Jan. 10, 2009
Stolen Beauty
A Young Teacher And A Financial Analyst Vanish. Are Their Cases Linked?
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Tara Grinstead, left, and Jennifer Kesse (CBS)
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Play CBS Video Video Stolen Beauty In Full: Two missing women, two investigations - do they have one common link? Peter Van Sant reports.
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Video Tara Grinstead Interview Watch a 1999 interview of Tara Grinstead by "The Fun Channel." (Video courtesy of The Fun Channel, Tifton, Ga./funchannelamerica.com)
Related Information
48 Hours Mystery
Tara Grinstead Case:
If you have any information about Tara's disappearance, contact the Georgia Bureau of Investigation
Tipline: 1-800-597-TIPS
Jennifer Kesse Case:
If you have any information about Jennifer's disappearance, contact CrimeLine
Tipline: 1-800-423-TIPS
If you have any information about Tara's disappearance, contact the Georgia Bureau of Investigation
Tipline: 1-800-597-TIPS
Jennifer Kesse Case:
If you have any information about Jennifer's disappearance, contact CrimeLine
Tipline: 1-800-423-TIPS
Asked if there could be a link between the cases, Rothwell says, "Possibly. It’s something we really, really need to consider."
Even as a child, people were drawn to Jennifer Kesse, says her mother Joyce. "She walked into a room and people noticed her. She was just so vibrant and really full of life," Joyce remembers.
By the time she was in her twenties, her father Drew says Jennifer had blossomed into a beautiful young lady, and her career as a financial analyst was taking off.
Her family and friends say she was very practical when it came to safety; she regularly used what she referred to as "safe phone calls." "She would always be on the phone with somebody walking from the store to her car, her car to home," Joyce explains.
By January 2006, 24-year-old Jennifer seemed to have everything going for her: she had bought a brand new condo in Orlando, had been promoted at work, and there was a new man in her life.
Rob Allen, a 32-year-old Englishman, lived two and a half hours away in Fort Lauderdale. The couple had been dating for a year and saw each other every other weekend. "We'd communicate four, five, six, seven times a day, every day. She became my best friend," Rob says.
In January 2006, Rob and Jennifer took a vacation to St. Croix. "It was just perfect," Rob remembers. "A lotta cocktails. A lotta sun. A lotta beach. We had an awesome time. We joked we should just stay there and just not come back to the real world."
But the real world was about to intervene: they flew back from vacation on Sunday, Jan. 22, and Jennifer stayed at Rob's Sunday night. "She'd left my house at six Monday morning and then drove straight to Orlando and had a full day at work," Rob says.
That evening, Jennifer spoke to Rob again. It would be the last time they would talk.
The first clue something was wrong came the next morning when Jennifer failed to show up for a meeting at work. Her co-workers at Westgate Resorts couldn't reach her on her cell phone or at home, so they called her parents.
Joyce called the manager of Jen's apartment complex. He went to her unit - Jennifer wasn't there, and neither was her car.
Jennifer's parents and her brother Logan raced the two hours from their home in Bradenton, Fla., to Jen's condo. Asked what he saw when he went inside, Logan tells Van Sant, "Clean apartment. Shower was wet. Blow dryer out. Clothes on her bed. Other than that, the apartment was completely normal."
Just like in Tara's case, there were no signs of forced entry, and no signs of a struggle. Jen's luggage was still in the front hall, untouched. But her purse, her keys and the cell phone, which she always kept with her, were missing.
Detectives checked for activity on her ATM card and "pinged" her phone to pinpoint its location. There was no response. At 7 p.m., police Sergeant Roger Brennan says they entered her into the system as a missing person and issued an alert for both Jennifer and her car.
"The key thing we were trying to do at this point, starting from 8 on is to find Jennifer's car, Jennifer, her phone, her property. So we started with her car," Brennan recalls.
Police soon learned when Jennifer was on vacation, her brother Logan and some of his buddies from out of town had stayed in her condo. One of his friends left a cell phone there. Could Jen have left her condo after she hung up with Rob at 10 p.m. to try to mail the cell phone?
Less than an hour after Jennifer was declared "missing," Sgt. Brennan started searching the streets of Orlando, looking for Jen and her car.
If you have any information, please contact CrimeLine.
Produced by Katherine Davis
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See all 142 CommentsOne thing that strikes me is this- it is clear that the person caught on camera had something similar to painter''s whites on and that Jennifer was very aware of the inquiring eyes of the painters at the condo. So what do you do?
You make it a PRIORITY to identify the painters at the condo the day she disappeared. You do not throw your hands up and say "well, it''s just too tough to track these day laborers" and leave it at that.
Find a CI (confidential informant) to start painting with companies and painters in the area. Think about the ethnic/racial makeup of day laborers and if need be, get someone who blends in (Cuban? Dominican?). Likely that there are rumors that are swirling in certain circles in Orlando-these need to be tapped into. A bunch of gringo cops can only get so far.
Also, the police should have made some effort to find out who drives by her condo on a daily basis in the AM. This should have been a public plea-Did anyone see a blonde woman with someone at this particular time at this particular location?
Also how extensively were other security cameras checked in the area of where the car was deposited and the mysterious figure seen? A couple of square blocks? Be thorough. Do buses have cameras on them, if so, they should be checked if they were in that area. I guarantee you there is a lot of work that hasn''t been done. Do it.
One thing that strikes me is this- it is clear that the person caught on camera had something similar to painter''s whites on and that Jennifer was very aware of the inquiring eyes of the painters at the condo. So what do you do?
You make it a PRIORITY to identify the painters at the condo the day she disappeared. You do not throw your hands up and say "well, it''s just too tough to track these day laborers" and leave it at that.
Find a CI (confidential informant) to start painting with companies and painters in the area. Think about the ethnic/racial makeup of day laborers and if need be, get someone who blends in (Cuban? Dominican?). Likely that there are rumors that are swirling in certain circles in Orlando-these need to be tapped into. A bunch of gringo cops can only get so far.
Also, the police should have made some effort to find out who drives by her condo on a daily basis in the AM. This should have been a public plea-Did anyone see a blonde woman with someone at this particular time at this particular location?
Also how extensively were other security cameras checked in the area of where the car was deposited and the mysterious figure seen? A couple of square blocks? Be thorough. Do buses have cameras on them, if so, they should be checked if they were in that area. I guarantee you there is a lot of work that hasn''t been done. Do it.
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See all 142 Comments