Monday, November 14, 2016
Disappearance of Genette Tate
Genette Louise Tate (5 May 1965 – disappeared 19 August 1978) is an English girl whose disappearance became a missing person case when she went missing at age 13 while delivering newspapers in Aylesbeare, Devon, England.
Background: ate's disappearance occurred within sight of her home village shortly after 15:30 (BST) on Saturday 19 August 1978. Her bicycle and scattered newspapers were found lying in the middle of a quiet country lane a few minutes after she had been speaking to two friends. Eyewitnesses reported seeing a maroon car in the lane at around the time of the disappearance, and police issued a photofit picture of a man that they wanted to question, describing him as "between eighteen and twenty-five with thick blackish eyebrows and a pale complexion. Despite an extensive police investigation and a search of the surrounding countryside involving thousands of volunteers, Tate's disappearance remains unexplained. In 2002, DNA belonging to Genette Tate was found on one of her jumpers kept by her mother, which would allow her body to be identified if discovered. On the 25th anniversary of the case in 2003, Genette's parents John and Sheila both stated their belief that she is no longer alive. Police have amassed more than 20,000 cards in a filing system related to the case, which is stored at the Devon and Cornwall Police headquarters in Exeter. Following the conviction of serial killer Robert Black in October 2011 for the August 1981 murder of Jennifer Cardy, a spokesman for the Police Service of Northern Ireland commented that "There are striking similarities" between the two cases. Black had already been questioned by Devon and Cornwall Police about the Tate case, but in August 2008 the Crown Prosecution Service decided that there was insufficient evidence to charge him. Devon and Cornwall Police were looking in to the case again in June 2014 with the hope of prosecuting Black. At the time of Black's death in January 2016, Devon and Cornwall Police were five weeks from submitting a file to the Crown Prosecution Service for a new decision on whether to prosecute him. The file was submitted to the CPS in April 2016, but the CPS said that it would not be making a decision on charging Black.
Labels:
criminal justice
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