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Amarit Kaur was last seen leaving her Jamaica, Queens, home at about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, police said. The 34-year-old mother of 7-year-old twins was heading to Chase Bank in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, which is located approximately one mile from her home. Kaur, who is six weeks pregnant, was reported missing when she failed to return home. The New York Police Department located Kaur’s vehicle in a parking lot near Chase Bank. Her cellphone was inside the vehicle, police said.
Detectives have since obtained video footage that shows Kaur exiting the bank alone. What happened to her after that is unknown. Searches of the area failed to turn up additional leads, police said.
would it take a long time to get legal access to other cameras?
originally posted by: TinySickTears
www.huffingtonpost.com...
Amarit Kaur was last seen leaving her Jamaica, Queens, home at about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, police said. The 34-year-old mother of 7-year-old twins was heading to Chase Bank in the Richmond Hill neighborhood, which is located approximately one mile from her home. Kaur, who is six weeks pregnant, was reported missing when she failed to return home. The New York Police Department located Kaur’s vehicle in a parking lot near Chase Bank. Her cellphone was inside the vehicle, police said.
Detectives have since obtained video footage that shows Kaur exiting the bank alone. What happened to her after that is unknown. Searches of the area failed to turn up additional leads, police said.
anyone hear about this?
crazy #
leaving gender, age, race, etc out of it cause we dont know anything about anything....
i think it is wild that in 2017 in a place like new york with cameras on every corner that a person can just vanish.
the bank is a mile from her house and she left at 10:30 so that means between then and sat 11:00 in broad daylight a person can just drp off the map.
what the hell?
im curious about this. i am curious as to what happened and i am curious how they have no footage save for her leaving the bank.
granted i dont know how # works.
i know its not like the movies cause in the movies they head on down to the station and pull footage from all cameras in the area and boom. done.
would it take a long time to get legal access to other cameras?
trippy a person can just be gone.
The New York Police Department located Kaur’s vehicle in a parking lot near Chase Bank. Her cellphone was inside the vehicle, police said.
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: TinySickTears
The New York Police Department located Kaur’s vehicle in a parking lot near Chase Bank. Her cellphone was inside the vehicle, police said.
She got out of the car to go to the ATM and left the door unlocked. Somebody watching the bank ATM hid in the back seat, forced her to drive to a nearby parking lot before kidnapping her for whatever reason.
Or she's in the closest dumpster near her abandoned car.
originally posted by: TinySickTears
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: TinySickTears
The New York Police Department located Kaur’s vehicle in a parking lot near Chase Bank. Her cellphone was inside the vehicle, police said.
She got out of the car to go to the ATM and left the door unlocked. Somebody watching the bank ATM hid in the back seat, forced her to drive to a nearby parking lot before kidnapping her for whatever reason.
Or she's in the closest dumpster near her abandoned car.
when you say it like that it now makes me think a person could vanish easily.
seems so bizarre but when you think about it there are probably a million ways.
it might take em a while to chase it down huh?
originally posted by: Baddogma
Dunno ... there are some NY members suspiciously absent from this thread, and some replies that sound awfully knowledgeable about disappearances.. .maybe the authorities should start here!
.
originally posted by: TinySickTears
leaving gender, age, race, etc out of it cause we dont know anything about anything....
There are as many as 100,000 active missing persons cases in the U.S. at any given time. Of the 692,944 people reported missing in 2010, 531,928 were under the age of 18. According to the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), 355,243 women were reported missing in 2010 compared to 337,660 men.