nivek
As Above So Below
People from nowhere, those poor souls who were never identified, buried and so many forgotten about, could there be family members thinking they're still alive somewhere but at that same moment the person lay buried in a grave as a John or Jane Doe?...
Mysterious Deaths of People from Nowhere
In September of 1988 there was the case of a so-called “Julie Doe,” whose body was found lying in the marshy wilderness of Lake County, Florida. The corpse was highly decomposed, but was thought to be a woman in her 20s, yet this was hard to ascertain as the victim seemed to have a good amount of male DNA and was thought to be perhaps transgender. She was thought to have had breast implants done, and to have been pregnant at some point in the past, but this was unclear.
Despite the fact that Julie Doe is believed to have been undergoing gender reassignment surgery to become a man at the time of her death, and that this was a rather rare procedure at the time, there have been no clues from the plastic surgery community as to her identity, and she is still a nameless, shadowy victim who could be anyone.
In April of 1990 there was an unidentified woman that turned up dead after being tragically struck by two different vehicles near Huntington Beach, California. The woman, who was around her early 20s, carried no identification of any sort, and nothing came up in database searches, leaving authorities scratching their heads as to her identity.
An unusual clue found on her was a ring made of human hair, its purpose just as inscrutable as her identity. Further investigation would turn up some leads, but they only served to make things more mysterious.
Some people who came forward claimed that they had met the mystery woman and that she had said her name was Andrea, with one witness even saying that she had stayed with them for a time. A few of these witnesses said she was just a homeless vagrant, but others said that she had told them she well off and was looking for her birth parents, who by her own admission were rather famous.
One of these leads told police that they had seen the woman suddenly chop off a portion of her hair and make the odd ring she had been found with, although why she would have done this is anyone’s guess. In some cases “Andrea” was claimed as saying she had been from New York, but in other cases she had reportedly said she was from Virginia, and in the end nothing seemed to add up. To this day no one knows who the “Huntington Beach Jane Doe” was.
In that same year, on September 10, 1990 a motorist in Brazoria County, Texas came across a human skull stuffed within an old tire when he pulled over to relieve himself by the side of the road.
Nearby was the rest of the skeleton, thought to be from a woman in her late teens or early 20s. Other than that, not much could be made of the decomposed skeletal remains, and even the cause of death was not apparent, but there were certainly some intriguing hints found on her person.
The woman was found to have a total of 6 rings on her fingers, one of which was a class ring from Robert E. Lee High School in Houston for the class of 1975. This was odd, since the woman would have been too young to have graduated at that time, and authorities have been stumped as to why she would have it.
All attempts to track down who might have given it to her or lost their class ring from that year have turned up absolutely nothing. The identity of the woman, nicknamed “Princess Blue” due to the blue stone that had been set in the ring, remains unknown.
Mysterious Deaths of People from Nowhere