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Homicide Detective Assigned to Nonnie Dotson Case

By David Lohr

(Continued)

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The following day, Shires told Crime Library the field was approximately three to four acres in size but investigators were able to pinpoint the last signal to a thirty-foot area. When asked how he thought the phone might have ended up there, Shires said the initial assumption was that someone might have thrown it there.

In an interview with The Denver Post, Nonnie's brother, Beau Dotson, said he did not understand how his sister could have disappeared without a trace.

"I don't see how someone can disappear in the middle of the day going to the store," Dotson said. "Someone has to know something."

Nonnie Dotson with Daughter
Nonnie Dotson with Daughter

Dotson also did not believe his sister vanished voluntarily, especially without taking her daughter with her.

"She adored her daughter," he said. "She meant everything to her, she would never leave her behind."

Nonnie's ex-boyfriend and the father of her child, Edward Vehle, 53, was initially a person of interest in her disappearance; however on December 6, 2006, he met with investigators from the Bexar County Sheriff's Department and was able to provide them with receipts, proving he was in Texas when Nonnie disappeared.

"I cannot give you any specifics, but I can say he answered all of the questions he was asked," Jefferson County Sheriff's spokeswoman Jacki Kelley, told Crime Library in an interview last year, adding, "We are still no closer to understanding what happened."

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Contact  David Lohr at 
crimewriter74@adelphia.net








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