Monday, October 12, 2009

Search On For Missing Navy Man

Now I in no way post this to lessen or minimize a person's pain. What this woman and other relatives must be feeling is one of the most tragic things that can happen in human relations; however, why does this item receive so much print and publicity? There are missing people everywhere, everyday. This missing vet is getting more press than the guys on the front lines, and more than the homeless roaming our streets.

Again, I am not trying to minimize a person's pain or tragedy, but the editorial and selection choices down at the Boston Globe, I don't know. Unless it is because they seem more intent on selling you more wars based on unholy, abominable, and atrocious lies and would rather feature this mystery than soldiers returning home in coffins or with missing limbs?


Related: Bruins Fan Skating Short-Handed

So this is really the second day of coverage?


"Woman awaits word of missing boyfriend; Boston police investigating man’s whereabouts" by Jenara Gardner and Michael Corcoran, Globe Correspondents | October 12, 2009

As police continued searching yesterday, the girlfriend of a 24-year-old Quincy man who disappeared after leaving the Bruins game Thursday night said she is trying to stay positive.

Claire Mahoney, 24, of Quincy, said her boyfriend of two years, William Hurley, was tired after going from work in Weston to his first Bruins game, and she offered to pick him up when he called her during first intermission. They talked on the phone as she drove to the TD Garden from the University of Massachusetts at Boston, where she is a graduate student.

She overheard Hurley, unfamiliar with the area, ask a passerby his exact address. Mahoney heard someone yell "99 Nashua St." before Hurley's phone died about 8:45 p.m. "I was right around the corner. But when I got there, Will was gone," Mahoney said yesterday in a phone interview.

Hoping her boyfriend decided to find his own way to their Quincy apartment, Mahoney left after searching the area for about an hour. "I just kept thinking OK, maybe he took the T home. He'll be home in an hour," said Mahoney. "Then with every hour that went by, I kept thinking, he's got to be here sometime soon, he's got to be here sometime soon, and then I started to panic."

Mahoney called Boston and Quincy police, who told her to wait 24 hours.

Yeah, that always makes you feel better, doesn't it (as the cop chomps into another donut and slurp of coffee)?

Yeah, GO ON HOME and DON'T BOTHER US!

Yeah, the Boston cops got BETTER THINGS TO DO with their time like cruise the strip, bust brothels, hang out in bars, buy drugs, and worry about cellphones while ROBBERIES, RAPES, and MURDERS go UNSOLVED!!!

See: Who Remembers Timothy Finch?

But they are cracking down!

"Earlier this month, police wrapped up a 30-day sting involving plainclothes officers mimicking tourists and other pedestrians. Once they were panhandled, they essentially became victims guaranteed to show up for a trial"

She then called hospitals and Hurley's friends. No one had any information for her. On Friday, she went to Quincy and Boston police stations to file a missing persons report. "That's when they realized it was more serious than they had thought," said Mahoney. On Saturday, Boston police spokesman Joe Zanoli said they had "found no indicators of any foul play, but that possibility can't be ruled out."

Yesterday, Boston police spokesman James Kenneally said authorities "are still in the process of trying to locate the individual. We encourage anyone who knows anything about Mr. Hurley's whereabouts to contact police."

See, they DO NOT PREVENT ANYTHING!

According to several broadcast reports, authorities searched the Charles River for Hurley yesterday. His mother was said to be en route from North Carolina, where he is from. Police described Hurley as a white male, 5 feet 8 inches tall, 155 pounds, and thin, with blond hair and blue eyes. He was last seen wearing white Nike sneakers, blue jeans, a green T-shirt, and a red North Face jacket, police said.

Hurley had moved to Quincy from Florida, where he had been stationed in the Navy, last December to live with Mahoney. In April, Hurley was hired as a groundskeeper by Weston Gulf Club, along with Brendan Venti. The two became friends, and when Venti's father offered him Bruins tickets Thursday afternoon, he jumped at the chance. "It was just a last-minute thing. So we decided to go," said Venti, 24, of Brighton, in a phone interview.

Venti said Hurley had one beer and said he was tired at the first intermission and that he was heading home. That was the last time he saw him, he said. The next morning, Venti received a text message from Mahoney, alerting him that Hurley was missing.

I don't advise drinking, ever.

"Honestly, the whole thing is dumbfounding. He and his girlfriend go out almost every weekend with me and my girlfriend. I just keep thinking that we would have been watching the Red Sox game together. I just can't put it into words," he said. "From what I know of him, he would not just disappear like this."

Related: Today's Top Story

Venti called Hurley a "soft-spoken Navy guy" who "lives for his family and his girlfriend." "It is always in the back of your mind that something negative happened. But we are just hoping for the best."

--more--"

We shall see if the Globe stays heavily involved in the search or just lets the sailor

float away.

Yeah, whatever happened with that guy?


In any event, I do pray that this man is returned to his family and not found dead in an alley somewhere.