Into the Fire: The Lost Daughter (2024) s01e01 Episode Script
Part One
1
Put another piece on the fire.
I think right there will be good.
Yeah.
Careful.
That looks good.
This story is not about me.
This is about a missing child.
My missing child.
All my life I was looking for her.
But I didn't know what happened to her.
She just, like, disappeared.
It's been a long,
difficult journey.
Because, here's the thing,
my daughter's case wasn't unsolved.
It was uninvestigated.
And that enraged me.
But anger is a motivator.
I got to the point
that I got to find this kid alive.
I don't care if I have to walk over
God's green earth to do it.
You can't run on anything else.
You can run on anger.
It doesn't need to be fed.
It doesn't need to sleep.
It might kill you.
You want to get something done,
get good and angry.
There's going to be an answer to this.
I am going to find her.
You get the naughty one.
-That's good?
-Yeah.
I'm ready.
I met Ed in '91.
The old-fashioned way in the bar.
Cathy was in her scrubs.
She worked professionally
as a nurse in New Orleans.
And she left the bar, and neither of us
thought we'd see each other again.
Three days later, we crossed paths again,
and after that we never separated.
She quit her job, rented a U-Haul trailer,
loaded up all her stuff and her dog,
and drove from New Orleans up here
to this house in Massachusetts.
And along the way, we stopped at
the chapel at the University of Virginia,
and we were married
about ten weeks after we met.
And that was 32 years ago.
We were married for about a month
when she mentioned that she'd had a child,
and she'd given the child up for adoption.
It's heart-wrenching,
all my life, that I did this,
that I allowed this to happen
to her and I.
She was the prettiest baby
I ever saw.
Extremely bald-headed.
Beautiful eyes.
I was only 16 years old
when I had my daughter in 1974.
And it was becoming a reality that I was
going to have to get her out of a diaper.
I was gonna have to teach her
how to feed herself.
I was gonna have to do
all the things that an adult does
that I wasn't sure I could do.
And I was very vulnerable.
And my mother cornered me.
And she said,
"You need to give her up for adoption."
"You can't take care of this baby."
"You don't know what you're doing."
So I didn't know how to prove
I was worthy of my child.
And I got talked into
She was going to get the best parents
that adoption could offer,
as long as I gave her up as an infant.
If I couldn't do anything else for her,
I was going to do this.
She deserves this.
And I just stepped back.
And I let my daughter go into
the adoption system in Norfolk, Virginia,
so that she could have a better life.
She was just nine months old.
Throughout my life,
she was always on my mind.
But it was a closed adoption,
so I don't know what happened to her.
She never came looking for me.
Thirty-five years later, in 2010,
I get this letter
from the adoption agency.
I thought it was a letter telling me
my daughter was looking for me.
And I was just like,
"Wow. This is happening."
Instead, I found out that
my daughter went missing 21 years ago,
in 1989, when she was 14 years old.
And I was told that an unidentified body
found next to a cornfield
might be my daughter's body.
I just everything just, like, went blank.
And the adoption agency
immediately tells me
that a detective has been to see them
about this Jane Doe
and that the police needed my DNA
to help identify her.
So I gave them my DNA,
and they told me
I have to just wait for some time.
I didn't know what to do.
She had been missing 21 years
when they finally found me.
And so I couldn't sit at that computer
and just wait for my DNA to be verified
that they were her remains.
So I got in touch with the police
and the adoption agency.
But they would not tell me
what my daughter's adopted name was,
where she went missing from.
Because I put her up for adoption,
I had no standing.
So I can't go and say,
"This is my daughter."
You know,
I I don't have the right to do that.
So that kind of made me go, "I'm going to
find out about my daughter myself."
I only had my daughter's birthday.
And so I said to Eddie,
"Look on the computer and look for
a missing child close to her birthday."
I don't think I spent ten minutes
looking at this website,
when I found this missing person
with the same birth date as her daughter.
June 23rd, 1974.
She was the first one listed
on the missing person's section
of the Michigan State Police Department.
I named her Alexis Miranda Badger.
I learned that her name had changed to
Aundria Michelle Bowman.
And I found out that she lived
in Hamilton, Michigan.
I mean, looking at her, I was just like,
"I don't know that person."
I remember an infant.
But when I started looking at her eyes
and just
She looks like me.
She is mine. My little girl.
But I was looking on the internet
trying to find her.
I couldn't find her
or the adopted parents anywhere.
Nothing.
And so I just decided to open
a Facebook "Find Aundria M Bowman" page.
Because I knew
that kids go looking for each other
that went to high school together.
Roll up my sleeves for some work.
Why is this not loading?
Listen, I knew nothing about computers
when this all started.
"Welcome, members."
"If any of you were
close friends of Aundria,
we'd love to hear from you."
"Please drop us a line via Private Message
to this Find Aundria M Bowman
Facebook page. Thanks."
Suddenly, everything
just started happening.
I contacted her immediately
to give Cathy more information.
Aundria was adopted
by Brenda and Dennis Bowman.
Our family just absolutely
loved her.
Brenda is my husband's cousin.
We went to the same school together
over in Muskegon, Michigan.
Brenda was more quiet
and was just sort of to herself a lot.
Brenda and Dennis met
when she was in high school.
And they fell for each other.
That was probably
Brenda's first boyfriend.
Yeah. When she graduated from high school,
Dennis was in the Navy at that time.
But before I ever went into the service,
I had told Brenda,
I'd met her about a year before I went in,
I told her, I said,
"Look, when I get out of boot camp,"
I said, "And I come home for leave,"
I said, "Will you accept my ring?"
And I knew she was the one
just as soon as I met her.
We got married in '71.
And he got stationed in San Diego.
We lived there for six months.
And I had my choice
of duty station.
We came to Norfolk, Virginia.
And they were trying
to start a family.
And at that time,
they told me there was a double uterus.
"Chances of you getting pregnant
are probably very slim."
And that's when
we were applying for adoption.
And it took us, like
I can't think how many years.
The social worker called
one morning,
and she goes, "We have a baby for you."
"Six months old."
She called the next day,
and she goes, "Brenda, I made a mistake."
I says, "We can't have her?"
And she goes, "She's ten months old."
And I go, "Okay."
We adopted Aundria.
I was never supposed to have any,
and we got the miracle of adopting.
She had always been Daddy's girl.
She was the sweetest kid that ever walked.
Yeah, Aundria was a a sweet little girl,
uh, a gift from God to this family
who couldn't have children.
Brenda and Dennis eventually moved
from Virginia
back to the west side of Michigan.
Hamilton, it's a smaller community.
Hamilton is a quiet, sleepy town
close to Holland.
You don't have anything bad
in Hamilton happen.
Basically, gas station, tons of churches,
the school, and a grocery store.
That's about Hamilton,
back in the day, summed right up.
Small town living.
Everybody knew everybody's business.
And you had to go to church.
If you were out of that norm,
you were looked at different.
Brenda and Denny went to church
every Sunday.
Both of them were Sunday school teachers,
and they wanted to grow their family.
And then years later,
I was constantly sick.
And Denny just come home from work one day
and threw a pregnancy test down.
And I go, "Yeah, right.
We got a 13-year-old adopted daughter."
And I got up in the middle of the night
and I says, "Well, may as well take it."
And then I just go
In fact, it was Father's Day weekend
because I come back to bed,
and I go, "Wake up, Daddy."
And Aundria was ecstatic
when Vanessa was born.
How wonderful. Now they have a family.
And then in 1989,
Aundria was in high school.
Our high school, it was small.
It was tight-knit,
just like the community.
You had your jocks, and then you had
your really Christian group,
and then you had your, like, stoner kids,
and then you had your,
like, shunned and nobodies.
I was the crowd
kind of pushed away.
Boy, there were some bad hairstyles
in the '80s, good heavens.
I can remember,
like, washing my hair the night before
and then you have to spray it with
Rave hair spray, like tease it, curl it,
spray it again, and then get up
and do it again the next morning.
Our hair was, like, huge.
It was oh, it was terrible.
Aundria was a lot of fun.
I remember being at her house,
being in her bedroom,
and listening to Cyndi Lauper and Madonna.
Of course, you know,
you're in a room, you turn the radio up,
and you just start dancing around a lot,
trying to sing
"Girls Just Want to Have Fun."
Aundria was definitely outgoing.
For the most part,
Aundria just wanted to be around people.
She was funny.
I remember hanging out in school.
I can remember her smile.
I can remember that.
She tried really, really hard
to go out of her way to make you happy.
I guess you could say chameleon
because she'd change
to fit the person
she was talking to or with.
So I think that might have caused her
some problems
in some relationships at times
because she would try really hard
to fit in with this person
and then change the way she was behaving
or what she said to fit in
and make herself be like the other person.
She just wanted to fit in just
like every teenage person does.
She was just,
I would say, just a normal teenager.
She didn't do good in school.
A few times talked back to the teachers.
She was just a a normal teenager.
But when she turned 12, 13,
it was like
somebody just flipped a switch.
And all of a sudden,
she's running away from home.
She's taking drugs from kids at school.
She's shoplifting.
She's lying.
One day she got mad at my wife
and stuck her fist
through the front window of the door.
I mean, we were taking her to counselors
and this and that.
The day Aundria went missing
what do you remember happening?
Denny had taken her
to school that morning.
There was a band thing.
He went and picked her up.
And Aundria was just very quiet with us.
And then I had to go to work.
I worked second shift at Lincolnshire.
We bundled up the baby
and take the baby,
so Aundria could do homework
and not use the excuse,
"Well, I was watching the baby."
And Denny dropped me off.
When I came home,
I walked through the front door.
The house was unlocked.
I took the baby in,
and I laid her on the couch.
I went upstairs.
I called for her.
The door to our bedroom,
which was locked, was busted open.
We had little carry bags for overnight.
We had a set of 'em, and one was gone.
We had gotten
our income tax money.
Some of it was in the bank,
but there was cash in an envelope.
And he kept it hidden in his dresser.
She took that.
She took all the change whatsoever
she could get out of the baby's bank.
And her purple coat.
So I called the police
right away,
and I said, "Look, my kid's missing."
They came down.
They came in. Took the report.
She was gone.
In the first few days
when Aundria was reported missing,
people were looking out for her.
We hunted and hunted.
We borrowed people's cars
and went down through Holland at night
so she didn't recognize our car.
There were reports of her being
seen in the Holland area and areas nearby.
There were tips of people seeing her at
a roller skating rink, at grocery stores.
A family friend said that
they had seen her in the checkout line,
that her hair had been bleached,
and that she appeared that
she could have possibly been pregnant.
There were reports of her working
in a adult-entertainment-type industry
down in Indiana.
I remember hearing
she ran away to the truck stop,
got a trucker to pick her up,
and she took off from there
and was living somewhere else.
So it was pretty official,
you know, that she had run away.
The problem was there were
no other leads to go forward on.
There was no information
There was nothing to look for.
I mean, the trail really went cold.
I would get off of work
at 11:30 or whatever, and I would
I would go around the streets
looking for her.
Until it got to a point
that Denny says, "You gotta stop."
"You have a baby at home.
You have got to stop."
We were two grieving parents,
and our daughter was missing.
Aundria disappeared.
She was gone.
She was just gone.
Oh, wow.
That's how she looked,
just about like that last time I saw her.
So cute. Beautiful eyes. Oh my God.
I miss that little girl.
When I had Alexis,
I was a runaway.
My mother was very physical.
I mean, she just smacked me around
one too many times,
and I just got sick of the physical abuse
and ran off to New Orleans
with the clothes on my back.
I was 14.
I got pregnant
maybe a year or so after that.
And Alexis was 14 when she ran away.
When you're a runaway,
you're seen as a delinquent.
They're just not going to look
for these runaway kids.
They didn't look for me.
So I knew the police, back in the '80s,
they never looked for her.
They dropped the ball
on this case years ago.
So it took this web sleuth guy
in California in 2010
to get the police started
on Alexis's case.
Twenty years after the fact.
So Carl was the game changer.
I first started getting involved
in the missing and unidentified in 2009.
There was a site called "Websleuths"
that dealt with
all kinds of unsolved mysteries,
but in particular, there were unidentified
John Doe and Jane Doe cases,
where amateur sleuths could collaborate
online to try to solve these cases.
When I started working on this,
I was finding that none of the websites
that showed missing persons
had very good means
of searching through all their cases.
So what I decided to do is put together
this spreadsheet of missing persons.
By the time I got done with this,
it was probably close
to 19,000 names on the list.
Well, I'm an accountant,
so I had very good spreadsheet skills.
And so there were several instances where
I was able to solve a missing person case
from various states.
He kind of spooked me at first.
How does this become your hobby?
Who is this dead person,
who's that dead person?
Could it be this person? Because it's
it's armchair sleuthing, right?
But it was Carl
that sort of was like the catalyst
that kicked that whole thing into gear.
There she is.
This is the post-mortem photo that was
distributed for the Racine Jane Doe case.
I came across this case
from 1999 from Racine, Wisconsin.
The brutal murder is one
investigators say they will never forget.
when law enforcement found
the body of a badly abused woman.
in a cornfield
on the side of the road in Racine County.
Jane Doe showed signs
of being sexually abused.
Who did it and who is Jane Doe?
So I went through
my spreadsheet here.
Let's see if we have a female,
uh, maybe from Wisconsin,
Michigan, or Illinois.
And she would have been born
around the early '70s.
And using these filter mechanisms
and I was able to come up with 13 cases.
And you can see the second one here
is Aundria Michelle Bowman.
Aundria Bowman was listed as
missing from Hamilton, Michigan in 1989.
The Jane Doe was found
in Racine, Wisconsin in 1999.
Aundria was 14
at around the time she disappeared,
and Racine Jane Doe
was in her mid-twenties.
The age was about right.
So I created
the facial reconstruction drawing.
There are a lot of similarities between
the facial characteristics
of Aundria Bowman
and those of the Racine Jane Doe.
First of all,
their noses are very similar.
Aundria has a long nose
with sort of a bulbous tip.
And, looking at a map,
you can see that Holland, Michigan
was right across Lake Michigan
from Racine, Wisconsin.
I contacted the Racine County
Sheriff's Department,
and I was put in touch with
a detective in charge of this case.
And I told him, "Hey, I've got this girl
who is from Holland, Michigan,
and she looks like she might be a pretty
good potential identity of your Jane Doe."
As bad as I wanted to know
what happened to her, I
I just dreaded to know that, you know
Alexis had been beaten to death,
thrown in a ditch.
But finally, after three years,
they tested my DNA against Racine Jane Doe
and then sent it to me.
Okay.
"Let it be noted"
Oh God.
It wasn't her.
It meant that she wasn't my daughter.
She wasn't Alexis.
But I was relieved.
It was the strangest relief.
It's an anticipation of horror
that you can't believe,
and when that horror doesn't play out,
it's relief.
But it also meant
that I was right back where I started.
I have to keep looking for her,
and I am going to find her.
She'd totally reject me,
you know, and rightfully so.
But at least I'd know she's alive.
Especially when Detective Haverdink
called me and said, "We're pursuing this."
"This is not something
that's gonna go away."
Um, I was hopeful.
I, actually, was in
the same school as Aundria.
I was a year ahead of her,
and there wasn't even any talk
around the school
about her missing or running away.
I just got this feeling
that he wanted it solved.
He wasn't part of that '80s
and '90s dropped-the-ball crowd.
The Aundria Bowman case
was a cold case for 20 years,
so we wanted to solve this case,
and the cold case team was formed.
We wanted to work this case in a way
that it had not been worked so far.
All this stuff.
And so we would reach out to the Bowmans.
Letting them know that
we are actively looking at the case again
and trying to move it forward.
Well, good morning. My name is Todd.
Dennis.
Dennis? Nice to meet you, sir.
So we're out of the State Police post
in Wayland.
Obviously, this is an old, old case,
but we've been brought in
to try and bring some closure.
Some closure.
There's never any closure.
Let's get down to business.
Let's find my daughter.
Yeah, that's where we're at too.
We also reached out
to Cathy, the biological mother.
She was also very adamant
that she wanted to find her daughter.
And I knew she talked to Carl Koppelman.
She had started some Facebook pages.
Several of Aundria's friends
had reached out to her,
you know, kids that I went to school with.
So I just kind of listened
to Cathy and Carl Koppelman
to see what information they had,
to see if that was something
that was gonna be helpful
or useful to our case.
I was just like, "Thank God."
I was not alone having to do this.
And I just knew
that if I kept looking for Alexis
and started throwing all my energy
into the Find Aundria M Bowman page,
something was going to develop.
And then Metta appeared.
I reached out to Cathy Terkanian
on May 11, 2013.
And I said, "I just want to share with you
that in September of 1989,
I was abducted from Holland, Michigan
at the Windmill gas station
on the south side of Holland."
"I can't help but think
our stories may be connected."
I walked home after school
and then I asked my mom
if I could go to my friend's house,
which I did regularly.
We always walked to each other's houses.
It was a safe neighborhood, we thought.
And she actually said no.
And I and I begged her and begged her.
"All right. Call me when you get there."
And then
Yup.
I was six years old.
This is where the Windmill was.
So he actually took me
from, like, right here.
I was walking along here, and he saw me,
and he came, and he parked right here
alongside this sidewalk.
And he just said, "Your mom said
I could take you to go see some puppies."
"We're gonna go to a barn
and see some puppies."
So I was close enough for him,
where he just grabbed me
and put me in his red pickup truck.
We would drive for a while,
and I would say, "Oh, is that the barn?"
because I'm excited
to see some puppies, you know.
And he's like, "No, we're almost there."
And we keep driving.
And then we came to a four-way,
and there was a cop,
so he told me to lay down.
And then he started, like,
putting my hair behind my ear
and stroking my cheek and
He was really nice at first, you know.
I thought he was a nice guy.
He knew my mom.
And then his whole demeanor changed.
He pulled over.
And he got out and got a rope
from the back of the truck.
And then he came around,
and he yanked me around my neck
and dragged me into the woods,
and I started screaming.
And he took off all my clothes,
and he tied my sweater around my mouth
to keep me quiet.
I can see it like it just happened.
And he was above me.
He unzipped his pants.
And then all of a sudden,
some dog started barking.
And they seemed like
they were really close by.
There's a campground nearby,
so he probably assumed that there
was people nearby along with the dogs.
So he got up and ran and left me there.
He did sexually assault me.
And then I untied myself.
Then I ran to the road naked.
And then someone called 911.
That night I had to sit down
and speak with a composite artist,
and I gave her as much detail as I could.
But they never caught him.
So since I was six years old,
I've been looking for him.
I wanted to make sure it didn't happen
to anybody else, any other little girls.
As soon as the internet came around,
it was definitely a game changer.
I started looking at missing people
in Michigan,
but especially near Holland,
near me in Hamilton and areas.
And then you kind of do the rabbit hole
and do your research
and see if there could be a connection.
2013 is when I reached out
to the Facebook page.
And it just kind of seemed odd
to me that Aundria Bowman went missing
the same year as me, the same area as me.
The similarities with Aundria's case,
if she was abducted,
I felt like her kidnapper could be
the guy that kidnapped me.
So I started reading up
on her case more.
And then I saw a picture of Aundria's
adopted father, Dennis Bowman.
Oh my God.
He looks exactly like the guy
that kidnapped me.
I was devastated and horrified.
This is the adopted father of my daughter.
That was very
And so Metta and Carl and I
did a lot of research together.
I was abducted
from the Windmill gas station.
He smelled dirty, like a mechanic,
maybe a paint-ish smell.
Dennis Bowman was employed
in the Macatawa Harbor.
He was a carpenter
and worked on yachts in the harbor.
So Dennis worked
right down the road from there.
And it was like a little after 3:00.
He seemed like he'd just got out of work.
And the route basically went
right by his house,
pretty close to where
I was brought into that campground.
He went to church right up the road
from where he abducted me from.
The red pickup truck I got taken in
was like a faded, old, rusty pickup truck.
We were trying to figure out
whether he drove a red truck,
so we had to ask a relative
of the Bowman family,
and she said,
"Oh yeah. He had a truck like that."
And they actually provided
a photo of that truck.
It looks very similar to the truck
that I was taken in.
It was just as Metta
had described it.
Just too many coincidences.
And then when I heard his voice
So I called the police
right away,
and I said, "Look, my kid's missing."
It was like chills down my back.
The voice, you remember.
Could it be Dennis Bowman is the reason
my child went missing?
I don't know how to say this
in a nice way. Dennis was different.
He made me feel uncomfortable at times.
He's not someone
I wanted to be around.
She told me
that her parents didn't like her.
Something tells me
it was a house of horrors.
Aundria disappeared.
She was gone.
Jeez. Yeah, that's the guy.
Who the hell adopted my daughter?
This whole situation,
this is like a house on fire.
Now, I can either walk past that house
and just not look at
everybody screaming for help,
or I can walk right into that fire,
and I could just let it burn me.
I saw the fire and I walked right in it.
And I won't be out of it
until I get all the way through it.
And so I just knew
I had to go to Michigan.
I had to follow up in Michigan
where Alexis went missing from.
The first time
we went out to Michigan, it was in 2013.
And this will be
the fifth time to Holland.
But we're fully capable
of getting behind the wheel
and getting out there
for as long as it takes to solve this.
Thank goodness I had Eddie.
He didn't know my daughter.
And I honestly think that,
had I not met Ed,
I wouldn't have come looking for Alexis
because I didn't have
that kind of unconditional love.
I feel loved.
- Hi. Good to see you, Cathy!
- Carl Koppelman!
Great to see you again.
Good to see you, Ed.
- Yeah.
- Hey, Carl.
We've been to Michigan with Carl
several times over ten years.
It's very surreal, but it happened
with exactly the right people.
My sleuth and my rock.
-And her support system. Yeah.
-My rock.
A lot of my investigation
was through Facebook,
but you can't get
every little detail you need
unless you can talk to the person.
And so Eddie and I and Carl met people
that would be willing to meet us,
people that I've never met in person.
Sue! Hi. How are you?
Hi.
- Finally.
- I'm so glad to meet you.
- So good to meet you too.
- I know.
I can see your baby in your eyes.
Mmm. Thank you. Thank you.
You came just chiming in
like a sweet little bird.
Because we love her.
I See? Wow.
Can you go into a little bit about how
they'd bring her over to your home?
Yeah, I remember
Aundria sitting on the hearth,
just kind of like this.
Then Brenda would come up and say,
"Well, did you hear what the kid did?
Want me to tell you what the kid did?"
And I'm going like,
"This is your child, supposedly."
And poor Aundria would cross her arms,
or she'd just look up and down and just
Was Dennis there in the room?
Oh, yes. Oh, yes.
She seemed withdrawn and, well, demeaned.
I mean, you're put down and everything.
You're not a happy-go-lucky kid.
I'll be honest with you.
That kind of rocks my world.
I don't want to hear all that stuff.
You know, but I'm here to bear witness,
so I will bear witness.
Hello?
Am I at the home
of Michelle Timmer?
- Hi, Michelle. I'm Cathy.
- Hello.
-Hi.
-Hi, honey. Hi.
- Jennifer.
- Hi. How are you?
Oh, I'm very good. Thank you.
-Are you Kim?
-I am.
- She is!
- Hi.
-How are ya?
-Nice to meet you.
Does my heart good
to see Alexis's friends.
I call her Alexis.
That's okay. Yeah, I understand.
I'm sorry I have to ask both of you
to relive that stuff.
No, it's it's all right.
I remember she was
in the ninth, I was in tenth grade,
and we took the bus to her house,
and we went to go inside,
but she turned around,
and she looked at me, and she said,
"Don't go in. Just wait out here."
And then she went in, and her dad
immediately started chasing her
and yelling and screaming something.
And so she tore off,
and he was right behind her
and grabbed her foot, so she fell down.
And I looked,
and I couldn't see her anymore.
I couldn't They were yelling
and screaming upstairs.
So then on Monday,
when I saw her at school,
I asked her about it and, you know,
she told me that he'd chased her upstairs
and started hitting her
'cause she was late getting off the bus,
which she wasn't late getting off the bus.
I was invited to her house,
and we were just hanging out,
and at dinner time, I remember
the parents were eating hamburgers.
Aundria and I were only allowed
I think what was called
a leftover sandwich.
It was ketchup, mustard, and relish
on two pieces of bread,
and she made a comment that
that's all she was allowed to eat.
- That's what Aundria said?
- Yes, that's what Aundria said.
So Dennis came across the table
right in front of me
and hit her so hard
he almost knocked her out of the chair.
She started bawling her eyes out,
of course.
Brenda sat there and did nothing about it.
She just kept on feeding the baby.
It's like she just turned her back on it
and acted like it didn't even happen.
At this point,
whatever happened, she had had enough,
and so she came home on the bus with me.
My parents were both gone,
so we came up to my room,
and then she stayed in my room,
just hiding from her adoptive parents.
And she stayed for like four days.
I would bring extra food up there
and give it to her
after my family were done eating.
She progressed into telling me
that her adoptive dad,
he'd come in her room at night
and made her do sexual things
that she didn't want to do.
As a 13-year-old,
it's traumatic to hear about,
and I didn't even know what to do
other than, "You need to tell somebody."
So we went back to school the next day.
Aundria and I came off the school bus,
went into the principal's office,
and sat down to talk to the people
in there about what happened to her.
I'm proud of her. That makes me proud.
She was very strong.
She was like me.
Only so much you're gonna put up with.
I remember Aundria and I commiserating
with the problems that we had at home.
So I remember that Allegan County
would come to the school,
and then they would call your parents
to come to the school as well.
They would ask you right there
in the room with your parents,
"Okay, so tell us what's going on."
Well, what are you going to say?
You know, your your parents are sitting
right there in front of you.
You you just look at your parents
and say, "Oh, you know. Nothing."
And so then they just send you
right back home with them.
I went through that too.
One day, there was an argument,
and she turned around and said that,
"Daddy had molested me."
And I told her, I said, "That's a lie."
At the time, we had her in counseling.
And the three of us went in
to talk to the minister.
And he took her in
and talked to her first.
And then he had Denny and I come in.
He says, "Do you have something to say?"
And she just says, "Yeah. I lied."
You know, he told her,
with all of us there, he says,
"Do you realize what kind of allegation
like that could do to your dad?"
She admitted
that nobody touched her.
It was a lie
but she was trying to get her way.
Bring the church in, of course.
If you're gonna go to therapy,
let's go to the church.
Mm-hmm. That's a classic.
She's begging for her life.
She was begging for her life.
All these people just turned a blind eye.
I mean,
the kids did more than the adults did.
The kids lied for her.
The kids snuck her food.
The kids cared about her.
The justice system did nothing for her
but put her right back in that situation.
Just what does that say,
right there,
about how Brenda's reacting to anything
that might take place with her daughter
in regards to Denny
and how he would treat her?
I can understand, when everything is
rolled back to that time
of sitting on the hearth at the fireplace,
that that's what was going on.
She was telling everybody
that she could tell,
and nobody would listen.
But she never came out and said anything
to us, probably thinking, "Why?"
"They won't believe me either."
And it just broke my heart.
We encouraged her to leave,
to get out of the situation,
get out of her house,
and she didn't wanna leave the baby there.
She said,
"No, I have to take care of Vanessa."
We had Trapper Keepers back then.
Aundria kept pictures of the baby
in her Trapper Keeper.
She took care of her all the time.
Changed her diaper, would feed her bottle.
She loved her little sister.
And she was panic-stricken about leaving
her little sister there by herself.
And she told us, you know
Sorry. It's just really sad.
-I understand. I'm sorry.
-But, anyway, she said that, um
She was going to leave
when Vanessa was older and go find,
you know, her real mom.
I think she ran away from home
and just living somewhere
away from her adopted family.
She was probably happy and out there.
Had got away from the situation
and was doing better.
And knowing how bad
she wanted to run away,
I honestly believe it.
Brenda called us and told us
that Aundria had run away.
And the story I got, I didn't hear
anything about her taking money.
- No? Oh, no?
- Or No.
I said, "Did she take anything with her?
Did she take her clothes?"
"Did she take her purse?"
"No, she didn't take anything."
"She didn't take her purse
or makeup. Nothing."
And I'm going like,
I told Craig, I said, "Isn't that odd?"
But I'd talk to Brenda on the phone,
and I'd say,
"You know, well, what what is Denny
How's he feeling about all this?"
Right.
And she goes,
"Well, we can't talk about it
because we get in a fight
as soon as I bring it up."
His demeanor bothered me so much
that I reported it.
I just said, "I'm calling about
Aundria's Bowman's disappearance,
and I think that you ought to
closely look at Dennis Bowman."
The circumstances
around her leaving don't make sense,
and I want answers.
She was supposed to get
the best of the best.
That's what I was told.
And this is what she got.
Oh, it's so infuriating.
That whole
turmoil comes back.
After I put Alexis up for adoption,
I fought suicide for years.
That's what adoption did to me,
and so I don't have any kids.
You know, I wasn't that brave.
And I tell you, honestly,
uh, had I had I been able to keep her,
had I been supported to keep her,
she'd be here right now.
I hate myself for that.
Fuck. Sorry.
Of course I believed
everything my mother told me.
"She'll have a beautiful life."
Sorry.
It's hard to get your dreams,
like, crushed like that.
So I have to live with that.
I have to live with this.
And it is
Rips me to shreds.
And if something happened to Alexis,
I don't think
I could really forgive myself.
I found out about FOIA,
Freedom of Information Act, from Carl.
And what it is is it's a law
that you can get a form,
send them a lot of money,
and they will send you
the whole stack of records.
And so I just FOIA'd Dennis Bowman.
When I found out Bowman's background
like,
you got to be kidding me.
There were two cases
that were included.
One was his arrest for breaking
and entering and stalking a coworker.
When he was caught, they searched his home
and found a duffel bag
containing the woman's lingerie,
a mask to conceal his identity,
and an illegal sawed-off shotgun.
He only ended up serving
like a year in county jail for that.
And then there was a second,
even more violent case, in 1980.
May 23, 1980, he was 31 years old.
Bowman attacked the victim.
She was a teenager.
It was along Lakeshore Drive,
near Kirk Park, in Holland, Michigan.
So questioned by the lawyer,
"What's the first thing that happened?"
Her answer.
"He said, 'Pull over, get off your bike,
and start heading towards the woods.'"
"Then I saw the gun.
And he yelled at me again."
"And he fired the gun past me."
"And he said,
'Goddamn it, get off your bike
and start heading towards the woods.'"
"And he shot the gun towards my foot,
and I saw the dirt fly."
"He told me he was going
to blow a hole right through me,
and he was pointing the gun at me."
"And I turned around
and saw a pickup truck heading south."
"So I waved my arms and tried to make
the person driving the truck stop."
"And I threw my bike
in the back of the truck."
"And she opened the door and let me in."
"And when he was caught,
he told the police,
'You got to let me go. I got to go
pick up my little daughter from school.'"
He went straight to pre-trial?
Right, he was initially charged
with attempted murder
and pled to assault with intent
to commit criminal sexual conduct.
This is the opinion of the judge.
"The court has concluded
that he is a danger to women
if he is not confined."
February 2nd, 1981, sentenced
five to ten years for her attack.
At that time,
Aundria was six years old.
I moved to Kinross
when he was transferred there.
And she always had
this chip on her shoulder.
"Well, all the kids know
I'm a prisoner's daughter."
And I said, "You're not the only one."
Heaven forbid I took that child
into a prison visiting room.
When I found out she was taking
that little girl to the prison, I just
You know
It just it just kind of destroyed me.
He was then released from prison
on January 31st, 1986,
and Aundria,
at that point, was 11 years old.
We were just all shocked
that Brenda stayed with him
with this young girl.
So here my little daughter was,
living with a man on parole
who attempted to murder a teenage girl.
Nobody was there to protect my daughter.
She wasn't adopted into a good family.
I mean,
just look at his history, you know.
And so, by this point, I was convinced
Dennis had done something to Alexis.
I was convinced he'd murdered her.
So Alexis tells other people
that Dennis is molesting her,
and Brenda knows, but doesn't care.
He needed her dead.
I have to prove he did do it.
And if I have to get crazy to shake
everybody up, well, then, so be it.
I'm going to rattle every cage I can find.
The past ten years,
Carl and I, we started traveling
to the Missing in Michigan conference.
And what it is is it's, every year,
all the families
of the missing people get together,
and they sort of air what's going on.
Horrible stories.
Hi. My name's Mary Berlin.
My sister is missing.
I have a missing family member,
Richard Hitchcock.
He's been missing since 1990.
I'm just thankful for everyone
in this room and everyone who shows up.
It's a kind of a support system.
You know, you go check in
with these people once a year.
After 32 years of waiting
and looking for a loved one,
it's a horrible place to be.
And sometimes I feel like
I wish I could find him as an angel
rather than wonder where he is.
The second time
we went to Michigan with Carl was in 2013.
We're a few minutes late.
The circle's already formed.
And I sit down, and Carl goes,
"There's Brenda." And everything stopped.
I had taken this notebook.
Cause I had the suspicion
Cathy was going to be there
and I was going to meet her.
I was going to share pictures.
And I said,
"Today, she has two mothers here."
"I want to thank you for coming, Cathy."
And that's all I said.
I jumped up.
I said, "You tell these people
who your husband is."
And then all of a sudden,
you know, everybody got startled,
and there was a little bit of commotion.
I had had a cup of coffee in my hand
all that morning,
and had I had that cup of coffee,
I'd have thrown it right in her face.
She flung her hand across in front of her,
as if she was slapping her
across the face.
I just went Jerry Springer baby, you know.
She acted like such a
witch.
She screamed and hollered that
because my husband was in prison one time,
he was a monster.
He killed her, and I stood and watched.
We're not that kind of people.
I was a nervous wreck.
I couldn't talk.
I could yell, but I couldn't talk.
So Carl starts talking.
So I stood up,
and I started introducing myself.
Cathy came up behind me
and held up a sign, "Find Aundria Bowman."
So she was standing behind me
holding the sign.
And Carl says, "There's the story
that they're telling you,
and there's the likely story."
And everybody sort
of looked at Brenda like,
"What's the likely story, Brenda?"
You know?
She just started in,
screaming and ranting and raving.
And I says,
"Carl, I was willing to talk to her today,
but not if she's gonna be like this!"
Brenda was kind of upset,
and she says,
"It's a good thing my husband isn't here."
And I said,
"Well, what do you expect me to say?
"We know his record."
"We know he spent five years in prison
for attempting to rape
an 18-year-old girl at gunpoint."
"What are we supposed to think?"
And her response was,
"Well, I haven't forgotten what he did,
but I forgive him,
and I take my marriage vows seriously."
And I just, I can't contain it anymore.
So I just stormed out of the room.
I walked up. I got my candle.
Lit it.
And I thought,
"Well, who's the better mother here?"
"She won't even walk across
stage for her daughter?"
Ugh. I I couldn't do it.
I couldn't be in the room with her.
I got in the car and screamed
like I've never screamed before.
Carl put up with a lot from me.
I'm like fire. He's like ice.
And that's the kind of stuff
that keeps you sane,
that you have somebody
that will put up with you
losing your mind, you know?
When you have to deal with life
in this world of the missing,
there's a real set agenda you have.
I'm slow, but I'm determined.
You talk to the community.
Talk to the people that she knew.
I heard her described as a rebel.
Yeah, that's the way I see Alexis
as far as being a rebel.
"I don't want to conform
to be like everybody else."
"I am my own individual."
You know,
it sounds like my blood.
Yeah?
That's what Carl and I did
in those ten years.
We got the word out.
Dennis felt us. He felt us out there.
He knew we were out there surrounding him.
I think she really changed
the course of which direction
this whole investigation went.
The first time I ever seen a poster
was when you started this up.
I mean, you don't forget her face.
Like your face shape
and your eyes look a lot like Aundria's.
She looks a lot like you.
- Thank you for that. Thank you.
- Yeah.
You know, talking to people
that actually knew Alexis
just makes her more real.
You know, more than
a photograph on a poster.
You are beautiful.
You get yourself in here.
And I just immediately bonded
with Metta.
I know he abducted her
when she was this little six-year-old.
She kind of spurred me on.
I was already angry and motivated,
but once I met Metta,
I was like double that.
We connected on that level.
It's just like
this soul connection.
I always call her my soul mama.
And I love her,
and I don't think any of this
would have happened without her.
Oh, there we go. Now it's gonna
We're going to Hamilton High first?
We're going
to the Bowman house first.
Oh, okay.
Carl and I, we would get a car,
and we would drive to every place
Bowman ever lived,
trying to find something
that I felt proved
Dennis Bowman is responsible
for my daughter's murder.
Now, look to the right
is where the house used to be.
Yeah.
Right here.
This is the house
where Alexis lived, but it got torn down.
Dennis and Brenda moved
out to the property that they live on now,
almost like right after
Alexis went missing.
Which is pretty close to the first home.
It was so odd
with them moving from that corner
because we thought,
"What if she comes back?"
You know, "Where will she go?"
Here they are.
There's the house.
The Bowmans live there.
Oh, somebody's home.
Pull across the road, Carl.
You launch. I'll spot.
Oh, okay.
If anybody starts looking like,
"What in the hell is going on?"
Carl could just drop to his knee and go,
"Will you marry me," you know?
Let's get that drone a flyin'.
Yeah.
Come on, little guy. There it is. Okay.
All the circumstances
just keep pointing at Dennis.
I could just feel it in my bones.
And I was becoming obsessed
with Dennis Bowman's backyard.
I got it now.
Go down where that
that spot right there.
- Yeah.
- You're making my day, man.
Well,
this is Dennis Bowman's backyard.
And I knew about Google Earth, and I just
started looking at the Bowmans' property.
And there was something in the back
of that house that just made me go, like,
"What is that?"
First one I saw was around 2011
that had the oval-shaped thing.
And then that went away.
And then there was just the ground.
Yeah, it looks like there's cement there.
But look at this, Carl.
There's something right there.
What is that?
Why does that keep changing?
What does that mean?
That must mean he's hiding something.
What is he hiding?
My daughter,
she's in that backyard.
I'm doubtful
that he put her remains there
because he lived in a different location
when Aundria disappeared.
Given that there was a wooded area right
across the street from the Bowman house
where they had lived at the time,
the most obvious conclusion,
if he killed her,
was that he took her body
and disposed of it into that wooded area.
And Cathy keeps saying,
"No, she's buried in his backyard."
But I can't reconcile
how he would have killed her and then
five, six months later
put her body in that backyard.
But she's convinced.
My daughter's there.
If you come down here
Right there. Probably 20 feet
off the backside of his house.
I didn't tell her she was crazy
or that that's a stupid theory.
I I just kind of rolled with it.
I just became convinced
he felt like he owned her.
And had the right to kill her.
And had the right to bury her.
And he was going to keep her close.
I mean, that is the most far-reaching,
far-fetched, but it fits.
Prove me wrong, Dennis.
Come on, prove me wrong.
I know what you did, Dennis Bowman.
And I know why you did it.
I called the police, and I said,
"Get a search warrant.
Her body's in the backyard."
You can't just go dig up somebody's yard
because the mom has a feeling, you know.
But Dennis Bowman was
at the top of the list of suspects.
But we didn't have
any witnesses saying he did anything.
We didn't know if she's alive,
if she's dead.
When we started meeting with him,
he was a little standoffish.
He always denied any involvement.
We had nothing to do
with Aundria's disappearance.
I will swear that on a stack of Bibles.
Aundria hasn't been seen
or heard from in a very long time.
My assumption is that she is dead.
I've had that assumption
for a long time.
- But you can't prove it.
- I can't prove it.
How helpless they must have felt, huh?
I'll tell you, I felt pretty helpless.
But I just went like,
"I'm going to get that motherfucker."
So I went billboard.
Billboard will push it in their face,
won't it?
It was on the main road
going from where Dennis lived.
I was taunting him.
"You know I know, Dennis.
You know I know."
Now everybody else is gonna know.
More power to her
getting this going to find answers.
That's amazing that she did this
and pushed so hard.
I was on him on Facebook.
"Your bad karma is breathing
down your neck, Dennis Bowman,
and it's never going to forget your name."
Do you ever worry
about posting stuff like that?
No. Never. Never.
I don't think Dennis Bowman's brave enough
to come after somebody
toe-to-toe with him, you know.
Have you ever been accused
of that before that?
No.
It was shit,
and she was feeding it to everybody.
And she's still feeding it.
The only reason the posters was put up,
just was to hassle us.
Did you take any of 'em down?
No. I want to find her.
I mean, Cathy would write
letters to them on a daily basis.
She would call multiple times a day.
At one point, I called them up,
and, of course, the machine answers,
and I, like, just rip into them
until this machine goes, "Beep."
And I called them right back,
and I ripped into them,
and the machine went, "Beep."
And I called them right back.
"Beep." Do you know they disconnected
their phone that next week?
Cathy may have been
very close to crossing some lines.
That definitely caused us
to have to take a step back
and calm the Bowmans down.
Brenda called Detective Haverdink.
He said that, "Brenda told me
that if you call her again,
she's going to file charges
for harassment."
I wouldn't call that harassment.
I'd call that perseverance and tenacity.
And a pit bull with lipstick.
That's right.
She gave up her kid,
and she comes off like,
"Oh, my poor child.
And we gave her to these monsters."
He had to prove he didn't do it,
or I could stand and scream it
for the rest of my life.
What you gonna do about it?
We won't give up on it. And we're
going to push it, push it, push it.
I was set up at a little desk
in here in the living room,
and it was early in the morning,
and I had been trying to build
the Facebook page a little bit more.
And I was thinking
nothing was ever gonna happen.
And the phone rang,
and I picked it up, and it's Metta.
And the first thing Metta
said was, "They got him."
Somebody from Facebook messaged me
that was friends with the neighbor.
And they said,
"They're at the Bowman property."
"And there are so many police cars
sitting out in his yard."
And I was just like, "Finally"
"they're going to charge Dennis Bowman
for the murder of my daughter."
Six cops come at me out of nowhere.
Slam me against the window
and said I'm under arrest.
They won't tell me what for.
I didn't kill my daughter.
There's no goddamn way.
Thirty-one years ago
she walked out of our life.
We have no idea where she is.
I didn't murder my daughter.
Good morning, Mr. Bowman.
I'm Lieutenant Squyres,
and this is Detective Smith.
Do you know why we're here?
I have no freakin' idea.
- None?
- None.
You've been waiting for me.
You gonna tell me why I was arrested?
Absolutely,
I'm gonna tell you why you were arrested.
I'm the guy that you have been
looking over your shoulder
waiting for to show up
for most of your life.
And now it's here.
Your eyes okay?
Kinda, yeah.
Goody-goody, so you're a Norfolk cop.
That's correct.
You're under arrest
for the homicide in 1980
that you did when you killed
that fighter pilot's wife in Virginia.
You're out of your freakin' mind.
That's why we're here.
Put another piece on the fire.
I think right there will be good.
Yeah.
Careful.
That looks good.
This story is not about me.
This is about a missing child.
My missing child.
All my life I was looking for her.
But I didn't know what happened to her.
She just, like, disappeared.
It's been a long,
difficult journey.
Because, here's the thing,
my daughter's case wasn't unsolved.
It was uninvestigated.
And that enraged me.
But anger is a motivator.
I got to the point
that I got to find this kid alive.
I don't care if I have to walk over
God's green earth to do it.
You can't run on anything else.
You can run on anger.
It doesn't need to be fed.
It doesn't need to sleep.
It might kill you.
You want to get something done,
get good and angry.
There's going to be an answer to this.
I am going to find her.
You get the naughty one.
-That's good?
-Yeah.
I'm ready.
I met Ed in '91.
The old-fashioned way in the bar.
Cathy was in her scrubs.
She worked professionally
as a nurse in New Orleans.
And she left the bar, and neither of us
thought we'd see each other again.
Three days later, we crossed paths again,
and after that we never separated.
She quit her job, rented a U-Haul trailer,
loaded up all her stuff and her dog,
and drove from New Orleans up here
to this house in Massachusetts.
And along the way, we stopped at
the chapel at the University of Virginia,
and we were married
about ten weeks after we met.
And that was 32 years ago.
We were married for about a month
when she mentioned that she'd had a child,
and she'd given the child up for adoption.
It's heart-wrenching,
all my life, that I did this,
that I allowed this to happen
to her and I.
She was the prettiest baby
I ever saw.
Extremely bald-headed.
Beautiful eyes.
I was only 16 years old
when I had my daughter in 1974.
And it was becoming a reality that I was
going to have to get her out of a diaper.
I was gonna have to teach her
how to feed herself.
I was gonna have to do
all the things that an adult does
that I wasn't sure I could do.
And I was very vulnerable.
And my mother cornered me.
And she said,
"You need to give her up for adoption."
"You can't take care of this baby."
"You don't know what you're doing."
So I didn't know how to prove
I was worthy of my child.
And I got talked into
She was going to get the best parents
that adoption could offer,
as long as I gave her up as an infant.
If I couldn't do anything else for her,
I was going to do this.
She deserves this.
And I just stepped back.
And I let my daughter go into
the adoption system in Norfolk, Virginia,
so that she could have a better life.
She was just nine months old.
Throughout my life,
she was always on my mind.
But it was a closed adoption,
so I don't know what happened to her.
She never came looking for me.
Thirty-five years later, in 2010,
I get this letter
from the adoption agency.
I thought it was a letter telling me
my daughter was looking for me.
And I was just like,
"Wow. This is happening."
Instead, I found out that
my daughter went missing 21 years ago,
in 1989, when she was 14 years old.
And I was told that an unidentified body
found next to a cornfield
might be my daughter's body.
I just everything just, like, went blank.
And the adoption agency
immediately tells me
that a detective has been to see them
about this Jane Doe
and that the police needed my DNA
to help identify her.
So I gave them my DNA,
and they told me
I have to just wait for some time.
I didn't know what to do.
She had been missing 21 years
when they finally found me.
And so I couldn't sit at that computer
and just wait for my DNA to be verified
that they were her remains.
So I got in touch with the police
and the adoption agency.
But they would not tell me
what my daughter's adopted name was,
where she went missing from.
Because I put her up for adoption,
I had no standing.
So I can't go and say,
"This is my daughter."
You know,
I I don't have the right to do that.
So that kind of made me go, "I'm going to
find out about my daughter myself."
I only had my daughter's birthday.
And so I said to Eddie,
"Look on the computer and look for
a missing child close to her birthday."
I don't think I spent ten minutes
looking at this website,
when I found this missing person
with the same birth date as her daughter.
June 23rd, 1974.
She was the first one listed
on the missing person's section
of the Michigan State Police Department.
I named her Alexis Miranda Badger.
I learned that her name had changed to
Aundria Michelle Bowman.
And I found out that she lived
in Hamilton, Michigan.
I mean, looking at her, I was just like,
"I don't know that person."
I remember an infant.
But when I started looking at her eyes
and just
She looks like me.
She is mine. My little girl.
But I was looking on the internet
trying to find her.
I couldn't find her
or the adopted parents anywhere.
Nothing.
And so I just decided to open
a Facebook "Find Aundria M Bowman" page.
Because I knew
that kids go looking for each other
that went to high school together.
Roll up my sleeves for some work.
Why is this not loading?
Listen, I knew nothing about computers
when this all started.
"Welcome, members."
"If any of you were
close friends of Aundria,
we'd love to hear from you."
"Please drop us a line via Private Message
to this Find Aundria M Bowman
Facebook page. Thanks."
Suddenly, everything
just started happening.
I contacted her immediately
to give Cathy more information.
Aundria was adopted
by Brenda and Dennis Bowman.
Our family just absolutely
loved her.
Brenda is my husband's cousin.
We went to the same school together
over in Muskegon, Michigan.
Brenda was more quiet
and was just sort of to herself a lot.
Brenda and Dennis met
when she was in high school.
And they fell for each other.
That was probably
Brenda's first boyfriend.
Yeah. When she graduated from high school,
Dennis was in the Navy at that time.
But before I ever went into the service,
I had told Brenda,
I'd met her about a year before I went in,
I told her, I said,
"Look, when I get out of boot camp,"
I said, "And I come home for leave,"
I said, "Will you accept my ring?"
And I knew she was the one
just as soon as I met her.
We got married in '71.
And he got stationed in San Diego.
We lived there for six months.
And I had my choice
of duty station.
We came to Norfolk, Virginia.
And they were trying
to start a family.
And at that time,
they told me there was a double uterus.
"Chances of you getting pregnant
are probably very slim."
And that's when
we were applying for adoption.
And it took us, like
I can't think how many years.
The social worker called
one morning,
and she goes, "We have a baby for you."
"Six months old."
She called the next day,
and she goes, "Brenda, I made a mistake."
I says, "We can't have her?"
And she goes, "She's ten months old."
And I go, "Okay."
We adopted Aundria.
I was never supposed to have any,
and we got the miracle of adopting.
She had always been Daddy's girl.
She was the sweetest kid that ever walked.
Yeah, Aundria was a a sweet little girl,
uh, a gift from God to this family
who couldn't have children.
Brenda and Dennis eventually moved
from Virginia
back to the west side of Michigan.
Hamilton, it's a smaller community.
Hamilton is a quiet, sleepy town
close to Holland.
You don't have anything bad
in Hamilton happen.
Basically, gas station, tons of churches,
the school, and a grocery store.
That's about Hamilton,
back in the day, summed right up.
Small town living.
Everybody knew everybody's business.
And you had to go to church.
If you were out of that norm,
you were looked at different.
Brenda and Denny went to church
every Sunday.
Both of them were Sunday school teachers,
and they wanted to grow their family.
And then years later,
I was constantly sick.
And Denny just come home from work one day
and threw a pregnancy test down.
And I go, "Yeah, right.
We got a 13-year-old adopted daughter."
And I got up in the middle of the night
and I says, "Well, may as well take it."
And then I just go
In fact, it was Father's Day weekend
because I come back to bed,
and I go, "Wake up, Daddy."
And Aundria was ecstatic
when Vanessa was born.
How wonderful. Now they have a family.
And then in 1989,
Aundria was in high school.
Our high school, it was small.
It was tight-knit,
just like the community.
You had your jocks, and then you had
your really Christian group,
and then you had your, like, stoner kids,
and then you had your,
like, shunned and nobodies.
I was the crowd
kind of pushed away.
Boy, there were some bad hairstyles
in the '80s, good heavens.
I can remember,
like, washing my hair the night before
and then you have to spray it with
Rave hair spray, like tease it, curl it,
spray it again, and then get up
and do it again the next morning.
Our hair was, like, huge.
It was oh, it was terrible.
Aundria was a lot of fun.
I remember being at her house,
being in her bedroom,
and listening to Cyndi Lauper and Madonna.
Of course, you know,
you're in a room, you turn the radio up,
and you just start dancing around a lot,
trying to sing
"Girls Just Want to Have Fun."
Aundria was definitely outgoing.
For the most part,
Aundria just wanted to be around people.
She was funny.
I remember hanging out in school.
I can remember her smile.
I can remember that.
She tried really, really hard
to go out of her way to make you happy.
I guess you could say chameleon
because she'd change
to fit the person
she was talking to or with.
So I think that might have caused her
some problems
in some relationships at times
because she would try really hard
to fit in with this person
and then change the way she was behaving
or what she said to fit in
and make herself be like the other person.
She just wanted to fit in just
like every teenage person does.
She was just,
I would say, just a normal teenager.
She didn't do good in school.
A few times talked back to the teachers.
She was just a a normal teenager.
But when she turned 12, 13,
it was like
somebody just flipped a switch.
And all of a sudden,
she's running away from home.
She's taking drugs from kids at school.
She's shoplifting.
She's lying.
One day she got mad at my wife
and stuck her fist
through the front window of the door.
I mean, we were taking her to counselors
and this and that.
The day Aundria went missing
what do you remember happening?
Denny had taken her
to school that morning.
There was a band thing.
He went and picked her up.
And Aundria was just very quiet with us.
And then I had to go to work.
I worked second shift at Lincolnshire.
We bundled up the baby
and take the baby,
so Aundria could do homework
and not use the excuse,
"Well, I was watching the baby."
And Denny dropped me off.
When I came home,
I walked through the front door.
The house was unlocked.
I took the baby in,
and I laid her on the couch.
I went upstairs.
I called for her.
The door to our bedroom,
which was locked, was busted open.
We had little carry bags for overnight.
We had a set of 'em, and one was gone.
We had gotten
our income tax money.
Some of it was in the bank,
but there was cash in an envelope.
And he kept it hidden in his dresser.
She took that.
She took all the change whatsoever
she could get out of the baby's bank.
And her purple coat.
So I called the police
right away,
and I said, "Look, my kid's missing."
They came down.
They came in. Took the report.
She was gone.
In the first few days
when Aundria was reported missing,
people were looking out for her.
We hunted and hunted.
We borrowed people's cars
and went down through Holland at night
so she didn't recognize our car.
There were reports of her being
seen in the Holland area and areas nearby.
There were tips of people seeing her at
a roller skating rink, at grocery stores.
A family friend said that
they had seen her in the checkout line,
that her hair had been bleached,
and that she appeared that
she could have possibly been pregnant.
There were reports of her working
in a adult-entertainment-type industry
down in Indiana.
I remember hearing
she ran away to the truck stop,
got a trucker to pick her up,
and she took off from there
and was living somewhere else.
So it was pretty official,
you know, that she had run away.
The problem was there were
no other leads to go forward on.
There was no information
There was nothing to look for.
I mean, the trail really went cold.
I would get off of work
at 11:30 or whatever, and I would
I would go around the streets
looking for her.
Until it got to a point
that Denny says, "You gotta stop."
"You have a baby at home.
You have got to stop."
We were two grieving parents,
and our daughter was missing.
Aundria disappeared.
She was gone.
She was just gone.
Oh, wow.
That's how she looked,
just about like that last time I saw her.
So cute. Beautiful eyes. Oh my God.
I miss that little girl.
When I had Alexis,
I was a runaway.
My mother was very physical.
I mean, she just smacked me around
one too many times,
and I just got sick of the physical abuse
and ran off to New Orleans
with the clothes on my back.
I was 14.
I got pregnant
maybe a year or so after that.
And Alexis was 14 when she ran away.
When you're a runaway,
you're seen as a delinquent.
They're just not going to look
for these runaway kids.
They didn't look for me.
So I knew the police, back in the '80s,
they never looked for her.
They dropped the ball
on this case years ago.
So it took this web sleuth guy
in California in 2010
to get the police started
on Alexis's case.
Twenty years after the fact.
So Carl was the game changer.
I first started getting involved
in the missing and unidentified in 2009.
There was a site called "Websleuths"
that dealt with
all kinds of unsolved mysteries,
but in particular, there were unidentified
John Doe and Jane Doe cases,
where amateur sleuths could collaborate
online to try to solve these cases.
When I started working on this,
I was finding that none of the websites
that showed missing persons
had very good means
of searching through all their cases.
So what I decided to do is put together
this spreadsheet of missing persons.
By the time I got done with this,
it was probably close
to 19,000 names on the list.
Well, I'm an accountant,
so I had very good spreadsheet skills.
And so there were several instances where
I was able to solve a missing person case
from various states.
He kind of spooked me at first.
How does this become your hobby?
Who is this dead person,
who's that dead person?
Could it be this person? Because it's
it's armchair sleuthing, right?
But it was Carl
that sort of was like the catalyst
that kicked that whole thing into gear.
There she is.
This is the post-mortem photo that was
distributed for the Racine Jane Doe case.
I came across this case
from 1999 from Racine, Wisconsin.
The brutal murder is one
investigators say they will never forget.
when law enforcement found
the body of a badly abused woman.
in a cornfield
on the side of the road in Racine County.
Jane Doe showed signs
of being sexually abused.
Who did it and who is Jane Doe?
So I went through
my spreadsheet here.
Let's see if we have a female,
uh, maybe from Wisconsin,
Michigan, or Illinois.
And she would have been born
around the early '70s.
And using these filter mechanisms
and I was able to come up with 13 cases.
And you can see the second one here
is Aundria Michelle Bowman.
Aundria Bowman was listed as
missing from Hamilton, Michigan in 1989.
The Jane Doe was found
in Racine, Wisconsin in 1999.
Aundria was 14
at around the time she disappeared,
and Racine Jane Doe
was in her mid-twenties.
The age was about right.
So I created
the facial reconstruction drawing.
There are a lot of similarities between
the facial characteristics
of Aundria Bowman
and those of the Racine Jane Doe.
First of all,
their noses are very similar.
Aundria has a long nose
with sort of a bulbous tip.
And, looking at a map,
you can see that Holland, Michigan
was right across Lake Michigan
from Racine, Wisconsin.
I contacted the Racine County
Sheriff's Department,
and I was put in touch with
a detective in charge of this case.
And I told him, "Hey, I've got this girl
who is from Holland, Michigan,
and she looks like she might be a pretty
good potential identity of your Jane Doe."
As bad as I wanted to know
what happened to her, I
I just dreaded to know that, you know
Alexis had been beaten to death,
thrown in a ditch.
But finally, after three years,
they tested my DNA against Racine Jane Doe
and then sent it to me.
Okay.
"Let it be noted"
Oh God.
It wasn't her.
It meant that she wasn't my daughter.
She wasn't Alexis.
But I was relieved.
It was the strangest relief.
It's an anticipation of horror
that you can't believe,
and when that horror doesn't play out,
it's relief.
But it also meant
that I was right back where I started.
I have to keep looking for her,
and I am going to find her.
She'd totally reject me,
you know, and rightfully so.
But at least I'd know she's alive.
Especially when Detective Haverdink
called me and said, "We're pursuing this."
"This is not something
that's gonna go away."
Um, I was hopeful.
I, actually, was in
the same school as Aundria.
I was a year ahead of her,
and there wasn't even any talk
around the school
about her missing or running away.
I just got this feeling
that he wanted it solved.
He wasn't part of that '80s
and '90s dropped-the-ball crowd.
The Aundria Bowman case
was a cold case for 20 years,
so we wanted to solve this case,
and the cold case team was formed.
We wanted to work this case in a way
that it had not been worked so far.
All this stuff.
And so we would reach out to the Bowmans.
Letting them know that
we are actively looking at the case again
and trying to move it forward.
Well, good morning. My name is Todd.
Dennis.
Dennis? Nice to meet you, sir.
So we're out of the State Police post
in Wayland.
Obviously, this is an old, old case,
but we've been brought in
to try and bring some closure.
Some closure.
There's never any closure.
Let's get down to business.
Let's find my daughter.
Yeah, that's where we're at too.
We also reached out
to Cathy, the biological mother.
She was also very adamant
that she wanted to find her daughter.
And I knew she talked to Carl Koppelman.
She had started some Facebook pages.
Several of Aundria's friends
had reached out to her,
you know, kids that I went to school with.
So I just kind of listened
to Cathy and Carl Koppelman
to see what information they had,
to see if that was something
that was gonna be helpful
or useful to our case.
I was just like, "Thank God."
I was not alone having to do this.
And I just knew
that if I kept looking for Alexis
and started throwing all my energy
into the Find Aundria M Bowman page,
something was going to develop.
And then Metta appeared.
I reached out to Cathy Terkanian
on May 11, 2013.
And I said, "I just want to share with you
that in September of 1989,
I was abducted from Holland, Michigan
at the Windmill gas station
on the south side of Holland."
"I can't help but think
our stories may be connected."
I walked home after school
and then I asked my mom
if I could go to my friend's house,
which I did regularly.
We always walked to each other's houses.
It was a safe neighborhood, we thought.
And she actually said no.
And I and I begged her and begged her.
"All right. Call me when you get there."
And then
Yup.
I was six years old.
This is where the Windmill was.
So he actually took me
from, like, right here.
I was walking along here, and he saw me,
and he came, and he parked right here
alongside this sidewalk.
And he just said, "Your mom said
I could take you to go see some puppies."
"We're gonna go to a barn
and see some puppies."
So I was close enough for him,
where he just grabbed me
and put me in his red pickup truck.
We would drive for a while,
and I would say, "Oh, is that the barn?"
because I'm excited
to see some puppies, you know.
And he's like, "No, we're almost there."
And we keep driving.
And then we came to a four-way,
and there was a cop,
so he told me to lay down.
And then he started, like,
putting my hair behind my ear
and stroking my cheek and
He was really nice at first, you know.
I thought he was a nice guy.
He knew my mom.
And then his whole demeanor changed.
He pulled over.
And he got out and got a rope
from the back of the truck.
And then he came around,
and he yanked me around my neck
and dragged me into the woods,
and I started screaming.
And he took off all my clothes,
and he tied my sweater around my mouth
to keep me quiet.
I can see it like it just happened.
And he was above me.
He unzipped his pants.
And then all of a sudden,
some dog started barking.
And they seemed like
they were really close by.
There's a campground nearby,
so he probably assumed that there
was people nearby along with the dogs.
So he got up and ran and left me there.
He did sexually assault me.
And then I untied myself.
Then I ran to the road naked.
And then someone called 911.
That night I had to sit down
and speak with a composite artist,
and I gave her as much detail as I could.
But they never caught him.
So since I was six years old,
I've been looking for him.
I wanted to make sure it didn't happen
to anybody else, any other little girls.
As soon as the internet came around,
it was definitely a game changer.
I started looking at missing people
in Michigan,
but especially near Holland,
near me in Hamilton and areas.
And then you kind of do the rabbit hole
and do your research
and see if there could be a connection.
2013 is when I reached out
to the Facebook page.
And it just kind of seemed odd
to me that Aundria Bowman went missing
the same year as me, the same area as me.
The similarities with Aundria's case,
if she was abducted,
I felt like her kidnapper could be
the guy that kidnapped me.
So I started reading up
on her case more.
And then I saw a picture of Aundria's
adopted father, Dennis Bowman.
Oh my God.
He looks exactly like the guy
that kidnapped me.
I was devastated and horrified.
This is the adopted father of my daughter.
That was very
And so Metta and Carl and I
did a lot of research together.
I was abducted
from the Windmill gas station.
He smelled dirty, like a mechanic,
maybe a paint-ish smell.
Dennis Bowman was employed
in the Macatawa Harbor.
He was a carpenter
and worked on yachts in the harbor.
So Dennis worked
right down the road from there.
And it was like a little after 3:00.
He seemed like he'd just got out of work.
And the route basically went
right by his house,
pretty close to where
I was brought into that campground.
He went to church right up the road
from where he abducted me from.
The red pickup truck I got taken in
was like a faded, old, rusty pickup truck.
We were trying to figure out
whether he drove a red truck,
so we had to ask a relative
of the Bowman family,
and she said,
"Oh yeah. He had a truck like that."
And they actually provided
a photo of that truck.
It looks very similar to the truck
that I was taken in.
It was just as Metta
had described it.
Just too many coincidences.
And then when I heard his voice
So I called the police
right away,
and I said, "Look, my kid's missing."
It was like chills down my back.
The voice, you remember.
Could it be Dennis Bowman is the reason
my child went missing?
I don't know how to say this
in a nice way. Dennis was different.
He made me feel uncomfortable at times.
He's not someone
I wanted to be around.
She told me
that her parents didn't like her.
Something tells me
it was a house of horrors.
Aundria disappeared.
She was gone.
Jeez. Yeah, that's the guy.
Who the hell adopted my daughter?
This whole situation,
this is like a house on fire.
Now, I can either walk past that house
and just not look at
everybody screaming for help,
or I can walk right into that fire,
and I could just let it burn me.
I saw the fire and I walked right in it.
And I won't be out of it
until I get all the way through it.
And so I just knew
I had to go to Michigan.
I had to follow up in Michigan
where Alexis went missing from.
The first time
we went out to Michigan, it was in 2013.
And this will be
the fifth time to Holland.
But we're fully capable
of getting behind the wheel
and getting out there
for as long as it takes to solve this.
Thank goodness I had Eddie.
He didn't know my daughter.
And I honestly think that,
had I not met Ed,
I wouldn't have come looking for Alexis
because I didn't have
that kind of unconditional love.
I feel loved.
- Hi. Good to see you, Cathy!
- Carl Koppelman!
Great to see you again.
Good to see you, Ed.
- Yeah.
- Hey, Carl.
We've been to Michigan with Carl
several times over ten years.
It's very surreal, but it happened
with exactly the right people.
My sleuth and my rock.
-And her support system. Yeah.
-My rock.
A lot of my investigation
was through Facebook,
but you can't get
every little detail you need
unless you can talk to the person.
And so Eddie and I and Carl met people
that would be willing to meet us,
people that I've never met in person.
Sue! Hi. How are you?
Hi.
- Finally.
- I'm so glad to meet you.
- So good to meet you too.
- I know.
I can see your baby in your eyes.
Mmm. Thank you. Thank you.
You came just chiming in
like a sweet little bird.
Because we love her.
I See? Wow.
Can you go into a little bit about how
they'd bring her over to your home?
Yeah, I remember
Aundria sitting on the hearth,
just kind of like this.
Then Brenda would come up and say,
"Well, did you hear what the kid did?
Want me to tell you what the kid did?"
And I'm going like,
"This is your child, supposedly."
And poor Aundria would cross her arms,
or she'd just look up and down and just
Was Dennis there in the room?
Oh, yes. Oh, yes.
She seemed withdrawn and, well, demeaned.
I mean, you're put down and everything.
You're not a happy-go-lucky kid.
I'll be honest with you.
That kind of rocks my world.
I don't want to hear all that stuff.
You know, but I'm here to bear witness,
so I will bear witness.
Hello?
Am I at the home
of Michelle Timmer?
- Hi, Michelle. I'm Cathy.
- Hello.
-Hi.
-Hi, honey. Hi.
- Jennifer.
- Hi. How are you?
Oh, I'm very good. Thank you.
-Are you Kim?
-I am.
- She is!
- Hi.
-How are ya?
-Nice to meet you.
Does my heart good
to see Alexis's friends.
I call her Alexis.
That's okay. Yeah, I understand.
I'm sorry I have to ask both of you
to relive that stuff.
No, it's it's all right.
I remember she was
in the ninth, I was in tenth grade,
and we took the bus to her house,
and we went to go inside,
but she turned around,
and she looked at me, and she said,
"Don't go in. Just wait out here."
And then she went in, and her dad
immediately started chasing her
and yelling and screaming something.
And so she tore off,
and he was right behind her
and grabbed her foot, so she fell down.
And I looked,
and I couldn't see her anymore.
I couldn't They were yelling
and screaming upstairs.
So then on Monday,
when I saw her at school,
I asked her about it and, you know,
she told me that he'd chased her upstairs
and started hitting her
'cause she was late getting off the bus,
which she wasn't late getting off the bus.
I was invited to her house,
and we were just hanging out,
and at dinner time, I remember
the parents were eating hamburgers.
Aundria and I were only allowed
I think what was called
a leftover sandwich.
It was ketchup, mustard, and relish
on two pieces of bread,
and she made a comment that
that's all she was allowed to eat.
- That's what Aundria said?
- Yes, that's what Aundria said.
So Dennis came across the table
right in front of me
and hit her so hard
he almost knocked her out of the chair.
She started bawling her eyes out,
of course.
Brenda sat there and did nothing about it.
She just kept on feeding the baby.
It's like she just turned her back on it
and acted like it didn't even happen.
At this point,
whatever happened, she had had enough,
and so she came home on the bus with me.
My parents were both gone,
so we came up to my room,
and then she stayed in my room,
just hiding from her adoptive parents.
And she stayed for like four days.
I would bring extra food up there
and give it to her
after my family were done eating.
She progressed into telling me
that her adoptive dad,
he'd come in her room at night
and made her do sexual things
that she didn't want to do.
As a 13-year-old,
it's traumatic to hear about,
and I didn't even know what to do
other than, "You need to tell somebody."
So we went back to school the next day.
Aundria and I came off the school bus,
went into the principal's office,
and sat down to talk to the people
in there about what happened to her.
I'm proud of her. That makes me proud.
She was very strong.
She was like me.
Only so much you're gonna put up with.
I remember Aundria and I commiserating
with the problems that we had at home.
So I remember that Allegan County
would come to the school,
and then they would call your parents
to come to the school as well.
They would ask you right there
in the room with your parents,
"Okay, so tell us what's going on."
Well, what are you going to say?
You know, your your parents are sitting
right there in front of you.
You you just look at your parents
and say, "Oh, you know. Nothing."
And so then they just send you
right back home with them.
I went through that too.
One day, there was an argument,
and she turned around and said that,
"Daddy had molested me."
And I told her, I said, "That's a lie."
At the time, we had her in counseling.
And the three of us went in
to talk to the minister.
And he took her in
and talked to her first.
And then he had Denny and I come in.
He says, "Do you have something to say?"
And she just says, "Yeah. I lied."
You know, he told her,
with all of us there, he says,
"Do you realize what kind of allegation
like that could do to your dad?"
She admitted
that nobody touched her.
It was a lie
but she was trying to get her way.
Bring the church in, of course.
If you're gonna go to therapy,
let's go to the church.
Mm-hmm. That's a classic.
She's begging for her life.
She was begging for her life.
All these people just turned a blind eye.
I mean,
the kids did more than the adults did.
The kids lied for her.
The kids snuck her food.
The kids cared about her.
The justice system did nothing for her
but put her right back in that situation.
Just what does that say,
right there,
about how Brenda's reacting to anything
that might take place with her daughter
in regards to Denny
and how he would treat her?
I can understand, when everything is
rolled back to that time
of sitting on the hearth at the fireplace,
that that's what was going on.
She was telling everybody
that she could tell,
and nobody would listen.
But she never came out and said anything
to us, probably thinking, "Why?"
"They won't believe me either."
And it just broke my heart.
We encouraged her to leave,
to get out of the situation,
get out of her house,
and she didn't wanna leave the baby there.
She said,
"No, I have to take care of Vanessa."
We had Trapper Keepers back then.
Aundria kept pictures of the baby
in her Trapper Keeper.
She took care of her all the time.
Changed her diaper, would feed her bottle.
She loved her little sister.
And she was panic-stricken about leaving
her little sister there by herself.
And she told us, you know
Sorry. It's just really sad.
-I understand. I'm sorry.
-But, anyway, she said that, um
She was going to leave
when Vanessa was older and go find,
you know, her real mom.
I think she ran away from home
and just living somewhere
away from her adopted family.
She was probably happy and out there.
Had got away from the situation
and was doing better.
And knowing how bad
she wanted to run away,
I honestly believe it.
Brenda called us and told us
that Aundria had run away.
And the story I got, I didn't hear
anything about her taking money.
- No? Oh, no?
- Or No.
I said, "Did she take anything with her?
Did she take her clothes?"
"Did she take her purse?"
"No, she didn't take anything."
"She didn't take her purse
or makeup. Nothing."
And I'm going like,
I told Craig, I said, "Isn't that odd?"
But I'd talk to Brenda on the phone,
and I'd say,
"You know, well, what what is Denny
How's he feeling about all this?"
Right.
And she goes,
"Well, we can't talk about it
because we get in a fight
as soon as I bring it up."
His demeanor bothered me so much
that I reported it.
I just said, "I'm calling about
Aundria's Bowman's disappearance,
and I think that you ought to
closely look at Dennis Bowman."
The circumstances
around her leaving don't make sense,
and I want answers.
She was supposed to get
the best of the best.
That's what I was told.
And this is what she got.
Oh, it's so infuriating.
That whole
turmoil comes back.
After I put Alexis up for adoption,
I fought suicide for years.
That's what adoption did to me,
and so I don't have any kids.
You know, I wasn't that brave.
And I tell you, honestly,
uh, had I had I been able to keep her,
had I been supported to keep her,
she'd be here right now.
I hate myself for that.
Fuck. Sorry.
Of course I believed
everything my mother told me.
"She'll have a beautiful life."
Sorry.
It's hard to get your dreams,
like, crushed like that.
So I have to live with that.
I have to live with this.
And it is
Rips me to shreds.
And if something happened to Alexis,
I don't think
I could really forgive myself.
I found out about FOIA,
Freedom of Information Act, from Carl.
And what it is is it's a law
that you can get a form,
send them a lot of money,
and they will send you
the whole stack of records.
And so I just FOIA'd Dennis Bowman.
When I found out Bowman's background
like,
you got to be kidding me.
There were two cases
that were included.
One was his arrest for breaking
and entering and stalking a coworker.
When he was caught, they searched his home
and found a duffel bag
containing the woman's lingerie,
a mask to conceal his identity,
and an illegal sawed-off shotgun.
He only ended up serving
like a year in county jail for that.
And then there was a second,
even more violent case, in 1980.
May 23, 1980, he was 31 years old.
Bowman attacked the victim.
She was a teenager.
It was along Lakeshore Drive,
near Kirk Park, in Holland, Michigan.
So questioned by the lawyer,
"What's the first thing that happened?"
Her answer.
"He said, 'Pull over, get off your bike,
and start heading towards the woods.'"
"Then I saw the gun.
And he yelled at me again."
"And he fired the gun past me."
"And he said,
'Goddamn it, get off your bike
and start heading towards the woods.'"
"And he shot the gun towards my foot,
and I saw the dirt fly."
"He told me he was going
to blow a hole right through me,
and he was pointing the gun at me."
"And I turned around
and saw a pickup truck heading south."
"So I waved my arms and tried to make
the person driving the truck stop."
"And I threw my bike
in the back of the truck."
"And she opened the door and let me in."
"And when he was caught,
he told the police,
'You got to let me go. I got to go
pick up my little daughter from school.'"
He went straight to pre-trial?
Right, he was initially charged
with attempted murder
and pled to assault with intent
to commit criminal sexual conduct.
This is the opinion of the judge.
"The court has concluded
that he is a danger to women
if he is not confined."
February 2nd, 1981, sentenced
five to ten years for her attack.
At that time,
Aundria was six years old.
I moved to Kinross
when he was transferred there.
And she always had
this chip on her shoulder.
"Well, all the kids know
I'm a prisoner's daughter."
And I said, "You're not the only one."
Heaven forbid I took that child
into a prison visiting room.
When I found out she was taking
that little girl to the prison, I just
You know
It just it just kind of destroyed me.
He was then released from prison
on January 31st, 1986,
and Aundria,
at that point, was 11 years old.
We were just all shocked
that Brenda stayed with him
with this young girl.
So here my little daughter was,
living with a man on parole
who attempted to murder a teenage girl.
Nobody was there to protect my daughter.
She wasn't adopted into a good family.
I mean,
just look at his history, you know.
And so, by this point, I was convinced
Dennis had done something to Alexis.
I was convinced he'd murdered her.
So Alexis tells other people
that Dennis is molesting her,
and Brenda knows, but doesn't care.
He needed her dead.
I have to prove he did do it.
And if I have to get crazy to shake
everybody up, well, then, so be it.
I'm going to rattle every cage I can find.
The past ten years,
Carl and I, we started traveling
to the Missing in Michigan conference.
And what it is is it's, every year,
all the families
of the missing people get together,
and they sort of air what's going on.
Horrible stories.
Hi. My name's Mary Berlin.
My sister is missing.
I have a missing family member,
Richard Hitchcock.
He's been missing since 1990.
I'm just thankful for everyone
in this room and everyone who shows up.
It's a kind of a support system.
You know, you go check in
with these people once a year.
After 32 years of waiting
and looking for a loved one,
it's a horrible place to be.
And sometimes I feel like
I wish I could find him as an angel
rather than wonder where he is.
The second time
we went to Michigan with Carl was in 2013.
We're a few minutes late.
The circle's already formed.
And I sit down, and Carl goes,
"There's Brenda." And everything stopped.
I had taken this notebook.
Cause I had the suspicion
Cathy was going to be there
and I was going to meet her.
I was going to share pictures.
And I said,
"Today, she has two mothers here."
"I want to thank you for coming, Cathy."
And that's all I said.
I jumped up.
I said, "You tell these people
who your husband is."
And then all of a sudden,
you know, everybody got startled,
and there was a little bit of commotion.
I had had a cup of coffee in my hand
all that morning,
and had I had that cup of coffee,
I'd have thrown it right in her face.
She flung her hand across in front of her,
as if she was slapping her
across the face.
I just went Jerry Springer baby, you know.
She acted like such a
witch.
She screamed and hollered that
because my husband was in prison one time,
he was a monster.
He killed her, and I stood and watched.
We're not that kind of people.
I was a nervous wreck.
I couldn't talk.
I could yell, but I couldn't talk.
So Carl starts talking.
So I stood up,
and I started introducing myself.
Cathy came up behind me
and held up a sign, "Find Aundria Bowman."
So she was standing behind me
holding the sign.
And Carl says, "There's the story
that they're telling you,
and there's the likely story."
And everybody sort
of looked at Brenda like,
"What's the likely story, Brenda?"
You know?
She just started in,
screaming and ranting and raving.
And I says,
"Carl, I was willing to talk to her today,
but not if she's gonna be like this!"
Brenda was kind of upset,
and she says,
"It's a good thing my husband isn't here."
And I said,
"Well, what do you expect me to say?
"We know his record."
"We know he spent five years in prison
for attempting to rape
an 18-year-old girl at gunpoint."
"What are we supposed to think?"
And her response was,
"Well, I haven't forgotten what he did,
but I forgive him,
and I take my marriage vows seriously."
And I just, I can't contain it anymore.
So I just stormed out of the room.
I walked up. I got my candle.
Lit it.
And I thought,
"Well, who's the better mother here?"
"She won't even walk across
stage for her daughter?"
Ugh. I I couldn't do it.
I couldn't be in the room with her.
I got in the car and screamed
like I've never screamed before.
Carl put up with a lot from me.
I'm like fire. He's like ice.
And that's the kind of stuff
that keeps you sane,
that you have somebody
that will put up with you
losing your mind, you know?
When you have to deal with life
in this world of the missing,
there's a real set agenda you have.
I'm slow, but I'm determined.
You talk to the community.
Talk to the people that she knew.
I heard her described as a rebel.
Yeah, that's the way I see Alexis
as far as being a rebel.
"I don't want to conform
to be like everybody else."
"I am my own individual."
You know,
it sounds like my blood.
Yeah?
That's what Carl and I did
in those ten years.
We got the word out.
Dennis felt us. He felt us out there.
He knew we were out there surrounding him.
I think she really changed
the course of which direction
this whole investigation went.
The first time I ever seen a poster
was when you started this up.
I mean, you don't forget her face.
Like your face shape
and your eyes look a lot like Aundria's.
She looks a lot like you.
- Thank you for that. Thank you.
- Yeah.
You know, talking to people
that actually knew Alexis
just makes her more real.
You know, more than
a photograph on a poster.
You are beautiful.
You get yourself in here.
And I just immediately bonded
with Metta.
I know he abducted her
when she was this little six-year-old.
She kind of spurred me on.
I was already angry and motivated,
but once I met Metta,
I was like double that.
We connected on that level.
It's just like
this soul connection.
I always call her my soul mama.
And I love her,
and I don't think any of this
would have happened without her.
Oh, there we go. Now it's gonna
We're going to Hamilton High first?
We're going
to the Bowman house first.
Oh, okay.
Carl and I, we would get a car,
and we would drive to every place
Bowman ever lived,
trying to find something
that I felt proved
Dennis Bowman is responsible
for my daughter's murder.
Now, look to the right
is where the house used to be.
Yeah.
Right here.
This is the house
where Alexis lived, but it got torn down.
Dennis and Brenda moved
out to the property that they live on now,
almost like right after
Alexis went missing.
Which is pretty close to the first home.
It was so odd
with them moving from that corner
because we thought,
"What if she comes back?"
You know, "Where will she go?"
Here they are.
There's the house.
The Bowmans live there.
Oh, somebody's home.
Pull across the road, Carl.
You launch. I'll spot.
Oh, okay.
If anybody starts looking like,
"What in the hell is going on?"
Carl could just drop to his knee and go,
"Will you marry me," you know?
Let's get that drone a flyin'.
Yeah.
Come on, little guy. There it is. Okay.
All the circumstances
just keep pointing at Dennis.
I could just feel it in my bones.
And I was becoming obsessed
with Dennis Bowman's backyard.
I got it now.
Go down where that
that spot right there.
- Yeah.
- You're making my day, man.
Well,
this is Dennis Bowman's backyard.
And I knew about Google Earth, and I just
started looking at the Bowmans' property.
And there was something in the back
of that house that just made me go, like,
"What is that?"
First one I saw was around 2011
that had the oval-shaped thing.
And then that went away.
And then there was just the ground.
Yeah, it looks like there's cement there.
But look at this, Carl.
There's something right there.
What is that?
Why does that keep changing?
What does that mean?
That must mean he's hiding something.
What is he hiding?
My daughter,
she's in that backyard.
I'm doubtful
that he put her remains there
because he lived in a different location
when Aundria disappeared.
Given that there was a wooded area right
across the street from the Bowman house
where they had lived at the time,
the most obvious conclusion,
if he killed her,
was that he took her body
and disposed of it into that wooded area.
And Cathy keeps saying,
"No, she's buried in his backyard."
But I can't reconcile
how he would have killed her and then
five, six months later
put her body in that backyard.
But she's convinced.
My daughter's there.
If you come down here
Right there. Probably 20 feet
off the backside of his house.
I didn't tell her she was crazy
or that that's a stupid theory.
I I just kind of rolled with it.
I just became convinced
he felt like he owned her.
And had the right to kill her.
And had the right to bury her.
And he was going to keep her close.
I mean, that is the most far-reaching,
far-fetched, but it fits.
Prove me wrong, Dennis.
Come on, prove me wrong.
I know what you did, Dennis Bowman.
And I know why you did it.
I called the police, and I said,
"Get a search warrant.
Her body's in the backyard."
You can't just go dig up somebody's yard
because the mom has a feeling, you know.
But Dennis Bowman was
at the top of the list of suspects.
But we didn't have
any witnesses saying he did anything.
We didn't know if she's alive,
if she's dead.
When we started meeting with him,
he was a little standoffish.
He always denied any involvement.
We had nothing to do
with Aundria's disappearance.
I will swear that on a stack of Bibles.
Aundria hasn't been seen
or heard from in a very long time.
My assumption is that she is dead.
I've had that assumption
for a long time.
- But you can't prove it.
- I can't prove it.
How helpless they must have felt, huh?
I'll tell you, I felt pretty helpless.
But I just went like,
"I'm going to get that motherfucker."
So I went billboard.
Billboard will push it in their face,
won't it?
It was on the main road
going from where Dennis lived.
I was taunting him.
"You know I know, Dennis.
You know I know."
Now everybody else is gonna know.
More power to her
getting this going to find answers.
That's amazing that she did this
and pushed so hard.
I was on him on Facebook.
"Your bad karma is breathing
down your neck, Dennis Bowman,
and it's never going to forget your name."
Do you ever worry
about posting stuff like that?
No. Never. Never.
I don't think Dennis Bowman's brave enough
to come after somebody
toe-to-toe with him, you know.
Have you ever been accused
of that before that?
No.
It was shit,
and she was feeding it to everybody.
And she's still feeding it.
The only reason the posters was put up,
just was to hassle us.
Did you take any of 'em down?
No. I want to find her.
I mean, Cathy would write
letters to them on a daily basis.
She would call multiple times a day.
At one point, I called them up,
and, of course, the machine answers,
and I, like, just rip into them
until this machine goes, "Beep."
And I called them right back,
and I ripped into them,
and the machine went, "Beep."
And I called them right back.
"Beep." Do you know they disconnected
their phone that next week?
Cathy may have been
very close to crossing some lines.
That definitely caused us
to have to take a step back
and calm the Bowmans down.
Brenda called Detective Haverdink.
He said that, "Brenda told me
that if you call her again,
she's going to file charges
for harassment."
I wouldn't call that harassment.
I'd call that perseverance and tenacity.
And a pit bull with lipstick.
That's right.
She gave up her kid,
and she comes off like,
"Oh, my poor child.
And we gave her to these monsters."
He had to prove he didn't do it,
or I could stand and scream it
for the rest of my life.
What you gonna do about it?
We won't give up on it. And we're
going to push it, push it, push it.
I was set up at a little desk
in here in the living room,
and it was early in the morning,
and I had been trying to build
the Facebook page a little bit more.
And I was thinking
nothing was ever gonna happen.
And the phone rang,
and I picked it up, and it's Metta.
And the first thing Metta
said was, "They got him."
Somebody from Facebook messaged me
that was friends with the neighbor.
And they said,
"They're at the Bowman property."
"And there are so many police cars
sitting out in his yard."
And I was just like, "Finally"
"they're going to charge Dennis Bowman
for the murder of my daughter."
Six cops come at me out of nowhere.
Slam me against the window
and said I'm under arrest.
They won't tell me what for.
I didn't kill my daughter.
There's no goddamn way.
Thirty-one years ago
she walked out of our life.
We have no idea where she is.
I didn't murder my daughter.
Good morning, Mr. Bowman.
I'm Lieutenant Squyres,
and this is Detective Smith.
Do you know why we're here?
I have no freakin' idea.
- None?
- None.
You've been waiting for me.
You gonna tell me why I was arrested?
Absolutely,
I'm gonna tell you why you were arrested.
I'm the guy that you have been
looking over your shoulder
waiting for to show up
for most of your life.
And now it's here.
Your eyes okay?
Kinda, yeah.
Goody-goody, so you're a Norfolk cop.
That's correct.
You're under arrest
for the homicide in 1980
that you did when you killed
that fighter pilot's wife in Virginia.
You're out of your freakin' mind.
That's why we're here.