Archive | February 9th, 2009

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News 4 Jax: 20 Years Later, Search Continues For Missing UF Coed

Posted on 09 February 2009 by sarah

See the full Tiffany Sessions story from News 4 Jacksonville.

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CBS: 20 Years Later: The Search For Tiffany Sessions

Posted on 09 February 2009 by sarah

Tiffany Sessions Disappeared Feb. 9, 1989

She Was A Junior At The University Of Florida

Cold Case Investigators Continue To Work The Case

During the winter of 1989, at the University of Florida in Gainesville, a young woman left her apartment to go for an early evening jog but she never returned. Her name was Tiffany Sessions and she disappeared without a trace twenty years ago today. To mark the 20-year anniversary of the case, the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office is holding a news conference.

Sessions’ father, a Miami real estate developer-turned missing children advocate, Patrick Sessions told CBS4 News partner The Miami Herald that police are expected to reveal new tips in the case; one from a man in jail, who Sessions said had information that would be hard to come by without “some exposure to the case,” stated the Herald.

Tiffany, who would now be 40, disappeared on February 9, 1989. When she left for her jog, she was carrying a black Sony Walkman, but had left her keys, wallet, and identification at home. For days, crews searched the area looking for clues but came up empty. There was no sign of a struggle, no Walkman, no evidence, not anything. More than 2-thousand leads have been investigated over the years but still nothing but conflicting stories and unsubstantiated theories.

Patrick Sessions has never given up the search for his daughter, who was 19 years old the last time he saw her. In his never-ending search for Tiffany, Patrick has launched the “Official Tiffany Sessions” Web site on the 20th anniversary of her disappearance.

Visitors to the web site can leave tips for investigators, learn more about Tiffany’s disappearance and the site also acts 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.

There’s also a reminder about the $25,000 reward being offered by the Sessions family for information leading to the remains of Tiffany and the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for her abduction.

To read the full story click here.

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Miami Herald: New leads pursued in Tiffany Sessions case

Posted on 09 February 2009 by sarah

The 20th anniversary of UF student Tiffany Sessions’ disappearance will be noted Monday with a news conference announcing new leads.

On Monday, 20 years since University of Florida student Tiffany Sessions disappeared, the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office will announce new leads.

Sessions’ father, Patrick Sessions, who lives in Miami, said he had not been fully briefed on the leads, which will be discussed at a 10 a.m. news conference, but that they were more solid than others pursued since 1989. Still, he told The Miami Herald he does not expect to find out exactly what happened to her.

One of the new tips is from a man in jail, who Sessions said had information that would be hard to come by without “some exposure to the case.”

Sessions said he does not expect to find Tiffany alive. He just wants closure.

Tiffany, who would now be 40, left her Gainesville apartment for an evening jog and never returned. During the first week she was missing, her father was joined by a 1,000-person search party.

‘You never know when somebody who has moved to Washington state, has totally forgotten about Tiffany, reads about it again and says, `You know, I should’ve called the cops because there was this guy that was really weird and I should’ve told them,’ ” Sessions said.

The fact that the investigation has continued, he said, is “encouraging because at some point a case gets stale and people have done all they can do.”

To remind people of Tiffany, Sessions also launched a website, www.tiffanysessions.com, to make it easier for anyone with information to come forward.

He said he hoped the reminder about the $25,000 reward for information leading to the remains or abductors would bring forth something useful soon.

”It’s a terrible anniversary to go by,” said Sessions, 62. “Twenty years and we don’t know what happened to her. . . . I’d like some closure to find out what happened to Tiffany, and I don’t have any reason to believe whoever did it still isn’t out there.”

To see the full article in the Miami Herald click here.

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