The afflicted woman solves the mystery of the disappearance of her husband 23 years later
Source : Photo credit: colbycriminaljustice.wikidot.com
Linda Iseler lived in hell. Her husband, Richard, had disappeared without a trace and the police thought it had something to do with his sudden disappearance.
Linda was allowed to raise her two children alone, on a tight budget, drowning in debt and uncertainty. Then, one day, 23 years after her disappearance, Linda discovered information that might shed some light on what ultimately happened to her missing husband ...
source:Photo credit: ABC News
Linda and Richard Hoagland lived happily in Indiana with their two children, Matthew, age 9, and Douglas, age six. Things went well for the happy couple. Of course, they had their arguments about money, children, things like that, but it was nothing that could not be solved with a little conversation and commitment.
But it seemed that all outward appearances were deceptive. Richard Hoagland was hiding something inside. Something he thought he could not fix if he stayed with his wife and family. The husband and father became more maniacal, retreating to the corners of the house to be alone. But his family had no idea what he was planning ...
Source :ABC News - Go.com
On February 10, 1993, Linda had gone to work at a doctor's office, as she did every Wednesday before. Around 4:45 p.m., Richard called his wife in the office and told him that he had to go to the emergency room, he did not feel well. She said she could leave the job and go with him if he wanted, but he said he was fine.
Linda took that to say it was not dangerous to life and ended her day, thinking she would go to the hospital later after she had figured out what to do with the children. He picked up little Douglas from daycare on the way home and came home around 5:25 p.m. To his shock and dismay, he discovered that Richard had left Matthew at home alone when he went to the emergency room ...
Source: Smh.com.au
An hour later the phone rang. It was Richard. "I can not live like this anymore ..." he said sadly. "I think you'd be better off without me." Before Linda could respond, Richard had hung up. Two hours later, he called back from what was probably an airport. "I do not want to go to jail," he said. "I'll never go back ..." And he never did.
Richard Hoagland had disappeared on February 10, 1993. His car was found abandoned a few days after his last cryptic call, but his name was not recorded on any of the flights entering or leaving the airport. "Then I called a few more times, once from Aruba another from Venezuela ... Everything was becoming very clear; Richard never went home ...
When police began investigating their involvement in Richard's mysterious departure. "
Linda Iseler was fighting for life. They often passed the house asking strange questions. I was sure they thought it had something to do with what had "happened" to Ricard.
, The woman has told the police that she did not know anything about the husband's disappearance. At the end of one of the many police interrogations, one of the detectives even accused Linda of conspiring to take off with her children and meet her supposedly missing husband ...
Even worse than the accusations was the knowledge that not only did Richard Hoagland have left her and her children out of money and the collective mass of debts they had both accumulated, she had also exhausted all her credit cards. Richard had falsified his signature on a bank loan before leaving town. In a short time, mortgages, auto payments and other bills accumulated, out of control.
Before long, Linda had to file for bankruptcy. At the same time, the bank closed his house and recovered his van. Their lives had been turned upside down by the now gone, Richard Hoagland, and he was nowhere to be found. Linda Iseler had to live with a friend of the church for six months after Richard left. They had no money, no car, no house, and yet the police were watching her ...
A second interview took place a few years after the first incident and resulted in the police watching Linda's house and the comings and goings of her family for six months. She even found that someone was opening her mail and that she would come home from work with items in her house misplaced. Even his phone was heard.
Meanwhile, Richard Hoagland was living the good life in West Palm Beach, Florida. Apparently, in the course of his travels, Richard had found a death certificate in a house he had been renting. It was then that he realized that he could finally cut ties with life in Indiana that he had fought so hard to leave behind. And so, Richard Hoagland became Terry Symansky ...
The real Terry Symansky died in 1991, of course, but that did not mean he could not find a job or a new place to live. Like Terry, Richard has found love, married, had a child and started a new life in West Palm Beach. The truth of his deception was discovered a few years later, when true nephew Symansky found that his late uncle had been married and obtained a pilot's license years after his death.
Last summer, Linda received a detective call from the Pasco County Sheriff's Department Anthony Cardillo. "Excuse me, Miss Iseler," he said. "Do you know who Richard Hoagland is?" They revealed to Linda that they had discovered that Richard had finished and had stopped. He was arrested for using the identity of a dead man ....
On July 20, 2016, the Pasco County Sheriff's Department came to "Terry Symanskys" and arrested Richard Hoagland. He was taken to the Pasco County jail with a $ 25,000 deposit. Richard was finally brought to justice not only for his real crimes, but also for acts committed by despisers leaving his poor wife and two children.
Source : Photo credit: colbycriminaljustice.wikidot.com
Linda Iseler lived in hell. Her husband, Richard, had disappeared without a trace and the police thought it had something to do with his sudden disappearance.
Linda was allowed to raise her two children alone, on a tight budget, drowning in debt and uncertainty. Then, one day, 23 years after her disappearance, Linda discovered information that might shed some light on what ultimately happened to her missing husband ...
source:Photo credit: ABC News
Linda and Richard Hoagland lived happily in Indiana with their two children, Matthew, age 9, and Douglas, age six. Things went well for the happy couple. Of course, they had their arguments about money, children, things like that, but it was nothing that could not be solved with a little conversation and commitment.
But it seemed that all outward appearances were deceptive. Richard Hoagland was hiding something inside. Something he thought he could not fix if he stayed with his wife and family. The husband and father became more maniacal, retreating to the corners of the house to be alone. But his family had no idea what he was planning ...
Source :ABC News - Go.com
On February 10, 1993, Linda had gone to work at a doctor's office, as she did every Wednesday before. Around 4:45 p.m., Richard called his wife in the office and told him that he had to go to the emergency room, he did not feel well. She said she could leave the job and go with him if he wanted, but he said he was fine.
Linda took that to say it was not dangerous to life and ended her day, thinking she would go to the hospital later after she had figured out what to do with the children. He picked up little Douglas from daycare on the way home and came home around 5:25 p.m. To his shock and dismay, he discovered that Richard had left Matthew at home alone when he went to the emergency room ...
Source: Smh.com.au
An hour later the phone rang. It was Richard. "I can not live like this anymore ..." he said sadly. "I think you'd be better off without me." Before Linda could respond, Richard had hung up. Two hours later, he called back from what was probably an airport. "I do not want to go to jail," he said. "I'll never go back ..." And he never did.
Richard Hoagland had disappeared on February 10, 1993. His car was found abandoned a few days after his last cryptic call, but his name was not recorded on any of the flights entering or leaving the airport. "Then I called a few more times, once from Aruba another from Venezuela ... Everything was becoming very clear; Richard never went home ...
When police began investigating their involvement in Richard's mysterious departure. "
Linda Iseler was fighting for life. They often passed the house asking strange questions. I was sure they thought it had something to do with what had "happened" to Ricard.
, The woman has told the police that she did not know anything about the husband's disappearance. At the end of one of the many police interrogations, one of the detectives even accused Linda of conspiring to take off with her children and meet her supposedly missing husband ...
Even worse than the accusations was the knowledge that not only did Richard Hoagland have left her and her children out of money and the collective mass of debts they had both accumulated, she had also exhausted all her credit cards. Richard had falsified his signature on a bank loan before leaving town. In a short time, mortgages, auto payments and other bills accumulated, out of control.
Before long, Linda had to file for bankruptcy. At the same time, the bank closed his house and recovered his van. Their lives had been turned upside down by the now gone, Richard Hoagland, and he was nowhere to be found. Linda Iseler had to live with a friend of the church for six months after Richard left. They had no money, no car, no house, and yet the police were watching her ...
A second interview took place a few years after the first incident and resulted in the police watching Linda's house and the comings and goings of her family for six months. She even found that someone was opening her mail and that she would come home from work with items in her house misplaced. Even his phone was heard.
Meanwhile, Richard Hoagland was living the good life in West Palm Beach, Florida. Apparently, in the course of his travels, Richard had found a death certificate in a house he had been renting. It was then that he realized that he could finally cut ties with life in Indiana that he had fought so hard to leave behind. And so, Richard Hoagland became Terry Symansky ...
The real Terry Symansky died in 1991, of course, but that did not mean he could not find a job or a new place to live. Like Terry, Richard has found love, married, had a child and started a new life in West Palm Beach. The truth of his deception was discovered a few years later, when true nephew Symansky found that his late uncle had been married and obtained a pilot's license years after his death.
Last summer, Linda received a detective call from the Pasco County Sheriff's Department Anthony Cardillo. "Excuse me, Miss Iseler," he said. "Do you know who Richard Hoagland is?" They revealed to Linda that they had discovered that Richard had finished and had stopped. He was arrested for using the identity of a dead man ....
On July 20, 2016, the Pasco County Sheriff's Department came to "Terry Symanskys" and arrested Richard Hoagland. He was taken to the Pasco County jail with a $ 25,000 deposit. Richard was finally brought to justice not only for his real crimes, but also for acts committed by despisers leaving his poor wife and two children.
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