Post by hi224 on Jul 9, 2019 22:28:32 GMT
Abigail Andrews, 28, was an expectant mother, approximately 3 months pregnant, and not yet showing. She was last seen on April 7, 2010, walking home from her friend’s house in Fort St. John, B.C. She is of Metis descent. She disappeared with only the clothes she was wearing, a pink BlackBerry Pearl cellphone and a purple Guess handbag. No transactions have been made with her bank card since her disappearance. She last had contact with her family at 7 p.m. that evening before she left her home. According to a neighbour, when she left her home that night, she was going to visit a male friend.
Andrews is described as six feet tall, 200 pounds, with brown hair. She has hazel eyes and a tattoo of tribal art on her lower back. As the time of her disappearance, she’s believed to have been wearing black pants and a white shirt with a dark blue or black vest and jacket.
Two days before she disappeared, Andrews’ parents had taken her shopping for baby supplies.
"She was very excited about getting all this baby stuff," Andrews’ father said. "We got a high chair, a stroller, a playpen, teddy bears, clothes, she had Pampers that she was stockpiling, she was stockpiling food, all kinds of garments and goodies in preparation for the birth of this child."
She was reportedly excited for the future and preparing for the birth of her first child.
On April 20, 2010 a search of the Fort St. John landfill was completed, but no evidence was discovered.
In June, 2010 Andrews’ family arranged for two large billboards to be put up on the Alaska Highway to remind people that the case remains unsolved.
In 2013, the RCMP released a re-enactment video in hopes of stirring up memories and new leads. The investigation found one suspect. The suspect’s name has never been released. Investigators believe that the suspect has spoken to people about what they have done, and are asking those people to contact them, no matter how small or how unimportant they may feel their information is.
Police have not ruled out foul play in Andrews’ disappearance, and are treating her case as a homicide.
What happened to Abigail Andrews?
Sources:
www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/mmiw/profiles/abigail-andrews
www.mollymatters.org/murdered-pregnant-women-of-canada/abigail-andrews-3-months-pregnant/
www.energeticcity.ca/2013/10/suspect-identified-in-abigail-andrews-disappearance-from-fort-st-john/
www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/10/15/abigail-andrews-missing_n_4102064.html
www.alaskahighwaynews.ca/regional-news/local-news/local-woman-still-missing-1.1149006
Andrews is described as six feet tall, 200 pounds, with brown hair. She has hazel eyes and a tattoo of tribal art on her lower back. As the time of her disappearance, she’s believed to have been wearing black pants and a white shirt with a dark blue or black vest and jacket.
Two days before she disappeared, Andrews’ parents had taken her shopping for baby supplies.
"She was very excited about getting all this baby stuff," Andrews’ father said. "We got a high chair, a stroller, a playpen, teddy bears, clothes, she had Pampers that she was stockpiling, she was stockpiling food, all kinds of garments and goodies in preparation for the birth of this child."
She was reportedly excited for the future and preparing for the birth of her first child.
On April 20, 2010 a search of the Fort St. John landfill was completed, but no evidence was discovered.
In June, 2010 Andrews’ family arranged for two large billboards to be put up on the Alaska Highway to remind people that the case remains unsolved.
In 2013, the RCMP released a re-enactment video in hopes of stirring up memories and new leads. The investigation found one suspect. The suspect’s name has never been released. Investigators believe that the suspect has spoken to people about what they have done, and are asking those people to contact them, no matter how small or how unimportant they may feel their information is.
Police have not ruled out foul play in Andrews’ disappearance, and are treating her case as a homicide.
What happened to Abigail Andrews?
Sources:
www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/mmiw/profiles/abigail-andrews
www.mollymatters.org/murdered-pregnant-women-of-canada/abigail-andrews-3-months-pregnant/
www.energeticcity.ca/2013/10/suspect-identified-in-abigail-andrews-disappearance-from-fort-st-john/
www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/10/15/abigail-andrews-missing_n_4102064.html
www.alaskahighwaynews.ca/regional-news/local-news/local-woman-still-missing-1.1149006