Crime Junkie - MISSING: Dawn Mozino
Episode Date: September 8, 2025Police thought they solved Dawn Mozino’s 1989 disappearance when they found out she knew a convicted serial killer. But in her diary, Dawn wrote of not one, but two love triangles that might actuall...y lead police to different suspects. If you have any information on the disappearance of Dawn Mozino on May 22, 1989, please contact the Radnor Township Police at 610-688-5600.And if you have any relevant information on Nick Katona, who lived in Coatesville, PA, in 1989, please email Tips@audiochuck.com. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/missing-dawn-mozino/Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies.Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
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Hi, crime junkies. I'm your host Ashley Flowers. And I'm Britt. And the story I have for you today is the truly mysterious disappearance of a 23-year-old woman from southeastern Pennsylvania. And if you just skim the headlines, you would think that police have had a strong suspect in this case for decades, a twice convicted killer who actually knew our victim. However, we got our hands on this woman's diary. And she wrote of not one.
but two love triangles that might actually lead to a break in the case.
This is the story of Don Mozino.
One day in June 1989, a woman in the Philly suburbs in Kathy sees a report of a missing young woman.
And Kathy studies the picture of a girl with curly brown hair and something about her is so familiar.
Her name is Don Mozino, and apparently, per this report, she's been missing since May 22nd.
Dawn's last known to have clocked out of her shift at Brynmar Hospital, where she serves food to patients.
And it would have been some time at around 3 or 4 p.m. that day.
And Kathy, like, can't believe what she's seeing, because never in a million years does anyone expect that they might have information on a case, right?
She doesn't know Dawn at all, but she does remember seeing a girl who,
looked just like her at a bus stop near the hospital a few weeks ago.
At the time, she was driving her two boys home from school, and one of them actually
pointed to this group of women waiting for the bus, who were all dressed the same,
gray skirts, maroon vests, and a black bowtie.
And that is actually one of the hospital's uniforms.
And here is the kicker.
She specifically remembers seeing Dawn in that group of young women.
But Dawn wasn't talking to the other women.
She was talking to a man standing nearby.
Now, Kathy isn't 100% positive of the date that she saw Dawn because the days can totally
like bleed together if you have the same routine, like picking up your boys from school
and driving them home.
But she doesn't want to risk not giving the information to police, especially if it could
be valuable.
And she definitely does note it was at least around May 22nd.
So she tells police about seeing Dawn, gives them.
The vague description of a guy that she thinks she was talking to,
this black man, maybe in his 30s.
Detective Luther Layton, who everyone calls Lucky, is the lead on Don's case.
And so he wants to ask Kathy if she'll identify him in a photo lineup.
And she's like, absolutely.
How?
Well, because a couple of weeks after Don had gone missing,
police already had someone on their radar.
Through their investigation, they came to realize that in Don's address,
there was an entry that said Tom Hawkins with a number beside it.
Now, his full name was Thomas Hawkins Jr.
And Thomas Hawkins Jr. is a convicted murderer.
Nine years before, he sexually assaulted, stabbed, and strangled a 15-year-old girl named Karen Stubbs.
This was in 1980.
And, Britt, he only served six years for that.
Six?
I know.
It seems like prosecutors couldn't pretext.
premeditation for first-degree murder.
Like, that's why they ended up offering him, like, a deal for third degree in exchange
for a guilty plea.
But still, six years is astounding to me.
Like, this man is clearly dangerous.
So, okay, did Don just run into this guy once, or did she, like, know him?
She knew him.
I mean, at least that's what her mom said.
Like, they actually worked together three or four years before at a local rehabilitation
center.
And what's wild is, like, when they worked together, this dude.
bullied her. Like one day, Dawn's sister, Kath, had to come pick Dawn up from work because
someone was being nasty to her. Turns out it was this guy. After this, Kath like, went and gave
Hawkins a piece of her mind. And then shortly after, Don left that job to go work at the
hospital. So before this witness, Kathy even called the police, they had already brought Hawkins
in. And his story was weird because he says that two months before Don went missing,
she had offered to help him get a job at the hospital she worked at.
Him, the guy who bullied her at their last job together.
Yeah, he says that she had even set up an interview for him on May 12,
which would have been 10 days before she goes missing.
But he says that he never actually showed up for that interview
and that Dawn was really angry with him about it.
But other than that, when they talked to him, he's like,
listen, I have not seen or heard from her since that whole thing, like, again, weeks before.
But guess what?
They came to learn that that story was BS.
The hospital had no record of an interview even being scheduled for Hawkins.
Why would he even lie about the interview?
Well, that's a good question, right?
Like, I'm thinking maybe he was actually near the hospital like Kathy, the witness said,
and he wanted to have a reason for that if police ever figured it out.
But I also don't know because it wasn't even on the same day.
So I don't know, like, if you're going to make up a lie, why make up one that's so easy to dispute?
and also doesn't even make any sense or actually explain anything away.
I mean, I could see him probably trying to, like, distance himself from her
and specifically from her on that date, because the interview that he missed was 10 days earlier, right?
Maybe.
But, like, they didn't know it was a lie at the time, and then they didn't have anything on the guy.
So at that time, they had to let him go.
Okay, so this guy is already on the radar when Kathy calls.
They offer this, like, photo lineup.
Does she recognize him?
So she agrees.
Yes, let's do this photo lineup.
But, by the way, just three days after police had originally talked to him about Don,
this guy actually committed another murder.
What?
Hawkins sexually assaulted, strangled, and stabbed his niece, Andrea Thomas, with a meat fork,
and staged the scene to look like a burglary.
Now, what is interesting is police did not know that it was him who did this at the time.
Like, it ends up taking several months for him to get arrested for that.
But I just wanted you to know, like, we're talking about a bad, bad guy here.
Yeah.
A bad guy that Kathy does ID as the one she said was talking to Don.
Which if, like, that's the guy that she saw,
Dawn probably isn't just a missing person at this point.
No, everyone kind of fears the worst.
But honestly, Hawkins or no Hawkins, the worst-case scenario was already playing out in the minds of Don's
family. Because they know it's not like her to just disappear and not contact them. I mean,
it took them only hours to report her missing because even though Dawn was 23, she had some
learning differences. She actually lived at home with her mom and her sister. Now, she's described
as high functioning, but developmentally delayed. And her sister Kath told us that because of this,
Dawn followed a pretty strict schedule. And if anything changed, she would always let her mom or her
sister, no. So that day that she went missing, her sister Kath said that Don was supposed to
come home after work, let the dog out, and then her plan was to either walk the 20 minutes to her
boyfriend Dan Colb's apartment in Wayne, Pennsylvania, or maybe just hop on like another bus over
there. Now, Dan also had some learning differences, and the two of them had been dating for like three
years. They were both super dedicated to the Special Olympics. Don actually won medals in like all
these different events. And the Special Olympics was something that she really took seriously.
So when she was going over to his place, the two of them were supposed to be like getting together
so that they could go to a practice together down at the local YMCA. But when Kath got home from
work early that evening, she noticed that the dog had not been taken out and there were like
half a dozen voicemails from Dan asking why Don hadn't met him, why she hadn't come to practice.
So all that to say, Don's family was adamant that something was wrong when they filed a missing person's report.
And police actually heard their concerns.
They took the report and then immediately started looking into where she could be, who she could be with, all of that,
which is how they wound up at Tom Hawkins.
And now that he has been IDed by their witness, the detective on Don's case gets a search warrant for his apartment in Philadelphia.
Now, there's nothing they find there that directly ties him to Dawn, but they do seize a stack of detective magazines.
And it's interesting because they say that they're all underlined and like dog-eared on articles about new police practices and tactics, stuff like that.
So Detective Lucky thinks that maybe this guy was like making notes on how to get away with murders.
Right.
Now, fast forward a little bit, they end up connecting.
Hawkins to the murder of his niece, and he finally gets arrested and taken to trial on that,
which only makes everyone more suspicious of him in connection to Don's disappearance,
so much so that Don's family attends every single day of the court hearings,
because they are fully convinced that Hawkins did something to Don,
and if police can't get him on that, at least they hope he'll go away and pay for this crime, right?
He'll be off the streets, which he does.
The jury convicts Hawkins of first-degree murder, which, like, in my mind, you must have been a terrible study of those magazines, which, by the way, they fully brought up at trial because his DNA and fingerprints were all over the crime scene.
And so after the verdict, Hawkins is sentenced to death.
And this gives Detective Lucky an idea.
He sees this as kind of a unique opportunity.
He basically goes to the prosecutor, Bruce Castor, and says, look, I think that.
This is our guy, but I got nothing.
Would you be open to taking the death penalty away if he gives us information about Don?
Like, her family just wants some closure.
And Bruce agrees, which to me, like, this is an offer that even the dumbest criminal would take if they could.
Like, if I was facing the death penalty for a case where they have me dead to rights, like, forget appeals.
Like, I try to be confessing to anything.
But I don't think it's just like a confession they want, right?
What they said is they want information.
I think they want to know, like, where she is, what happened.
But he says he has no information to give because he had nothing to do with Dawn's disappearance.
He's sticking to that.
Now, Hawkins, to this day, is still sitting on death row because Pennsylvania's governor put a moratorium on the death penalty.
But in all this time, he has never come close to confessing to anything relating to Don's disappearance.
You know, it is interesting to me that Don's case seems to be so different.
And I say scenes because I guess we don't really know what happened to her, right?
She's never been found.
We can't say that it's like not the same MO, but his other two victims, like...
They were found quickly, yeah.
Found quickly, not even hidden.
And you're right.
So I know we don't know what happened to Dawn, but we do know a lot about his other crimes.
And what we know is like he knew both of the victims, which is the same for Dawn, right?
And like his first victim, Karen, she lived in the same apartment complex.
as his parents. And so, like, they met each other on a few different occasions. And then, obviously, Andrea was his niece. We know that he sexually assaulted and killed both of them in their homes and then staged both crime scenes to look like robberies. And so, like I said, while he knew Don and that piece is the same, her home doesn't appear to be any kind of crime scene.
He didn't, as far as we know, he didn't stage anything. Yeah. Honestly, it seems like she never even made it home after. Right. And interestingly, Dawn is a
about a decade older than his two other victims,
which I think could factor in if Hawkins' crimes are sexually motivated toward adolescent girls.
But is that enough to rule him out for Dawn?
Not to Detective Lucky.
He is still convinced of Hawkins' guilt.
But what if he didn't do it?
I mean, I get why they would think that.
What are the odd that she knew a now twice convicted killer and he didn't have anything to do with it?
But like, what if they were right and wrong?
What if a convicted murderer did have something to do with her disappearance,
but they were just looking at the wrong one?
In 2001, Detective Lucky gets the shock of his career
when he reads the front page headline of the Delaware County Daily Times,
and it says, did Bennett kill Dawn?
Now, per this article that he's seeing, for the first time,
The detective.
Yes.
Cool.
It's basically saying that a guy in prison named Gerald Bennett had written a letter to the paper confessing to Dawn's murder.
And let me preface this by saying, Gerald is the actual worst.
He's in prison for strangling his 33-year-old girlfriend, Roxanne Carolyn Lydie, to death.
And then sexually assaulting her 13-year-old daughter at knife point for nearly five hours right after.
And this was in 1999, so like 10 years after Dawn's disappearance.
And this, I don't know that I've ever dropped an MF or like on an episode,
but this man even self-published a book arguing that he is innocent of the crime
and accusing the 13-year-old, a literal child of killing her own mother.
Okay, when you said the actual worst, I thought that was hyperbolic, but the actual worst.
Now, in this letter that he writes to the paper, he says that he met Dawn in May of 1989
while he was applying for a job at the hospital where she worked, which is eerily similar
to Hawkins' story.
Yeah.
I don't know what to make of that.
It seems like just a weird coincidence.
Now, there aren't a ton of details in the letter, and even though they clearly didn't
reach out too lucky, the detective, the paper did get Bruce Castor, the prosecutor.
responding on record saying, quote,
if Bennett takes authorities to the body,
then I will publicly apologize to Tommy Hawkins
for indicating that I think he's the killer of Don Mozino.
That's pretty bold.
Yeah, especially for a guy who, like,
would go on to ascend the political ladder.
I mean, he eventually became the acting attorney general of Pennsylvania.
And it turns out Bruce called this guy's bluff.
Gerald isn't able to lead them to Don's remains.
He can't really even give them any verifiable information on what he says happened.
So according to the Philadelphia Inquirer, police determined that he was in an entirely different state when Dawn disappeared.
Then why lie out of the blue like that?
He was looking at life and prison or the death penalty, and I think trying to save his skin by giving false information in a high profile missing person's case.
The judge in Gerald's case called him, quote,
the most dangerous, remorseless, callous defendant I have seen in my 20 years as a judge, unquote.
Which I feel like I can't disagree, but now with Dawn's case, they're back to Hawkins?
Honestly, never really got off him. And again, I get why.
But I also, again, ask, what if the obvious thing distracted police from the real thing?
What if for all these years people ignored the one clue that Dawn herself left behind?
Her diary.
In this diary, which she seems to have started just three months before her disappearance,
Dawn doesn't mention Hawkins once.
She certainly doesn't say anything about Gerald Bennett.
What Don does write about is cheating on her boyfriend, Dan.
From her writings, it seems like Dawn had been getting.
a little bored in her relationship with Dan.
And somehow, while in this unsatisfied state,
she meets this guy named Nick Cotona.
I don't really know how,
but she devotes most of the pages of her diary
to venting about her complicated feelings for Dan and Nick.
We actually have a copy of Don's diary,
which we're going to put in the fan club app if you want to see it.
But Dawn's sister Kath actually read some parts of her diary
allowed for us to share.
Wednesday, the 22nd of March, 1989,
the day after I saw Nick,
I like him so much.
The only thing is I still have feelings for Dan.
I love him.
Tuesday, the 25th of April, 7.51 p.m.
But really, what do I do?
I'm lonely.
Dan will never come up here I know now.
He said he will, but I know he won't,
and I feel so bad.
When he finds out that all this time I've seen,
see Nick, he'll be so angry. Oh, well, he won't find out. I'll keep it from him. No problem. As long as
he doesn't see this diary. Wow. Look at how many entries I've made. Did her sister know about Nick?
No one in her family really knew about Nick. I mean, Kath said that, like, they knew who he was.
He came to the house a couple of times. She knew Don was friends with this guy, but she had no idea
that Don was involved with him romantically. Here's the catch, though. Police
did. They had this diary from the jump. And sometime in the 2010, so this is after Detective Lucky
had retired and this new guy was on Don's case, Detective McGuire. He lets Kath see the diary.
That's how she found out for the first time. Wow. Which I'm sure was like so disorienting for her
because for as long as she remembers, she believed the same thing as police that Hawkins probably
did something to her sister. But these writings, I don't know, she sees something.
something more in them than police clearly do, like call it a sister's intuition, whatever.
But she saw that Nick was clearly dominating Dawn's thoughts from March 1989 right up until
her disappearance in May. And it's clear from her entries that Nick did not treat her very
well. Wednesday the 12th of April 1989, 938 p.m. Hi. Well, now Nick is on my list. He's
He told me he was going to see me, and he didn't call me or stop by.
He had done this.
I don't know how many times.
He stole my heart, and now I want it back if he's going to keep on doing this.
I mean, I really liked him, and so he has to do this all the time.
Nick called me at 9.30 a.m. this morning and told me he was going to call me later,
but he, of course, not.
It pisses me off so much.
It seems like Dawn would drop everything to be with Nick, and Nick kind of just kept stringing her along.
basically like booty calling her.
He's not taking Don on wholesome dates.
He's taking her to hotels to have sex.
So Don talks in her diary about how she's getting frustrated.
Like she is clearly infatuated with Nick,
but she knows that she shouldn't be treated like this.
She also can't stop.
There's this moment where Don writes that she's listening to the song
Every Rose Has Its Thorn by Poison on Reapy,
which is like a tape she said she bought because it reminded her of Nick,
which just, like, sends me back.
I would say it's such a relatable moment.
I mean...
It's like you and I, like, when you're in middle school,
we'd, like, lay in your guest room
and just sing Carolyn Don Johnson.
I'd just say, complicated.
So, yeah.
Anyway, so after who knows how long of this,
but at least three months of entries,
she and Nick seem to be on the fritz come May when she disappears.
And police never talked to this Nick guy.
No, here's the thing.
They did.
Once, Radner police confirmed to,
us that they brought Nick in for an interview. But they wouldn't tell us when that was or what was
asked or what was answered or not answered. Or anything. Yeah. And we tried to get the case file
for Dawn's case, but our FOIA was denied because police said that it is an active investigation.
Okay. Then what about Dan? Like, did they look at him at all? Maybe he found out about Nick,
confronted Don, things got out of hand. No, so Dan isn't really considered a suspect at all,
like by anyone, including Kath.
He has a solid alibi.
I mean, A, there are all those voicemails
that he left on Don's answering machine.
Keep in mind, this is the 80s.
So they're either coming from his apartment
or pay phone.
Landline, yeah.
And then someone at the YMCA
confirmed that Dan did attend
the Special Olympics practice that night.
And Kath told us that she knows Dan really well.
He is this really sweet man
who get this, still calls Dawn's mom
every single evening
for the past 36 years.
years to say good night. And the thing that really sticks with me that I was so surprised by
is he wouldn't even have a motive because Kath says that to this day, Dan still doesn't know
that Don was cheating on him. As Kath told us, like, they didn't want to break his heart. And I,
like, when I heard that, I was like, we're putting this out. I was going to say, like,
should we be saying this right now? I checked with our reporter and she took to the family. I was
like, listen, like, someone needs to tell him before this episode comes out.
But we talked this up and down with Kath, and she said she's confident that he is not going to hear this, and it's not going to get back to him.
She says he doesn't even know what a podcast is. He doesn't have a smartphone. So he is living in a very, like, sheltered bubble.
So all this to say that Dan was and is quickly ruled out. Nick, on the other hand, is a different story.
After Kath reads her sister's diary, she really pushed police to explore the lead on Nick Moore.
Like in all this time, things with Hawkins hadn't progressed at all.
And it's not like he was going anywhere.
So like, let's just be sure, right?
Make sure every other avenue is explored to ensure nothing was missed and that if Hawkins is still where we end up, like in the end, so be it.
Yeah, he's right here.
We know where he is.
Yeah, but like might as well.
Right? But when she's pushing for this, Detective Maguire drops a bombshell.
He tells Kath that Nick had actually taken his life in September 2011,
which is before she is now coming to him asking for this.
So now they're like there's nothing we can do.
I mean, that seems like it might be like relevant information to have before now.
At the time, they didn't have any details for Kath about the circumstances around or leading up to his death.
Which, mind you, was over 20 years after Dawn disappeared.
But yeah, I mean, to say that Kath didn't have some follow-up questions, like, that seemed to have not been asked.
Like, that's an understatement.
And so this in 2013 is where she kind of becomes at odds with not just police, but her own family a little.
Because Dawn's mother is still in the Hawkins camp with police.
And Kath thinks that they've been so focused on Hawkins that they've been neglecting to follow up on other important leads like this one.
So by 2023,
Capp ends up working with a former social worker
turned civilian criminologist named Clark Williams,
who's pretty legit, like he's helped solve some cold cases.
And Clark starts his investigation with Dawn's diary
and methodically tracks down almost everyone Dawn ever mentions,
including Nick's family since Nick isn't around.
And really, he was reaching out to them,
most of all, to find out what contributed to Nick's death.
And his family told Clark that he was in love with a woman who had a serious illness.
And when that woman died, Nick just couldn't go on.
They also say, and I find this part real interesting, that he never mentioned anyone named on to them ever.
Okay.
I mean, even if Nick didn't want to get into, like, his sex life with his parents, you're telling me someone you know goes missing.
Yeah.
They're all over the news.
Didn't even mention her as like a friend.
And you don't say anything.
It makes you wonder, right?
Like, why wouldn't Nick go to the police when his friend goes missing?
Like, why not tell your family that your friend is missing?
Like, you were clearly, like, in the same orbit.
Even if you didn't do anything, like, could you offer information?
Yeah, I mean, it doesn't sound like, from the diary, at least, Nick was taking the relationship seriously.
So maybe he wasn't taking it seriously at all.
Like, he didn't think that it mattered.
Yeah, maybe.
But it also makes me think about the fact that Nick would sometimes randomly
They like show up at her house unannounced when it was convenient for him.
So like, I don't know, maybe he showed up at the hospital or the bus stop and picked her up that day she disappeared.
And, you know, because of her strong feelings for Nick, it's possible that Don might blow off other plans to hang out with him.
And then maybe something happened between them.
They got in a fight or Don confronted him about like being a total flake.
I mean, all of these are just like, I'm just like spitballing.
These are theories.
But, I mean, as we know, theories that no one even looked into by this point.
And it's all speculation. There's nothing to suggest that's what actually happened.
But again, we have to speculate because police did not do the legwork that we can actually like cross any of this off.
Did they search his car? Did they search his place? Did they do anything but talk to him one time TBD, who knows when?
I mean, did Nick have any kind of record over the years? Anything that would indicate he was capable of doing something to Don?
We tried looking it up. So I don't know a whole lot about Nick or who he was in the years after 1989.
On his official record, we found that he got a DUI in 1992, which is three years after her disappearance.
And then in 1996, Nick's charged with reckless endangerment, simple assault, and terroristic threats.
I'm not sure what the story is behind these charges because our attempts to get the records were denied.
And Nick's father has passed away.
His mother didn't respond to our request for comment.
So we're here.
We were here.
So actually, I mean, this is a good point to call out.
Like, if anyone out there listening new Nick Cotona in Coatsville, PA in 1989, like, would love to hear from you.
Tips at Audiochuk.com.
Now, the one problem I have with this Nick angle is Motif.
I mean, he seemed like a kind of grade A-a-a-hole, right?
Like, who I wouldn't want my sister to date.
But, I mean, like everything we know just kind of makes it seem like, like you said, he didn't care about Dawn.
Yeah, almost to the point where he wouldn't have done something like this because he's,
he didn't care about her enough to act on anything.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, and that's what I'm saying.
I don't know if he had another partner.
Like, was he having an affair or, like, you know, the way she had a boyfriend?
But we don't see any evidence in her diary or anything that Don was, like, threatening him in any way.
So it doesn't feel like there's a real reason that he would need her out of the picture.
But there was someone else mentioned in Don's diary who was having an affair, who Don had threatened.
to expose and who really needed Dawn to go away.
From her writings, it is clear to the criminologist Clark that for the most part, Dawn lived
out her life in like this five-mile radius.
She would hang out at the Kmart with a group of friends near Dan's apartment in Wayne,
Pennsylvania, and at the local Wawa.
Our reporter Jennifer Amel even took a drive with Kath to all the areas that Don would frequent,
And they trace the route that Dawn would usually take from her house,
her short cut through the park, past where Dan lived, and then to Kmart.
And this was the hub of her social life.
That is where she met her best friend Carol, who has a similar learning disability.
Now, Carol is mentioned in Dawn's diary.
And basically, what happens is Dawn finds out a few months before her disappearance
that Carol is seeing a married man named Hampton.
Now, one thing I haven't mentioned about Don is that she was quite religious.
She grew up Catholic, and she would go to church often and belonged to a few Bible studies.
And it's interesting because Dawn never wrote about her own affair with Nick behind Dan's back as something sinful.
But Kath thinks that Don would have probably viewed Carol's affair with Hampton as something more serious because he was married.
So Don actually had gone to, per her diary, gone to Hampton.
gone to Hampton's wife and told her about the affair.
Oh, and I can't imagine Carol and Hampton were, like, thrilled about that.
No, I mean, Dawn probably thinks she's doing the right thing here.
But yeah, Carol and Hampton are really mad at her for this.
So Kath thinks that maybe there was some kind of confrontation about this between Hampton, his wife, and Dawn.
But there is no solid evidence of this, and Dawn doesn't write about any specific incident in her diary.
We do know, however, that Dawn's very last entry before she disappeared is about this situation.
Her last diary entry is on May 17, 1989.
This is five days before her disappearance.
And, Brett, I'm going to have you read it for me.
Well, these few days have been hell with Carol and Hamp.
They're getting more in trouble, plus his wife is asking for things I know, which really isn't that much.
Other than that, everything is okay.
Dan is such a honey. Nick is a bastard. That's all it is. Well, I guess I'm going to go. Talk to you later. Don.
So the literal last thing Dawn writes is that Hampton's wife is trying to get more information out of Dawn about her husband's affair. And by the way, it's worth pointing out that Hampton had an apartment right down the road from Dan and the Kmart where we know she hung out. And Hampton is a black man. So if the witness Kathy really did see Don on the 22nd,
And she really was talking to a black man, and it wasn't Hawkins, could it have been Hampton?
Do they ever find out if Don got on the bus that day or, like, talked to the people who would have been waiting at the stop at the same time?
They were all, like, in the same hospital uniform.
I assume they knew each other.
We don't really know.
So because we don't have the files, all we know is that police did interview the bus driver.
Like, the guy who did that route, he didn't remember seeing Don get on.
But, like, I mean, that's just relying on a guy's memory who sees probably hundreds of people passing each day.
And would Hampton have known where Don live?
Because if she did get on the bus and made it to Wayne,
like she could have been intercepted before she even gets home.
Here's the thing.
I know Carol, who is best friends with Dawn, definitely knew where she lived.
So she could have told Hampton whether he knew outside of that or not.
So, yeah, if Don made it to Wayne, as she usually would after work,
Hampton would know exactly when and where to, like, bump into her on her walk home.
But, yeah, to your point, it would have had to have either been,
at the bus stop, like before she got on, or at the bus stop after she got off,
but before she got to her house.
Because the consensus is she never actually made it back inside her house the day she went missing.
Right, because the dog hasn't been let out, the voicemails, etc., etc.
And did the police ever question Hampton?
So Kath told us that police have spoken to both Carol and Hampton several times over the years,
though, by the way, the two have long stopped seeing each other.
But she told us that police recently interviewed Hampton and said that they,
They are currently not looking into him any further, but have not officially ruled anyone out.
Kath also tells us that Carol's brother is actually a detective in the next town over.
So Carol would cooperate with police whenever they wanted to ask questions, but she would always bring her brother with her and being a good brother and hip to police tactics and sensitive to Carol's disability.
Her brother has advised her to say as little as possible to understand.
Okay. And what about Hampton?
Like, we still have another player here.
Did they stay together?
I actually want to talk to her more than anyone since, like, she's the one trying to get Dawn to give her more information right before she went missing.
The thing is, she passed away in 2021.
In her obituary, her family said that she was diagnosed with diabetes when she was nine and it was like she was in and out of nursing homes all her life due to that.
And despite Hampton's unfaithfulness, they actually stayed together until her death.
And we tried to get a hold of Hampton, of course, but we weren't able to.
Kath also told us that over the years, she would run into Carol around town.
One time, actually, in the grocery store, Kath, like, turned into the aisle, saw Carol.
Carol, like, stopped, dead in her tracks, stared at Kat, and then, like, turned around, like, quickly to avoid her.
I don't know what Kath makes of this other than it was odd, and it's, like, stayed with her.
But, like, it was something that she brought up to us, so I just wouldn't.
to share. And listen, I think these new lines of inquiry coming from the diary are really
interesting. But Clark doesn't want to get tunnel vision. So he's still working on even more
different leads. Like he learned from Dan that he used to work at the Kmart they all hung out
at. And apparently there was this guy called Maurice Beale, who worked there too and would hang
around their group. Dawn knew him, but not super well. But it turns out that more
Maurice had a long criminal history.
From 1990 to 1994, Maurice was convicted of drug possession, criminal conspiracy, and assault.
He also had reckless endangerment and false imprisonment charges, but those ended up getting dropped.
And then in 2003, he's charged with the most serious crime, sexually abusing his then-girlfriend's eight-year-old daughter,
and stabbing her big sister multiple times when she tried to escape him.
Thankfully, Big Sister survived.
Maurice went to court for these charges,
but was never convicted because the judge declared a mistrial.
And I find this interesting because on the surface,
when you look at the victim type, you're like,
oh, eight-year-old girl, 20-something woman, very different, right?
But I've seen in past cases that a certain type of predator
preys on those who they deem weaker
or like easily manipulated.
So you might see the same perp go after the elderly and children and those who are disabled.
So what if Maurice thought that he could target Dawn because of her disability and then maybe
really underestimated her?
I don't know.
As of now, Maurice is incarcerated for another assault and harassment charge.
We did reach out to him as well, but he hasn't responded.
And we also sent a letter to Tom Hawkins in prison, but we just sent a letter to Tom Hawkins in prison,
but we didn't hear back from him either.
Ultimately, there's no solid evidence
tying any of these people to Dawn's disappearance.
So where does that leave the case, Kath, her sister now?
Well, I mean, like I said,
the old-timers still have their money on Hawkins.
And I get why.
Because if Kathy's ID really was right
and she really saw Hawkins on the 22nd,
then he is one of the last,
if not the last person, to see Dawn alive.
Bruce, the prosecutor, even has a framed newspaper clipping of the Hawkins trial with the headline, Hawkins' sentence to die.
So it's not like it's water under the bridge for him.
And Bruce told us that he is still convinced to this day that Hawkins abducted and killed Dawn.
He is just confidently waiting to be proven right.
Now, there is a new detective on Don's case now, Detective Brian Bell.
And Kath tells us that this guy's finally going down all the rabbit holes that police should have.
gone down back when this was still fresh in people's minds. And though Detective Bell declined to
comment on the record, my impression is that while he respects where the investigation has been,
he is also trying to come at this from like a very different angle and explore the unexplored,
so to speak. And the Mozino family is thrilled to have a detective who is doing the hard
work to look at past previous biases. The reality is it's been 36 years. And the Moseon
You know, family still doesn't know where Dawn is.
They know nothing more today than the day she stepped out of work and vanished.
So they're taking every tip that comes their way, even the ones that might seem far-fetched to some people.
Like one that came about two years ago.
That's when Kath was contacted by what's called a remote viewer, which is a person who says they'll psychically find where missing loved ones are located.
And listen, like, Kath was skeptical, but like, what does she have to lose at this point?
Well, this remote viewer zeroed in on one particular park and gave this very detailed description.
And Kath thinks that the park that this remote viewer described was an exact match to the one that Dawn would cut through to get to the Kmart or the Wawa,
the park that's nestled between the apartment buildings where Dan and Hampton lived.
It's also right down the street from the house that Carol lived in.
And did they know anything about this park beforehand?
No. According to Kath, not much.
Like all she says the remote viewer was given was the FBI's Vi-CAP report,
which had Don's name, picture, height, wait, that's it.
And just to be clear, is the remote viewer saying that Don's remains are in this park
or just something happened there?
This is like an important park to the case.
Like what?
She thinks that's where her remains are.
And listen, I'm in the nothing to lose camp.
If we can get a search done in this area, what would it hurt?
I mean, the park isn't too big.
There's like a playground and a baseball diamond, and it's a highly residential area.
There are pockets of dense foliage where human remains could possibly be hidden.
But also like committing a crime here and not having anyone see or hear anything is pretty far-fetched unless it was in the middle of the night or it happened somewhere else and maybe she was just disposed up there.
Because whatever happened to dawn, we know had to have happened in the late afternoon.
For her part, Kath is a bulldog for her sister's case.
She actually contacted us to cover this story,
and I'm glad that we can do our small part to bring awareness to Dawn's case.
Kath says that she has had this recurring dream.
She's driving through this neighborhood in Wayne, just past the park,
and there, walking up the hill is Dawn.
Kath pulls the car over, tells her sister to get in.
But for some reason, Don won't answer.
Won't even like look at her.
She just keeps walking up the hill.
And then Kath wakes up.
If you have any information on the disappearance of Don Mozino on May 22, 1989,
please contact the Radnor Township Police at 610-688-6-600.
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