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
Deanie 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

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 PetersTuesday'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
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.
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.
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Cold Case Cop An "aggressive" team
Deanie Peters
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