-Caveat Lector-

[Timeline for the Joyce Chiang homicide.  I guess she disappeared from the
Dupont Circle area, too.]


http://www.aagen.org/archives_txt/JoyceChiang/joyce.htm


Joyce Chiang - Background

Joyce Chiang, Immigration and Naturalization Service attorney and former
staff member for Congressman Howard Berman of California, has been missing
since January 9, 1999.  Her body was subsequently found and identified.




FBI Press Release:
January 15, 1999

INS ATTORNEY MISSING FOR SIX DAYS

The FBI's Washington, D.C., Field Office and the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) are asking for the public's assistance in
locating JOYCE CHIANG, an INS attorney, who has been missing since January
9, 1999.

Ms. CHIANG was last seen at approximately 8:20 p.m. on Saturday, January 9,
when a friend dropped her off at the intersection of "R" Street and
Connecticut Avenue NW in the DuPont Circle area of the District of
Columbia. According to the friend, Ms. CHIANG planed to go to a nearby
Starbuck's Coffee Shop and then walk to her residence in the 1700 block of
Church Street NW, where she lives with a relative.

JOYCE CHIANG is described as a Chinese-American female, age 28, date of
birth 12/7/70, 5'3" tall, 105 pounds, with brown eyes and shoulder-length
hair. When last seen, Ms. CHIANG was wearing a hooded, thigh length green
jacket, light blue jeans, a black turtleneck, a red paisley scarf around
her neck, and a black scarf on her head.

Ms. CHIANG has been employed by INS since April, 1992, and is currently
assigned to the Office of General Counsel at INS headquarters here in
Washington.

Anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of JOYCE CHIANG is asked
to contact the FBI's Washington Field Office at (202) 278-2382 or INS at
(202) 616-5000 as soon as possible. All telephone calls will be treated as
confidential.

********

Shu-ping Chan has also added the following information about the case:

FACTS: Joyce was last seen on Saturday, January 9 around 8:30pm. She went
to work that day at INS headquarters around 2pm, then went with 2 female
friends to see a movie. The two friends decided to go to dinner, but
dropped Joyce off near Connecticut and R Streets in Dupont Circle because
she had a telephone call to make. She lives about 2 blocks from the dropoff
point with her brother Roger, who does advance work for Andrew Cuomo at
HUD. Joyce crossed the street to Starbucks, and has not been seen since.
Her ID was found in Anacostia Park late last week. Joyce's mother flew in
from California over to weekend to be with Roger. Since Joyce is a federal
employee, the FBI is involved, along with Park Police, and Metropolitan DC
Police.

WHAT YOU CAN DO: If you live in the area, ask your friends and neighbors if
they were in the vicinity during the night in question. If they or you
yourself have information, call the numbers above. Your call will remain
confidential.

There will be a Joyce Chiang Reward Fund established with the Congressional
Credit Union. More information will be forthcoming. Please go to your
organization to see if you can contribute to this fund, even if it is a
nominal amount. It will provide a lot of comfort for the family to see many
friends and community organizations supporting this cause.

There will be an organized canvassing campaign to distribute posters and
reward information in and around the Dupont Circle area. The poster may
also be downloaded from the AAGEN web site at www.aagen.org.

********

A reward fund has been established for credible information leading to the
location of Joyce Chiang. If you would like to make a donation, please make
your check or money order payable to:

"The Fund to Find Joyce Chiang, Account 126463", and send it to:

Wright Patman Congressional Federal Credit Union P.O. Box 23267 Washington,
DC 20026-3267

Her Family and Friends appreciate your prayers and support. Please know
that if the reward is never claimed, the money will be given to charity as
determined by her family.

********

NBC News4 reports the following:

Thursday, January 21, 1999 - FBI agents have located several articles of
clothing along the Anacostia River that may belong to missing attorney
Joyce Chiang.

Agency spokeswoman Susan Lloyd says the items were found early this morning
at the north end of the Anacostia Naval Station, just west of the Frederick
Douglas Bridge. Before the search was called off for the day, divers
searching the area did recover a body but it was determined to be that of a
man. A U.S. Park Police helicopter aided in a search of the area.

Chiang's government identification was found in Anacostia Park January 10,
a day after the 28-year-old Immigration and Naturalization Service lawyer
was last seen near Dupont Circle. Chiang's family came to Dupont Circle
Monday night to post fliers and to talk to people who might have seen her.
Chiang's mother flew in from California and lit candles for her daughter.
Though Chiang hasn't been seen in 11 days, her government identification
card was found last week in Anacostia park. Chiang is 28 years old, 5'3"
tall and weighs 105 pounds. The FBI is asking anyone with knowledge of her
whereabouts to call.

**********

The Washington Post reports the following:

Desperate Search for Missing Woman: Family, Friends of INS Lawyer Pass Out
Fliers, Cling to Hope

By John W. Fountain Washington Post Staff Writer Wednesday, January 20,
1999; Page B04

With few clues in the disappearance of a Northwest Washington woman last
seen 11 days ago, family and friends of Joyce Chiang flooded the streets
with fliers yesterday, praying for answers, holding onto hope.

Chiang, 28, is a lawyer for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. She
was last seen Jan. 9, after a friend dropped her off at 19th Street and
Connecticut Avenue NW, about three blocks from the apartment she shared
with a younger brother, Roger, in the 1700 block of Church Street NW, near
Dupont Circle.

Yesterday, Roger Chiang described his sister as "upbeat, very warm, a very
loving sister."

"She is a very hard-working, very dedicated person," said Roger Chiang, 26.
"People look to her for answers."

So far, there have been no answers to his sister's disappearance.

The FBI continues its investigation but has received only a "handful of
tips" that so far have not been substantive, said Susan Lloyd, an FBI
spokeswoman. Federal investigators have not turned up any witnesses who
have seen Joyce Chiang since she was dropped off about 8:30 p.m. Jan. 9,
with plans to go to a nearby Starbucks Coffee shop.

The only piece of evidence investigators have turned up is Joyce Chiang's
government identification card, found in Anacostia Park in Southeast
Washington by an unidentified woman, who gave it to U.S. Park Police on
Jan. 10, Lloyd said yesterday. The ID card was not turned over to the FBI
until Thursday, Lloyd said.

Park Police, the FBI and INS agents searched Anacostia Park on Friday but
found no more of Chiang's belongings.

In the absence of any strong clues, investigators are appealing to the
public for help. FBI officials said yesterday that they would like for the
unidentified woman who found Chiang's ID to contact authorities.

"We are very hopeful that someone will contact us with information as to
where she might be or what might have happened," Lloyd said.

Family, friends and co-workers have mounted a campaign to raise public
awareness about Chiang's disappearance. They are offering a $5,000 reward
for information leading to her whereabouts. The television show "America's
Most Wanted" will air a segment about the disappearance on Saturday,
officials and the family said.

Chiang, a Georgetown University law school graduate who started working at
the INS in 1995, worked on an agency task force to help implement a tough
1996 immigration law, said Donald Mueller, an INS spokesman.

"Joyce was sort of the linchpin of that whole effort as a special assistant
to the person in charge of that," Mueller said. "She had hundreds and
hundreds and hundreds of friends. She was one those kind of people who just
lit up a room."

Roger Chiang said he last saw his sister Jan. 9, a Saturday. Initially, he
thought she had spent the weekend with a friend, but he became suspicious
when she didn't come home after work the following Monday. When he called
his sister's office, he said, he learned that she had not shown up for work
that day. He alerted police and began his search.

"The incredible thing about this is [that] word has definitely gotten out
there," Roger Chiang said. "We're just hoping and praying."

Anyone with information regarding Joyce Chiang's whereabouts is asked to
call the FBI at 202-278-2382.

© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company

*********

In Month-Long D.C. Mystery, Hope Survives Woman Last Seen Near Dupont
Circle

By Maria Elena Fernandez and John W. Fountain Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, February 10, 1999; Page B03

Joyce Chiang needed to be home by 9 p.m. to call a friend in San Francisco
to wish him well on an acting performance -- the kind of across-the-miles
attention Chiang's friends were used to getting from her.

But, first, the Immigration and Naturalization Service lawyer needed a hot
cup of tea. The temperature had dropped to 24 degrees since she left the
apartment she shared with her younger brother that morning. Chiang craved
something warm to sip.

So she asked a girlfriend, with whom she had just had dinner, to drop her
off at Connecticut Avenue and R Street NW, across the street from
Starbucks. Chiang's petite frame was covered by her hooded, thigh-length,
green suede coat. Around her neck was a red paisley scarf; a black scarf
was layered over the hood of her coat.

At 8:20 p.m., she exited her friend's car and started across the
intersection surrounded by bustling restaurants, two coffee shops, a church
and a movie theater. She planned to buy her tea and walk the five blocks to
her home.

That was Jan. 9. No one has seen the 28-year-old woman since. "We're still
hopeful that she's alive and out there and will return home safely," said
Roger Chiang, 26, the missing woman's younger brother and roommate. " . . .
In my heart, I truly believe she's out there."

Chiang's family and friends rally every Saturday night by the Dupont Circle
fountain to pray for her safe return. The case is equally frustrating to
FBI and D.C. police investigators, who found some of her belongings on Jan.
21 but have not been able to trace her whereabouts.

On Monday, the FBI got an "encouraging" boost when forensic tests on
Chiang's coat, keys and several identification cards yielded "additional
leads in this matter," said FBI spokeswoman Susan Lloyd. Sources close to
the investigation said the evidence consists of hairs and fibers that
investigators hope will help them focus on suspects.

Investigators collected fiber samples from Roger Chiang's carpet on Monday
and asked for his home and cellular telephone carriers, he said. Roger
Chiang also agreed to take a polygraph test at the FBI yesterday because "I
want them to go through the motions and quickly rule me out so I can be
more cooperative. I'm being as cooperative as I can, but I think I can be
helpful if they communicate a little bit more with the family."

Roger Chiang, who said he does not believe he is being treated as a
suspect, said his polygraph test was "inconclusive."

"They feel I am not focused enough," he said. " . . . The FBI does not have
any true suspects at this time."

The FBI would not disclose whether it has any leads on suspects, Lloyd
said.

"The leads that we have gotten have produced very little," Lloyd said. "We
have not ruled out any theory, nor do we have a theory that we're relying
on more heavily."

Jan. 9 had been a productive and ordinary Saturday for Chiang. She stopped
by the office to finish some work before heading to Pentagon City to run
errands at the mall.

At 4 p.m., she met a friend, Patty First, a lawyer at the Department of
Justice, and a co-worker for coffee at Xando, also at Connecticut Avenue
and R Street. There, the three women caught up with each other's lives over
coffee and peanut butter cookies.

"She was tired because she had had a long week and had been sick over
Christmas," First said. "But she was still Joyce: funny and a little zany.
It was so cold that day. She had her hood up and the drawstrings really
tight around her face. She's so small and slight. She looked so cute."

Chiang and their other friend, who declined to be interviewed, took First
home before heading to a theater to see "A Civil Action." After the movie,
the two women had dinner; then Chiang was dropped off at the intersection
that now has become a memorial of sorts to the missing woman.

For the past month, Chiang's colleagues have spent their weekends posting
fliers with her photograph all over Northwest Washington. Wearing yellow
ribbons as a sign of solidarity and concern, Chiang's colleagues also rose
with the sun yesterday morning to flood Metro stations across the city with
the fliers.

"It's just maddening," said Ruth E. Tintary, 32, a congressional liaison
specialist at the INS. "You just don't know. You don't want to grieve
because that means you gave up hope. You don't want to give up hope because
the alternative is too awful. You just can't believe it's happening to
someone you know and love."

Even people who never met Chiang say it is impossible to overlook the
pretty, smiling woman in the haunting fliers that blanket the city. People
she never knew now refer to her by her first name. Strangers want answers.

"There's something about that smile in her photograph -- she looks like
somebody who could be your friend," said Josh Rolnick, 28, who lives in the
1900 block of Connecticut Avenue NW. "It's become a very personal thing.
You can't walk past that corner without thinking of her, and you can't walk
anywhere in this area without seeing her face. Everybody knows Joyce even
if they never met her."

By far, friends said, Jan. 21 was the toughest day for Chiang's family and
for them. Chiang's coat, keys and two identification cards were found in a
secluded, grassy area near the north gate of the Anacostia Naval Station
just south of Anacostia Park. Sources said later that the belongings
appeared to have been deliberately placed there.

Nearby, police also found Chiang's government access card, wrapped in a
Jan. 11 newspaper, sources said. Her coat had a tear in the back, sources
said.

"It was so tough," said First, one of several people called to identify
Chiang's coat. "For the first two weeks, this whole thing seemed to be
happening in a parallel twilight zone universe. It didn't seem real. Then,
that day, very quickly, it became real."

By all accounts, Chiang is a vivacious, intelligent woman who made friends
everywhere she went and knew how to keep them. She grew up in suburban
Chicago, graduated from Smith College in Northampton, Mass., in 1992 and
received her law degree at Georgetown University law school in 1995.

"I think about this every day, over and over again," said Barbara Strack, a
special assistant in the INS policy office. "I drive near her house, I walk
past her office, I see her nameplate. I put on the earrings that she gave
me for a Christmas present. There's still a sense that it's unbelievable
that she is not going to come walking down that hall, smiling and laughing.
We just need to know what happened."

© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company

************

Body Found Link to Missing INS Lawyer Pursued

By Avis Thomas-Lester and Brian Mooar Washington Post Staff Writers Friday,
April 2, 1999; Page B01

A canoeist found a body on the Potomac River shore in southern Fairfax
County last night, and police were investigating whether it is that of
Joyce Chiang, a 28-year-old Immigration and Naturalization Service lawyer
who disappeared Jan. 9 when a girlfriend dropped her off near Dupont
Circle.

The decomposed body was found about 6 p.m. in the 8000 block of East
Boulevard Drive in the Arcturus neighborhood, Fairfax County police said.
It was partially clothed and lying face down on a rocky stretch of the
shore.

Fairfax County police spokesman Ed O'Carroll said that because
decomposition was advanced, the body was listed as "of unknown sex and
unknown cause of death." An autopsy was scheduled for today.

But a law enforcement source familiar with the investigation said: "It's an
unidentified body; it appears to be the body of a female wearing clothing
similar to the clothing described as Joyce Chiang's clothing. It's the same
clothing described in the flier with the exception of the jacket, which was
found in Anacostia Park with her ID."

A couple walking in Anacostia Park found Chiang's government identification
card Jan. 10, and on Jan. 21, her green suede jacket, keys, a Safeway
shopper's card and a Blockbuster video card were found in a secluded,
grassy area near the north gate of the Anacostia Naval Station just south
of Anacostia Park.

Those locations near the Anacostia River are more than eight miles upstream
from where the body was found. Since Chiang's disappearance, two searches
of the river have been mounted. One turned up the body of a man, but
nothing was found to help the investigation of Chiang's case.

Chiang grew up in suburban Chicago, graduated from Smith College in
Northampton, Mass., in 1992 and received her law degree from Georgetown
University in 1995. She then began work as a lawyer at the INS.

Since she vanished, Chiang's friends and family have posted fliers around
town and held vigils in Dupont Circle. The case was featured on "America's
Most Wanted," and a $40,000 reward was offered.

Jan. 9 had been a productive and ordinary Saturday for Chiang. She stopped
by her office to finish some work before heading to the mall at Pentagon
City. At 4 p.m., she met a friend, Patty First, a Department of Justice
lawyer, for coffee in the Dupont Circle area. Later, she went with another
friend to see the movie "A Civil Action," had dinner and then was dropped
off at Connecticut Avenue and R Street about 8:20 p.m.

She had planned to go to the Starbucks at that corner, get a cup of hot
tea, and head to the apartment five blocks away that she shared with her
26-year-old brother, Roger.

She needed to be home by 9 p.m. to call a friend in San Francisco to wish
him well on an acting performance, but she never made it.


© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company

************

Body Deemed Likely to Be INS Lawyer's



Saturday, April 3, 1999; Page B02

There is a "strong possibility" that the corpse discovered Thursday night
along the Potomac River is that of missing Immigration and Naturalization
Service lawyer Joyce Chiang, an FBI spokeswoman said yesterday.

In addition to clothing that matches Chiang's attire when she disappeared
Jan. 9, the height and weight of the body found in southern Fairfax County
is consistent with that of the 28-year-old Georgetown University law school
graduate, FBI spokeswoman Susan Lloyd said.

"There are physical similarities between the body that was recovered last
night and the description of Ms. Chiang. We won't be able to make a
positive identification until additional forensic tests are completed,"
said Lloyd, adding that the identification process should be completed
within a few days.

In particular, Lloyd said, investigators are seeking dental records for
Chiang, who vanished on her way to a Starbucks coffee shop near Dupont
Circle. She never made it to the apartment she shared with her brother,
Roger Chiang.

Reached yesterday by telephone after he spoke with the FBI, Roger Chiang
said he would reserve comment until the FBI and Fairfax County authorities
complete their work: "I'm not going to make any judgment because I don't
want to dash any hopes."


© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company

******

Body Found Along Potomac Identified as Missing Lawyer Cause of Joyce
Chiang's Death Unknown, Officials Say

By John W. Fountain Washington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, April 13, 1999;
Page B02

A body found nearly two weeks ago along the Potomac River in southern
Fairfax County has been identified as Joyce Chiang, the Immigration and
Naturalization Service lawyer who disappeared from Dupont Circle on Jan. 9,
FBI officials said yesterday.

DNA tests by the state of Virginia forensic laboratory positively
identified the decomposed body, but the lab has not determined the cause of
death, according to Kelli Sligh, an FBI spokeswoman, who said a final
determination in the case could take 30 to 90 days.

The body yielded few clues during the autopsy. There were no obvious
indications of what caused death, such as wounds or bruises, sources close
to the investigation said yesterday. Tests may never reveal the cause of
death or whether it was a homicide, a suicide or an accident, the sources
said.

After dental records failed to confirm Chiang's identity last week, FBI
officials announced they would seek DNA tests. But long before yesterday's
results, the FBI had strongly suspected the body was Chiang's, in part
because the clothing matched what the missing lawyer was wearing when she
was last seen and because the height and weight of the body were consistent
with those of the missing woman. Also, Chiang's bank card was found inside
a stocking.

The Chiang family, who had braced for the worst, came face to face
yesterday with the grim news.

"We've obviously been preparing. But today was really very tough for me and
the rest of my family," said brother Roger Chiang, 26, who shared an
apartment with his sister in Dupont Circle, five blocks from where she was
last seen.

The FBI's telephone call to Roger Chiang confirming that the body found
April 1 was indeed his sister's, came yesterday, three months to the day
since Roger Chiang had reported her missing.

Joyce Chiang disappeared Jan. 9, after being dropped off by a friend at
Connecticut Avenue and R Street NW about 8:30 p.m. Chiang had planned to go
to the Starbucks there, then head home.

A day later, a couple walking in Anacostia Park found Chiang's government
identification card.

On Jan. 21, her green suede jacket, keys, a Safeway shopper's card and a
Blockbuster video card were found in a secluded, grassy area near the north
gate of the Anacostia Naval Station just south of Anacostia Park. Police
dragged the Anacostia River twice, on one occasion finding the body of a
man, but they apparently found no new clues.

Then on April 1, a canoeist discovered a body near the Potomac River, more
than eight miles downstream from the spot where Chiang's identification was
found in January. The body was partially clothed and face down on a rocky
stretch of the shore.

Like other members of his family, Roger Chiang believes that his sister may
have met with foul play, that she may have been the victim of an attempted
robbery. "That is the family's line: that something happened to her,"
Chiang said.

Chiang's cousin George Lin, who lives in Los Angeles, said relatives have
accepted her death, but they are praying for justice -- and also for
answers.

"We just want to bring her home and give her a proper burial near her
father," Lin said. "We hope that we will someday learn what happened to her
and who did this to her."

The FBI is asking anyone with information about Chiang's disappearance or
anyone who may have been the victim of an attempted abduction in the Dupont
Circle area to call 202-278-2377.

Staff writers Maria Elena Fernandez and Philip P. Pan contributed to this
report.

© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company

*****

Statement by the Department of Justice

April 19, 1999

As you know, Joyce Chiang, a young attorney in the Headquarters Office of
the General Counsel, disappeared from the Dupont Circle area of Washington,
DC on January 9, 1999. Since then, Joyce's family, friends, and colleagues
have kept a constant vigil of hope for her safe return. Many of you
contributed generously to a reward fund for information related to her
disappearance.

Sadly, on April 12, the FBI announced that a body that had been discovered
on April 1 along the Potomac river in Virginia had been positively
identified as Joyce. To date, no information has been released regarding
the cause of death.

The Chiang family will celebrate a funeral mass for Joyce at 9:00 a.m. on
Tuesday, April 20, at St. John Eudes Catholic Church in Chatsworth,
California (9901 Mason Avenue). The family has requested that, in lieu of
flowers, donations be made to the Joyce Chiang Foundation. Details on the
foundation will be forthcoming.

Arrangements are also under way for a special INS remembrance service for
Joyce to be held in Washington, DC. This event will most likely take place
during the week of April 26. Details will be announced as they become
available. Joyce was loved and respected by her colleagues throughout the
Immigration and Naturalization Service. Her presence has been and will
continue to be deeply missed.

*****

Memorial Services

The INS will hold a memorial service for our friend and colleague Joyce
Chiang at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 28. The service will be held at the
Turner Memorial A.M.E. Church, 600 I Street, NW, just a short walk from the
CAB.

The Commissioner encourages all supervisors to provide an excused absence
for those employees who wish to attend the INS service.

The Chiang family has requested that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made
to the Joyce Chiang Foundation. Details on the foundation will be available
soon.

In addition to the INS-sponsored service, the Chiang family will host a
memorial service for Joyce at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 29, at St.
Matthew's Cathedral, 1725 Rhode Island Avenue, NW. The church is located at
the intersection of Rhode Island and Connecticut Avenues, just south to the
Dupont Circle metro stop.

*****

Friends, Family Remember INS Lawyer Information Sought In Chiang Death

By Maria Elena Fernandez Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, April 30,
1999; Page B02

Family and friends remembered Joyce Chiang yesterday for her infectious
laugh, her loyal friendship and the way she broke up monotonous moments
with her skillful cartwheels and back flips.

At a memorial service for the 28-year-old government lawyer who disappeared
from Dupont Circle on Jan. 9, Chiang's friends, co-workers and younger
brother told affectionate stories about the ambitious, intelligent woman
who won their hearts with her good humor and generosity.

"She was the flower that . . . stood out in the Chiang family," Rep. Howard
L. Berman (D-Calif.), her onetime employer, told the several hundred
mourners who attended a memorial service for Chiang at St. Matthews's
Cathedral in Northwest Washington.

But he vowed at the beginning of his testimonial not to spend another day
mourning her loss. From now on, he said, "I will simply celebrate the joy
of having known her."

During the homily, the Rev. Brian Jordan urged Chiang's loved ones to "be
glad and rejoice" and not dwell on her sudden and unfathomable death.

Chiang's body was found along the banks of the Potomac River on April 1.
FBI investigators, who identified the body as Chiang on April 12, have not
released autopsy findings or revealed publicly when she died or what caused
her death.

Chiang, a graduate of Smith College in Northampton, Mass., where she was
student body president, began her career in 1990 as a summer intern in
Berman's office. After her 1992 graduation, she worked for Berman while
attending Georgetown University law school at night.

The young Chinese American later became Berman's expert adviser on
immigration law. In 1995 she became a special assistant to the director of
the Office of Congressional Relations at the Immigration and Naturalization
Service.

"She was a tremendous role model for women," said her brother, Roger
Chiang, 26, who described his sister as a staunch civil rights advocate and
a committed defender of Asian culture. "The legacy of Joyce is a legacy of
inspiration, a legacy that shows us to be compassionate about our passions"
no matter what they are.

"Remember Joyce: the fullness and beauty of an exceptional woman," he said.
"Remember Joyce [and] the compassion in her heart."

The memorial service was attended by Chiang's INS co-workers, law school
and college friends, and former Capitol Hill colleagues. Her mother, Judy
Chiang, served as a eucharistic minister during the Mass.

Chiang was buried in Los Angeles next to her father two weeks ago.

Sally Boasberg, who served on the Smith College board of trustees with
Chiang, recalled the "mesmerizing" way in which she twirled and untwirled
her hair during meetings.

"At the end of each meeting, you could count on at least one board member
saying after she left, 'Isn't she beautiful?' " Boasberg said. "She is
beautiful. Her memory is beautiful, and we will always love her."

After the service, Roger Chiang appealed to the public to call the FBI if
anyone has information about his sister's disappearance or death. Anyone
with tips should contact the FBI task force at 202-278-2377. A $50,000
reward is being offered for information that leads to an arrest and
conviction of a suspect.


© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company This page was last updated on
09/11/99


================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

   FROM THE DESK OF:

           *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
================================================================

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to