![]() ![]() Police had no evidence and still had no idea where Heidi was or what happened to her. When police spoke to Gary, he told them that he was at home asleep that morning with his girlfriend. The eye witness who saw a van at the store that morning specifically said that they saw two men leading a woman out of the store and into the van. He provided his fingerprints, blood and hair samples.ĭue to the police's surveillance of Richard, they began to look at Richard's brother Gary Thibodeau in relation to Heidi's disappearance also. Police searched his van but nothing was found that connected him or the van to Heidi. He also drove a van similar to the one that Christopher described. ![]() ![]() It was just a few minutes before Heidi was reported missing. Police suspected that Richard Thibodeau was somehow involved in Heidi's disappearance due to the time he was in the store. His brother Gary and his wife Theresa helped search for her too and helped to put up missing posters in the area. Richard went back to the store and helped search for Heidi. He said that it looked like one of the men had the woman in a bear hug. That purchase was made at 7.42am.Īnother man, Christopher Bivens, came forward and told police that he was driving by the store and saw two men leading a young woman to a van. He told police that he saw Heidi that morning as he was in the store and he purchased two packets of cigarettes. The news featured Heidi's alleged abduction and the police received a call from a man called Richard Thibodeau. Even though there were no signs of a struggle, police believed that Heidi may have been abducted and a search for her began immediately. The police saw Heidi's car parked outside and her purse and car keys were still inside the store. There were no signs that a struggle had taken place or any indication that anyone had been in distress. There was money in the cash register and $9.50 left by another customer on the counter for payment for gas and a newspaper. So that customer went out on to the road and flagged down a marked Oswego County Sheriff’s Department patrol unit car. It appeared that there was nobody working yet the lights and gas pumps were on. Heidi wasn't supposed to be at work that morning, the morning of the 3rd of April, but she agreed to work the shift so that her coworker could have the day off to spend it with her children. Heidi's shift began at 5.45am that morning. She wore a gray sweatshirt with a plaid SU logo on the front, light blue jeans and white sneakers to work.Īt 7.50 am, a customer went into the store but there was nobody there. And she was on track to graduate from Onondaga Community College in May 1994. Heidi wanted a career in education or counseling. Heidi was so ambitious that she took her last year of high school and her first year of college simultaneously. She was a determined young woman and full of energy. ![]() Heidi worked at D & W convenience for over two and a half years. She was singing and having fun but didn't stay up too late as her shift the next morning began early. Her sister Lisa and Lisa's husband Ed were there too. She brought some Easter gifts for her family. On the Saturday night, Heidi went to her parent's house with her boyfriend Brett. Eighteen year old Heidi Allen was working the morning shift as a clerk at D & W convenience store located at the intersection of State Routes 104 and 104B in the Oswego County Town of New Haven, New York, United States. Because that's what criminals do, they get off on the pain.” "In most criminal cases, the criminals return to the scene of the crime because they get off on it. So it wouldn't surprise me that they came back. ![]()
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