View Full Version: Alfonso, Teresa August 20,1974

Porchlight International for the Missing & Unidentified > Missing Persons 1974 > Alfonso, Teresa August 20,1974


Title: Alfonso, Teresa August 20,1974
Description: Florida 12 YO


oldies4mari2004 - August 3, 2006 01:00 AM (GMT)

oldies4mari2004 - November 21, 2006 06:47 PM (GMT)
Teresa Armanda Alfonso


Left: Alfonso, circa 1974; Center: Unknown age;
Right: Age-progression at age 39 (circa 1999)


Vital Statistics at Time of Disappearance

Missing Since: August 20, 1974 from Marathon, Florida
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date Of Birth: November 6, 1961
Age: 12 years old
Height and Weight: 5'2 - 5'5, 115 - 120 pounds
Distinguishing Characteristics: Light brown hair, brown eyes. Alfonso had a small gap between her upper front teeth at the time of her 1974 disappearance. She has a small-sized scar below her buttocks. Alfonso has had a tonsillectomy. Her ears are pierced. Some agencies may spell her first name "Theresa" and her last name "Alfonzo." She is of Hispanic descent.


Details of Disappearance

Alfonso was dropped off at the Marathon Movie Theater in Marathon, Florida on August 20, 1974 with her friend Cynthia Gooding. The two girls have never been heard from again. Their cases remain unsolved.


Investigating Agency
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:
Marathon County Sheriff's Office
305-296-2424



Source Information
The National Center For Missing and Exploited Children
Child Protection Education Of America
Florida Department of Law Enforcement



Updated 2 times since October 12, 2004.

Last updated October 28, 2005; alternate height and weight added.

Charley Project Home

oldies4mari2004 - November 21, 2006 06:49 PM (GMT)
Teresa Armanda Alfonso

oldies4mari2004 - November 21, 2006 06:49 PM (GMT)
Teresa Armanda Alfonso

Age-progression at age 39 (circa 1999)

monkalup - December 7, 2006 02:47 AM (GMT)

~*Mia*~ - December 28, 2007 10:52 PM (GMT)

monkalup - June 27, 2010 02:52 AM (GMT)
TERESA ARMANDA ALFONSO Age Progression
Case Type: Endangered Missing
DOB: Nov 6, 1961 Sex: Female
Missing Date: Sep 3, 1974 Race: Hispanic
Age Now: 48 Height: 5'2" (157 cm)
Missing City: MARATHON Weight: 120 lbs (54 kg)
Missing State : FL Hair Color: Lt. Brown
Missing Country: United States Eye Color: Brown
Case Number: NCMC801268
Circumstances: Teresa's photo is shown age-progressed to 46 years. She was last seen with a friend at a movie theatre in Marathon, Florida. At the time of her disappearance, she had a small gap between her front teeth

monkalup - June 27, 2010 02:54 AM (GMT)
Monroe County Sheriff's Office
Missing Persons Unit
305-296-2424
800-346-8477
You may remain anonymous when submitting information to any agency.

Agency Case Number: 74-203432

NCMEC #: NCMC801268

NCIC Number: M-729859018

dna dentals

Nut44x4 - October 14, 2010 02:28 PM (GMT)
Oct 13, 2010 6:20 pm US/Eastern

Old Bones, New Hope For Missing Girls' Families

A cold case in the Florida Keys may be heating up after human bones were found in Marathon about a mile and a half away from where two young girls disappeared back in 1974.

"I don't think I could ever stop searching," said Mercedes Cruz, a mother of one of the missing girls. "This is my daughter. This is my life. She is my life."

For 36-years, Mercedes Cruz has been on a mission to find any trace of her 12-year-old daughter Teresa Armanda Alfonso. She disappeared on August 20th, 1974, along with her 16-year-old friend, Cynthia Gooding.

"It's bad when you don't know, I think a lot of times though, 'does somebody have her, drugging here, is she prostituting?' It's the unknown that's killing me," Cruz told CBS4's Peter D'Oench.

The girls were last seen at the Marathon movie theater, which has since gone out of business. They had been dropped off and had planned to hitchhike to a party that day. Neither of the girls was seen again.

Investigators initially believed Gooding and Alfonso had run away from home, as one of them had a history of such behavior. But they soon decided that was not the case and were almost certainly abducted.

Gooding's loved ones described her as a "typical teen" who enjoyed water-skiing. She had moved from her mother's Portsmouth, Virginia home to Florida to be closer to her father and older brothers.

Three years ago, there was some hope when remains were dug up from a Key West cemetery. Now there's hope again.

On Friday, October 8th, Barbara Thrall was digging in her flower garden and found fragments of a jaw bone and skull. The next day, detectives went to the scene and began excavating the area where the bones were found. More pieces of skull bone were found along with some finger bones.

Dogs from Islamorada Fire/Rescue who are trained to locate cadavers were sent to the yard and they 'alerted' in the areas the detectives had already been digging; they also indicated there may be more remains on property.

"I hope there can be something good that comes out of it because everything else was just horrible," said Thrall.

The County Medical Examiner says the jaw bone fragments are consistent with a female but it's not known how long the bones have been there.

Dr. E. Hunt Scheuerman added, "It's going to be very difficult to identify these remains. The remains are very scattered and fragmented."

Dr. Scheuerman told D'Oench there was digging at the site located behind Thrall's home on Saturday and Sunday. The operation was delayed because of heavy rains but digging will continue on Thursday. It's not known how long that will continue.

On Wednesday, Cruz and two of her daughters came to the site on a narrow street across from the Marathon Airport. And they became very emotional as they gazed out on the site where the latest bones were discovered.

"I want my sister at peace." said Bonnie Padron. "I know that she's wanting us to find her."

"I slept in my sister's room for nearly 12 years," said Hilda Valdes. "I want to so much for us to find some answers. I want so much for my mother to find out what happened, to find this out while she is still alive."

Teresa's mother says the pain of losing a child never goes away.

"Nobody really knows how hard it is to lose a child unless you have been there," said Cruz. "To lose a child is such a horrible, horrible thing."

"This is a constant thing and I want it to be over with, let me know, to find out that I can let her rest at peace," said Cruz.

The Medical Examiner said the remains have been taken by a forensic anthropologist at a lab at Gulf Coast University. He also said he's not sure if the remains can ever be identified or how long the process will take.

The cases are both unsolved. The Police file for the girls was destroyed in a fire sometime after they vanished.
http://cbs4.com/local/bones.marathon.human.2.1960088.html

Nut44x4 - October 19, 2010 07:25 PM (GMT)
Oct 19, 2010 2:36 pm US/Eastern
Human Bones Found In Marathon Not Missing Girls


The Monroe County Sheriff's Office is back to square one when it comes to the discovery of human bones in Marathon last week. After the bones were found, a South Florida family thought they might belong to two teenage girls who went missing in 1974. However, Monroe County officials said Tuesday the bones definitely are not those of the two young girls.

Both Monroe County Medical Examiner E. Hunt Scheuerman and Forensic Anthropologist Dr. Heather Walsh-Haney, from Florida Gulf Coast University say they have examined the bones more closely and they belong to a mature adult, possibly a female. They also said the person most likely died decades ago but there is no way to say exactly how long ago from the bones they found.

Examinations of Barbara Thrall's backyard where the bones were found on October 8th, indicate they were most likely dumped there with fill that was brought in to the 93rd Street property years ago. Investigators say they do not believe the bones belong to a body that was buried at that location.

Investigators, and Dr. Walsh-Haney, spent the weekend digging, recovering a few more bone fragments; however the excavation of has since ended. Some bones will be sent to a lab to see if it is possible to recover DNA from them. If DNA can be recovered, then the profile can be submitted to the national DNA database for possible matching.

Sheriff's Office investigators will attempt to find out where the fill used on the 93rd Street property came from. The families of the two missing girls have been notified of the results of the investigation.

Mercedez Cruz, the mother of one of the missing girls, told CBS4 News last week that she will never give up searching for her daughter Teresa Alfonso, who disappeared when she was 12-years-old. Alfonso was with her 16-year-old friend Cynthia Gooding when the pair vanished without a trace on August 20th, 1974. The girls were last seen at the Marathon movie theater, which has since gone out of businss.
http://cbs4.com/local/bones.marathon.human.2.1969956.html




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