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[00:00:04]

Our cards this week are Jennifer Moonbeam Hammond, the ten of hearts from New York, and Christina White, the three of clubs from New York. Both young women disappeared from trailer parks in the quiet town of Milton, New York. Both were ultimately found in nearby remote woodlands. And even though they didn't know each other, police believe that they both likely crossed paths with the same someone. Someone who led them to the same cruel fate. And that potential connection might be the key to unraveling the mysteries that have surrounded these cases for way too long. I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is the deck.

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In early November 2003, police in Littleton, Colorado, made a call to detectives at the Saratoga County Sheriff's Office in upstate New York, nearly 2000 miles away. They had just gotten two reports about a missing young woman, 18 year old Jennifer Hammond. One had come from her father, who lived there, and the other had come from her boss. But investigators in Colorado realized that there was nothing they could do, because even though Jennifer was from Littleton, she was last seen in the town of Milton, smack dab in the Saratoga sheriff's jurisdiction. Jennifer's dad and her boss told police that she had been working for a company called Atlantic Circulation, which sells magazine subscriptions door to door. And she had only been in New York since late July of that year. But according to Saratoga County Sheriff's Investigator Matt Robinson, who's working the case now, she had been on the road with the sales crew for a while, traveling city to city. Here's. Investigator Robinson, the company that she works.

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For, would start on the West Coast and over course of time make their way all the way across the country, hitting a certain area for a couple of weeks, and then they'd move. And they'd go to the next area for a couple weeks and then move.

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It wasn't a lot to go on. And as soon as detectives dug into the case, they realized that they had their work cut out for them. Because Jennifer hadn't just gone missing, she had been missing for a while. Her sales manager told them that he left her at the entrance of the Creek and Pines Trailer Park in Milton at around 01:00 p.m. On Saturday, about two months ago, on August 30. Like usual, the plan was for Jennifer to pedal magazine subscriptions door to door throughout the development for a few hours until the manager came back to pick her up.

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It depended on how big of an area they were going to cover, whether there was one, two, three of them drop off at the same area.

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That Saturday, Jennifer was dropped off alone.

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She walks into the park, they turn around and leave to go to the next drop off location for the next kid, and she was not there. They came back to pick her up about three and a half hours later. The team manager on the day calls his boss and says, like, hey, Jennifer's not at the pickup location. What do you want me to do? They had him drive all through the park and look for her.

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Now Creek and Pines was a pretty large mobile home community. Over a hundred lots and more than half a dozen little roadways. So there were a lot of places she could be, but she was nowhere in sight when they went looking for her. And when her team got back to the hotel they were staying in, they noticed that all of her stuff was still there. But that wasn't necessarily a cause for concern to those traveling with her.

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She had told people, and this was like a common occurrence, because they're a bunch of teenagers that would come and go from work all the time that she was planning on going back home, that when they left Albany, she wasn't going to travel with them, she was going to go back home. So at first they thought, well, she probably just went back home. Maybe she just went back to Colorado. So they weren't overwhelmingly concerned with it.

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As investigator Robinson pointed out, that wasn't unusual. Traveling sales jobs can be enticing, especially to young people with wanderlust. But those jobs also have a high rate of turnover. With folks bouncing in and out, the sales crews weren't exactly living in the lap of luxury. Like in Jennifer's case. She and a group of coworkers had been sharing a couple of rooms at a low budget hotel in nearby Albany. It wasn't a shock that she might want to go head home eventually. Jennifer's boss had called her dad soon after he last saw her, I guess just to give him a heads up about the situation. And her dad told investigators that he already knew that she was basically over the magazine job. She had reached out to him in late August and said that she was sick of working and being on the road, although she didn't mention any specific problems. But she had asked him to buy her a bus ticket home, which he did. Now. She never mentioned a particular date that she'd be leaving. And her dad wasn't too worried when she didn't promptly show up or even when he didn't hear from her for a while.

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As he explained to police, it wasn't unusual for Jennifer to be out of communication. He said she was kind of a wandering hippie type. I mean, her nickname was Moonbeam.

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Her dad kind of described her like a very free spirited person. This is what she wanted to do. She wanted to travel the country and just see places and do different things.

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He assumed she'd be home when she was ready. But weeks passed, and when she didn't return to the hotel for her belongings, her boss reached out to her dad again, offering to send her stuff back to Colorado. And that's when he started to get really concerned. So by the time it was all said and done, it had been more than two months since anyone had laid eyes on her or spoke to her, which was a significant gap of time for police. But even more challenging than that was the total lack of direction they had to go in when they canvassed the trailer park the day after the report hit their desk, not a single person recalled seeing Jennifer. And even though Creek and Pines had its share of residents with questionable pasts, including some registered sex offenders, it wasn't.

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Like she had previously met any of these people or had connections to. We had no idea.

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No one in that park had security cameras or anything that would offer a peek into what happened to her that day. And the possibilities were overwhelming, especially if one of those possibilities was that she had gotten on a bus to go home, because that meant she could be missing from anywhere between New York and Colorado.

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We were able to confirm through the bus company that the ticket was purchased, but it never got picked up. She never went to the bus station and picked up the ticket, but that.

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Didn'T mean she was still in New York. Her dad said she was known to hitchhike when she was in Colorado, so the left behind bus ticket wasn't even a real clue. Maybe she had gotten a ride instead, and in that case, she could literally be anywhere in the country. Detectives tracked down other members of the magazine sales crew that she worked with, because at least that seemed like a decent jumping off point. The National Consumers League ranks traveling sales among the five most dangerous jobs a teen can have. And like many companies that employ door to door sales teams, atlantic Circulation had a bad reputation for scamming customers and exploiting its young workers. But despite their questionable operations, they made themselves available for police.

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We did a whole investigation into the company and the people who worked there, obviously the people she was directly working with, and there was nothing like a good lead or a solid connection specific to this case. And all the magazine people were cooperative with us. They didn't give us any kind of a hard time or pushback in our investigation.

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They didn't give them a hard time or pushback, but they didn't give them any helpful information either. They said they had no idea where she was or who she would be with. According to a Denver Post article by Howard Pancratz, jennifer was outgoing and friendly, and Investigator Robinson said she got along fine with everyone on her team, but she didn't have a bestie who she confided in.

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She hadn't spoken to any of them about any kind of major ongoing problem that she had or anybody that was giving her a hard time or anything like that.

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She had never been to Saratoga County before and didn't have any connections there besides her job. And even though she'd go out and party sometimes, there wasn't a set crowd she hung out with. It was just random people. Word of her disappearance rippled through the trailer park. But beyond that small community, I don't think anyone in the area knew she was missing.

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She was just an unknown missing person. Don't know where she is, don't know what to look for, don't have anybody to go. Question. So the case goes kind of cold, per se. Pretty quickly, it just falls off a cliff. There's just nowhere else to go.

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It would stay that way for years, forgotten about. So much so that when another young woman went missing, it seemed like another isolated incident in an otherwise quiet region. Almost two years later, and a mile and a half away from where Jennifer was last seen, 19 year old Christina White left her family's trailer in the Stockade mobile home park. It was around 1030 at night on Thursday, June 30, 2005, and she was leaving, pissed off because she had gotten into a spat with her younger brother. Here's her mom, Suzanne.

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I guess Christina had gotten into an argument with her brother. About leaving dirty dishes all over in the sink and that kind of stuff. I was at work. She called me and said she was going to go for a walk. Because she was just really upset and she needed to cool off.

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Her brother and her grandmother saw her.

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Leave, even though she told her mom she would be back. By the time Suzanne got home from work, like around midnight. Christina never returned, but everyone knew she liked to take long walks, especially when she was upset or needed to think.

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Sometimes she would walk for hours. So for her to just be gone wasn't immediately a source of concern.

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But Friday passed, then Saturday, and there was still no sign of Christina.

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We were calling everybody that she knew, that we knew that she knew, and nobody had seen her.

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It wasn't uncommon for her to go for a day or two, but after a couple of days, nobody hears from her, they don't see her. Her mom got concerned.

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On Sunday, July 3, suzanne called police to report Christina missing. The early consensus among detectives was that she might have run away. Maybe she was cooling off after the family disagreement. After all, Christina had finished high school, and she didn't have a job at the moment, so it's not like she was missing any formal commitments. But her mom, Suzanne, was worried.

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Whenever she had left the house previous to that, when she had run away, she always called my mother to let my mother know she's okay.

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So police started investigating, just trying to locate her.

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We started going through their close friends. She had a couple ex boyfriends. We talked to them, did our neighborhood canvas, the same ways we would do for any missing person.

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No one they spoke with knew where she could be, and her cell phone offered detectives little in the way of digital breadcrumbs. But unlike with Jennifer, who was just passing through the area, christina had roots in the county. People were more aware that she was missing, and they had more to offer in terms of leads. For instance, three different people reportedly saw her walking down the highway. Stockade trailer park is on, but investigator Robinson says he's not sure how reliable those sightings were. None of the witnesses were positive that it was her they saw. Plus, she was known to walk on that particular highway all the time. So even if they saw her, it could have been a different day. Not to mention, they all said they saw her at different times and different locations along the road, although, in general, it seems like they placed her clear across town about 3 miles east of Stockade, possibly in the early morning hours of Friday, July 1. Now, Suzanne told us that Christina had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder with schizophrenic tendencies. She was prescribed medication but hadn't been taking it on a regular basis, and she didn't bring it with her when she left that night.

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The only things missing along with Christina were the things that she always carried with her her cell phone, her wallet, and her knives. And that might sound unusual, but these weren't like kitchen knives. They were decorative folding knives, something that you might find, like in a gift shop. She always had one or more on her. From what I gathered, it seemed like they were more of an accessory to go along with her gothic style, not something she had for self defense. Now, investigator Robinson said that none of Christina's loved ones were alarmed about her immediate mental state or well being. But as days turned into weeks and then months, the urgency to find her grew, especially when police started monitoring her bank account. Christina got disability benefits, and the money was direct deposited to her, but she hadn't been spending it. In fact, they saw that she hadn't touched her account at all.

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The aspect of the investigation changes from she's a teenager who's out doing something stupid somewhere to maybe this is more.

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Something know after like a week. I told my father she's not coming home.

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Unfortunately, Suzanne was right. On Friday, March 10, 2006, a hiker walking his dog through an offbeat and densely wooded area in Daketown State Forest in the town of Greenfield, which is about 6 miles away from Christina's home, he made a grim discovery. Skeletal human remains. They weren't buried. They were just lying on top of the ground. According to the Saratogian, the hiker rushed to a nearby home for help and frantically told the resident that he had found a skull. They called 911, and law enforcement quickly swarmed the woods, where they guarded the remains all night until a forensics team could take over saturday morning sheriff's deputies and police dogs scoured the woods and found even more bones, nearly a complete skeleton. All of it was promptly brought to a hospital so a forensic pathologist could compare the teeth to dental records of missing people across the state.

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We only have a couple of missing teenage girl cases, so we narrowed it down pretty quickly. Christina was the first one we went to because it was more recent and definitely from the area, and that's where we started.

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Sure enough, they quickly determined the remains were christina's. And at the scene. Crime scene texts recovered some hair and remnants of clothing, including a pair of pants nearby, presumably hers. And investigator robinson said it is possible she was sexually assaulted. What they didn't find were any of the things they figured she had when she'd left home. No wallet, no phone, no knives. In fact, investigators couldn't find any weapons at the scene or nearby. But the moment they examined her bones, they realized whoever killed her used something, because it was obvious that she had been stabbed multiple times around her ribs, between her chest and her abdomen. So this was a homicide case now, and investigators ramped up their investigation big time. One of their first moves was to return to daketown forest to look for more clues. The coroners thought that her body had probably been there since not long after she went missing. But police weren't surprised that it took a while to find her remains. They were almost 100ft deep into the woods, off the side of a road that rungs alongside the forest. This whole area, I mean, it's all thick brush and pine trees, so it's not a place people typically find themselves in.

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The closest houses are a quarter mile away, and popular hiking trails are on the opposite side of the road. But even with all that distance, when detectives spoke with nearby residents, they were able to corroborate the coroner's general timeline. Because locals had noticed something. Around the middle of July, back in 2005, people thought maybe a deer had.

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Been hit because they could smell something. And there's a ton of wild animals in that area. So, like, a deer getting hit by a car and decomposing on the side of the road and you smell it as you drive by wouldn't raise any concern. But there was no deer works.

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Investigators questioned local teens who hung out in the surrounding woods. They conducted a lengthy interview with the hiker who found her just in case. And they revisited everyone they had already talked to and took statements from a bunch of new people.

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We went through and did full background and full workups on all of her ex boyfriends, because that's where your brain goes immediately. Oh, a girl gets killed, it's probably your ex boyfriend. So we went through all of those people. We were able to eliminate them either through alibis or through other people, like witness statements and things like that.

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Detectives quickly realized that the investigation was going to be challenging and for the exact opposite reason that Jennifer's had been. Jennifer didn't know anybody, so they had no one they could turn to for potential information. But Christina, she knew a ton of people, so they had to speak with everyone.

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The main source of the investigation was just interviewing and re interviewing her friends, her family, other people she associated with in a park, her friends from school, her friends from the community. We interviewed like 1200 and something people. We have these, like, totes that have all the paperwork in it. Christina's case is six totes. Jennifer's case would fit in a folder.

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Some tips seemed promising. Like Christina had told friends that a guy had been stalking her or harassing her in some way.

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She'd mentioned that to a couple people, but nobody who had any idea who he was.

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Detectives weren't even sure if this was one dude or several, and they couldn't narrow it down.

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We did a lot of different things to try to identify who this guy who was giving her a hard time, or guys or whoever it may be, but nothing that ever bore any kind of fruit. There was very rough descriptions, like some guy in a truck.

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Suzanne had heard a similar vague account from her daughter about six months before she disappeared. But at the time, she hadn't been overly concerned.

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Sometimes she would come up with these stories that weren't really anything.

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They were figments of her imagination, Suzanne said. Christina didn't seem all that worried about it either, so she just told her daughter to be careful. Along the way, investigators also got calls about various knives people found here and there, eight of which they took into evidence, but none could be connected to Christina. So even as the leads rolled in, investigators found themselves with more questions than answers. They knew that statistically, the killer was likely a man and someone Christina knew. Beyond that, they didn't really have a theory. But Christina's mom told Saratogian reporter Jim Kinney that she did. She had suspicions about at least one person, john Regan, a 49 year old man from a prominent family in Waterbury, Connecticut. You see, a few months after Christina went missing on Halloween night in 2005, john attacked a teen girl in the Saratoga Springs High School parking lot, which is only ten minutes away from Milton, according to New York Times reporters William Yardley and Michelle York. As the girl was loading up her car after track practice, john tried to force her into his van. Luckily, she managed to fight him off and her coaches heard her screaming for help.

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He drove off and they chased him and directed police to his location. And chillingly, when they looked in his van, they saw the backseat had been removed and there was a shovel, a noose, a tarp and a syringe loaded with a sedative. John, who was married with three kids was arrested for attempted kidnapping. And although he had no prior convictions, investigators soon discovered that he was actually awaiting trial in two separate cases in Connecticut, both involving sexual assault allegations. They learned that John was first arrested in 2004 for trying to sexually assault the 21 year old coworker, and a DNA sample after that arrest connected him to an unsolved rape from 1993. Back then, a woman named Donna Palumba told police that someone broke into her home while her husband was traveling and sexually assaulted her while her children slept down the hall. He concealed his identity, so for years, she didn't know who he was, though it turned out now that they had the DNA match that he was her husband's childhood friend. But even before anyone knew who Donna's attacker was, the case became infamous in her area, but for infuriating reasons because, as she shares on her website, Jane Doe no more.

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When Donna reported the assault, investigators accused her of lying, and they threatened to arrest her. In 2001, Donna won a civil lawsuit against the city of Waterbury and its police department for how badly they screwed the whole investigation up. Maybe if they hadn't, john wouldn't have had the chance to go after his co worker and a high school girl more than a decade later. And if that's not maddening enough, the statute of limitations for sexual assault had expired by the time his involvement in Donna's case came to light, so he could only be charged with kidnapping. So back to 2005, by the fall, John had pleaded not guilty to the charges involving his coworker and Donna, and he was out on a $350,000 bond when police got a call from a concerned photo clerk at a Connecticut Walgreens. This clerk told them that John had brought in some disturbing pictures he wanted developed, all surveillance style photos of women in Waterbury, including the co worker he was accused of trying to assault. And John must have gotten word that police were going to be after him, because that is when he headed to Saratoga Springs, where his mother and her family were from relatives of his still own property in the area, and he was apparently working on one of their houses while he was in town.

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So, according to that New York Times article, knowing that he may have operated outside of his home, state authorities in New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, where he sometimes traveled for work, began exploring potential connections to various unsolved sex crimes and murders that had taken place over nearly two decades. And after Christina was found, saratoga county deputies got looped in on their investigation.

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In just our talks as a group of investigators, like, who are possible potential people who could be involved, he's somebody whose name has come up because of the crimes he's been known to commit and his connections to the area.

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Detectives learned that John had no confirmable alibi for the time period when Christina went missing. But Investigator Robinson said he can't call John a suspect or even a person of interest in her murder.

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We can't rule him out, but we have nothing that really connects him to it either. And there's other information that indicates that maybe it's not him.

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In 2006, John pled guilty to all of the charges he was facing in the two different states. And all told, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison. But investigators were never able to definitively link him to any other victims. And despite their efforts, they couldn't make any more leeway with Christina's case. Until Sunday, October 25, 2009, when another awful discovery changed everything. Deer season had just begun, and three hunters were trekking through Lake Desolation State Forest in Greenfield, not far from where Christina's body had been found. This terrain was rugged and the area was isolated. They weren't on a trail, and the closest road wasn't even paved.

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There's nothing other. You can go for like a mile in any direction. There's no houses, there's nothing.

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So they were shocked when they stumbled upon part of a human skull. According to Times union reporter Dennis Yusco, law enforcement initially thought it belonged to a child under the age of twelve. And there were a few possibilities for who it could be, including a name that will be familiar to crime junkies Jalek Rainwalker. He was a boy who disappeared under very suspicious circumstances from a town about a half hour away in 2007. But based on various local news coverage, it seems like investigators ruled him out pretty quickly. As they searched the area with a fine toothed comb. Over the next few days, they found more and more remains, including a portion of an orbital bone, the bony structure around the eye. They also found a lower jawbone with teeth, a few of which had unique dental work. And thanks to teeth and dental records, police were able to quickly determine that this actually wasn't a kid. It was five foot, 2110 pound Jennifer Hammond. Now remember, the investigation into her disappearance had never gained any traction.

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We didn't know if she was actually here or she had hitchhiked to Indiana. We had no idea until we found her. That case really hadn't gone anywhere at that point.

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But finally, detectives had something they could work with. And one theory came together almost immediately. They suspected that whoever killed Jennifer also killed Christina.

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Once we found Jennifer and we started digging more into both of them together, we really started to find that they were almost certainly linked.

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There were too many parallels to ignore. The girls were around the same age. They vanished within two years of each other from mobile home parks in Milton. Their bodies were found within a few miles of each other in wooded areas of Greenfield. There were no weapons found at either scene. And Jennifer had also been stabbed to death, probably in the same area of the body as Christina, although Investigator Robinson won't come out and say that in so many words. Was she killed in the same way as Christina?

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Oh, that's likely.

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They even had similar features, like reddish hair and petite builds. Though there was a key difference, at least, in how the murders might have gone down.

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The nature in how they were found indicates that Christina's probably happened in a lot more of an urgent almost like this was an in progress thing where Jennifer's was probably coordinated. Which is why maybe the one was hidden much better than the other.

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And based on how far out Jennifer's body was found, detectives theorized that the killer might have taken her to the location on an ATV or something.

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Somebody went out there, probably with the intent of doing what they did. Whether she's riding on an ATV with somebody and then something happens, or whether she was already deceased and somebody disposed of her, I can't say that absolutely. But with Christina's, indications at the scene are probably that something happened very nearby, that's not probably how the suspect planned it.

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For instance, maybe the killer made a move on Christina and she started fighting him off, which caught him by surprise. But they can't tell one way or another if Jennifer was sexually assaulted because her body was out there for even longer. Although it's not clear exactly how long. There were only tiny scraps of her clothing left, and leaves and dirt had built up on her remains, which, like I said, were mostly above ground. Although detectives couldn't tell if the perpetrator just didn't bother burying her because the terrain was rocky and he figured no one would find her. Or if maybe she had been buried, but was unearthed naturally over time.

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So it's not like the neighbor can say anything about something that they saw or heard or smelled or anything like that. She's out in literally the middle of nowhere.

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But the nature of both scenes indicated that the killer probably knew the area pretty well where they were found.

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That's an area that you're not going to know about unless you knew about the area. Right? So whether they were a resident or somebody who at least frequented the area.

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Detectives started looking for links between Jennifer and Christina, any overlap between people they hung around or anything, really. But if they ever found something, investigator Robinson's not saying, they also spent some time trying to determine if their deaths were connected to another disturbing local situation, which will also be all too familiar to crime junkies. That's the 1998 disappearance of Suzanne Lyle. Suzanne was 19 when she vanished, and she was from Milton. But Suzanne, who was in college, went missing near her SUNY Albany campus. And even though detectives can't be sure the cases aren't linked, at least not until they're all solved, it just didn't seem likely. So they cracked open John Regan's case file again. By this point, John was serving his sentence in an upstate New York prison. Presumably, he never confessed to anything about Jennifer or Christina, because if he did, I'd be telling you a different story. And even though police discovered that John didn't have a confirmable alibi for the time of Jennifer's disappearance either, they still couldn't draw a line between him and either victim. But to be fair, there also really wasn't a link between John and that high school track star that he tried to kidnap.

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Although Matt Apuzo of The Registered Citizen reported that back in 2005, before John left his home in Connecticut for Saratoga Springs, he visited the website of a local newspaper and read an article that twice mentioned that girl by name. Now, there have been other people who have come on investigators radar over the years, and some that have come on mine as we've been researching these cases. Like, according to Wendy Libertor's, reporting for the Times Union, in 2017, a guy named Harold Walcott, who was a manager of the Creek and Pines Trailer Park pled guilty to criminally negligent homicide after he put a tenant into a chokehold during a fight. But it turns out that Harold didn't actually live there or manage the park back in 2003, and he's not even a consideration for police in these cases. In 2019, saratoga County Sheriff Michael Zurlo told WNYT News Channel 13 reporter Jerry Gretzinger that he thought he knew who killed both girls. They just didn't have enough evidence to prove it. But law enforcement theories have shifted as new developments surfaced, and Investigator Robinson told us that things have changed since the Channel 13 piece was aired.

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Whatever suspect the sheriff had in mind back then might still be the culprit. Like, that's not something they've disproven, but at this point, they don't think it's the most likely scenario anymore.

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I've had the cases since 2016, and we've done some stuff with it, especially on the technology end of things, because technology just continuously advances. So we've tried to do a couple of different things there.

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Even though he wouldn't elaborate on any current working theories, investigator Robinson did imply that at least one person he's eyeballing lived in the Creek and Pines Trailer Park back when Jennifer went missing in 2003. Though it's worth noting that now that trailer park is known as Cateross Acres. What's interesting is if the witness accounts about Christina walking a few miles from her home on the night she left are accurate, that means she went right past the road that Creek and Pines is on. The entrance of it is literally less than one 6th of a mile away from the intersection that she would have gone through. And this really is where the episode was going to end. But after we sat down with Investigator Robinson, a new potential lead came to light. Just in late September of 2023, a nine year old girl was kidnapped while riding her bike at a state park campground about 25 minutes from Milton. After a harrowing two day search, police arrested 46 year old Craig Ross Jr. According to Times Union reporter Brenda J. Lyons, he was caught after investigators lifted a fingerprint from a ransom note he allegedly left in the girl's family's mailbox, which matched prints on file from an old DWI arrest.

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They tracked him down to a camper behind his mother's mobile home, where they found the girl alive, thank God, and hidden inside a cupboard. State police had recently investigated Craig after he was accused of sexually abusing a different girl that he knew, but apparently he denied the allegations and the case was closed without him being charged. So what does this have to do with Jennifer and Christina? Well, Craig and his family are longtime locals. His mother's trailer, which she's been living in for three decades, is only about 1000ft away from creek and pines. And Craig lived in the same trailer park as Christina in the early 2000s, which, again, this trailer park also changed its name later. It's now known as Saratoga Village Mobile Home Park. So that means that their time there probably overlapped since Christina's mom, Suzanne said that her family was there for about five years when her daughter went missing. But she did say she doesn't remember ever meeting or knowing Craig. Now, the Sheriff's office is assisting the state police with the recent kidnapping case. And as of October 2023, investigator Robinson said they were looking into potential involvement Craig might have with any major cases in the area, including Jennifer's and Christina's.

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But he also said that there's no evidence linking him to either homicide. According to Brendan Lyons reporting, the investigator wouldn't disclose if police ever interviewed Craig about Jennifer or Christina, but he said Craig's name had never surfaced in their investigations, at least, quote, not with any kind of significance, end quote. So for now, the search for a killer or killers continues.

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I still hope that with all of the knowledge that's out there nowadays and everything that can be done, that they figure it out.

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Police are optimistic that both cases can be solved.

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Somebody somewhere knows exactly what happened. I would say to listeners or anybody in the public, if you think you know something, call me.

[00:35:10]

If you have any information about Jennifer Hammond or Christina White, please contact the Saratoga County Sheriff's Office at 518-85-6761. The Deck is an audio Chuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis. To learn more about The Deck and our advocacy work, visit thedeckpodcast.com so what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?

[00:35:39]

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