The father of a missing 19-year-old college student said Thursday
that police have identified badly decomposed remains found a week ago in
an Apache Junction desert wash as that of his daughter.
“I know
she is in heaven and she is at peace,’’ Rick Salinas said. “Right now
we are in deep grief and mourning. It is indescribable pain.’’
Rick
Salinas said he received a telephone call from police Thursday
afternoon notifying him that the remains found in the wash by a property
owner on Aug. 6 are that of his beloved daughter, Adrienne Salinas, a
Gateway Community College student.
Sgt. Mike Pooley, a Tempe police spokesman,special occasion
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in women's, confirmed Adrienne Salinas’ death. He said the state
Department of Public Safety’s crime lab had identied the remains as
those of the missing student.
Pooley said early Thursday that
police had no suspects in the young woman’s mysterious disappearance. A
team of 100 searchers had spent the day looking for the personal effects
of Adrienne, not knowing if the remains belonged to her or to another
person.Whether the new device keeps the styling of the
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Police
were looking for such items as Adrienne Salinas’ cell phone or
clothing, but Pooley said he did not know specifically what was found or
if any of the items were connected to the Salinas case.
But the
work of about 100 searchers -- a combination of police and volunteers
-- is far from over. The searchers plan to return early Friday to cover
the remainder of a four-mile wash, said Sgt. Mike Pooley, a Tempe police
spokesman.
The property owner notified Apache Junction police,
who performed an initial investigation, but called Tempe police the
following day because the remains were similar in size and stature to
Salinas.
Authorities said it remains unclear where the body
originated from because of recent flooding in the area, near the base of
the Superstition Mountains. There was significant flooding on July 21.
“We don’t know where the body came from,” Pooley said. “Part of the objective today is to find the originating spot.’’
Pooley
said police do not have a suspect in Adrienne’s disappearance, despite
an exhaustive investigation that has been hindered until the body’s
discovery by a lack of physical evidence, and by a dearth of witnesses.
Police
have interviewed hundreds of people, some of whom allowed them to
search their personal property. Some of those interviewed also have
agreed to polygraph examinations that are inadmissible in court but used
by police as an investigative tool.
In addition, police
searched the area near Salinas’ apartment, west of Arizona State
University, and they also searched Tempe Town Lake.
More than
100 people, including volunteers, are searching a wide area,
concentrating on 6 miles of a wash, which includes private property.
Salinas’
family was informed last week about the discovery but police didn’t
release any information because of concerns about evidence.
Salinas,
a student at Gateway Community College, attended a party in Tempe with
her boyfriend the night of June 14 and had been drinking.Although
protective carriers
are generally quite thin, She and her boyfriend got into an argument at
the party. The boyfriend drove her to his home in Scottsdale, but they
continued to argue so he drove her home.
The last time anyone
reported seeing Adrienne was early in the morning of June 15. Her
roommates told police that she packed an overnight bag and said she was
driving back to her boyfriend’s home.
But the boyfriend told
police that Adrienne never arrived. A witness reported seeing Adrienne’s
car hit a median near her apartment. Rick Salinas, Adrienne’s father,
found the car two blocks away with two flat tires and reported his
daughter missing to police.
Later the morning of June 15,
Adrienne repeatedly called the boyfriend, but was unable to reach him,
shortly after 4 a.m. She eventually sent him a text message at 4:43
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The
boyfriend told police that Adrienne never arrived. Tempe police have
said the boyfriend is not considered a suspect and has been very
cooperative in the investigation.
At the Pentagon and CIA, they
are known as “countermeasures,” the jargony adaptation of Newton’s Third
Law: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
The
U.S. Army in Iraq jammed cellphones to counter deadly roadside bombs
triggered by calls. Osama bin Laden switched to carrier pigeons when spy
agencies got good at eavesdropping on al-Qaida communications.
Adam
Harvey revved up his assembly line to foil — or at least critique — the
National Security Agency’s (NSA) collection of Americans’ phone records
in the name of counterterrorism.
Harvey is an artist and
privacy advocate in New York. His “privacy-protection” creations, which
include “anti-drone garments” that he says thwart thermal-imaging
cameras, have attracted the attention of guerrilla fashionistas and at
least one intelligence agency.
His latest gadget, to be sent to
customers Sept. 20, is a metallized fabric case that he says shields a
cellphone from electronic poaching by the government, by phone
companies, by whomever.
“The thing I’m worried about is creating a large database of all my movements and not knowing what it’s used for,Universal
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