>>14820817 pb
>>14820817 pb
>5 Missing Persons Have Now Been Found Murdered Hunting Brian Laundrie
>The red herrings are actual leads to new cases. What's the connection? BL is dropping crumbs & markers.
>Josue Calderon, 33
>Robert Lowery, 46
>Sara Bayard, 55
>Lauren “El” Cho, 30,
>Kylen Schulte, 24,
>Crystal Turner, 38
Gawd I fucking hate the media.
These faggots apparently don't report news about people of color, then claim that it's everyone else fault and call it “missing white woman syndrome”
Former partner and "friend" says Choevaporated
Cho found in desert
https://www.kpbs.org/news/local/2021/10/11/body-found-in-search-for-lauren-cho-in-yucca-valley-desert
An undated photo of Lauren Cho released by the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.
Searchers in Southern California have found a body in the Yucca Valley desert, two months after Lauren Cho disappeared in the area.
The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department announced Sunday that the human remains were found in rugged terrain in the open desert on Saturday. Now the coroner’s office is working to identify the remains and determine a cause of death.
The sheriff’s office had searched by air and on foot for Cho, 30, who walked away from a rental house on June 28.
Her case is one of many involving people of color that don’t get much public attention. Complaints about a phenomenon known as “missing white woman syndrome” soared during the search for Gabby Petito, a white 22-year-old whose body was found in Wyoming after she vanished during a cross-country trip with her boyfriend that she chronicled on social media.
The sheriff's office said the identification process could take several weeks and that no further information will be released until those results are confirmed.
Authorities Searching for a Missing Woman Find Human Remains in the Yucca Valley Desert
Officials are working to identify remains that were found during the ongoing search for 30-year-old Lauren Cho, who went missing in June
By
Kailyn Brown -
October 11, 2021
Share
Search crews have found human remains in the Yucca Valley desert near where a 30-year-old New Jersey woman went missing this summer, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.
Officials say the remains were discovered on October 10 while a search was being conducted for Lauren Cho, who was reported missing on June 28. The remains were located “in the rugged terrain of the open desert of Yucca Valley,” officials said via a Facebook post. It could take several weeks before an identity and cause of death are determined.
Cho’s sister, who was not identified, told CNN, “The family is just holding our collective breaths. We so badly desire answers, but already feel the heartbreak of what the answer could be.”
Cho was last seen on June 28 when she walked away form the residence she was staying at with friends and her former partner in the 8600 block of Benmar Trail in Yucca Valley. Her friends reportedly said she was “upset and presumably walked away form the resort, leaving her personal belongings.” About three hours after she disappeared, her ex-boyfriend reported her missing.
Detectives conducted an aerial search of the terrain near the residence on July 24 and a search of the Yucca Valley residence where she’d been staying on July 31, but found nothing, officials said.
Cho is described as being 5-foot-3 with black hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a yellow T-shirt and jean shorts.
On a Facebook page, Cho’s family members describe her as being a “talented musician, an incredible baker, a hilarious and loyal friend, a strangely intuitive gift giver, and probably the coolest sister one could hope for.”
>https://archive.ph/DM6U3#selection-1365.74-1365.87
Cho’s friend and former partner, Cody Orell, told Hi-Desert Star that she “evaporated” from the residence where they had been staying. “I searched all in the hills and no tracks, anywhere,” he said.
Cho’s case has been compared to that of 22-year-old Gabby Petito who was reported missing in September during a cross-country trip with her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, who returned home without her. Some critics have argued that Cho’s case is an example of how people of color don’t receive the same attention as their white counterparts, the Los Angeles Times reports. But Cho’s family says the cases differ.