View Full Version: Tiffany Sessions Missing 2/9/89 FL

fromwhisperstor >>UM 1980's >>Tiffany Sessions Missing 2/9/89 FL


<< Prev | Next >>

Magic407- 02-10-2007
Tiffany Sessions Missing 2/9/89 FL
On The Eve Of Disappearance Anniversary, A Look At Unsolved Cold Cases 2/8/2007 By Stacey Samuel, WCJB TV20 News We see them on television, criminal investigations, and they're usually solved in the course of an hour. But many real life cases continue to mystify. February 9th, marks eighteen years since the disappearance of Tiffany L. Sessions, a University of Florida student who left her home in southwest Gainesville one evening and vanished. Law enforcement says it's a delicate balance they must strike with every case, between efficiency, due process and patience. Even when no expense is spared, as in Session's case, crime investigations can't always close the book on open cases. The 1989 search for Session spread far and wide for many months, foul play has always been suspected but no leads ever turned up. According to then Lieutenant of Alachua County Sheriff's office, Spencer Mann, says her disappearance was suspicious, "...credit cards that sort of thing certainly hasn't shown up anywhere," he said then. He adds that there were thousands of leads and hundreds of people involved in the investigation. But the question begged is, with more resources than lesser known cases, how does a case like this go unsolved? University of Florida professor emeritis in Sociology, with a specialty in crime, Dr. Fred Shenkman says the public's expectations are often too high and police resources too slim. According to Shenkman, "forensics have come a long way and that's gotten a lot of high profile coverage on television and people expect to find some DNA or some evidence." In reality only 20 percent of index crimes get solved. This type of crime that are officially included in crime rate statistics include murder, arson, rape and larceny. So when tiffany sessions left her home here at Casablanca East and never returned, her disappearance was never officially categorized as a crime, leaving law enforcement that much more dependent on the community for clues. "The police could work more quickly but whether or not that crime would ultimately be proved beyond a reasonable doubt in court of law is something different that the police just knowing in their gut who committed that crime," adds Shenkman. He adds a large percentage of crimes are solved because someone tells the police. That however hasn't been the case for the family of Tiffany Session. Mann says,"as I continue to say to many victim's families of crime of homicides and other disappearances is keep the hope, we never give up." Her case remains in the hands of the Alachua County Sheriff's Office. http://www.wcjb.com/news.asp?id=14590

Magic407- 02-10-2007

Decades bring no answers in woman's disappearance Last Edited: Friday, 09 Feb 2007, 5:51 PM EST Created: Friday, 09 Feb 2007, 5:48 PM EST 18 years after her disappearance, Tiffany Sessions' mother holds out hope for answers. BRANDON - Not much has changed in 18 years inside Tiffany Sessions' bedroom. Photos from Tiffany's senior prom still hang on the wall. Her favorite stuffed animal lies on her bed. Her mother Hilary says it's her sanctuary. Hilary has spent nearly two decades looking for any shred of evidence to tell her what happened to Tiffany. She keeps a brave face, but on this day, the anniversary of her disappearance, it's tough. "A little sad, it's been hard to get through today, because it was 18 years ago that Tiffy went out for a jog, and hasn't been seen," Hilary Sessions said. Hilary spends her days thinking of her only child. But she is also a crusader to find other missing children. Three years ago, she became the executive director of Child Protection Education of America. "When I come to work everyday here, I know that we're making a difference in people's lives," she said. She works alongside other women who have a relative missing. This summer, she'll head up a program for young children, teaching them how to fight back against an abductor. Hilary is now writing a book about Tiffany's disappearance. In a few months, she'll be going back to Gainesville to search another area. She says she has information from three different psychics. Hilary doesn't think Tiffany is still alive. But she says there's a chance. Even if she's no, Hilary just wants to know who took her, and why. "Initially my thought was a stranger came along. But because of the length of time, my thought is it was either someone she knew peripherally, or someone who knew of her," Sessions said. Hilary never thought this much time would go by with no answers. She says in her field, they bring back a lot of children. But she knows sometimes, they just can't. The night she disappeared, Tiffany had on a Rolex watch. Rolex has put a red flag on the serial number of that watch. But they say no one has ever tried to sell or pawn it, anywhere in the world. http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=2334035&version=2&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.2.1 >

Gaia- 07-30-2008

Find Missing Child By D'ANN LAWRENCE WHITE The Tampa Tribune Published: July 30, 2008 Updated: BRANDON - It won't bring her daughter back. Hilary Sessions has long given up hope of ever seeing her daughter, Tiffany, alive again. However, she hopes someone else's daughter will be protected by a new Florida law that went into effect July 1 and requires law enforcement to start searching within two hours of a report of a missing person younger than 26 and suspected of being in danger or victims of crime. Previously the age limit was 18. The Valrico resident is eagerly awaiting the opportunity to meet with Gov. Charlie Crist for the official signing of the Jennifer Kesse and Tiffany Sessions Missing Persons Act. Sessions has been fighting for the legislation since her daughter, a student at the University of Florida, went for a jog around the Gainesville campus Feb. 9, 1989, and never returned to her dorm room. Since then, Sessions has become an outspoken national advocate for missing children. She became involved with the Missing Children HELP Center, a nonprofit organization on Ware Boulevard in Tampa founded by Brandon resident Ivana DiNova to help the families of missing children. The group helped spearhead efforts to pass the 1983 Missing Children's Act, which eliminated waiting periods for searching for missing children. When the HELP Center closed in 2001, Sessions took over the offices and many of the cases the center was handling and opened the nonprofit Child Protection Education of America. Before long, it became apparent that CPEA needed more than part-time volunteers, Sessions said. So she ended her career with the nation's third-largest mutual fund company to become the full-time executive director of CPEA in 2004, one of six paid employees. "This is where my heart is," she said. "When you have a passion for something, whatever you do is never enough." Sessions describes the organization as the right hand of law enforcement when it comes to missing children cases. CPEA works with law enforcement, case workers and the parents of missing children throughout the country. The staff offers services such as printing fliers, distributing photographs, billboards and any help needed. "We're here to serve law enforcement any way we can, to be an adjunct," she said. "And we're here to support the families. We've walked in their shoes. We know how they feel." Currently, CPEA is working on 451 active missing children cases. In June, the organization moved into larger offices at 3439 Brook Crossing Drive in the Brook Crossing office park off Bloomingdale Avenue in Brandon. It offers children's fingerprinting and self-defense classes for children and women. But Sessions' pet project would have to be the bloodhounds. She is convinced that if a bloodhound had been available soon after Tiffany didn't return to her dorm as expected, law enforcement would have had a much better chance of finding her. So among the missions of the CPEA is to raise money to purchase bloodhounds for any law enforcement agency that wants to have one on hand to track missing persons. "A lot of families of missing children believe that if a scent-discriminating bloodhound had been brought to the scene immediately, they might have their loved one with them today," Sessions said. "Each person has a unique scent, and the sooner a scent-discriminating dog is given the scent, the greater the chance is of recovery. Time is of the essence, because the more people who show up, the dog's nose will be less sensitive to that one scent." Sessions found bloodhound breeder Pam Andrews in Lake Butler, who was willing to provide the puppies if Sessions could get donations to cover the cost of each bloodhound and law enforcement agencies offered to train them. With donations from civic associations, corporate sponsors and the sale of DNA identification kits, CPEA has donated 16 bloodhounds to law enforcement agencies. Among them are Snoopy, the Tampa Police Department's bloodhound, and Ella, who helps patrol Polk County. Ella was named for 85-year-old Winter Haven resident Ella M. Murray, who went missing in 1997 and has not been seen since. Other CPEA bloodhounds have gone to law enforcement agencies in Massachusetts and Washington state. "My goal is to make sure all agencies have a bloodhound or access to one," Sessions said. A member of the advisory board for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Sessions noted that 579 canines are working in law enforcement in Florida. Of those, 99 are trail dogs, meaning they are trained to follow someone's trail by sight, and 89 are scent-discriminating dogs, meaning they are given an article of clothing with the person's scent and track it. Duvall and Polk counties have the most scent-discriminating dogs, with 20. Hillsborough County has four. "These dogs are amazing," Sessions said. "In January, Ella found a boy who was missing for 24 hours." Sessions knows she will not have a happy ending, so for her, the Jennifer Kesse and Tiffany Sessions Missing Persons Act represents more than much-needed law to aid families desperate to get law enforcement to act more quickly. Under the new state law, when a person has been missing for 90 days, law enforcement will be asked to obtain DNA samples from family members and enter it into the National DNA Database. Relatives' DNA often is similar to those who have gone missing. "The hit rate for a match is 32 percent," Sessions said. "So maybe there's a chance some of the half-million unidentified bodies sitting in morgues around the country can be identified, and some of these families can finally have closure. "If we can get this law passed nationally, think of what it will do for these families going through agony," she said. "It's the unanswered questions that eat at you day after day." For information, call Child Protection Education of America at 1-866-USA-CHILD or (813) 626-3001 or visit www.find-missing -children.org. Reporter D'Ann Lawrence White can be reached at (813) 657-4524 or dlwhite@tampatrib.com. http://brandonnews2.tbo.com/content/2008/jul/30/br-find-missing-child/?news

Themis Eternal- 02-05-2009

Father Uses Social Media to Find Missing Daughter After 20 Years Patrick Sessions Launches Official Tiffany Sessions Blog and Outreach MIAMI & GAINESVILLE, Fla. — When missing person Tiffany Sessions http://tiffanysessions.com/ disappeared from Gainesville without a trace on February 9, 1989, there was no Amber Alert, no Web sites displaying pictures of missing kids – and no social media to spread the word across the country with a few keystrokes. Tiffany Sessions is still missing, her case is still open, and Miami-based real estate developer-turned missing children advocate, Patrick Sessions, is leveraging social media tools to help police find missing children and especially the daughter he last saw when she was 19-years-old and a senior at the University of Florida. Refusing to give up on his daughter, Sessions is launching the “Official Tiffany Sessions” Web site on February 9, 2009, the 20th anniversary of his daughter’s disappearance. The Alachua County Sheriff’s office will be conducting a press conference on Monday, February 9, 2009 at 10:00 AM. “This is still a viable case with several new leads being developed and explored by members of the Unit. This 20-year anniversary of Tiffany’s disappearance is a time to remember and recommit ourselves to resolving as many unsolved missing persons and murder cases as possible,” said Alachua County Sheriff Sadie Darnell, who was originally part of the case in 1989 as the Gainesville Police Department’s public spokesperson. A $25,000 reward is being offered by the Sessions family for information leading to the remains of Tiffany Sessions and the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for her abduction. “There was no Facebook when Tiffany was in college. No cell phones to trace her whereabouts. No MySpace pages to investigate,” Sessions says. “I am launching this Web site in hopes that someone out there knows where Tiffany is or can offer new leads that will help us find her. We believe social media can play a vital role in finding missing children everywhere, including Tiffany.” To learn more about the missing persons case of Tiffany Sessions, including the details surrounding her unexplained disappearance and links to contact legal authorities with pertinent information, visit http://TiffanySessions.com. In addition to serving as a vital resource for Tiffany’s case, the Web site will also act as a resource for other parents and friends coping with the disappearance of a loved one by providing phone numbers and links to missing persons organizations. Media Contacts: Please see the following sources for more information and/or interviews: Patrick Sessions – Miami, Florida Tiffany’s Father, 305-609-6443 Jason Sessions – Jacksonville, Florida Tiffany’s brother, 904-386-8380 Alachua County Sheriff’s Department Public Information Office: Steve Maynard, 352-367-4041 Send Tiffany Sessions Leads to: rdean@alachuasheriff.org, 352-367-4161 Case #: 01569-89 Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) Larry Ruby, LarryRuby@FDLE.State.Fl.US, 386-418-5411 National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) Nancy McBride, 877-446-2632 http://www.centredaily.com/news/education/story/1102507.html

Forumer™ is Voted #1 Free Forum Hosting provider
Build your own community today with the largest message board hosting company.