Find Dean Marie Pyle Peters

Bring Dean Home

News: Finding Dean

News: Finding Dean


I will try to keep you as updated as possible with recent news articles about Dean's disappearance. Keep visiting to keep up with any news or updates in Deanie's case.


New Clues In Dean's Case & a $25,000 Reward!

Reward, new clues in Deanie Peters case

The teen disappeared in 1981

Updated: Thursday, 19 Nov 2009, 6:35 PM EST
Published : Monday, 16 Nov 2009, 5:28 PM EST

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) - Investigators trying again to solve the 1981 disappearance of 14-year-old Deanie Peters say they have learned that the girl was involved in an altercation a few days before she vanished, and want to talk to any witnesses.

The physical altercation involved other students and happened at the school, according to detectives.

The Metro Cold Case unit hopes a newly offered reward from a private individual will help loosen lips.

"There is now a $25,000 cash reward for information that leads us to the location of Deanie Peters' body and information that leads us to those individuals that are responsible for her death," Detective and Sgt. Sally Wolter said.

In a news conference Thursday, investigators say they have excavated all the rumored sites where people said Peters might have been buried, interviewed hundreds of people and traveled to seven states to do that.

The unit financed by a federal grant has had five detectives on it for 16 months.

The teenager vanished from Forest Hills Central Middle School while attending her brother's wrestling practice in February 1981.

The head of the Cold Case team said just the announcement that there would be a news conference Thursday has resulted in more calls coming in, indicating a high public interest in the case decades later.

If you have information about Peters' disappearance, you are asked to call the Cold Case team at (616) 632-6123.

http://www.woodtv.com/dpp/news/local/kent_county/Cold-Case-Team-to-update-Deanie-Peters

Recent Updates in Dean's Disappearance

Kent County Sheriff to update case of Deanie Peters, missing since 1981

By The Grand Rapids Press

November 16, 2009, 6:24PM

deanie peters.JPGDeanie PetersKENT COUNTY -- Cold-case investigators attempting to solve the 1981 disappearance of Deanie Peters have scheduled a news conference for Thursday to update their efforts, but authorities said they will not announce an arrest.

The team of five detectives set its eyes on solving the Peters case about 20 months ago, pledging to revisit all aspects of the 14-year-old's vanishing Feb. 5, 1981.

Kent County Sheriff Larry Stelma will address the probe but is not expected to declare any major developments toward an arrest or resolution.

As recently as May, the investigators used a backhoe to excavate a 30-foot-by-50-foot area behind an Ionia County schoolhouse while searching for Peters' remains. It was one of many areas authorities said they were taking another look at during the renewed focus.

Peters went missing from a wrestling practice at Forest Hills Middle School gymnasium after her mother said she left to use the bathroom. She hasn't been seen since, a case that has baffled investigators then and now.

Through the years, police have searched fields, looked into a school incinerator, sent divers into a shallow pond and searched a mound of rocks with cadaver dogs.

They have jailed a school janitor for a night, and questioned suspects in Lowell. Officers have traveled to other states including Kentucky and a visit to Florida's death row for an interview with a potential suspect.

http://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2009/11/kent_county_sheriff_to_update.html

Dean's Best Friend Speaks Out

http://www.mlive.com/news/grpress/index.ss...4500.xml&coll=6 (http://www.mlive.com/news/grpress/index.ssf?/base/news-27/1139931979134500.xml&coll=6)

Deanie Peters' best friend still lives in pain

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

By Tom Rademacher and Ken Kolker
The Grand Rapids Press

Both wore their hair the same, loved the same rock musician, attended the same church. They hung out together virtually every day, traded clothes, baby-sat together, even celebrated birthdays the same month.

But tragically, Kathy Kingma would celebrate her 15th and all future birthdays without her best friend, Deanie.

"Twenty-five years have passed, and still she's missing," said Kingma, as tears poured down her cheeks. "Why?

"Why, why, why?"

It's a question that has evaded authorities since Feb. 5, 1981, the afternoon Dean Marie Pyle Peters -- "Deanie" to family and friends -- walked out of the gym at Forest Hills Middle School and never was seen or heard from again.

And even a quarter-century later, the ripple effect produced by her disappearance remains strong for those who knew and loved her.

"It is a pain that never goes away," said Kingma, who was Kathy Weeks when she and Deanie were eighth-grade classmates.

Kingma took a ragged breath on her cigarette and looked into space as she acknowledged she will never see her childhood friend again.

"The only place that Deanie is alive is in my head and in my heart," she said.

Two Sundays ago was especially tough for Kingma. It marked the 25th anniversary of the day Deanie waved to her mother's friend, said "I'll be right back," and strolled from the gym.

It also served as a painful reminder of the day she picked up a newspaper to learn that Eugene Debbaudt, who was assigned to solve cold cases for the Kent sheriff's department, would not be taking on Deanie's case.

Debbaudt, a former FBI agent here who solved the 1993 Robert Fryling murder case for the sheriff's department, has said Deanie's case was supposed to be next in line. A reported rift between Debbaudt and the detective bureau derailed that idea.

By all public accounts, Deanie disappeared without a trace. No one has been charged in connection with what detectives largely believe was a homicide.

But at times, it only seems like yesterday when Kathy and Deanie were "jammin' to Meatloaf" in one anothers' homes, or stealing out for a cigarette, or phoning each other to talk about school, about boys.

"I can still see her smile, still hear her voice," said Kingma, who remembered how Deanie always worked over the first syllable of her name -- "Hey Kaaa-thy...Hey Kaaa-thy."

Kingma said immediately after detectives suspected Deanie was abducted -- a theory never proven -- they took measures to safeguard her best friend.

"They were afraid I might be next. For three weeks, I was watched over," said Kingma, who admitted the experience "absolutely" frightened her.

Kingma still treasures a diary she kept the year Deanie disappeared.

On Jan. 2, 1981, Kingma wrote that "I got a call from my best friend Deanie. She asked me to come over and spend the day with her...We jammed down with records. I guess my favorite group is Meatloaf. I like that record "Bat Out of Hell..."

But just five weeks later, on Feb. 12, she would record that "This last week has been hell. My best friend Dean Marie Pyle 'Deanie Peters' has been missing since last Thursday... There are so many stories and you don't know what to believe. I love her and am praying for her..."

Although at least one church in the area has planted a tree and established a scholarship in Deanie's honor, Kingma said she was forlorn over the fact that there is no gravesite or memorial erected to Deanie. Kingma herself was on track to set something up at their middle school around 1993, but fell gravely ill with aplastic anemia and was not able to follow through.

So at least six times a year, she drives by the home in which Deanie used to live. It helps her to think of the good times they had together as kids, and that "Deanie lived and breathed on this earth."

A Timeline to the Disappearance of Deanie Peters

A look back: the investigation of missing Deanie Peters
Posted by Ken Kolker and Tom Rademacher | The Grand Rapids Press March 05, 2008 10:03AM
This story originally was published Feb. 12, 2006

In the quarter-century since 14-year-old Deanie Peters disappeared from her little brother's wrestling practice at Forest Hills Central Middle School, the investigation has led detectives to a school incinerator, divers to a shallow pond and, as recently as last year, cadaver dogs to a mound of rocks.



Deanie Peters
Detectives locked up a school janitor overnight, interviewed a man on Florida's death row and questioned suspects from the Lowell area.

More recently, a psychic provided GPS coordinates to look for Deanie's body, while another drew a picture of a former camp where she might be.

But, no matter which direction the investigation has taken, it keeps circling back to where it started -- Forest Hills Central Middle School, where the 14-year-old told her mother's friend: "I'll be right back."

By some accounts, those were her last known words. And Deanie -- the dark-haired eighth-grader who should turn 40 in September -- hasn't been heard from since.

"It's been terribly frustrating," said Ken Kleinheksel, 67, the retired Kent County sheriff's detective initially assigned to direct the investigation. "I lost a lot of sleep on this, wondering why can't we move forward, why aren't there more clues."

Deanie's disappearance on Feb. 5, 1981 -- 25 years ago last Sunday -- is one of the most baffling mysteries Kent County sheriff's detectives have faced in recent memory.

There is no body, no sign of foul play, no indication whether she's alive or dead. Televised pleas by her mother and stepfather went unanswered.

Kent County Undersheriff Jon Hess said the case remains open. He said his department has considered creating a regional team to explore cold cases such as Deanie's, but "to this point, it hasn't come to fruition."

Deanie disappeared two years after another high-profile murder mystery -- the January 1979 kidnapping, rape and murder of Hope College senior Janet Chandler, whose body was found the next day in southwest Michigan. State police cold-case investigators last week announced an arrest in that murder, which is unrelated to the Peters case.

The frustration over Deanie's case has led one woman, who had used Deanie as a baby sitter, to team with the retired Kleinheksel as the duo conduct their own probe.

"Nobody just vanishes from a school," said Ardene Herbert, who was the person to whom Deanie waved at the gym that day and told she'd be right back.

"What in the world do you do when someone disappears off the face of the Earth without a trace?" said former Kent County sheriff's Capt. Jack Christensen, who questioned the death-row inmate in Florida.

Independent investigations
The case has raised new questions about the performance of the Kent County Sheriff's detective unit, which has been criticized in recent years over its handling of other old, high-profile cases.
Sgt. Chet Bush, the former lead detective who said supervisors erected roadblocks during the investigation of millionaire businessman Robert Fryling's 1993 murder, revealed this month he was kept from pursuing some leads in Deanie's disappearance.

Bush, who is retired and working security at the Kent County Courthouse, said he wasn't allowed to travel to Arizona to interview Deanie's mother and stepfather, who live there, and wasn't given the time to track down and reinterview the first identified suspect -- a school janitor.
The Press, however, found that man living in a small house on Grand Rapids' Northeast Side, about a mile from the sheriff's department, where he has been for the past 15 years.

Besides the independent investigation Kleinheksel is conducting, others, too, have been working on it, including a pair of women teaming with psychics who believe they have promising leads.
Undersheriff Hess had no comment on Kleinheksel's continued involvement and said "I don't know anything about that" in reference to Bush's criticisms.

Sgt. Jeff McAlery is now handling the case. Hess said McAlery was "not available" for an interview.

At least two men interviewed as possible suspects in the case -- former Central Middle School janitor Arthur Diaz, now 65, and former Lowell resident Bruce Bunch, now 42 and living in Kentucky, say they continue to live under suspicion.



Press File Photo
Arthur Diaz was a Forest Hills Central Middle School janitor who came under suspicion in the disappearance of Deanie Peters. He wants his name cleared.
Both proclaim their innocence. And both want their names cleared.

"If somebody accuses you of doing something, how do you clear yourself?" asked Diaz, who said he spent a night in jail and was questioned by a grand jury, an appearance confirmed by the Kent County prosecutor at the time, David H. Sawyer, now a state appellate judge.

Hope fades
Deanie's mother, Mary Peters, who was 34 when her daughter disappeared, said she is disappointed that she hasn't heard from Kent County detectives in five years. "They probably don't want to call me to get my hopes up," she said.

Deanie was at the middle school with her mother to attend a wrestling clinic for youngsters, including her 4-year-old brother. At some point, she crossed the gym floor and exited a doorway. Stories differ as to whether she was headed to the restroom, sneaking out for a cigarette or bound for a friend's nearby home.

What everyone agrees on is only this: She was never seen again.

It quickly became apparent she hadn't run away. She left behind several hundred dollars in Christmas money, her purse, jewelry and clothing.

As time passed, hope faded for her safe return. In July 1991, more than a decade later, Deanie's mother filed a petition for a "presumptive death certificate."

The death certificate, filed in January 1992, has a chilly aura about it: "Cause of death: unknown. Place of death: unknown."

Following the leads
Arthur Diaz, then 40, figures he was the first suspect. He clearly remembers Deanie, though he said he never spoke with her. "She was a sharp kid, a good-looking gal," he said.
Diaz said he believes detectives targeted him because he is Hispanic. His criminal record in Michigan includes drinking and driving convictions since 1992.

About a week after the disappearance, Deanie's mother and stepfather approached him at school, and he offered condolences. He said he told them what he also told detectives: Three high-school-age boys, one wearing a green-and-white Forest Hills Central jacket, banged on the locked doors of the school during the wrestling practice. He said he refused to let them in because he didn't recognize them.

Diaz still wonders whether that was important. He said he was never asked to give a description or look at mug shots.

The lead detective and Deanie's mother said they don't recall talking to Diaz about the boys.
Detectives for a time focused on the possibility that Diaz cremated Deanie's body in the school's incinerator. Diaz said he never was asked about the gas-fired incinerator, which was used to burn food scraps and school papers.

Christensen, the former sheriff's captain, said detectives later determined the incinerator wasn't hot enough to "burn up paper books." Using it to dispose of a body, he said, "was an impossibility."

Diaz said he was in the school bus garage about a month after the disappearance when detectives handcuffed him to go before a secret citizens grand jury. He said he spent the night in the Kent County Jail before testifying the next day.

Diaz quit the school job in 1984 for construction work. He said police haven't bothered him since, though he heard that Kleinheksel and a woman were looking for him three years ago at his ex-girlfriend's house.

Sgt. Chet Bush, who helped with the case from almost the beginning, said detectives soon developed leads on Lowell-area suspects. That led divers to search a shallow pond along Grand River Drive near Lowell, he said.

Bruce Bunch, a former Lowell High School student who was 17 when Deanie vanished, said he had a dream about Deanie after watching a TV news report about her disappearance but insists he never knew her.

"When I was a kid, I used to have this mental telepathy thing," Bunch said during a phone interview from his home in Somerset, Ky. "I could tell things, like when a bird comes into your house and tells you someone's going to die."

He said he can't remember details of the dream, only that he told friends about it, and it somehow mushroomed into how he had killed Deanie and buried her. Some say they've heard he struck her with his car or truck.

"Everybody just keeps carrying it different ways," said Bunch, who owns an auto-repair shop.

Roadblocks to closure
Sgt. Bush took over the case from Kleinheksel in 1993. He interviewed more than 50 people and looked at a dozen or so possible suspects in Deanie's case, he said. "I wasn't able to eliminate anybody (as a suspect) on paper," he said.

He talked to Deanie's mother and stepfather once by phone but only to get a photograph for a missing-persons poster. Bush refuses to say who kept him from going to Arizona, or why.

Bush said he never found Diaz, whom The Press tracked down in 30 minutes and interviewed this past Tuesday.

Christensen, the former sheriff's captain, said he was vacationing in Florida when he visited a man on death row for killing his wife and children. The man was of interest because he had lived near Central Middle School, but Edward Zakrzewski II had moved from Michigan before the disappearance.

Back to Lowell
For reasons not completely clear, the case keeps returning to the Lowell area.

A woman interviewed by The Press said she was canoeing and drinking with friends on the Flat River in 1989 when a Lowell man in her canoe talked about how he and two others had struck a girl named Deanie with a car in a school parking lot. They got scared and hid her body in the trunk. They later buried her along the Flat River, the woman said she was told.

Bruce Bunch was not among those identified by the man in the canoe, said the woman, who asked she not be named.

Joseph Fallstrom, one of the three men identified in that scenario, said he was questioned twice by sheriff's detectives in the early 1990s. At first, they listened to the story that he had heard:
That Bruce Bunch had talked about Deanie Peters during a kegger near the sod farms off Grand River Drive near Lowell.
The story was that her body was buried near the old one-room Standard School about five miles north of Lowell, Fallstrom said.

Acting on a tip, former Lowell Police Chief Barry Emmons said he'd poked around the schoolhouse grounds shortly after Deanie's disappearance but found nothing.

Fallstrom, now 43, said Kent County detectives turned it around on him, saying, "We heard you and your brother ran her down at a party."

"I'm like, man, this is scaring me," said Fallstrom, who denies any involvement.

The story told on the canoe trip led the woman and her sister -- and, eventually, cadaver dogs and Kent County crime-scene investigators -- to the former Young Marines Camp. It's located in a hilly area at the end of Heether Road in Ionia County's Keene Township, not far from the one-room schoolhouse.

Toni Schaefer, who owns and lives on the former Young Marines Camp with her husband, Patrick, said a team of Kent sheriff's detectives dug on the property four years ago and again last spring for Deanie's body.

A short time after detectives left, a psychic visited her land, Schaefer said.

The psychic had told Schaefer a body had been stored somewhere on the property before the ground thawed enough to bury her.

Undersherrif Hess said he helped search an area at 92nd Avenue and Whitneyville Road SE about a year ago. He said they've also searched in Montcalm County.

Somber anniversary

Mary and John Peters said they have no place to mourn. "We can't bury her," Mary Peters said. "We have no place to go."

Sgt. Bush said he has marked past anniversaries by driving to Forest Hills Central Middle School. He'd park his unmarked vehicle, then sometimes take down license plate numbers.

"They always say the perpetrator returns to the scene," he said.

However, last Sunday, for the first time since 1993, he did not visit the school.

Bush said he'll leave that for detectives now on the case.

"It's time for them."

http://blog.mlive.com/grpress/2008/03/a_lo...estigation.html

Search for Body Near Schoolhouse is a Dead End.

Search for body of Deanie Peters near Lowell schoolhouse turns up nothing, police say they have other leads in 1981 case

By The Grand Rapids Press

May 12, 2009, 7:17PM
A law enforcement team and Michigan State student search near an old schoolhouse in Ionia County for the body of Denie Peters on Tuesday.

IONIA COUNTY -- When she heard police were searching for the remains of Deanie Peters, Ariadyne Herbert rushed to the rural Lowell area scene.

"As soon as I found out they were digging, I wanted to come out," said Herbert, who saw the 14-year-old Peters moments before she went missing from a Forest Hills school more than 28 years ago. "It's haunted me for many years."

Deanie Peters

Tuesday's dig with a backhoe and help from Michigan State University anthropology graduate students turned up nothing, but cold-case detectives say they are pursuing other leads.

The Kent County Metro Cold Case Team re-opened the Feb. 5, 1981 disappearance of Peters more than a year ago. Police said they expect to check several sites for her remains, but would not name the other locations.

Workers used the backhoe to excavate an area about 30-feet-by-50-feet behind the old Standard one-room schoolhouse at Marble and Potters roads northeast of Lowell. Over the years, rumors have persisted about a man talking during a kegger party about burying Peters' body near the schoolhouse.

Police and others have looked near the school before, including with a cadaver dog last summer, but not to the extent of Tuesday's dig.

"We're trying to apply today's techniques and science to the investigation," Kent County Sheriff's Lt. Kevin Kelley said. "This is a site we need to look at before we move on."

The backhoe slowly excavated ground to a depth of 3 to 4 feet as the students and detectives looked through the dirt for evidence. About 20 workers were at the scene.

The anthropology students also used long rods to push into the soil, a process that helps them feel differences in soil compaction and find areas that may have been disturbed in the past.

Peters disappeared after leaving a wrestling practice at the Forest Hills Central Middle School gym to go to the restroom. Herbert was in the gym talking with Peters' mother just before she left.

"Deanie waved at me and said, 'I'll be right back,' " Herbert recalled. "She went out the doors and was never seen again."

Herbert, who still keeps in touch with the Peters family, now in Arizona, was going to call the family if police found anything Tuesday.

Kent County Sheriff Larry Stelma, who was at the schoolhouse with Undersheriff Jon Hess, said the dig cost was negligible because students donated their efforts and the backhoe also was donated. He is confident detectives will solve the case.

"I think there are a lot of people that would like to get some closure in this case," he said.

E-mail John Tunison: jtunison@grpress.com

Source:http://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2009/05/search_for_body_of_deanie_pete.html

05/12/09: Crews Dig For Dean

Crews dig again in
Deanie Peters search

Credits-By: Tony Tagalvia

http://www.woodtv.com/dpp/news/

Teen has been missing since Feb. 5,
1981

Updated: Tuesday, 12 May 2009, 5:48 PM EDT
Published : Tuesday, 12 May 2009, 12:05 PM EDT

LOWELL, Mich. (WOOD) - Cold case investigators looking into the Feb. 5, 1981 disappearance of then-14-year-old Deanie Peters did not find the evidence they were hoping for during a Tuesday dig behind an old schoolhouse in northwest Ionia County.

"We're wrapping up this part of the operation," Kent County Sheriff Larry Stelma told reporters at around 2 p.m. "So they'll move on to the next set of leads." The sheriff did not want to disclose when or where the next search would take place.

Peters disappeared from her brother's wrestling practice at Forest Hills Central Middle School in Ada. She told her mother she was going to use the restroom and never returned.

The site of Tuesday's dig, northeast of Lowell near Potters Road and Marble Road, has long been tied to the investigation. The Lowell police chief visited the Keene Township site shortly after Peters' disappearance. In the 1990s, a tipster told investigators that he overheard a man named Bruce Bunch at a party talking about burying Dean Marie Pyle -- known as Deanie Peters -- there.

"He was haunted by the chains clanging on the may pole behind the schoolhouse where he claims to have buried her," said the tipster, Joe Fallstrom, in an interview last year with 24 Hour News 8.

The cold case team reopened the case in March 2008 with the hope that new theories, new standards and new technology could shed some light, Sheriff's Lt. Kevin Kelley told 24 Hour News 8.

"Through their looking at the case and reinterviewing several witnesses, this is one particular location where they thought that it was necessary to dig to look for Deanie Peters' body," Kelley said.

Tuesday's dig began around 9 a.m. with more than a dozen people involved -- along with heavy equipment.

"Went by one time and the tents were there," neighbor Betty Nelson told 24 Hour News 8. "Came by another time and the backhoe was there so thought something was up."

"They used the mechanical excavator here to skim the top soil," Stelma told 24 Hour News 8. He said the team contacted the Michigan State University Department of Anthropology to engineer the dig. And once that top soil was skmmed, the anthropologists examined it.

"When there's a change in the soil composition than they can point out where that soil's been disturbed -- or it hasn't been disturbed" even nearly three decades later, the sheriff explained.

Nelson has lived in the area for roughly 15 years. When she moved in, "Our neighbor told us that there was a rumor that a girl from Forest Hills was kidnapped, killed and buried behind the old schoolhouse.

She said she thought it was just a story, a rumor -- and hadn't thought about it until she saw crews digging. Tuesday's unsuccessful search could put that rumor to rest.

The case has involved several other suspects, including a custodian at Forest Hills Central Middle School and a death-row inmate in Florida. Charges were never filed in either instance.

Investigators have used psychics, hypnotized a student and sent Peters' dental records to other states to help in the case. You are asked to call the Kent County Cold Case Team at (616) 632-6123 if you know anything about Peters' disappearance.

10/08/08: 27 Years Later Dean's Fate Remains a Mystery

Deanie Peters
disappearance remains a
mystery after 27 years

Deanie Peters disappearance remains a
mystery afte

Updated: Wednesday, 08 Oct 2008, 12:23 AM EDT
Published : Friday, 23 May 2008, 2:11 PM EDT

Credits-By Emily Zangaro

LOWELL, Mich. (WOOD) -- On the banks of the Flat River just north of Lowell is a plot of land formerly known at the Young Marines Camp. It hasn't been used for years, but it continues to draw the attention of police detectives.

Toni Schaefer and her husband currently own 13 acres of the property, and detectives first came to their house about nine years ago, searching for clues that may lead them to Deanie Peters, the 14-year-old who vanished 27 years ago.

Police "say they continue to get tips over the years steadily and that's why they always come back," Schaefer told 24 Hour News 8. Their ground has been dug up in multiple spots, including "behind where that rock is."

Deanie -- whose given name is Dean Marie Pyle -- disappeared Feb. 5, 1981 from her brother's wrestling practice at Forest Hills Central Middle School. She told her mom she was going to use the restroom.

She hasn't been seen since.

About two months ago, Schaefer got another call from cold case investigators who wanted to check out ground near a flag pole. Detective Sgt. Sally Wolter is part of the Kent County team that reopened the Deanie Peters case in March.

Over the years, Wolter said, consistent tips have led detectives to a couple different locations in Lowell, including the Young Marines Camp and an abandoned schoolhouse five miles north of the city.

"We have approximately 1,500 people that we need to sit down and talk with," Wolter said. "That's an uphill battle."

In the weeks after Peters disappeared, her mother and stepfather - plus the entire community - searched everywhere. Sources close to the early investigation said tips led them all over. A janitor at Central Middle School was an early suspect, then a death-row inmate in Florida. Investigators used psychics, hypnotized a student and sent her dental records to other states.

In the 1990s, Bruce Bunch became a suspect. The Lowell man was a teen at the time Peters disappeared, and the theory was Bunch hit her with a car and buried her body.

Joe Fallstrom, who only knew Bunch through friends, said he overheard Bunch talking about Peters at a drinking party. "He was haunted by the chains clanging on the maypole behind the schoolhouse where he claims to have buried her," Fallstrom told 24 Hour News 8.

The tide turned on Fallstrom for a period. "I was a person of interest, they said to me." But he maintains his innocence. "They'll never find any factual evidence to link me to her because there is none."

Bunch moved to Kentucky years ago, and detectives never traveled to re-interview him. He died in February of this year.

On the 20th anniversary of her disappearance, a retired detective told 24 Hour News 8 the sheriff's department refused badly-needed help from outside agencies, and only polygraph-tested one potential suspect, but never asked those closest to Peters to take a test.

Now, Wolter said, "We don't concentrate on the roadblocks then because the roads are open for us now."

But there are no formal suspects, only persons of interest, she said.

Goal No. 1 is to speak with everyone who was there the night of February 5, 1981 when Peters disappeared. So put yourself back to the time and place. Were you here? And if so, what did you see? What you think is an insignificant fact may be the piece detectives need to help crack this case.

You are asked to call the Kent County Cold Case Team at (616) 632-6123 if you know anything about Peters' disappearance.

07/5/2006: Cold Case

07/5/2008 1:46:00 PM 

 

Det. Sgt. Sally Wolter of the Michigan State Police Lakeview post leads the Kent Metro Cold Case team.

Cold Case Cop
Article By:
Elisabeth Waldon
Staff Writer

GRAND RAPIDS - She waved to her mother's friend and said, "I'll be right back."

Dean Marie "Deanie" Pyle Peters of Cascade was 14 the afternoon of
Feb. 5, 1981, when she disappeared while walking out of her brother's wrestling meet at Grand Rapids Forest Hills Central Middle School, never to be seen again.

The eighth-grade pupil and aspiring model was declared legally dead in 1991, although neither she nor a body have ever been found.

Michigan State Police Lakeview post Det. Sgt. Sally Wolter is on a mission to bring closure to this cold case.

An "aggressive" team



The elite Kent Metro Cold Case Team was organized in September 2006.

The State Police head up the multijurisdictional group, which is led by Wolter with a home base at the Kent County Sheriff's Department in
Grand Rapids. The other five team members include Grand Rapids Police Department detectives Erika Fannon and A.J. Hite, Kent County Sheriff's Office detectives Marnie Mills and Tom Nawrocki, and State Police Det. Sgt. Rob Davis.

In not even two years of work the cold case team has solved three homicide cases to date. Those involved convicting the murderers of Laurel Ellis, who was slain in 1975; George Powell, who was killed in 1996; and Jermaine Kirkland, who died in 1999.

"This team is really aggressive and has positive results," Wolter said.

Davis led the group at the outset because Wolter was busy solving the murder of 88-year-old Henry Marrott, who was beaten to death July 24, 2002, in his Trufant home.

Last October a
Montcalm County jury found Edward Griffes of Greenville and brothers Clint McGowan of Orleans and Heath McGowan of Greenville guilty of first-degree murder in Marrott's death.

Wolter gave the cold case team a two-year commitment in April. The 47-year-old plans to retire in 2010 and wants to finish her career at the State Police Lakeview post.

"This has been my home for about nine years," Wolter said of the Lakeview post. "The troopers here at the post have been like family."

Deanie Peters



When Wolter joined the cold case team, she spent three months just looking through the files on the Deanie Peters case.

"Fresh homicides have a body, witnesses, people you can interview, a fresh scene," Wolter explained. "In a cold case you have none of that. All you have are documents.

"It involves tremendous traveling to locate these individuals and research to find these documents you may or may not need," she said. "You almost have to start fresh. That's what we do, we start fresh and try to put together some of the pieces of the puzzle that may or may not be there.

"Henry Marrott took four years to solve," Wolter added. "Cold cases take even longer."

The Deanie Peters case has been reopened several times since 1981. The Peters family now resides in
Arizona but Wolter stays in close touch with them about any progress being made.

"There's multiple agencies working toward finding their daughter," Wolter said. "It's been on the back burner for many years but never forgotten. After reviewing this case I'm convinced that this team will come up with some answers. We're going to take this through to the end."

Cold case team members don't believe Peters is still alive.

"It bothers me that her body has not surfaced for 27 years," said Wolter. "Somebody's holding onto a deep, dark secret."

"Solvability rate"



Wolter said the team could easily use the assistance of six more officers, noting that it benefits from unlimited resources.

She is in contact daily with two
Kent County prosecutors who assist the team members with their work.

"With every cold case there's a solvability rate," Wolter said. "Time works against you during the first 48 hours of a crime. In a cold case time almost works with you. We develop a strategy. Who are our persons of interest? What is unfinished business that should have been completed many years ago?"

Davis said in Grand Rapids alone there are about 100 unsolved homicides.

"We go through and review a number of cases and we want to target ones that we think we can actually solve," he said.

"Sally is the most experienced person here with close to 30 years of police experience," said
Davis. "She just brings a lot of experience and a unique perspective. She's very organized and always has a great attitude and comes up with strategies based on each individual case."

"I couldn't ask for a better group of detectives to work with," Wolter said. "I'm just pleased that they allowed me to be a part of that group."

 

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