Interpol asks public to help crack new missing women cases
Details of each one have been published on Interpol’s website, along with photographs of possible identifying items and facial reconstructions.
Most of the victims are thought to have been aged between 15 and 30.
The body of the teenager with red shoes, beaded necklaces and a 10p piece was found underneath layers of leaves in a layby near a village called Le Cellier in 1982. It had been there for several months.
Speaking near the area she was found, now overgrown with brambles, nettles and horse chestnut trees, detective Franc Dannerolle says the teenager’s body was “disposed of like garbage”.
“There was no respect, no care for her before her death,” he adds.
The 10p coin led investigators to believe that she was either British or had been travelling in Britain before her murder, though they acknowledge that she could have found it, or been given it.
Police have chosen not to go into detail about the nature of her killing to avoid “fake perpetrators” from claiming responsibility.
Unfortunately, the teenager’s remains can no longer be found, which complicates the cold case investigators’ task.
“If we manage to find them, it could be possible to work on her DNA to have a link with the family,” says Det Dannerolle.
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