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Paper: The Daily Oklahoman
Title: Computer Photo Helps in Search For Missing Girl Author: Robert Medley Date: January 24, 1997 Section: NEWS Page: 17 If she's alive, Cynthia Britto turns 11 today. She has been missing since she disappeared with her mother and her aunt May 29, 1992, in Chandler.Britto, her mother, Wendy Camp, who was 23 at the time of the disappearance, and the girl's aunt, Lisa Renee Kregear, who was 22, have not been seen in almost 5 years. The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation has released a computerized image of how Britto might look now in hopes the public might be able to help in the case. State agents said they suspect foul play in the disappearance, but they have had few leads since 1992. "Wendy Camp suffered from multiple sclerosis. She needed medication and assistance getting around, so investigators don't believe she would have taken Cynthia anywhere without telling family members," OSBI spokeswoman Kym Koch said. Britto, Camp and Kregear were all from northwest Oklahoma City. They were last seen getting out of a 1983 dark blue Audi at the Wal-Mart in Chandler. The three were returning from Shamrock, where Camp had been visiting her 4-year-old son. Anyone with information about the case can call the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at (800) 843-5678 or the OSBI at (405) 848-6724. Author: Robert Medley Section: NEWS Page: 17 Copyright 1997 Oklahoma Publishing Company **************************************************** Paper: Tulsa World Title: OSBI Hopes TV Feature Uncovers Lead to Missing 3 Author: World Correspondent Date: October 20, 1993 Section: CITY/STATE Page: N9 CHANDLER - The reported disappearance of two Oklahoma City women and a child from the Wal-Mart parking lot in Chandler will be featured on the television program "Unsolved Mysteries," at 7 p.m. Wednesday. "We're hoping someone will see this who has information on the case," Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation spokesman Kym Koch said Tuesday.Wendy Laraine Camp, 23, her daughter, Cynthia M. Britto, 7, and Lisa Renee Kregear, 25, were last seen on May 29, 1992, after reportedly being dropped off at the Chandler Wal-Mart following an argument with their driver, police said. "We have a concern they are dead. Wendy Camp has MS (multiple sclerosis) and did not have enough medication to last," Koch said. The OSBI has sent agent Jackie Johnson to the "Unsolved Mysteries" studio in Burbank, Calif., to take calls in the event any come in Wednesday night following the program, to be broadcast on Channel 2 in Tulsa and Channel 4 in Oklahoma City, Koch said. "We will also have additional staff in our office in case we get any calls," Koch said. OSBI headquarters can be reached at 1-800-522-8017. The three had traveled from Oklahoma City to Creek County with Wendy Camp's ex-mother-in-law, Beverly Noe of Bristow, Chandler Police Chief Mel Roberts said. "Beverly Noe was the last person we know that saw them," Roberts said. He said Noe told police "they got into an argument somewhere between the Shamrock-Bristow area and Chandler and she dropped them off at the Chandler Wal-Mart and drove off." Author: World Correspondent Section: CITY/STATE Page: N9 Copyright 1993 Tulsa World. World Publishing Co. **************************************************** Paper: Tulsa World Title: Acting's for `Wimps,' Believed Tulsa Actor Until College Course Author: Natalie Nichols Date: October 19, 1993 Section: ENTERTAINMENT Page: E3 "For me, it's just a hobby I love," said Tulsa resident Doug Bauer about his acting career. "When I was in college (at the University of Oklahoma), I took an acting course and liked it a lot. I was naive and thought I could be a movie star. "But it wasn't something I'd wanted to do all my life. In high school I thought the drama people were wimps. I was a football player."Despite the fact that he was a late bloomer in the dramatic world, Bauer seems to have a knack for it. Thanks in part to his rugged good looks, he has been seen in two feature films, three television shows and about 20 national and international commercials in the last five years. His latest credit is an upcoming appearance on Wednesday's episode of "Unsolved Mysteries" (which airs at 7 p.m. on KJRH, Channel 2), where Bauer plays a man whose ex-wife and her daughter have come up missing. "This is a story about an Oklahoma case," Bauer said. "The show was put together in Oklahoma City and my agent told me about the audition, and I got it. I play a character named Chad. At first, I was in several scenes, but I understand that a couple of them got cut." The man Bauer is playing on the screen is Chad Noe, whose ex-wife Wendy Camp and Camp's 7-year-old daughter, Cynthia Britto, along with Camp's sister-in-law, Lisa Kregear, disappeared on May 29, 1992, after they were allegedly left at a Wal-Mart store in Chandler by Noe's mother. Noe has custody of his and Camp's son, and Noe's mother, Beverly Noe, had offered Camp a ride from Oklahoma City to Shamrock to visit the little boy, as Camp had no other means of transportation. Camp was last heard from when she called her husband from a payphone at a Shamrock cafe to say that the visit had gone well and they were on their way home. They never made it. Beverly Noe said she and Camp argued in the car, and she asked the women and little girl to get out at the Wal-Mart store. No witnesses have come forward to place the trio at the Wal-Mart, and officials have no other leads. Author: Natalie Nichols Section: ENTERTAINMENT Page: E3 Copyright 1993 Tulsa World. World Publishing Co. **************************************************** Paper: Tulsa World Title: Waiting Game Is 8 Months Old - Missing Women, Child Now Presumed Dead Author: David Fallis Date: February 7, 1993 Section: NEWS Page: A1 EDMOND - Wendy Camp and her 7-year-old daughter have been put to rest, but not buried. Eight months after they - along with Camp's 25-year-old sister-in-law, Lisa Ranea Kregear - disappeared on a trip to Shamrock, family members and state agents believe the three are dead."We know in our hearts they were murdered. We just don't have any evidence to prove it," said Camp's mother, Jackie Taylor. There are no leads, no suspects and no reason for the two women to disappear voluntarily - the 23-year-old Camp was partially paralyzed and dependent on medication. State investigators are reduced to waiting, but Taylor said her family could not. In August they held a memorial service for Camp and daughter Cynthia Britto to "obtain closure" until they know what really happened. It is "a matter of waiting for the phone to ring," Taylor said. The trip to Shamrock - a tiny town nestled among rolling hills just northwest of Bristow - was a chance for Camp to see her 5-year-old son, Jonathon, who is in the custody of her ex-husband, Chad Noe, Taylor said. "She was excited. It was the first time she had seen Jonathon in six or eight months," Taylor said. Camp and Noe divorced several years ago, and Noe took custody of Jonathon when Camp was hospitalized in a coma from multiple sclerosis, Taylor said. Taylor said when her daughter regained her health, she was intent on seeing her child. It became a court fight and Camp eventually won the right to visit Jonathon, Taylor said. On May 28, Noe's mother, Beverly Noe of Bristow, called and offered to take Camp to visit the boy, Taylor said. "Wendy was elated" at the offer, Taylor said. Taylor said Camp's husband was worried about his wife's safety and insisted that his sister, Kregear, go along. On May 29, Noe picked up the two women - and Cynthia - at Camp's Oklahoma City home, Taylor said. About 1:45 p.m. Camp called Taylor and said they had arrived in Shamrock. Camp called again shortly before 5 p.m. from a pay phone in front of a Shamrock cafe. She said the visit had gone well, that Beverly Noe was waiting to take them home and that "they were on their way," Taylor said. The pay phone is the last place lawmen can verify the trio's whereabouts. Beverly Noe ordered the two women and child to get out of her car at the Chandler Wal-Mart about 6 p.m. after they argued, according to Beverly Noe's mother, Ida Prewitt. Prewitt said Camp "badmouthed" her family as soon as they left Shamrock. Noe was not available for comment, but Prewitt said she told her daughter to take her home to Bristow before taking Camp home. "She did, and she went on," Prewitt said. By 10:30 p.m. when the three failed to return, "we were frantic," Taylor said. Taylor said the family filed missing person's reports with Oklahoma City police. Because they did not have phone numbers or addresses for the Noes, they decided to go to the Bristow police the next day, Taylor said. Prewitt said that was when her family learned from police the three had not made it home. "We were not close. But we hate to see anything happen to anyone no matter who it is," Prewitt said. Prewitt defended her daughter's decision to put the women and the child out of the car. She said Camp was intent on fighting, despite Beverly Noe's efforts to arrange the visit with Jonathon as a gesture of good will. "She (Beverly) took all she could stand and let them out," Prewitt said. Investigators have found no one who saw the two women and the child at the Wal-Mart, said Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation spokesman Kym Koch. In an effort to drum up new leads, Koch said the case will be featured on the national television show "Unsolved Mysteries" this summer. Taylor hopes the show brings answers - and a finality - to what she is already trying to accept. "I know they are at peace. I know they are with God," Taylor said Author: David Fallis Section: NEWS Page: A1 Copyright 1993 Tulsa World. World Publishing Co. **************************************************** Paper: Tulsa World Title: 3 lost without a trace - After four months, families in dispute Author: DAVID FALLIS Date: September 26, 1992 Section: NEWS Page: 1A OKLAHOMA CITY - Jackie Taylor says photographs on her desk at work are constant reminders that she has given up for dead her daughter, daughter-in-law and granddaughter. Law enforcement agents do not dispute her worst fears.On May 22, Taylor's daughter, Wendy Camp, 23; Camp's daughter, Cynthia Britto, 6; and Camp's sister-in-law, Lisa Ranea Kregear, 25; disappeared after a visit with relatives in Shamrock. Camp, who lives with her husband in Oklahoma City, was in no condition to be separated from her family or from medical attention, Taylor said. Camp's right side is paralyzed from multiple sclerosis, and Taylor said her daughter has to take steroid medication eight times a day. Without it, "within a week, she would have been totally comatose or dead," Taylor said. Cynthia was to begin first grade this fall, and Kregear has a husband and two small children in Oklahoma City, Taylor said. Taylor, 40, said the ordeal drove her to a mental breakdown and a six-week hospital stay. "I'll never get over this. I've learned to try to have some kind of routine to get through a day," Taylor said. Seen at pay phone The last verified reports, according to state investigators, place the two women and the brown-haired girl at a pay phone in Shamrock, a small Creek County town nestled among rolling hills and oil leases 13 miles northwest of Bristow. Taylor said the three were returning to Oklahoma City from Shamrock after a visit to Camp's 4-year-old son, who lives with Camp's ex-husband, Chad Noe. The couple divorced several years ago, Taylor said, and Noe was given custody of the boy. At the time, Taylor said, her daughter was seriously ill and in the hospital. Taylor said the family fought for and was granted visitation rights. On May 21, she said, Noe's mother, Beverly Noe of Bristow, called and asked if Camp wanted to see the 4-year-old the next day. At the time, Taylor said, she thought the offer was a ploy to look good to the court. "They wanted just my daughter to go," Taylor said. Taylor said Camp's husband was worried about his wife and insisted that his sister, Kregear, go along. The two took Cynthia as well, she said. Bristow woman drove on trip About 11 a.m. May 22, Taylor said, Beverly Noe drove to Oklahoma City and picked up the three. About 1:45 p.m., Taylor said, her daughter phoned from outside the Shamrock cafe to say they had arrived and were waiting for her ex-husband to come down the dirt road to meet them. Shortly before 5 p.m., Taylor said Camp called again from the cafe pay phone. She said her ex-husband had just dropped them off and that Beverly Noe was coming to pick them up for the trip back. It was the last time family members say they heard from Camp. Beverly Noe could not be reached for comment, but Ida Prewitt, her mother, said her daughter made arrangements May 21 for Camp to see the 4-year-old, because Camp's family "insisted on visitation rights." She said her daughter was extremely tired, but "offered" to drive anyway, "to help her out." "Beverly has had to be the goat that does everything for everybody," Prewitt said. "She always went and got them and took them back." Argument cut trip short Prewitt said about 5 p.m. May 22, her daughter picked the three up at the cafe in Shamrock. She said her daughter told her that on the trip back to Oklahoma City, Camp "badmouthed" the Noe family. Prewitt said her daughter told her she became fed up with Camp and put the three out of the car at the Chandler Wal-Mart. When Camp failed to arrive home that evening or call, Taylor said her family grew frantic. At 10:30 p.m., she said, they called police and filed a missing-persons report. Taylor said the family did not have the Noes' telephone numbers, so she waited until morning, then drove with her husband to the Bristow police station. Prewitt said her family did not realize that Camp, Kregear and Cynthia had not made it home until law officers contacted them early Saturday. "We were not close. But we hate to see anything happen to anyone no matter who it is." Little contact Taylor said since the disappearances, the Noes have made no attempt to telephone her family. The only contact came during a recent court hearing about Camp's 4-year-old son. "To me, if I took someone's family off and they didn't return, the first thing I'd want to do is get with the family," Taylor said. But Prewitt said it is Camp's family that is unfriendly, and that the lack of contact is normal. "We've never been speaking with each other," Prewitt said. Prewitt said it has been rough on her family, too, "because they (Camp's family) think we have done something wrong, which we haven't." Prewitt said state investigators came to her home. "We gave them permission to search the house, and they took a bunch of papers and stuff and haven't returned them." No further reports OSBI spokesman Kym Koch said agents have been unable to find anyone who saw Camp, Kregear or Cynthia at the Wal-Mart parking lot in Chandler on May 22. Repeated ground and air searches of the Shamrock area and the use of dogs trained to locate bodies have turned up nothing. With no leads, Koch said, agents will take the case to a national TV show on unsolved mysteries. Taylor said asking for the show's help "should have been done a lot sooner." Like Taylor, state agents are concerned that the three are dead. But "at this point we can't really call it a homicide," Koch said. Author: DAVID FALLIS Section: NEWS Page: 1A Copyright 1992 Tulsa World. World Publishing Co. **************************************************** Paper: The Daily Oklahoman Title: Mother Refuses To Quit Search For Missing Kin Author: Judy Kuhlman Date: August 20, 1992 Section: NEWS Page: 16 It's been almost three months since two Oklahoma City women and a child were reported missing, but Jackie Taylor says she won't give up searching for the bodies of her missing daughter and granddaughter. "We've known from the beginning that they were murdered. But we don't have the proof or evidence to bring this to trial. I'll never give up on this till the case is solved or the day I die," Taylor said.Lisa Kregear, 25; Jackie's daughter, Wendy L. Camp, 23, and Camp's daughter Cynthia Britto, 6, were reported missing May 29. Since their disappearance, Taylor, a librarian at the University of Central Oklahoma, said her life has been a "nightmare." Taylor said she had a "mental breakdown" and has been unable to work since Camp and Britto made the ill-fated trip to Shamrock on May 29. She said everything just seems to have gone wrong since her daughter's disappearance. "Our two cars broke down, and it took a week and half for my husband to fix them so he could go to work. It seems like it's continuous. I feel like I'm on bottom, and I just keep getting knocked down farther," Taylor said. At the urging of her psychiatrist, Taylor and her family last Thursday conducted a memorial service in Mesquite, Texas, for her daughter and granddaughter. "It was just a way of going through the grieving process, some kind of way of putting things in perspective," Taylor said. "We have 8-by-10 pictures made of them and had them displayed on an altar. We had our memorial around that altar. I have an uncle who is a minister, and he officiated," Taylor said. She said she hopes someone will come forward and give information about the disappearance. Kregear, Camp and Camp's daughter went to see Camp's 4-year-old son Jonathon Noe at his father's home in Shamrock on May 29, Taylor said. Taylor said Camp called her husband in Oklahoma City from the Shamrock Cafe about 5 p.m., and that was the last time the family heard from the three. They were last seen getting out of a 1983 gray Audi in Chandler, Taylor said. The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation and local authorities have conducted aerial and ground searches for the three but with no luck. Last month the bureau offered a reward of up to $5,000 to help find them. Wednesday OSBI spokesman Kym Koch said investigators still have no major leads. Kregear is 5 feet, 4 inches tall, weighs 130 pounds, and has blond hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing acid-washed jeans and a yellow and white striped shirt. Camp is 5 feet, 3 inches tall, weighs 200 pounds and has brown hair and eyes. Camp has multiple sclerosis and walks with a limp. She was last seen wearing a red sweat shirt and pants and white tennis shoes. Officials fear for her safety because she was not carrying her life-preserving medication. Britto is 3 feet tall, weighs about 60 pounds and has brown hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a pink sweater, light blue corduroy pants, a blue and black striped shirt and tennis shoes. Anyone with information should call the OSBI's 24-hour hot line, 1-800-522-8017. Author: Judy Kuhlman Section: NEWS Page: 16 Copyright 1992 Oklahoma Publishing Company **************************************************** Paper: The Daily Oklahoman Title: Girl's Family Awaits News Author: Robert Medley Date: June 26, 1992 Section: COMMUNITY III Page: 1 Stacy McCall used to make friends laugh with a hillbilly accent while hanging out at a fast-food restaurant. Her aunt Nancy Clymer said people called her niece "spacey Stacy," because after being told a joke she would pause and say, "Oh, I get it."McCall, 18, the source of laughter and light-hearted silliness only a few short weeks ago, is the focus of prayers and the cause of horror, fear and grief now. Three women, Stacy McCall, her friend Suzie Streeter, 19, and Streeter's mother, Sherrill E. Levitt, 47, have been missing from Levitt's Springfield, Mo., home since June 7. McCall's car is still parked in the driveway of her friend's home in Missouri that is still sealed off by yellow police tape. A cocker spaniel named Bubba that was a graduation gift to McCall is still waiting to see his new owner. At the Oklahoma City home of Stacy McCall's aunt, the days hang heavy with anxiety and anticipation. Nancy Clymer moves quickly to the telephone each time it rings waiting for news about her niece. "`We have to believe she is alive, but when you wake up in the morning ... mornings are hard," Clymer said. "It has not been a very happy experience to say the least." Her niece McCall has already been mentioned on "America's Most Wanted" and on a CBS This Morning television newscast. The attractive girl with light brown hair that falls below her waist also now is seen on huge billboards across southwestern Missouri that ask for information in the missing persons case. Aileen Moore, the missing girl's grandmother, has been absent from her home in The Village and from her The Village Christian Church for three weeks as she has stayed near her daughter's home in Springfield. This week, Nancy Clymer recalled the telephone call she got from her sister and mother from Springfield at 5 a.m. June 8. Moore had gone to Missouri to see her granddaughter Stacy McCall graduate from Kickapoo High School the night before the girl vanished. "My sister and my mother were both sobbing to tell me Stacy was missing," said Clymer, who lives in northwest Oklahoma City with her husband, Robert, and two children, ages 12 and 9. Clymer already has answered prank phone calls from people claiming to be her niece while her mother and sister have had their share of cruel phone calls in Missouri. Psychics call to offer visions such as: "I see them tied up in some place that is hot." She said psychics' words give her hope the girl is still alive, but information from police has been hard to come by although they are doing their best. "The police say they have no clues," Clymer said. Clymer explained that police have told the family that Stacy McCall went through high school graduation ceremonies Saturday, June 6. After going to a birthday party that followed the ceremony, she was suppose to go to friend Janelle Kirby's house where a group of girls had planned to spend the night. The girls were planning a trip to WhiteWater in Branson, Mo., the next morning. Then Streeter said she felt sick to her stomach and wanted to go home to her mother Sherrill Levitt's house around 2:30 a.m. June 7, and they left the suburb of Battlefield in two cars. Clymer said her niece and Streeter were not close friends, and Streeter hung out with a group of people her niece did not associate with. Yet McCall followed the friend home to the mother's house. Levitt lived there alone with her daughter and a small "yippy" dog named Cinnamon, which is now with a neighbor, Clymer said. Springfield police told the family the three women's purses were all found in one room and all the beds were unmade in a house usually meticulously clean, as if the women had already gone to sleep that night, Clymer said. A porch light had been knocked out, police said. The next morning, the girls did not show up to go to WhiteWater, and at noon Kirby went to the home but found nobody there and the television on, Clymer said. Clymer said she is staying in Oklahoma City for now, watching her mother's house in The Village. "They have so much community support around there now; I figure at some point that is going to slow down and I am going to be needed there," she said. She said she has also watched another case of three missing females from Chandler closely because she empathizes and feels there may be similarities. "I would hope the police and FBI would have looked into that," she said. In Oklahoma on May 29, Wendy Camp, 23, Lisa Kregear, 23, and Cynthia Britto, 6, disappeared after being dropped off at a Wal-Mart in Chandler. Chandler police chief Mel Roberts said he has already been contacted by news gatherers from CBS's "48 Hours," who are working on a story about the Springfield case. Anyone with information about the case can call the Springfield police at 417-864-1758 or 417-864-1755. Author: Robert Medley Section: COMMUNITY III Page: 1 Copyright 1992 Oklahoma Publishing Company **************************************************** Paper: The Daily Oklahoman Title: Aerial Hunt for 3 To Resume Today Author: Judy Kuhlman Date: June 19, 1992 Section: NEWS Page: 13 Police conducted a ground and aerial search Thursday in three counties for two women and a girl missing since May 29. The search was fruitless, but, weather permitting, the aerial search will continue today, said Kym Koch, Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman.Jackie Taylor, mother of Wendy Camp, said Thursday she does not have much hope that her daughter, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, is still alive. Missing with Camp, 23, are her Camp's daughter, Cynthia Britto, 6, and Camp's sister-in-law, Lisa Renee Kregear, 22. OSBI agents, joined by Bristow police and Creek County sheriff's officers, searched Payne, Lincoln and Creek counties, Koch said. Taylor said Wendy's doctor feared Wendy would be either dead or in a coma without her medication. Wendy Camp, her daughter, and her sister-in-law went to Shamrock on May 29, Taylor said. She said Wendy called her husband about from the Shamrock Cafe about 5 p.m. that Friday. That was the last time any of Wendy's family have heard from her, Taylor said. Koch said the three were riding home with an acquaintance when they got into an argument with the driver. The driver dropped the three off at a Wal-Mart in Chandler between 5:30 to 6 p.m., Koch said. Camp is 5 feet 3 inches tall, weighing about 200 pounds and has brown hair and blue eyes. She was wearing red sweat pants, a red shirt and white tennis shoes. She walks with a limp. Britto is 3 feet tall, weighing about 60 pounds and has brown hair and brown eyes. She was wearing a pink sweat shirt, a blue and black striped shirt, light blue corduroy slacks and tennis shoes. Kregear is 5 feet, 4 inches tall, weighing about 130 pounds and has blond hair and blue eyes. She was wearing acid-washed jeans, a yellow and white striped shirt, black ankle boots and yellow earrings. Anyone who may have seen the three get out of a gray 1985 Audi at the store is asked to call the OSBI's 24-hour hot line at 1-800-522-8017. Author: Judy Kuhlman Section: NEWS Page: 13 Copyright 1992 Oklahoma Publishing Company **************************************************** Paper: Tulsa World Title: Aerial search for 2 women, girl fruitless Author: AP Date: June 19, 1992 Section: NEWS Page: 21A OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - A search for two women, one suffering from multiple sclerosis, and a 6-year-old girl who have been missing since May 29 proved fruitless Thursday, authorities said. Missing with Wendy Camp, 23, who has multiple sclerosis, are her daughter, Cynthia Britto, 6, and Camp's sister-in-law, Lisa Renee Kregear, 22.Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation agents, joined by Bristow police and Creek County sheriff's officers, searched along highways in Payne, Lincoln and Creek counties, said OSBI spokesman Kym Koch. Oklahoma City police officers in one of the department's helicopters and Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers in an airplane searched the area from the air, Koch said. "It got too hot so the search was discontinued this (Thursday) afternoon," Koch said. Koch said the aerial search was to continue today, weather permitting. Jackie Taylor, Camp's mother, said she doesn't hold much hope that her daughter is still alive because she doesn't believe she could have survived 20 days without her medication. "When they tried to wean her off the medication over a period of six months one time, within one week after they stopped the medication, she could not walk and began having seizures," Taylor said. Camp, her daughter and her sister-in-law went to Shamrock May 29, Taylor said. She said Camp called her husband from the Shamrock Cafe that afternoon and that was the last time any of her family have heard from her. The three were riding home with an acquaintance when they apparently got into an argument with the driver, who then dropped them off at a store in Chandler, Koch said. Author: AP Section: NEWS Page: 21A Copyright 1992 Tulsa World. World Publishing Co. **************************************************** Paper: The Daily Oklahoman Title: Woman Missing With 2 Others Needs Medication, Police Say Author: Judy Kuhlman Date: June 4, 1992 Section: NEWS Page: 1 The family of two women and a 6-year-old girl reported missing last Friday fears one of the women may die if she doesn't receive her medication soon for multiple sclerosis, state and Oklahoma City authorities said Wednesday. Wendy Camp, 23; her daughter, Cynthia Britto, 6; and Camp's sister-in-law, Lisa Renee Kregear, 22, all of northwest Oklahoma City, were last seen at a Wal-Mart store in Chandler, Oklahoma City police Lt. John Riley said."Our main concern is that Wendy suffers from MS, and she has been off her medication since last Friday. Her doctor advises us that she is in a life-threatening situation. If she is found, she needs to be rushed to the nearest hospital," Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman Kym Koch said. Riley said police suspect foul play because family members told them the two women, especially Camp, were careful about letting family members know their whereabouts. Also, Camp did not have her medicine with her Friday, and she never misses taking her daily medication, Riley said. Camp's daughter was taught how to dial a telephone and whom to call in case of emergencies because of her mother's illness, Riley said. "This is so out of character for these women," Koch said. Oklahoma City police took the initial missing persons report from Camp's family and then passed the information on to the OSBI, Koch said. Koch said OSBI agents and Creek County sheriff's deputies are working on the case. Riley said Camp's husband, Leon Camp, last heard from Wendy when she called from Shamrock in Creek County about 5 p.m. Friday to say she would be home in a couple of hours. The three were riding with an acquaintance. During the ride back, the three who are missing got into an argument with the driver, and she dropped them off at the Wal-Mart in Chandler about 5:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., Riley said. Camp is 5 feet 3 inches tall weighing about 200 pounds and has brown hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing red sweat pants, a red shirt and white Reebok tennis shoes. Camp also walks with a limp. Britto is 3 feet tall weighing about 60 pounds and has brown hair and brown eyes. She was last seen wearing a pink sweat shirt, a blue and black striped shirt, light blue corduroy slacks and tennis shoes. Kregear is 5 feet 4 inches tall weighing about 130 pounds and has blond hair and blue eyes. She was last seen wearing acid-wash jeans, a yellow and white striped shirt, black ankle boots and yellow earrings. Anyone who may have seen the two women and girl get out of a 1985 gray Audi at the Wal-Mart last Friday is asked to call the OSBI's 24-hour hot line at 1-800-522-8017. Author: Judy Kuhlman Section: NEWS Page: 1 Copyright 1992 Oklahoma Publishing Company **************************************************** |
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#2 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Aug 30, 2005
Posts: 139
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This is one of those cases that I am so hoping that it gets solved.. Everyone pretty much knows that foul play was involved but it is hard to prove without evidence of a crime taking place.. I personally have some strong views on this case because I feel like the police officials were very slack in investigating this case.. but I pray that it gets solved so that the family can get some peace!! and whom ever is responsible for there deaths ( Chad Noe and family) are punished
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#3 |
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Member
Occasional Poster
Join Date: Oct 08, 2009
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 5
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This case has always been the most obvious case on Unsolved Mysteries. Chad Noe and family seem like horrible people. In the beginning, he talks about divorcing Wendy because she had M.S. Isn't marriage for better or for worse? Obviously he never truly loved Wendy if he could do that to her. I also believe that Chad and his family are lying about the little boy being sexually abused by Wendy's husband, Leon. It is very easy to see in the segment that Chad and his grandmother have a lot of hate in them, especially for Wendy Camp. One person on here asked why Ida would admit to arguing with Wendy in the car if her and Beverly were guilty? They had to come up with a reason why Wendy left the car. Her story seems like a very good excuse. Ida showed no compassion in the hopes of finding them. She just doesn't want to be blamed because she knows more than what she is telling. What are the odds of reveiving a rare invite to see your son and then being dropped off in a Wal-mart parking lot and hooking up with a murderer that is going to kill 3 people, including a child? Like Wendy's mom said, she would have called her mother or husband. Poor Cynthia. I just wonder how they have hide the remains all of these years. I'm still hoping that the Noe family will one day tell the truth.
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#4 |
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Member
Occasional Poster
Join Date: May 27, 2011
Location: NY
Posts: 31
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Hi I am going to be doing a story on this case on Crime Kittehs. I am also going to try to start a campaign to raise awareness and to put pressure on the local police to investigate Chad Noe.
If anyone would be interested in helping out let me know. I want to find out which local PD handles this case so I can get their email and start emailing them about the case to put pressure on them. |
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#5 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Sep 02, 2010
Location: California
Posts: 373
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What's crazy is I'm older than the 2 women were who disappeared, they were so young when they were murdered. When you grow up watching these segments, the victims seem older than they really are. Once you reach their age, you think "Wow, they weren't very old." It's eye opening. Cynthia would have been my age too, we were born the same year.
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#6 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Aug 05, 2010
Location: Myrtle Beach
Posts: 234
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Ugh... are Ida and her clan of scumbugs still alive? what a nasty bunch. :/ watching the segment made me so angry how she and Chad had no remorse or compassion.
Last I heard Ida was in jail for arson and fraud? or I could be wrong. jail is too good for people like that anyway. |
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#7 |
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Member
First Time Poster
Join Date: Dec 27, 2011
Posts: 1
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New to the board and this story. But have been looking for all the info I could find since I recently learned of this terrible story. I found where Ida passed away a few months ago. I guess what ever she knew is now gone.
Ida Jane Prewitt July 27, 1929 - September 2, 2011 Bristow, Oklahoma |
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#8 | |
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Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 08, 2009
Location: Texas
Posts: 2,067
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Quote:
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#9 | |
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Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 14, 2010
Posts: 1,874
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Quote:
http://www.tributes.com/condolences/...emory/92558734 Interestingly enough, Wendy Camp's sister did an interview on Websleuths radio a few months ago and did not mention this info, so she may not even be aware of Ida's death at the time. However, given that Beverly and Chad were probably the real masterminds behind the disappearances, at least Ida's death doesn't completely eliminate the possibility that there will be closure someday. |
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#10 |
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Good news everyone!
Occasional Poster
Join Date: Nov 27, 2025
Posts: 85
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I don't understand why Chad the cad was not charged. When Ida's son started talking, he must have claimed Chand knew nothing about it. I can't believe a judge dismissed the charges against him when he helped his mother Ida hide the bodies. Every day that goes by, vigilante justice seems to be more and more likely the only real justice in the world.
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#11 |
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Member
Forum Regular
Join Date: Dec 06, 2003
Posts: 525
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Anyone watch the ID channel show on this case? a cousin of jonathon talks about idas family. Idas father always said he killed some one. Jonathon was not aloud to talk on his mother or look up anything on case, yet he was interested. The cousin came over and looked up the case when jonathon was alone with her. he scared they would be found out. I Jonathon said to the press after his grandma was arrested cause he was scared. I think Jonathon was raised under a lot of fear. Trust me not all of Ida's family is nuts and they know there stories that creep them out on Ida and her kids. it was interesting.
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