006

FBI Checking Dallas Girl To See If She's Teekah Lewis April 26, 2006 By KOMO Staff TACOMA - The FBI is working a tip that a girl missing from Tacoma for seven years might be alive, although they caution they don't think the tip is going to pan out. Teekah Lewis was taken from a Tacoma bowling alley in January 1999 and there's been no sign of her since. But now her mother says she might be living in Dallas. "This is the greatest tip we've had in 7 years," said Teekah's mother Theresa English. English has always believed her daughter Teekah is alive, but now for the first time, she really believes Teekah may be coming home. Her prayers gave way to hope two weeks ago when Theresa's private investigator got a tip that Teekah may be living with a woman in Texas. He checked it out. The woman said the girl is her daughter and not Teekah. When shown a photograph of the girl in Texas, English says she sees a resemblance to Teekah. She said the right ear on her daughter matches the right ear on the girl in the photograph. Besides that, Theresa says she looks just like her other daughters. "I seen the little girl's picture my heart said 'that's mine,' " English said. But both the FBI and Tacoma police say they don't think it's Teekah. The "look-alike" has been ruled out as far as law enforcement is concerned, FBI Agent Melissa Schuler said. "It was a combination of photos and records that are available and birthmarks," she said. But they will do a DNA test to be absolutely certain for the family's sake. The Tacoma police detective assigned the case has been kept in the loop, said Mark Fulghum, spokesman for the Tacoma Police Department. "The FBI talked to the family down there (in Texas). They were cooperative from everything I've been told," Fulghum said. "Our detective hasn't gone down there. He's just being kept abreast of what's going on." But English is still hopeful. "(The investigator) got the tip from Dallas, these people are living in an R.V. with a Washington license plate," English said. "There is more to this story than what they're telling us." Theresa knows the DNA will tell the truth, she just hopes it will reveal her what her heart already believes. "This here brings new hope to our family she's out there and she could be coming home," English said. The FBI says while this is a priority case, they don't know for sure when the DNA tests will be returned. http://www.komotv.com/stories/43140.htm

Themis Eternal- 06-26-2006

DNA testing shows Dallas girl is not Teekah Lewis Wednesday, June 21, 2006 By Christine Clarridge Seattle Times staff reporter DNA testing has proven that a Dallas girl is not Teekah Lewis, who disappeared from a Tacoma bowling alley seven years ago when she was two-years-old. The FBI said today that the Dallas girl's DNA did not match that of Teekah's family. The news was devastating to the missing girl's family. "It's another blow to the whole family," said Teekah's mother, Theresa English. "We're back to square one. I'll never give up on my baby girl. I don't care it takes me 10, 20 years. I'm not giving up." Teekah disappeared from a bowling alley during a family outing in 1999 and an intensive search yielded no sign of the girl. Family members were given polygraphs and eliminated as potential suspects, police said. Since then, dozens of detectives have worked the case, thousands of dollars in reward money has been raised and Teekah has been featured on the television show "America's Most Wanted" at least four times. Her picture and the story of her disappearance are featured on the Internet site for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. In April, Lewis was contacted by her family's private investigator who believed he might have found Teekah living with a woman in Dallas. FBI investigators examined and interviewed the child and concluded that while she was a near look-alike, she was not Teekah, an FBI spokeswoman said. The DNA testing was done to remove any doubt about the girl's identity. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003076619_weblewis21.html

Themis Eternal- 06-26-2006

Mother Of Missing Girl Shocked Texas Girl Isn’t Daughter UPDATED: June 22, 2006 TACOMA, Wash. -- Theresa English thought a young girl living in Dallas, Texas, was her missing daughter Teekah Lewis. Lewis vanished from a Tacoma bowling alley in January 1999 and her mother has been searching for her ever since. A private investigator hired by English located a girl in Dallas believing it was Lewis. English said she was certain it was Teekah when she saw the girl’s picture. A DNA test was performed and the results were negative. “To have somebody call you on the phone and tell you the results are negative and for the past eight weeks your hopes have been up so high, it hurts,” English told KIRO 7 Eyewitness News. English said she is now back at square one, hoping her daughter is still alive and that she will be found. http://www.kirotv.com/news/9407793/detail.html

Magic407- 01-16-2007

Rescue of missing Missouri boys gives hope to Teekah Lewis' mother Story Published: Jan 15, 2007 at 5:22 PM PST Story Updated: Jan 15, 2007 at 6:11 PM PST By Michelle Esteban Teekah Lewis TACOMA - It's the talk of the nation: two Missouri boys who were found in the apartment of their alleged abductor. The prayers of the victims' families have been answered. Now a Tacoma mother says it could mean answered prayers for her missing daughter. Teekah Lewis. Teresa English, Teekah's mother, says she remembers her as a happy child with a dazzling smile. It's a smile that disappeared 8 years ago when Teekah vanished. "She was there, I looked back she was gone," says English. Teekah, just a toddler, was snatched from a bowling alley in Tacoma. Since then, it's been 8 years of crying, praying and waiting. "She needs to come home, the people need to let her go," English said. "It's been 8 long years and pain for my family!" Teresa's certain that Teekah is alive, and says the missing Missouri boys discovered over the weekend make her believe it can happen again. "Every child that is found out there it just makes me think my child is one day closer to coming home," insists English. On January 23, it will be 8 years since Teekah went missing and no one has given up on her, especially her mother. The FBI, Tacoma Police Department, the Center for Missing and Exploited Children still want to find her, but on this day there are no leads, only renewed hope. There are other children missing in our state. Sofia Juarez disappeared in February 2003 from Kennewick. She was last seen in her bedroom playing. Also, Cody Haynes of Kittitas vanished a year later under similar circumstances -- he was last seen in his own home. http://www.komotv.com/news/5202767.html

Gaia- 07-14-2007

Friday, July 13, 2007 - Page updated at 03:15 PM Revisiting unsolved cases of 2 Tacoma-area girls The abduction of Teekah Lewis, 2, and the abduction and slaying of Adre'anna Jackson, 10, have frustrated Tacoma-area police for years. But the arrest of Terapon Dang Adhahn in the July 4 abduction and slaying of Zina Linnik, 12, could also signal a break in the two other cases. Tacoma Police Chief Don Ramsdell said investigators are trying to determine whether Adhahn could have some connection with other abductions, including those of the two Tacoma-area girls. Some of those cases include: • Michella Welch, 12, of Tacoma, whose body was found hours after the girl disappeared from Puget Park on March 26, 1986. • Jennifer Bastian, 13, of Tacoma, who was found dead Aug. 28, 1986, in Point Defiance Park, where she'd been last seen riding her bicycle two weeks earlier. • Lenoria Jones, 4, of Tacoma, who disappeared July 20, 1995. Here's a look at the Teekah Lewis and Adre'anna Jackson cases. Teekah Lewis Teekah disappeared from Frontier Bowling Lanes in Tacoma around 10:30 p.m. on Jan. 23, 1999. The girl's mother told police she saw her daughter standing near the bowling lanes' video games. When she looked back, Teekah was gone. Police at first thought the little girl had wandered off. But when an extensive search of the area turned up nothing, the girl's disappearance began to look more like an abduction and no one — including relatives — was immune from suspicion. Tacoma police later said the family was ruled out as suspects. But despite a 24-hour tip line and interviews with people who were at the lanes that night, no suspect has emerged. In 2001, the girl's mother, Theresa Lewis, was asked to provide a DNA sample to match against the body of an unidentified dead child found in Kansas City, Mo. The child was not Teekah. In April 2006, Theresa Lewis was notified by a private investigator that he had found a girl he believed to be Teekah living with a woman in Dallas. The investigator, who was hired by the Lewis family more than a year earlier, sent her photos of the girl, she said. "We compared her picture to my twins and other children, and we think it's her," Lewis said. "We feel in our hearts that it's her." But DNA testing proved the girl was not Teekah. On Friday, Theresa Lewis came to the Linnik home to offer support. When she heard that Adhahn could be connected to her daughter's disappearance, she was too distraught to speak. Adre'anna Jackson Adre'anna was last seen Dec. 2, 2005, when her parents sent her off on a five-minute walk to see whether Tillicum Elementary School was closed because of snow. Police spent days searching her neighborhood and scoured nearby American Lake for any sign of the girl. Two children found a skull and a portion of a spinal column in a vacant, overgrown lot near Woodbrook Middle School on April 4, 2006. The remains were identified by dental records as those of Adre'anna Jackson. Investigators could not determine the cause of death. A 44-year-old transient was questioned about the disappearance and death, but it was determined he was in jail on an unrelated matter from the time the girl went missing. Reached at home this afternoon, Adre'anna's mother, Yvette Gervais, said she thought there were physical similarities between her daughter and Zina Linnik. "We're just sitting here and hoping that, if it is him, there will be some closure," she said. "At least someone has been apprehended and that's one more person that's not going to do this to more families." Information from Seattle Times staff reporters Christine Clarridge and Roxana Popescu, Times archives and The Associated Press is included in this report http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003787936_weblinnikside13m.html?syndication=rss

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