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Author Topic: Missing Woman: Ivory Green--NY--03/06/2004  (Read 3139 times)
Dan
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« on: May 21, 2007, 11:14:56 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 04/21/06
by Denise 





DOB: Oct 27, 1986
Missing: Mar 6, 2004
Height: 4'11" (150 cm)
Eyes: Brown
Race: Black
Age at time of disappearance: 17
Sex: Female
Weight: 110 lbs (50 kg)
Hair: Black
Missing From:
UTICA
NY
United States

Ivory was last seen on March 6, 2004. She may still be in the local area. Ivory has a mole above her upper lip and a mark in the shape of an H on her shoulder.

Utica City Police Department (New York) 1-315-735-3301


Print a poster: http://www.projectjason.org/aan/AAN_IvoryGreen.pdf

Print a Poster of Ivory
http://www.missingkids.com/missingki...archLang=en_US
« Last Edit: October 23, 2008, 07:52:43 AM by Jenn » Logged

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« Reply #1 on: May 21, 2007, 11:15:53 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 04/21/06
by Denise




www.uticaod.com

Officials search for missing girl

Wed, Jun 30, 2004


Officials are seeking the public's assistance in finding a Utica teen who has been missing since March 6 but still may be in the area, the Utica Chapter of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children said.

Ivory Green, 17, is classified as an endangered runaway. She is 4 feet 11 inches, weighs 110 pounds, has a mole above her upper lip and a mark in the shape of an H on her shoulder, the center said.

Anyone with information should call the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children at (800) 843-5678 or the Utica Police Department at 735-3301.



Missing Children riders find compassion, friends along the way

Mon, May 23, 2005

Observer-Dispatch

The Observer-Dispatch is publishing the diaries of The Ride for Missing Children riders as they make their way to Washington, D.C.

DAY 2: SUNDAY, MAY 22

We are always amazed and heartened by the support and good wishes of people we meet. At the top of a very, very long "hill" the riders stopped for a rest break at a Perkins Restaurant in Tunkhannock, Pa. The parking lot was crowded, so we were going to move on to a better stopping place.

A Schneider's truck was at the end of the parking lot and the driver came out and asked about the ride. He was tall, very tall, and from Cleveland, Ohio. We told him why we were riding, of the 3,297,018 posters of missing children we have sent out in the past 10 years on 1,028 missing children -- with 664 of these children now successfully recovered.

He was very interested. He introduced himself; his first name is Ivory. Each of our eight teams is riding for a missing child, and each rider on that team wears a photo pin with a picture of that child.

One of our teams is riding for Ivory Green, a 17-year old girl missing from Utica since March 2004. One of the team members gave him their photo pin of Ivory. He looked at the picture, and when we looked we saw the tears falling on his cheeks. He asked if we took donations and gave us enough money to send out 100 posters.

He said he would take the button and if on his travels he saw anyone that looked like Ivory Green he would call the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at (800) The Lost.
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« Reply #2 on: May 21, 2007, 11:17:03 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally postd on 04/21/06
by Denise




Project Jason announces that Ivory Green is the current 18 Wheel Angel campaign. Her campaign will continue through August 15th.

18 Wheel Angels is a national missing person's locator program in which truck drivers or other business travelers are recruited to place posters of a specific missing person along the way as they travel.

Project Jason teams up with JB Scott Publishing to feature Ivory in their monthly publication; Through the Gears, which can be found at truck stops nationwide. You may also see Ivory's photo on their site at http://www.truckjobseekers.com/18%20Wheel%20Angel.aspx

For additional information, and to print and place Ivory's poster, please see:

http://www.projectjason.org/18wheel.html

You do not need to be a truck driver to help please posters. You can also help by telling any truck drivers or trucking companies you know about this program.
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« Reply #3 on: May 21, 2007, 11:18:10 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 04/21/06
by Denise



An event for Ivory:

"On March 13, 2004 Ivory Green left her home at 8:00pm and has not returned. It has been a long and frustrating time for her mother Shirlette. We are asking you to join us for a Walk to help bring awareness and possible closure to this missing child case.

The local police are positive that someone in her neighborhood knows something about her disappearance. The walk will start and end at her home. With a large number of people walking through her neighborhood the family hopes someone will come forward with new information.

The walkers will meet in front of the Cosmopolitan Center on 1445 Kemble St. in Utica, NY. (This is also the Loretto Center building). The date of the walk is October the 29th from 1-3:00pm.

If you have any questions please call me.

Katherine Slocum
Program Director
NCMEC NY/MV
Utica, NY 13502
Office (315) 732-7233"

If any of our readers are from Utica, NY, or nearby, please consider participating. Thank you.
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« Reply #4 on: May 21, 2007, 11:18:56 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 07/06/06
by MichelleB





[/hr]


I found a new photo of Ivory... No new news, though...
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« Reply #5 on: May 21, 2007, 11:19:34 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 10/08/06
by Denise


Sunday October 8, 2006 NEWS

Families grieve long after trail has gone cold
Years-old cases lack closure


Gannett News Service

By Nancy Dooling
Press & Sun-Bulletin

Edward Tandler began his long, strange trip in 2003.

The Brooklyn resident ditched his postal service job, a wife and a child to follow his New Age dreams alone on the streets of Ithaca and in a rural neighborhood in Tioga County.

Life in the Town of Spencer was a far cry from the 45-year-old Tandler's middle-class Brooklyn roots. But in middle age, Tandler began a new life of poverty, mysticism and scrounging to get by, living in his car, said his father, Murray Tandler, a retired school administrator in Rockland County.

Tandler's upstate companions included Ithaca hippies, mystics, protesters and a man who would achieve national infamy as Ithaca's notorious Collegetown Creeper. The Creeper is an accused serial "peeping Tom" whose alleged crimes would escalate to sexual assaults against women in California before he was caught by San Diego police earlier this year.

But 15 months ago, Eddie Tandler would join another group -- one of New York's 3,424 missing persons and one of about a dozen people listed as missing from Southern Tier counties. Nationally, about 110,000 people, including both adults and children, were missing in August, the last month statistics were available, said Erin Bruno, director of case work at the National Center for Missing Adults in Phoenix, Ariz. Families grieve long after trail has gone cold

MISSING FROM THE SOUTHERN TIER

* Ivory Francis Green, now 19, vanished March 6, 2004, from Utica. She is believed to be a runaway and may still be in the region. She has a mole above her upper lip and a mark in the shape of an "H" on her shoulder.
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« Reply #6 on: May 21, 2007, 11:20:12 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 12/16/06
by Linda




Polly Klass.com


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« Reply #7 on: May 21, 2007, 11:21:23 PM »
ReplyReply

Originally posted on 03/05/07
by Denise



Mom offers reward for missing daughter

Monday, Mar 5, 2007

By Rocco LaDuca
Observer-Dispatch
rladuca@utica.gannett.com

UTICA – The mother of Utica woman who disappeared three years ago is offering a $5,000 reward for any correct information that leads to her daughter’s whereabouts and the conviction of anyone who may have harmed her.

On Tuesday, three years will have passed since Shirlette Green last saw her daughter Ivory, who was 17 at the time. Ivory disappeared as she walked home from a friend’s house the evening of March 6, 2004.

Ivory now would be 20 years old.

Despite a large billboard of Ivory on the corner of James Street and Howard Avenue, as well as a street march in October 2005 to raise awareness of Ivory’s disappearance, Green is no closer to finding out what happened to her daughter.

But Green said she’s not going to give up. Although she’s financially strapped, Green said she hopes the $5,000 reward will help bring her grieving to an end.

“I pray every day and just wish that somebody would step forward and say something,” Green said. “I believe that somebody knows what happened, but they’re just too scared to come forward.”
uticaOD.com - The Observer-Dispatch - Mom offers reward for missing daughter
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« Reply #8 on: May 25, 2007, 06:32:02 PM »
ReplyReply

http://www.news10now.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=106674

Balloon launch to find missing kids

Updated: 5/25/2007 5:29 PM
By: Brad Vivacqua

Shirlette Green last spoke to her daughter Ivory, 17, on March 6, 2004.

"She called me at about 7:45 to say that she was on the way walking home. She never made it and I never heard from her anymore," said Green.

Green said Ivory liked to joke around and make people laugh, but this was no joke.

"It's been awful hard without my daughter. We had a special relationship me and her," said Green.

As she continues to pray for Ivory, Green volunteers regularly at the Missing Children's center in Utica.

May 25 is National Missing Children’s Day. Members of the National center for Missing and Exploited Children in Utica held a balloon launch on Friday to help find missing kids.

Friday, she joined others to commemorate national missing children's day. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in Utica normally honors Missing Children's Day at their annual bike ride held last week. This year the center wanted to do a little something extra.

At 10:25 a.m., 25 balloons with pictures of missing children including Ivory's were released into the sky. For the first time the center is also promoting a "Take 25" initiative.

"What we're asking is that parents take 25 minutes on this important day and just talk to their children about safety. Not going anywhere alone. Taking a buddy, check first, checking when they go somewhere," said Missing and Exploited Children's Center Utica Director Kathy Slocumb.

"We're also encouraging parents to talk to them about Internet safety which is our big push here. To make sure the kids go on Netsmartzkids.org, talk to their kids about Internet safety and really get the message out there," said Missing and Exploited Children Community Educator Jaime Donahoe.

Green also believes parents should talk to their children more. She says she hopes no parent ever has to go through the same thing.

From January through April of this year the Utica Center for Missing and Exploited children has printed and distributed more than 200,000 posters of missing kids.

All of the work is done by about 250 volunteers.
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« Reply #9 on: March 06, 2008, 10:46:09 AM »
ReplyReply

Ivory has been missing for 4 years today. Our thoughts and prayers are with her family.
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« Reply #10 on: May 12, 2008, 11:57:30 PM »
ReplyReply

A Project Jason Brief:

In 1995, a group of 7 men rode their bicycles from Utica, New York to Washington, D.C. in order to raise awareness about the plight of missing children and to bring a message of safety to the people they met along the way. They arrived on the steps of the Capitol on May 25th, the first National Missing Children’s Day. Two years later, inspired by that first Ride, a group of 43 riders rode their bicycles 100 miles from Albany to Utica NY with the same message of safety and awareness.

There are three purposes to “The Ride”, which takes place on May 16, 2008:

To honor the memory of all missing children,
To increase public awareness of the plight of all missing and exploited children and the need for child safety education, and
To raise funds to support the missing children poster distribution and mission of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children – New York/Mohawk Valley (NCMEC-NY/Mohawk Valley).

This year marks eleven years for the Ride for Missing Children. The 43 riders have grown to an astonishing 400! The unified team of bicyclists, riding 2 x 2 for 100-miles, is escorted by the New York State Police and local law enforcement of the jurisdictions along the route. The Ride stops at schools along the way for educational Rest Stops, and “Ride-By” other schools throughout the day. At each school visited, riders and volunteers bring the message of child safety and abduction prevention.

The parents of missing Omaha, NE teen Jason Jolkowski, and founders of nonprofit organization Project Jason, Jim and Kelly Jolkowski, will be participants for a 3rd year. Jim will be riding, and Kelly will speak at both the opening and closing ceremonies. The Jolkowskis will be among several family members of missing persons, including Doug and Mary Lyall, parents of missing Suzanne Lyall, and Shirlette Green, mother of missing Ivory Green.

For additional information about the Ride for Missing Children, please see http://www.rideformissingchildren.com/index.html

For more information about Project Jason, please visit http://www.projectjason.org/
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Project Jason
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If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
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« Reply #11 on: May 17, 2008, 10:03:54 PM »
ReplyReply

http://www.wktv.com/news/local/19009004.html

Parents of missing children inspire others taking part in Ride

By JOLEEN FERRIS

Story Created: May 16, 2008 at 11:43 AM EDT
Story Updated: May 16, 2008 at 12:12 PM EDT

ONEIDA - Parents of missing children from around the country attended the opening ceremonies for the Ride for Missing Children Friday morning at the State Police barracks in Oneida.

Kelly Jolkowski's teenaged son, Jason, disappeared without a trace in 2001. Friday, Jolkowski inspired the riders as they prepared to begin their journey.

She says that the work of these complete strangers on behalf of her son and other missing children has been a bright spot in the darkness of now knowing what happened to her son.

Also there Friday was Shirlette Green, of Utica. Police are still searching for her daughter, Ivory, who disappeared in March 2004.

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Project Jason
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Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member
http://www.projectjason.org/awareness.shtml

If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
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« Reply #12 on: May 17, 2008, 10:20:58 PM »
ReplyReply

http://www.uticaod.com/homepage/x1191421503/First-timers-eager-for-bike-ride

Green: "It's a great feeling, to know you're not alone."

By ROCCO LaDUCA
Observer-Dispatch
Posted May 16, 2008 @ 07:59 AM
Last update May 16, 2008 @ 10:03 PM


ONEIDA COUNTY — The bikes are rolling as the annual Ride for Missing Children winds through Oneida and Herkimer counties.

A record 411 riders, including 102 first-timers, plan to participate in today’s ride, which aims to raise awareness about missing and exploited children, honor missing children, instruct children on how to stay safe and raise money for posters that could help bring missing children home.

O-D reporter Rocco LaDuca is talking to riders and spectators along the route.

1:20 P.M.
"It's a great feeling, to know you're not alone."

While hundreds of bicyclists encountered cheering crowds throughout their journey today, the cheers fell silent as they passed through Mid-State Correctional Facility in Marcy.

The silent tribute at the prison was meant to honor those missing children who would never be returning home, and perhaps also to send the message that so many people remain strong in the face of their tragedies.

One mother who has not given up hope on ever finding her daughter is the mother of Ivory Green, who went missing in 2004 while walking to her Utica home.

The spirit of Ivory's mother, Shirlette Green, still remained uplifting as she greeted all of the riders arriving at New York Mills Central School in late morning.

"We all come together for one cause: to bring our kids home safely," Shirlette Green said with a photo of Ivory on her chest.

"It does give me hope and makes me want to keep trusting God, like I have been doing," she added. "It's a great feeling, to know you're not alone."

12:30 P.M.
Youth inspired

Earlier in the morning, Courtney Deyulio, 17, was also inspired as drove past her cheering classmates at Clinton Central School.

"It was awesome," Deyulio said. "My whole high school was out there. I loved it."

Deyulio said she decided to ride two years ago after attending the closing ceremony in New Hartford.

"Once I heard all the parents talking about their stories, I had to do it," she said. "I'm kind of addicted to it now."

And like Ivory Green's mother, Deyulio said it is impressive to find so many people coming together all for one cause.

"You could just tell everyone cares so much," Deyulio said with a big smile.

Although the ride is physically exhausting in the end, seeing so many smiles on so many faces makes it all worthwhile, she said.

 "You crash on your bed, but you still feel good at the end of the day," Deyulio said.

10:49 A.M.
Stop in Westmoreland brings the riders to children

The Ride arrived at Westmoreland Elementary School shortly after 9 a.m., where Fourth grader Konner Farrell, 10, was among the cheering children.

Konner was holding the "T" as he and his other classmates spelled out "Thank You" for the riders.

"I feel like it's good, because they're trying to find kids, and you can't give up hope," said Konner, who is one of Laura Fruscella's students.

Moments later, the children began to sign 14-year-old Conrad Stafford's bicycle uniform. This is Stafford's first year riding, he said.

Stafford, of New Hartford, said he wanted to participate in the ride this time because he understands the rules children should remember to avoid being swept up by a stranger one day.

"Just say no, and don't go," Stafford explained. "We're just here to show the kids what they should do, and shouldn't do."

And that's exactly the same reason Karen LaScala, 55, of New Hartford, decided to participate for the first time this year as well, she said as she ate a peanut butter and jelly sandwich during the Westmoreland stop.

The Ride for Missing Children, in its 12th year, has its origins following the 1993 disappearance of Sara Anne Wood as she rode her bicycle along a rural road in Herkimer County.

"I can still remember where I was when Sara disappeared, and the helicopters flying overheard as they looked for her," LaScala said.

In 1995, Sara's father and several other people rode bicycles to Washington, D.C., to raise awareness toward the plight of missing children. Over the years, that initial journey grew into the annual Ride for Missing Children.

"The whole educational aspect has grown out of Sara's family tragedy," LaScala said.

LaScala then became emotional as she expressed how she felt upon riding into the sea of the children's smiling, cheering faces.

"I think if one kid stays safe because of I did this today ... it will be a great thing," she said. "We want them to understand that, unfortunately, not everyone is your friend anymore."

After paying silent tribute at the Byrne Dairy in Kirkland where New Hartford police Officer Joseph Corr was shot and killed in February 2006, the ride passed through Clinton and Myles schools, where student bands played and flags waved.

9:02 A.M.
Encouraged to remember

Moments before the opening ceremony, Nick Cuda, 17, of Whitesboro, prepared to participate in his third Ride for Missing Children.

During the 105-mile journey, riders will be periodically stopping at various schools to mingle with children, and that's what Cuda likes most.

"I just love how the kids are so excited to see you," Cuda said alongside his friend, Ray Ferrone, 16, who this year is riding for the second time. "I just love the whole reason for the ride: to raise posters for missing children."

State police Trooper Jim Simpson encouraged every rider to show their appreciation for the children who will greet them at every school, such as Westmoreland and Holland Patent.

"You're their heroes today," Simpson said. "Mingle with them, shakes their hands - that means a lot to them."

 
BY THE NUMBERS

This year's Ride for Missing Children begins at 7:45 a.m. today at state police Troop D Headquarters in Oneida. A closing ceremony will take place between 7:05 and 7:25 p.m. at the New Hartford Recreational Center.

The ride by the numbers:

● 12: Years the event has taken place.

● 411: The record number of riders in the event this year.

● 359: Riders last year.

● 150 plus: Volunteers this year.

● 102: First-time riders this year.

● 102: Miles in this year's ride.

● 2.1: The length in miles the riders take up at any time during the ride.

● 5: Recovered children involved with the event (three riding in the event).

● 51: People involved in the event from more than 30 families affected by missing children.

● 17: Local schools to be visiting during today's ride.

● 500: The minimum number of dollars each rider must raise.

● 5,237,313: Posters distributed for 3,603 missing children since 1995 by the Mohawk Valley Office of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.

● 2,152: Of the 3,603 missing children who were successfully recovered.
 
 "We must protect our children…”

John Mazzaferro, who is city council president in Rome, wore a picture of missing Kristena Steward on his chest as he prepared to begin his second year riding.

As a former teacher, Mazzaferro said he has a special concern for all youths.

"This is a cause that I feel is extremely important," Mazzaferro said as he sat among a sea of pink, purple, blue, yellow, and white bicycle uniforms at state police Troop D headquarters in Oneida. "We must protect our children, and keep them safe through education and awareness."


Families of the missing join in

With the opening ceremony under way, Ride for Missing Children chair Frank Williams said 53 parents and family members of missing children will be riding with or supporting roughly 400 riders this year. Seven parents will be riding anonymously, he said.

"Each of them is grateful for the strength you give them as they continue to search for their children," Williams said.

The crowd also broke out in applause when Williams announced that five recovered missing children will be among the group today. Two recovered children, he said, will be waiting at the finish line in New Hartford to say "Welcome home."

"Words we wish we could say to all our missing children," Williams said.

Bill Frear was among the parents who spoke to the riders about his own missing son, Craig, who was last seen leaving his friend's house in Scotia, NY, in 2004.

"We have hope that maybe — maybe — he is out there," Frear said. "We still have hope because of this ... "

Frear then held up his wrist to reveal a bracelet one of the riders gave him at last year's event.

"It has not been off my wrist since that day," Frear said.
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Kelly Jolkowski, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org
Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member
http://www.projectjason.org/awareness.shtml

If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
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« Reply #13 on: November 28, 2008, 01:11:58 PM »
ReplyReply

AAN Poster Notify Sent   Code 43

Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member
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Kelly Jolkowski, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org
Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member
http://www.projectjason.org/awareness.shtml

If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.
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