Sunday, December 24, 2006

After three years, no answers in Grobe case

Publication:Daily American Republic;
Date:Nov 29, 2006;
Section:Front Page;
Page Number:1A

After three years, no answers in Grobe case

By JACKIE HARDER Staff Writer

(EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the third in a four-part series on missing people from this area.)

More than three years after an elderly Poplar Bluff woman went missing from her home, investigators are still unsure exactly what happened or who might be responsible. But as time goes on and the chances of finding Mary Lee Grobe alive diminish, Butler County Sheriff Mark Dobbs said the investigation continues.

Grobe was 74 when she was last seen by her granddaughter, Amy Bridgewater, on the evening of Sept. 27, 2003 at her home at 1557 Highway B, Dobbs said.

When family mem- bers didn’t hear from Grobe within a couple days, they entered her home to find the elderly grandmother and her 100-pound black lab, “B-B,” missing. Grobe’s purse and medications were still inside.

B-B returned home in good condition in a few days. But now, three years later, the whereabouts of the dog’s owner remain a mystery.

“I guess, good or bad, you look at life differently when you have been hit with something like this,” said Joyce Caldwell, Grobe’s daughter who lives in Wentzville. “On one of my trips down to Poplar Bluff, I stared out the car window and it struck me that I used to see open fields and wonder what the farmer planted, and how his crop was growing or how beautiful the surroundings were. Now I look and wonder if my mom is out there somewhere or if there is another missing person out there somewhere. Sad isn't it?”

Grobe’s disappearance has since been investigated by the sheriff’s department, the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the Department of Aging and the Butler County Emergency Management Agency -- not to mention many Internet blogs and websites devoted to hashing out the details of her disappearance and speculating what happened to the woman.

“I do have a theory of what I think happened, but nothing I can speak of or divulge without more proof,” Dobbs said. “Right now, we are just trying to keep everything up to date and following any new leads that come in, no matter how far fetched some of them might be. Unfortunately that is often the case with (this particular disappearance).”

Making the investigation even more complicated, Dobbs said, is the bitter and longstanding feud in Grobe’s family. Before Grobe went missing, family members were split over whether or not she was capable of caring for herself and her own finances. Since Grobe disappeared, the distrust and accusations have only escalated.

“It’s greatly hindered this investigation. Several times, when we have tried to make steps in the right direction and make progress, we’ve been hindered by certain family members,” Dobbs said. Elected in 2004, Dobbs took over the investigation from former Sheriff Bill Heaton. A short time later, Dobbs pursued draining an out-of-use lagoon near Grobe’s home in search of her body.

“There were family members and even one elected official who tried to get that stopped,” Dobbs said. “In this case, they were more concerned with family grudges than actually seeing the truth.”

The lagoon was eventually drained to no avail.

Inheriting a case that hadn’t been properly investigated from the start has also complicated things, according to Dobbs.

“We feel it’s unfortunate that we didn’t get to start the investigation,” Dobbs said. “We feel there would have been a different outcome based on the way (my administration) does things and the manner that we are more thorough with investigations from the start.”
“The problem with (the Grobe) investigation is it wasn’t thorough from the start,” he continued. “It was speculated that a family member from northern Missouri had taken Ms. Grobe and in the midst of that speculation, a thorough investigation was not done, such as crime scene processing and so forth.”

The investigation is still on-going, Dobbs said, and his department continues to run down all leads and tips. “It’s been difficult for us,” he added. “It’s something I would very much like to see solved and brought to an end.”

Joe Mammana, a philanthropist from Philadelphia, has offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of person(s) responsible for Grobe’s disappearance. Grobe is described as being 5 feet 2 inches and weighing about 160 pounds. She has blue eyes and gray hair. A diabetic, Grobe was on several medications, all of which were found inside her home.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Butler County Sheriff’s Department at 686-8070.

DAR Newspaper 11/29/2006 www.darnews.com
http://activepaper.olivesoftware.com/Repository/ml.asp?Ref=REFSLzIwMDYvMTEvMjkjQXIwMDEwNA==&Mode=HTML&Locale=english-skin-custom

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Mason Lee Bridgewater

Amy and Eric Bridgewater of Poplar Bluff have chosen the name Mason Lee Bridgewater for their 11-pound, 9.7-ounce son born at 9:06 a.m. Dec. 8, 2006, at the Poplar Bluff Regional Medical Center. Grandparents are Kenneth and Virginia Grobe and Timothy and Cheryl Bridgewater, all of Poplar Bluff. Great-grandparents are Mary Lee Grobe and the late Eugene Grobe of Poplar Bluff, Peggy Hastings Barker of Paris, Tenn. and the late Clayton Hastings, Ralph and Freda Innes of Poplar Bluff and the late Charlie “Babe” and Pheba Bridgewater of Neelyville. Mason has one brother, Wade Eric Bridgewater.

DAR Newspaper 12/19/2006 www.darnews.com

Friday, December 08, 2006

Poplar Bluff Area Missing Mothers

Poplar Bluff area missing Mothers

Thank You Jackie Harder and the Poplar Bluff DAR Newspaper for the infomational 4 part series on local missing Mothers

Teresa Butler from Risco MO
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=Teresa+Butler+Missing

Mary Grobe from Butler County MO
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Mary+Grobe+Missing

Vickie Lour from Piedmont MO
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=Vickie+Lour+Missing

Christina Burnett-Pitts from Poplar Bluff MO
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=Christina+Burnett-Pitts+Missing&btnG=Search

Thank You DAR and Jackie for the awareness and great public service you did on these missing Mothers who are loved, missed and not forgotten

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

After Three Years, No Answers in Grobe Case

Our Thank You to those who are trying to find answers for the Mary Lee Grobe Case.

We would like to give a heart-felt thanks to Jackie Harder and the Daily American Republic for your efforts to tell Mary Lee Grobe’s story. Mary was a hard-working dedicated, loving woman who deserved our love and protection. Butler County citizens deserve to know what happened to one of their finest citizens.





Mary’s Poplar Bluff family let her down. Butler County let her down. Finally when it seemed the Courts and Public Administrator Sharron Payne would step in and protect Mary Lee Grobe, they did nothing and in May 2005 the elected Public Administrator even tried to stop a search for Mary Grobe.



We thank the Butler County citizens and ask them to please remember Mary Lee Grobe. We ask the Butler County Sheriff’s Department to remember Mary Lee Grobe. Please don’t even think of letting Mary Lee Grobe down again. Mary Lee Grobe had so very little and never complained. She had only one wish or request and that was to be buried beside her husband. How can some people be so heartless to a sweet elderly woman?

See article below by Jackie Harder from the Daily American Republic of Poplar Bluff, MO on 11-29-06




.................... click on article to enlarge...................

We agree that adequate law enforcement can serve as a deterrent to crime. We strongly believe the reason Missouri has so many missing persons cases is because of rural sheriff’s like the ones that existed in Butler County, Missouri when the crime occurred back on 9-27-03. A criminal mind would look for opportunities and that is what happened in Butler County. A criminal would naturally look for an area where the sheriff wouldn’t or couldn’t investigate. Yet, Missouri law doesn’t allow for sheriff or Public Administrators supervision. Word spreads, the criminal tells his criminal friends, and the number of missing Missouri persons continues to increase.

Monday, December 04, 2006

Poplar Bluff Attorney Arrested

DECEMBER 4, 2006 - Posted at 3:49 p.m. CST

POPLAR BLUFF, MO - A Poplar Bluff attorney was arrested today for the alleged illegal sales of prescription medications.

Poplar Bluff Police Chief Danny Whitely says Richard Bascom was arrested late this morning on a warrant out of Stoddard County.

Bascom is charged with two counts of distribution of a controlled substance (hydrocodone), with a cash bond set at $50,000. Chief Whitely says the crime allegedly occured within the past two weeks.

KAIT TV 8
http://www.kait8.com/Global/story.asp?S=5767257&nav=0jsf

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Church secretary charged with stealing from church

Church secretary charged with stealing from church
By: CJ Cassidy

POPLAR BLUFF, Mo. - We're well into the season of giving, so small wonder leaders of one Heartland church want to know why one of their members would take from them!

The Secretary of Highland Drive Church of Christ in Poplar Bluff now faces charges for stealing more than $25,000.

Police say it's been going on for more than six years, and no one noticed until recently.

Investigators point out that's because 47-year-old Kim Puckett worked as a book-keeper and secretary at the church, so she had sole access to all the church accounts, checks and credit cards.

Investigators say volunteers who took over Puckett's position after she left to take up another position, noticed something wrong.

"The first four months of 2006 there was a little over $ 30,000 worth of the church's funds that she's already agreed she took. It's not going to surprise us if the funds that were taken don't reach a quarter of a million dollars," Assistant Police Chief Gary Pride says.

Pride adds that Puckett says she wanted to help her family pay some bills they were struggling to pay, and had intended on paying the church back.

Church leaders issued a statement that states "Mrs Puckett is a fellow Christian. We reach out to her as instructed by God in Galatians 6:1. If a man is overtaken in any trespass you who are spirituals, restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness, considering yourself lest you also be tempted.

We are deeply saddened and disappointed.

They desire that she repent and seek the Lord's forgiveness. We will continue to pray for Mrs. Puckett and her family."

Other members of the congregation say they feel betrayed.

Puckett is not in jail but were not able to speak with her today.

KFVS-TV12
www.kfvs.com/Global/story.asp?S=5754416&nav=menu51_2