close
close

Wisconsin woman has missed “lively and good” for over 6 decades | Deployment

According to the authorities, a woman from Wisconsin, who has been missing for more than six decades, was “alive and good” in a remarkable turn. Audrey Bacheberg, 82, disappeared in July 1962 at the age of 20, but a recently carried out investigation showed that it lived outside the state. The Sheriff office of the Sauk County confirmed the discovery in a press release, although the exact state in which it was found was not announced.


A Wisconsin woman who has been missing for 60 years was found alive. (Picture of representation/Unsplash)



(Read also: American woman in Bengaluru is amazed at the leading supply culture of India: “You can get everything”)

A disappearance of your choice

The Sheriff's office also explained that the disappearance of Bacheberg was not the result of criminal activities or bad game. “Further investigations have shown that Ms. Backeberg's disappearance was at his own choice,” the explanation said.

Backeberg, who was the mother of two children at the time, left her home on July 7, 1962. According to a report in The Guardian, her babysitter claimed that Backeberg after Madison, Wisconsin, drove to Indianapolis, Indiana. The babysitter's last memory of Bacheberg was that she went away from the bus stop.

A restless marriage and allegations of abuse



The Charley project, a platform that is devoted to the profiling of missing persons, previously updated his contribution via Bacheberg and revealed that she had married her husband Ronald Bacheberg at a young age. According to the marriage, which was supposedly in trouble, she was reported to be 15 years old at the time of marriage, which was supposedly in trouble.

According to a report by the BBC, Backeberg had submitted a criminal complaint against her husband at the time of her disappearance and accused him of abuse and threats to kill her. She had worked in a wool mill and was on the way to collecting her payment when she left home.

The case, which has been unresolved for decades, has been examined again as part of an ongoing review of the cold cases. In an explanation, the office of the Sheriff of the Sauk district said that the case was assigned to a detective for a “comprehensive review”, which included a “thorough re -evaluation of all case files and evidence”.



Detective Isaac Hanson, who headed the investigation, announced WISN News that he found Bacheberg about her sister's Akterry.com report. “It was an essential key to clarifying deaths, census reports, all kinds of data,” said Hanson. He turned to the department of the local sheriff under the address he discovered and received a call from Bacheberg within minutes.

(Read also: US woman fulfills her mother's lifelong dream of visiting Paris and capturing her priceless reaction to the Eiffel Tower)

“I think she was just removed and, you know, moved on from things and did her own thing and lived her life,” added Hanson. “She sounded happy. Confident in her decision, no regret.”




Leave a Comment