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Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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If I think about how likely it is that this profile point signifies something unusual, the inside-out clothing is very hard to explain away, but the brightly colored clothing may have a mundane explanation. Anything that makes you more visible from a longer distance by default makes you an easier target for any kind of predator, animal, human, or otherwise. So, I would expect more people to get lost while wearing colorful clothing rather than natural shades or camo. However, after they get lost, I would expect more people with colorful clothing to be found, as it cuts both ways. In other cases, the missing person may have died, and their body was never recovered. It is also possible for a person to go missing and never be found due to foul play. Subjects being found in an unusual position (like face down on the ground, the wrong side up in water for their gender, or with unusual lividity or state of decay for the length of their disappearance)

In these cases, the missing person is usually found within a few days. If the missing person is a child, they are often located by law enforcement using Amber Alerts and other resources. Marvin Clark is one of the most famous missing persons in American history. A businessman and prominent member of the community, Clark disappeared without a trace in 1926. From that point of view, this profile point should always be analyzed together with other variables. If a criminal group with the same unusual means and methods of abducting people in a forest setting is taking advantage of bad weather to kidnap and do god knows what with people in the same unusual ways, then the bad weather compromising searches should correlate more often with cases that contain other unusual elements to them than with normal cases of people going missing in a forest. There are several theories about what might be responsible for the high number of disappearances at Lake Mead.Since the area was established in 1936, there have been more than 563 reported cases of people vanishing without a trace. The most famous case is that of Harold Holt, an Australian prime minister who disappeared while swimming at Lake Mead in 1967.

In case you were wondering what I’ve been doing for the last couple of months instead of writing articles here, I guess you could call it research. I’ve been trying to find the best data that doesn’t fit with the dominant paradigm of what is or isn’t supposed to be physically possible. And oh my, is there a lot of anomalous data in the world that serious scientists tend to ignore or refuse to engage with. Like the Missing 411 cases. Paulides, David (2011). Missing 411 Western United States and Canada. North Charleston, South Carolina: CreateSpace. pp.ix–x. ISBN 978-1466216297. The interest in the book series prompted the creation of a documentary film based on the Missing 411 books; this film was released in 2017. [ citation needed] Images of maps made by Paulides regarding his theory have been frequently shared on social media. [18] The theory has also gone viral on TikTok. [19] If an area has been searched dozens of times, chances are the search was sufficient. Especially if the body wasn’t even found by dedicated searchers, but by random hikers or passersby after the search was over. This includes a number of cases of divers not finding the body, but random people on the shore finding it afterwards. Again without anyone seeing the body get in.As a result, most readers prefer to get the original books with raw information before the spinoffs, reprints and new editions distort them.

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