Dark Downeast - The Murder of Christine Hurlburt (Massachusetts)
Episode Date: May 7, 2026It started like so many Saturday nights at Mountain Park – music, crowded dance floors, and teenagers trying to stretch the night a little longer before heading home. But sometime before midnight on... October 5th, 1968, a teenager stepped out of that crowd and into the dark, beginning a walk she would never finish. In the days after she disappeared, there were delays, missed opportunities, and details that didn’t always line up. Some witnesses came forward, while others stayed quiet, and critical information surfaced only long after it might have made a difference. This case has been stagnant for far too long…And it’s time that changes. If you have information about the murder of Christine Hurlburt, please contact the Massachusetts State Police Detective Unit at 413-505-5941 or the State Police Unresolved Cases Unit at 1-855-MA-SOLVE. You can also text the word SOLVE to 274637. View source material and photos for this episode at: darkdowneast.com/christinehurlburt Dark Downeast is an Audiochuck and Kylie Media production hosted by Kylie Low. Follow @darkdowneast on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok To suggest a case visit darkdowneast.com/submit-case Did you know you can listen to Dark Downeast ad-free? Join the Crime Junkie Fan Club! Visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/fanclub/ to view the current membership options and policies. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It started, like so many Saturday nights at Mountain Park.
Music, crowded dance floors, and teenagers trying to stretch the night a little longer before
heading home.
But sometime before midnight on October 5, 1968, a teenager stepped out of that crowd and into
the dark, beginning a walk she would never finish.
In the days after she disappeared, there were delays, missed opportunities, and details that
didn't always line up.
Some witnesses came forward, while others stayed quiet and critical information surfaced only long after it might have made a difference.
This case has been stagnant for far too long, and it's time that changes.
So let's talk about it.
I'm Kylie Lowe and this is the case of Christine Hurlbert on Dark Down East.
It was the night of Saturday, October 5th, 1968, and just as it was on many Saturday nights before this one,
The ballroom at Mountain Park in Holyoke, Massachusetts, was packed to the brim with teenagers dancing to live rock and roll music.
The main season at the popular amusement park was almost over, but that holiday weekend, the fun and merriment carried on late into the night.
The place was packed with more than 800 people crowded inside, everyone from locals to out-of-towners, all cutting a rug to the music echoing out into the fall air.
Among the hundreds of attendees in the ballroom that night was 15-year-old Christine Hurlbert.
According to reporting by Charles E. Godoo for the Morning Union, she had left the dance with friends
once already, but she returned some time before walking out again. This time, she was alone
and on foot. Christine had options for leaving the dance that night. She'd reportedly been offered
several rides home, but for reasons that have never been publicly explained, she turned them down.
That decision would become one of the quiet haunting details of the case.
If Christine was intending to walk home that night, it would have been about three miles,
first down Mountain Park Road, a dark street flanked by trees on both sides,
and then more than half of the distance on Route 5 before she reached her home on Franklin Street.
She was last seen walking near a bridge that crossed over Route 91, not far from the park,
around 1135 p.m.
But wherever Christine was going, she didn't make it home that night.
Her mother, Dorothy, wasted no time reporting her missing, but at first, there was no clear
sign that anything was wrong.
By Monday, with still no sign of Christine, Dorothy went to the mayor's office looking
for answers, asking what more could be done.
According to reporting by the Springfield Republican, Christine's mother was told something
that even for the time felt dismissive.
Christine had probably just run away, the mayor said.
She would come back or turn up soon enough.
Behind the scenes, though, the response was more active than that statement suggested.
The mayor called in the police chief who explained that there was already a significant effort underway to find her,
more than what was typically done in cases involving missing teenagers, according to the chief.
Still, there were delays.
Police intended to organize a search of the area where Christine was last,
seen walking, but they struggled to gather enough people to do it properly, so the effort kept
getting pushed back. By the time a plan started to take shape, the next Saturday dance was
approaching and the heavy traffic it would bring to the Mountain Park area, Mady's search,
impractical. The search was postponed once again, this time to Sunday, more than a week
after Christine disappeared. A local rescue group called React was scheduled to search the wooded
areas near Mountain Park on October 13th, but Christine's family wasn't just sitting and waiting.
They simply couldn't. In the days before any organized search began, her father, Thomas,
and her 17-year-old brother Michael went out looking for Christine themselves. They walked the same
roads and pushed through surrounding wooded areas looking for any sign of her. With the search
still delayed and no police supervised effort underway, the hurlbards were left to do it all on their
own. A family should never have to take that on. A father and brother should never be put in the
position to make such a devastating discovery. But the day before the coordinated search effort was
set to begin, that's exactly what happened. Just before 2 p.m. on Saturday, October 12,
Thomas discovered his daughter's body in a wooded area off the access road leading to Mountain
Park. She was lying in heavy brush, about 30 feet from the west side of the road, and only about
10 feet inside the tree line.
The location was chilling in its proximity,
just several hundred yards from the same road
where Christine had last been seen walking a week earlier.
Christine was found nude except for a sweater
that had been twisted around her neck.
A blouse had been placed over the lower part of her body.
Daniel C. Boyle reports for the transcript telegram
that a trampled path through tall grass
led from the road to the spot where she was discovered
and several items of clothing were found nearby, including her shoes, stockings, and underwear not far from her head.
It was not immediately clear whether Christine had been killed where she was found or if her body had been left there after the fact.
However, initial findings painted a violent picture.
Medical examiner Dr. Edmund J. Zelensky said Christine had suffered multiple blows to the head and neck
and that she died from asphyxiation due to manual strangulation.
Investigators also believed she may have been sexually assaulted,
though a full autopsy report was still pending to confirm that and provide additional information.
One of the most critical questions, when she died, remained unanswered.
There was early speculation that Christine may not have been in that location the entire time she was missing,
and that she may not have been dead for the full week.
Part of that theory came from the fact that her father and brother said they'd already searched those same wooded areas in the days before her body was found and saw nothing.
On top of that, several dozen students from Smith College had been hiking in the area just days earlier, walking on both sides of the road and through the woods, and they didn't see anything either.
Investigators reasoned that if Christine or her belongings had been there at that time, it would have been difficult.
to miss. Her shoes, for example, were found just eight to ten feet from the shoulder of the road.
The questions were just beginning, but the loss was already being felt in every corner of the
small town. Christine was a sophomore at Holyoke High School. By all accounts, she was the kind of
student teachers remembered for the right reasons. Her school principal described her as a
representative young lady, very good and calm and quiet in class.
The Dean of Girls at the school echoed that, saying Christine was a very good school citizen.
She was very friendly and got along well with all teachers and students.
In the days after her body was found, that picture of who she was became even clearer in the way the community responded.
Jim Griffin reports for the transcript telegram that more than 400 people attended her funeral.
Classmates, teachers, friends and neighbors filled the John B. Shea funeral home and Sacred Heart Church,
a large crowd all coming together to mourn a girl whose life had been cut short.
As the community grieved, investigators were working against time,
trying to piece together Christine's final movements before memories faded and leads went cold.
They confirmed that Christine had gone to the dance at Mountain Park,
left with friends at one point, returned,
and later left again on foot by herself,
and she was, in fact, last seen walking near the bridge over Route 91.
There's little detail about that final sighting, though.
Investigators have not publicly stated who saw her walking or any other circumstances about her condition at that point.
Investigators acknowledged the possibility that she may have gotten into a car somewhere along her walk,
but no one had come forward to confirm it and no physical evidence pointed to where she might have gone next.
Dozens of people were questioned, including friends who had been with her that night.
One female friend was interviewed for several hours in the early morning of October 14th,
but that conversation reportedly did not produce any meaningful leads.
Even so, investigators reported that they were developing encouraging leads via other avenues.
They looked into a report of a stolen car that had been taken from South Holyoke on the same night Christine disappeared
and was later recovered in nearby Westfield.
At first, it was considered a possible connection.
but within a few days that lead was ruled out.
Then there were more unsettling tips.
One came from a nearby resident
who reported being woken up by a barking dog
in the early morning hours on the day Christine was found.
When the tipster looked outside,
they saw a young man, maybe in his 20s,
walking away from the same wooded area
where her body was recovered.
Police followed up on the tip
and searched the area again,
perhaps looking for evidence that might connect,
a 20-something man to the area?
Investigators went so far as to develop a description of the guy,
but it was never released publicly.
As the investigation continued,
speculation circled back to one of the most important details in the case,
spurred on by newspapers that seemed to be dueling
for the most compelling front-page headlines.
A Springfield newspaper The Morning Union reported on October 17th
that Dr. Zelensky had determined Christine died just eight
to 36 hours before her body was found, suggesting that she may have been alive for several
days after she was last seen. The report cited observations about skin condition, rigor mortis,
and the absence of animal activity. If accurate, this was a major point in the case. It meant
Christine could have been alive for the days after she disappeared. But that's the thing,
because officials quickly called out the newspaper for running an unverified time of death.
Dr. Zelensky himself challenged the claim printed in the newspaper,
he denied ever making that statement,
and told a different local newspaper that he had not yet received the full pathology report
and could not provide any conclusions.
Holyoke Detective Captain Adrienne E. Monty went further,
calling the report wild and irresponsible,
and completely unfounded.
Despite that, the Morning Union stood by its reporting,
publishing a follow-up article citing unnamed witnesses,
who claimed there were signs at the scene suggesting rigor mortis
had not fully set in when Christine was found,
again suggesting she died closer to that day than the day she disappeared.
The conflicting reports only added to the uncertainty and noise
during the early days of the investigation
when the full attention of police and the public and the press
should have been on Christine and Christine alone.
Yet tension between police and the press only continued to swell.
The relationship quickly turned strained and at times openly hostile.
On October 24th, the Morning Union ran a pointed headline.
Looks like Holyoke's chief sleuth wants to solve it all by himself.
It was an obvious direct jab at Detective Captain Adrian Monty.
The article quoted a police officer who spoke to a reporter who had Jessman asked to leave the station by the captain.
The officer reportedly said that even officers within the department were being kept in the dark about the progress of the investigation.
Quote, it would appear he wants to solve it all by himself, end quote.
Monti didn't let that go unanswered.
Speaking to the transcript telegram, he dismissed the criticism outright.
Quote, this is the first time since the investigation began that,
that I've had an opportunity to laugh.
I don't have anything more to say.
I don't have time to argue about anything.
We, and I emphasize the word we, have work to do.
End quote.
He also made it clear that information about the case
was being kept within a smaller circle on purpose.
It was shared among detectives,
but not widely distributed to uniformed officers.
While that back and forth played out publicly,
investigators continued to push forward,
without an official time of death, they were forced to consider multiple possibilities.
The working assumption remained that Christine had been killed on the night she disappeared
since there was no confirmed sighting or contact with her after that time.
But they also continued to explore the possibility that she may have been alive for some period after October 5th.
Almost three weeks into the investigation, police released a photograph of Christine and made a direct appeal to
the public, asking anyone who may have seen her between October 5th and October 12th to come forward.
They were careful to clarify that this request did not mean they believed she was definitely
alive during that entire period, only that they were trying to account for any possible
sightings. Calls came in from people who believed they had seen Christine in the days after she
was reported missing, though none of those sightings could be confirmed. Meanwhile, there was a growing
effort to generate leads outside of the official investigation. The transcript telegram newspaper
offered a $1,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of Christine's killer, along with
smaller rewards for information about her movements in the days between when she was last seen
and when she was found. More witnesses, more statements from those who may have seen Christine would
have been valuable, but the case was still lacking one of the most critical elements. A full report from
Boston pathologist Dr. George W. Curtis was expected to provide insight into the time of death,
the possibility of sexual assault, and other key forensic details. But that report kept getting
delayed with no real public explanation as to why. Working with what they did have, Holyoke
Police began looking more broadly at other incidents in the area in the day surrounding Christine's
disappearance, including assaults and break-ins and car thefts, searching for.
any possible connection. By mid-November, that work extended to Boston.
Detectives traveled to the hub to review the results of testing performed on Christine's clothing
and other materials recovered from the scene. Exactly what those additional materials were
has never been disclosed publicly, and if they ever provided insight into the crime itself,
it wasn't enough to close the case and secure an arrest warrant. The Holyoke community was
talking, the kind of talk that tends to fill the silence when answers are hard to come by.
Rumors were swirling in town. Investigators described it as ever-circulating, malicious
gossip, and it reached a point where people close to Christine felt the need to respond directly.
Unnamed male friends and members of her family voluntarily submitted to lie detector tests,
and they were cleared. The month stretched on without really any updates.
in the case until the summer of 1969 when finally one of the most anticipated developments came
through. According to reporting by Arthur H. Zalkin for the Springfield Republican, that highly
anticipated report from Dr. George W. Curtis, the one that could possibly hold answers about
Christine's date and time of death, was reportedly complete and the findings were shared with
Holyoke Police, but if it truly held the answers that could set the investigation off into one
clear direction, those details were not released to the public. Investigators chose to keep the
findings confidential concerned that sharing them could jeopardize the ongoing investigation.
To this day, there has never been a confirmed time or date of death in Christine's case.
Nearly eight months had passed since Christine's disappearance and death with little
to show for the investigation. But just as faith was fading in law enforcement's ability to finish the
case, Holyoke PD released a new lead that was quite literally a bright red flag in the case.
In early June of 1969, investigators announced they were looking for the operator and occupants
of a 1954 red or maroon for convertible. The car was described as newly painted,
well-kept, and seen with the top-down. It was believed to have Massachusetts license plates
and may have been registered in early October of the previous year. Police said they had received
information that on October 7th, possibly around 4 p.m., a car matching that description was seen
parked near the same area where Christine's body would later be found. Inside were four men and a woman
described in reports as Puerto Rican, and with them a teenage girl who was described as white.
Just to note, the police bulletin offering these descriptions of the occupants and driver of that car
did not explain how the individual's identities or backgrounds had been determined.
There were no details provided about how witnesses arrived at those conclusions
or how clearly they may have been able to see the occupants of the car.
It left open the possibility that some of those descriptors may have,
have been assumptions rather than confirmed facts.
That said, the description of the white teenage girl matched Christine, both in appearance
and in what she had been wearing the night she disappeared.
According to the information police had obtained, the teenager was sitting in the back seat
of the convertible and she appeared to have been beaten.
There was dried blood on her face and she looked unconscious and was slumped over.
on the tip, police believed that Christine may have been picked up in that convertible on the night
she disappeared. According to their theory, the unknown group drove her somewhere outside
of Holyoke, assaulted her, and later left her in the wooded area off the access road where she
was found. Investigators also publicly suggested that Christine may have died from exposure
while unconscious in the woods. However, other publicly disclosed medical findings did not
definitively support that conclusion, and key aspects of her death remain undetermined even after
the autopsy and further examination. At first glance, it sounded like a solid lead, but the deeper
details raised a lot more questions because of who was rumored to bring the tip forward.
According to unconfirmed reports, the witnesses were said to be two Holyoke police patrolmen
who had come across the vehicle while responding to a burglar alarm at the Mount Tom ski area.
According to Daniel C. Boyle's reporting for the transcript telegram,
the officers were on their way to the call when they stopped to check the car
while it was pulled over on the side of the road near Mountain Park.
The officers radioed headquarters to run the registration,
but the registry of motor vehicles wasn't able to provide any information.
The listing, they were told, was not available.
By the time the officers returned from the burglar alarm and passed the area they'd seen the car,
the convertible was gone.
For reasons that were never fully explained, the information about that encounter didn't surface right away.
It didn't come out the next day or the next week.
It wasn't formally reported until February of 1969 months after Christine was found.
Investigators never publicly clarified why the information.
about the red convertible wasn't documented sooner,
and officials declined to comment on the reports
about who had originally seen the car.
Later, one of the officers would say that although the written report
came months afterward, he had given, quote,
verbal confirmation to Captain Monty shortly after the incident.
Monty denied that claim.
To complicate things further,
the initial radio exchange didn't exist.
Under normal circumstances, that radio exchange
would have been recorded, this one was not. The system used to record all radio traffic to
dispatch had been down for two weeks, including the night the officers encountered the car.
I looked into these two patrolmen. They appear squeaky clean, respected, and celebrated in their
lifetimes. And although there was mention of possible repercussions for them at the time,
I don't have any evidence of any punishment resulting from the delayed report.
I don't really know what to make of this apparent failure to fully investigate a reportedly beaten
and bloodied teenage girl in the back of a convertible, especially given Christine had already
been reported missing, and all officers within Holyoke PD, not just the detectives,
should have been on high alert for anything suspicious or concerning.
Even without the report of a missing child, I'd think that,
Under any circumstance, a slumped over and unconscious-looking child would be cause for immediate concern.
Forget the burglary call at that point. There were more pressing matters to attend to.
But whatever the truth of the circumstances may be, when the information became public, it caught the attention of the Hamden County District Attorney's Office.
According to Don Ebelings reporting for the Springfield Republican, District Attorney Matthew J. Ryan noted that he only first learned about the Red
convertible through press coverage, not through direct communication from investigators.
He made it clear that his office wanted closer coordination with Holyoke Police moving forward.
He said, quote, as the chief law enforcement officer of the county, I was concerned with the
manner in which the investigation was proceeding. I was considering the welfare of the community
and the image of the police department, end quote. By that point, the case had already been
marked by delays, conflicting information, and leads that surfaced long after they should have.
And add that to the growing tension between investigators and the press,
and it's hard not to wonder what may have been overlooked in the moment.
With so much noise surrounding the case, the question lingers,
what could have slipped through the cracks?
The urgency that defined the early days of the investigation faded as the one-year anniversary approached.
Tips still came in, but many of them led nowhere.
In July of 1969, a tip surfaced out of Granby, Connecticut,
claiming that two brothers were involved in Christine's murder.
The rumor described a stabbing,
which didn't align with Christine's documented cause of death.
One of the brothers had been picked up in connection with a break-in
in Canaan, Connecticut, and he was questioned about Christine,
but he denied any involvement saying he didn't know what police were talking about.
Captain Monty also said later that the
brothers had alibis. They were reportedly working in New Jersey at the time, but investigators still
took the step of verifying those alibis to be sure. At the same time, police continued to follow up on the
red convertible lead, working with the registry of motor vehicles in an attempt to trace the car
and its possible occupants, but nothing in the source material I have access to for this case
shows me the ownership of that car was ever established. Around the two-year anniversary of Christine's
death, investigators released another potentially critical lead. They were looking for two men who had
attended the October 5th dance at Mountain Park. They'd never been seen at the dance before that night,
and they'd never been seen again. One was described as being in his mid-50s and the other in his mid-20s.
Here's why their presence stood out. From what I can tell, the dances at Mountain Park were mostly
attended by teenagers, and it was unusual for older men to attend. Others who didn't fit the usual
crowd at the dances, like parents of teenagers or friends of the band, they might ask for permission
to step in briefly without paying. But according to investigators, the fact that these men had
purchased tickets suggested they weren't familiar with the band or connected to anyone there.
Still, not everyone was convinced it meant anything. Some local officials expressed doubt that the
two men were involved, reasoning that if they had been approaching other girls or behaving
suspiciously, someone likely would have come forward with a story by then.
And by that point, two years into the investigation, some of the most basic questions remained
unanswered. There was still no official time or date of death, and the very place where it all
began was starting to disappear, too, but not before more tragedy came out of it.
The Mountain Park Ballroom, where Christine had spent her last night, burned down in 1971 after a devastating propane tank explosion during the Holyoke High School prom.
The fire claimed at least two lives.
What had once been a crowded, noisy gathering place for hundreds of teenagers was gone, leaving behind little more than a memory and an open case.
The message from investigators remained the same since day one.
the Christine Hurlbert murder probe will continue until it is solved, they said.
Police repeated the same promise again and again.
Yet as time passed, the case grew quieter and colder.
It's been nearly 60 years since this child was murdered,
and there's been very few documented moments when the case was stirred back to life.
In April of 1991, more than two decades after Christine's murder,
two Holyoke detectives traveled to Poughkeepsie, New York.
Sandra E. Constantine reports for the Springfield Republican that they were looking to speak with a man
believed to have information about the case. He was born in Massachusetts and had ties to
Holyoke. But that lead never fully developed. The man's attorney refused to allow him to be
interviewed, and without his cooperation, the effort appears to have come to a stop right there.
After that, like so many cold cases, Christine's story moved back into a long stretch of silence.
And now, nearly six decades later, a lot of the people who worked this case are gone.
Many of the original investigators have passed away.
Some of the people who may have known something back then still don't want to talk,
and I know because I asked them.
And my records request for this case were denied.
So if we don't have a clear picture of where the investigation ultimately landed,
then maybe the next best thing is to try to think like a detective.
Let's zoom out together for a second.
What else was happening in this area at the time?
Were there other crimes with similar patterns, similar circumstances?
Is it possible that something, some connection,
or even just a pattern was there all along but never fully recognized?
Cases like this don't always stand alone, and when you widen the lens beyond Christine's case
and look at what was happening in Massachusetts in the years around her murder,
there are other crimes that begin to echo in ways that are hard to ignore.
In May of 1966, 10-year-old Betty Lou Zuccovsky disappeared from Chikipi, Massachusetts,
a neighboring city to Holyoke.
She had left her home after receiving a phone call, believed to be from someone she knew,
and she never returned. Days later, her body was found in the Westfield River in West Springfield.
She had suffered blunt force trauma and ultimately died by drowning.
According to reporting by Jim Kinney and Stephanie Berry for the Springfield Republican,
the case went unsolved until decades later when a man named Donald Mars was identified as a suspect.
He was just 17 years old at the time of Betty Lou's murder, placing him at around 19 years old in October of 1968,
when Christine was killed.
It's not the same case,
but it's not hard to see the overlap.
Both crimes happened in the same small cluster
of Western Massachusetts cities
and both involved young female victims.
There's no public evidence linking Donald Mars to Christine's case,
but the timeline matters.
A violent offender capable of targeting young girls
was living and moving in the same region
in the years leading up to Christine's murder
and he remained unidentified at the time.
Then there's another case, one that came later, but echoes in a different way.
In 1978, 15-year-old Mary Lou Aruta disappeared from Raynham, Massachusetts, about 100 miles east of Holyoke.
She was last seen riding her bike near her home.
Witnesses reported seeing suspicious vehicles in the area, including a car that had been circling repeatedly.
Her body was later found in a wooded area in Freedown.
state forest. Like Christine's murder, Mary Lou's cause of death was ruled strangulation by ligature
or positional asphyxia. It's believed she'd been standing when she was tied to a tree, and when she
became unconscious, the ligature caused her to suffocate. The man eventually convicted of her murder,
James Cater, would go on to be at the center of a long and complicated legal battle, with
multiple appeals and retrials tied to issues with witness testimony.
The case became as much about the reliability of evidence as it was about the crime itself.
Now there are differences, of course.
Mary Lou's case played out a decade later and on the other side of the state,
but the similarities are hard to ignore.
A teenage girl, a public setting, a vehicle seen nearby,
and a body found in a wooded area.
Both died from apparent strangulation or asphyxia.
It's a pattern, but that's not the end of it.
James Cater had a criminal history before Mary Lou's case two
in an attack on a teenage girl the very same year of Christine's murder.
In June of 1968, just a few months before Christine was killed,
Cater abducted a 13-year-old girl in North Andover, Massachusetts.
She was walking her bicycle home when Cater approached her in a car
pretending to ask for direction.
When she turned around to respond, he grabbed her, forced her into the vehicle, and drove her to a wooded area.
There he assaulted her, struck her in the head with an iron bar, and bound her to a tree, and attempted to strangle her.
She lost consciousness but survived.
Kater ultimately pleaded guilty to kidnapping and assault-related charges in February of 1969.
He served six and a half years of a 15-to-20-year sentence and was released in the case.
in 1976.
Again, timeline matters.
By October of 1968, when Christine Hurlbert was murdered,
James Cater had already carried out that attack.
He had been arrested soon after,
but it's unclear from my research
whether he remained in custody
or if he'd been granted and made bail,
meaning he could have been back out on the street
prior to his plea and sentencing.
None of these have proven connections
to Christine's case,
but it raises a difficult question.
If this kind of crime had already happened in the same region
and would happen again later,
was there something or someone that investigators simply didn't connect at the time?
My friend and a friend of the podcast,
the late Lou Barry, spent time investigating Christine's case
before his passing in 2025.
You might remember Lou's distinctive, gravely New England voice
as he walked us through the case of Brianna Maitland.
He was a great mentor to me, but so much more importantly than that,
he was a dedicated supporter of family still waiting for answers and justice in their loved
ones' cases.
Lou's private investigation firm had been contacted by what he described as an interested
party in Christine's case, and I have a hunch about what Lou may have been working on before
he died.
I think he may have been following a lead in New York, just as investigators were doing back
in 1991.
As of Lou's last update, he and his team reviewed the information provided by the interested
party and took that to police investigators.
Lou's website for his since-closed private investigation firm indicates that Christine's case
was being handled by a cold case investigator with the Hamden County District Attorney's
Office, along with the Holyoke Police Department.
From the very first days of the case, investigators stated that they believed some
individuals who had information about Christine's final moments were reluctant to come forward.
But it's been almost six decades. It's time to speak up. Who knows what this killer or
killers have been up to since 1968? Consider this. The information you're sitting on could
lead to answers not only in Christine's murder, but could even lead to developments in other
unsolved cases too. So if you have information about the
the murder of Christine Hurlbert, please contact the Massachusetts State Police Detective Unit at
413-505-5941 or the State Police Unresolved Cases Unit at 1855 MA-Solve. You can also text the word
solve to 274-637. Thank you for listening to Darkdowneast. You can find all source material for this case
at darkdowneast.com.
Be sure to follow the show on Instagram
at Darkdowneast.
This platform is for the families
and friends who have lost their loved ones
and for those who are still searching for answers.
I'm not about to let those names
or their stories get lost with time.
I'm Kylie Lowe,
and this is Dark Down East.
Dark Down East is a production
of Kylie Media and Audiocheck.
I think Chuck would approve.
No
