Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - The Unexplained Disappearance of Jean Moore

Episode Date: November 12, 2024

Jean Moore and Al Henderson seemed like a happy older couple. They took a trip to Laughlin Nevada for a few days of gambling, won some money, and visited their favorite casinos in the smaller Las Vega...s-like resort town.However on the final day of their trip, Jean disappeared without a trace, leaving Al in a panic trying to find her. Over the next few weeks though, authorities started to wonder if Jean had actually ever made it to Laughlin… https://sinspod.co/52sourcesDomestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag! Get ad-free access for only $1 a month or ad-free and bonus episodes for $3 a monthApple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_sms Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 To listen ad-free, visit Zinspod.co slash subscribe. Starting at $2.99 a month, you'll also get access to our exclusive bonus content episodes when you join through Patreon or Apple subscriptions. Thanks for supporting the show. Jean Moore and Al Henderson seemed like a happy older couple. They took a trip to Laughlin, Nevada for a few days of gambling, won some money, and visited their favorite casinos in the smaller Las Vegas-like resort town. However, on the final day of their trip, Jean disappeared without a trace, leaving Al in a panic trying to find her.
Starting point is 00:00:35 Over the next few weeks, though, authorities welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast where we focus on cases that deal with domestic violence, as well as missing persons and unsolved cases. I'm your host, Sean, and with me, as always, is the one and only John. I am the only John in the room. The case we're sharing this week is a genuine head-scratcher of a mystery from over 30 years ago. It's one that's been covered a few times by podcasts and on TV, but it's never been solved, and you'll see why as we get into it. Today we're talking about the disappearance of Jean Moore from Laughlin. Do you want to tell us about Jean and her boyfriend Al?
Starting point is 00:01:26 Of course. Jean Moore was born Jean Marie Traxler on July 27, 1932 in Menominee, Wisconsin. So she'd be about 92 years old today. Her parents were Henry and Mabel Traxler, and she was the oldest of 10 children, three of whom died in early childhood. Her six living siblings are Everett, Norma, Jerome, Raymond, Barbara, and Bernard. Her mom died in 1990, and her dad died in 1996. The family moved from Wisconsin to Pasadena in 1960, and they moved around a little bit in those early years right around Pasadena. She has been
Starting point is 00:02:05 married twice, the first time in 1954 to a man named James Hamilton, who was an electrician's mate at Great Lakes Naval Training Station. They had a son named Joe Hamilton and a daughter named Connie, whose last name is now Christy. Later on, she married Glenn Moore in 1968, but they were divorced in 1971, and they didn't have any children together, but she still kept his name. She eventually settled in Apple Valley, California, which is near Victorville and Hesperia, just about 45 minutes north of Los Angeles, right along Route 15. We know that area well because we drive through there whenever we drive to LA or San Diego. Jean was very successful in her career. She worked as an escrow officer for a bank until her early retirement, and then started working as an independent real estate agent. She was well-known and well-respected in the community, and she was even elected honorary
Starting point is 00:02:56 mayor of Apple Valley in 1987. She loved gardening, traveling, and entertaining her many friends and family. She met and started dating Al Henderson in 1972. At the time, she was 39 and he was 50. Al was a very successful businessman. He was in real estate too and built a multi-million dollar real estate empire. We've seen him described as a real estate mogul in several places. The reason that's important is that it's very clear that money wasn't a problem for this couple. They were both very successful in their careers and were both retired or semi-retired even before they started dating. From the beginning, though, Jean's kids, Joe and Connie, didn't like Al much. In an interview, Joe said that he wanted his mother to be happy, and she really liked Al
Starting point is 00:03:46 and wanted her children to like him too. Joe tried, but he really just didn't, and on several occasions, he tried to talk her into breaking up with him. Connie said that although Al always said he really loved Jean, he would put her down in front of her friends, and that really bothered her, so she didn't like him much either. We know that Al also had children, and of course, he and Jean weren't married. Unfortunately, we didn't have a lot to go on with Al, so that, along with his very common name, made it difficult to find his records. Al and Jean dated for 20 years without getting married, but finally in December of 1991, Al proposed and Jean accepted, and they planned to get married in
Starting point is 00:04:25 November of 1992. In April of 1992, the couple decided to take a trip to one of their favorite places, Laughlin, Nevada. Laughlin is essentially like a mini Las Vegas that's located about 95 miles south of here, right on the Colorado River, just across from the Arizona state line. Also, importantly, it's about 190 miles east of Apple Valley on the I-40, or about a three-hour drive under the best conditions. Their plan was to stay from Monday, April 6th through Wednesday, April 8th, gamble, enjoy the food, and those sorts of things. Al preferred the Colorado Bell Hotel Casino because he had built up some comps there, so he would be getting things like free rooms and free food there. That's pretty typical in Laughlin and Vegas. If you spend a certain amount of money in
Starting point is 00:05:15 a hotel, they start giving you free things so that they keep you happy even if you aren't winning. It's a fun place, but it's even hotter than Las Vegas. It's normally 5 to 10 degrees hotter there than it is here, and that can get pretty intense. Since it's right on the river, there are a lot of water activities like parasailing, boating, jet skiing, and of course there's gambling, and many of those casinos are very similar to the ones here in Las Vegas. Gene and Al plan to stay at the Colorado Bell, as we said, which is a permanently docked riverboat, which is kind of neat. The Colorado Bell actually closed during the pandemic and hasn't reopened, and it's unclear if it ever will. That happened here, too, to several large casinos. They just closed during the pandemic and never reopened.
Starting point is 00:05:58 The owners seemed to take the opportunity in some cases to build other, newer properties and just demolish the old ones, and often they didn't even rehire the workers who had been with them for years, which we found pretty sketchy. On the way into Laughlin on the 6th, they stopped at a diner and had breakfast, and then they checked into the Colorado Bell around 1 p.m. According to several sources, like Al and some others that we'll mention. Jean won $600 or so playing a slot machine on Wednesday the 8th at the Hilton Flamingo Laughlin. We'll just call it the Hilton. At the time, that hotel was the sister property of the Las Vegas Hilton, now the Westgate. And the Laughlin Hilton Flamingo is now the Aquarius Casino Resort, but it's still there in Laughlin.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Later that night, Al called his bookkeeper, Geraldine Fender, to talk about something work-related, and then Jean also spoke to her and told her about how she'd had a run of luck and they'd be staying a little longer until Thursday the 9th. There was a small discrepancy here in that, in the interview, Geraldine recalled that Jean said she had a run of luck on the poker machine, but Al said she won the money playing slots. On Thursday the 9th, the couple was going to check out of the Bell around 12, but Jean said she wanted to go back to the Hilton to play her favorite slot machine again,
Starting point is 00:07:14 hoping to hit another jackpot. What follows here is Al's account of what happened that morning. Al and Jean drove from the Bell to the Hilton, about a half mile, but driving that short distance is understandable given that she was 59 and he was 70, and it was likely pretty warm, even in April. Al dropped Jean off at the front entrance to the Hilton and then attempted to find a parking spot. When he couldn't find one, he returned to the valet, which is also right in the front. He gave the valet the keys to his 1987 Cadillac, got the claim check, and headed inside, where he found Jean and gave her that ticket around 9.30 a.m. The plan, he says they agreed on, was that she'd claim the car and then drive back to the
Starting point is 00:07:57 Colorado Bell, where they'd meet in the hotel room at the Bell at 11.45, pack up the rest of their things, and check out at 12 o'clock and head back to Apple Valley. Since he liked playing at the Bell, he headed out to catch a cab back there. But for some reason, there were no cabs available, and none showed up, which is kind of weird. There are always cabs around in Vegas and Laughlin. So he headed back inside, thinking that maybe he'd just play blackjack or something at the Hilton instead. But when he went back inside, he couldn't find Jean near her favorite slot machine. In fact, there was someone already playing on it.
Starting point is 00:08:34 He waited for them to be done and then started playing on the slot, hoping that she'd come back and he could just turn it over to her. And he says that he did that for about 30 minutes from 9.45 a.m. to 10.15 a.m. At that point, she hadn't shown back up, so he decided to go back to the bell again. So this time he did get a cab and he headed to the bell where he played blackjack until around 11.45 and went up to the room expecting that she'd be showing up at any minute so they could go. When noon rolled around and she hadn't shown up, he went downstairs, checked out, and took another cab back to the Hilton to look for her. All of this would have been so much simpler in the age of smartphones. At the Hilton, he first visited the valet to ask about the car.
Starting point is 00:09:17 The valet told him that no one had come to get the car, and from what Al said, that's the first time he got worried. He went into the Hilton and she was nowhere to be found near her favorite slot machine, on the casino floor, in the lobby, or in the nearby shops. He couldn't find her anywhere. At that point, Al started to freak out a little. He called security and the police and told them she was missing. I just want to talk briefly about this morning and how strange it all seems to me. When we were researching this, we read several descriptions of their convoluted plan for that
Starting point is 00:09:48 morning, and it all seemed to be slightly different. And it was pretty hard to wade through it all and digest it and assemble it all into a coherent plan. What do you think about the whole plan they had as Al described it? Honestly, I thought it was convoluted, like you said, and a little strange. Why would they drive the car to the Hilton, drop her off in the front just so he could park the car and then only to take a cab back to the Colorado Bell a half mile away? The idea that she would then pick up the car, drive that half mile, presumably park the car again, go inside, help pack everything up, and then leave is a lot of steps, not to mention that is a lot of unnecessary cab rides. Why not just have her take a cab to the
Starting point is 00:10:33 Hilton by herself to play the slots or have Al swing by on the way out of town to get her, or maybe they could take a cab together and play at the Hilton for a couple of hours? We're only talking about 9.30 a.m. until 11.30 a.m. at the latest because checkout time was 12 noon. Even putting aside the annoying back and forth and cabs and multiple valets, that's a lot of time lost if she just wants to go play the slots for a bit. And depending on the weather, that's a short walk, really not more than five minutes. So she could have even walked, played, and then walked back to the bell. I totally agree with you.
Starting point is 00:11:09 It's a very convoluted plan. We've been to Laughlin, and you're right, it's not very far at all. The other thing was that Al said she may have had $600 or $700 cash on her, but that isn't very much money for a place like Laughlin. It's not like she hit a million-dollar jackpot that everyone saw and she had to walk down the street with a mountain of cash. The whole thing is just weird. Over the next few hours and days, Al had 4,000 flyers printed out at his own expense, as he points out, that offered a $25,000 reward for her safe return. Oddly, the flyers read possible amnesia, which is a bit of a stretch because up until that
Starting point is 00:11:45 point, I didn't read anything else about any reason he might have thought that she could have had amnesia. So that is very strange to me. He also spent $1,200 chartering a helicopter to search the surrounding desert for her, which also seems a little weird. If they weren't willing to walk the half mile from the bell to the Hilton, how likely is it that she would have just walked out into the desert? So at that point, it just seemed like Jean had just disappeared from the Hilton in Laughlin. But here's where it starts to get weird. The Las Vegas Metro Police Department got involved in the investigation because at the time, the Laughlin police were a substation of the LVMPD. Regardless, if you know anything about
Starting point is 00:12:25 casinos in Nevada, they take security very seriously. A lot of people seem to think that casinos are run by the mafia, but in fact, the mob's power and influence over the casinos started waning in the 1970s, and by the late 80s, it was mostly dismantled, replaced by something even more powerful and insidious, corporations. Corporate control by companies like MGM, Caesars Entertainment, the Sands Corp, Wynn Resorts, and Boyd Gaming, to name a few, became the standard, and that is still the standard, so it's safe to rule out mob involvement. So casinos take security very seriously because these corporations also take theft and loss very seriously. So if you're in a casino in Las Vegas or Laughlin, you can be absolutely sure that the eye in the sky is watching you.
Starting point is 00:13:11 There are cameras in all the public areas that are recording at all times, and that was true in 1992. So of course, the police had a mountain of video surveillance footage to review. Based on Al's account, they expected to see footage of him giving her the valet ticket, but they couldn't find it. The same was true of Al at Jean's slot machine. They had no footage of that. In fact, there was no footage found of Jean at the Hilton at all, not only on April 9th, but also none from any day that week, and also no record of her winning that $600 from a slot machine. Police did find footage of Al parking the car and getting his ticket, but there was no footage at all of Jean. So this is when they started to wonder if this was all made up. Was Jean ever
Starting point is 00:13:55 even in Laughlin? The only record of Jean in Laughlin from April 6th to April 9th came from the waitress at the diner that Sean mentioned where they had breakfast on the way into town. She said she remembered the couple specifically, but of course she didn't know Jean, so it's possible that it wasn't her, but we just don't know. And it's about to get even weirder. Police finally did locate a witness who was sure that she saw and spoke to Jean at around 4.30 p.m. on April 8th, and this was someone who knew the couple well. The problem was that it was back in Apple Valley at a convenience store gas station, three hours away when the couple was supposed to be in Laughlin. This witness is credible not only because she knew the couple, but also because she pinpointed the time and date she saw them
Starting point is 00:14:41 based on the fact that at that time, she was on her way to a school function for her children, and that function happened around 5 p.m. on April 8th. When confronted with this evidence, Al had some pretty convincing counter-evidence. Back in the 1990s, long-distance calls outside of the local area code were very expensive from a hotel, so people typically used calling cards, which allowed you to call an 800 number for free, even from a hotel, and then give them an ID number, like a credit card number, and then type in the long distance number you were calling. And then you paid a lower rate per minute for that calling card company. It was annoying and a lot of numbers had to be dialed.
Starting point is 00:15:24 Well, Al had a CallUSA long distance card and he turned over the call records from that calling card and the police also had his call records from the hotel. And sure enough, he dialed that 800 number and then made calls using his calling card at 4 p.m. and also 6.59 p.m. on April 8th from the Laughlin hotel room. He claimed that he only had access to the hotel room, but one of these things just isn't true. Either the witness in Apple Valley was mistaken somehow, or someone must have made those calls from Al and Jean's hotel room at the Colorado Bell using Al's calling card. Unfortunately, investigators could never prove that he didn't make those calls. There was just no way to verify further. Al didn't have an explanation for why they couldn't
Starting point is 00:16:09 locate Gene on the surveillance recordings. He just said they were looking in the wrong place or at the wrong machine. To me, that's very suspect. The detective from Metro, Thomas Ball, was adamant. He scoured through hours of footage. There's no reason not to believe that. And we know that casinos record everything. So to me, that points to her never having been in Laughlin. But if that's the case, where was she? Why wasn't she there? What was the motive? And why pretend that she was? And if you can believe it, there were other things that seemed strange too. For example, Jean had left all her jewelry, including her engagement ring, in the room in the Colorado Bell when she went to the Hilton. Well, I should say that that seemed strange to her kids. They told investigators that she always
Starting point is 00:16:54 had her jewelry on and wouldn't just leave it behind. Personally, that doesn't seem strange to me, but they knew her best. Her daughter also mentioned that Jean talked about her hiring an attorney because of some problems she was having with Al, but we don't have any further information on what that was about. They weren't married or anything, so that wasn't clear at all. It's also worth noting that unlike the case we covered with Tom Randolph, there was never any question about Jean's will or life insurance policies, meaning that one of the key aspects investigators would normally look for, motive, for any potential foul play, simply wasn't found. Both of them were independently quite financially comfortable and both at least semi-retired. There was also no reporting of fighting and no record of any domestic violence beyond the comments that her daughter made about him putting her down in front of their friends. And that's really the problem with this case. There's no
Starting point is 00:17:49 apparent motive and only very thin theories about what might have happened. There's a good amount of evidence that Al was being forthcoming about things like his phone records and seemed to be genuinely searching for her. But on the other hand, we have this reliable witness who says they saw Jean 190 miles away. To further muddy the waters, Unsolved Mysteries Season 2, Episode 1 from 1995 covered the case, did a great job with the reenactments, and got a lot of interviews with Al. In the interviews, he comes across as completely credible and concerned. There's absolutely no sense that we got that he was trying to hide anything, and he didn't have the same creepy vibe that we got from someone like murderer Tom Randolph.
Starting point is 00:18:29 They do ask about the fact that Gene isn't seen on any surveillance footage anywhere in Laughlin that week, and he has no satisfactory answer, though, which is truly baffling. He also offered up a different account of events than he originally gave police. He told Unsolved Mysteries that he dropped Jean off at the Hilton's side entrance, not the front, and then gave Jean the ticket in the front of the Hilton. That shifting narrative is really concerning, and of course, there is no video footage of that version either. It was this shifting narrative that had Jean's children thinking that he must have had something to do with her disappearance. They didn't trust him before, and his changing story made that even worse. The police eventually searched his motorhome and found what they described as a Kleenex with blood,
Starting point is 00:19:14 but it wasn't proof of anything, and no testing established that it had anything to do with Jean's disappearance. There are a lot of theories among the web sleuths that Al must have had something to do with Jean's disappearance, but there simply isn't enough evidence to support that, and Al was never charged. Al passed away in September of 2001, and Jean's family finally had her declared dead in 1999. Her obituary appears in a local Wisconsin newspaper on Sunday, April 4th, 1999, almost seven years to the day from her disappearance. Her date of death is listed as April 9th, 1992. Her family had a memorial service for her a week later on April 10th, 1999 in Menominee, Wisconsin, and she has a funeral plot there. Her case has
Starting point is 00:19:59 remained cold since then for over 30 years. The cases of missing people are so frustrating and so much more so for the families who are left behind. At the time of her disappearance, Jean was 5'2 and 125 pounds. She had a scar on her abdomen and both her ears were pierced. We'll be sure to post some photos of her on social media. If you have any information about Jean Moore or what happened to her, please reach out to the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department at 702-828-2907. This holiday season, we are again putting together a special Missing at the Holidays episode highlighting missing persons cases from around the country. If you have a missing persons case you'd like us to highlight, please email us at podcast at sinsandsurvivors.com and be sure to subscribe so you don't miss that important episode. Thank you for listening and remember what happens here, happens everywhere. To be continued... and to listen ad-free. Remember to like and follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and Threads at Sins and Survivors. If you're enjoying the podcast, please leave us a review
Starting point is 00:21:31 on your podcast platform of choice. You can contact us at questions at sinsandsurvivors.com. If you or someone you know is affected by domestic violence or needs support, please reach out to local resources or the National Domestic Violence Hotline. A list of resources is available on our website, sinsandsurvivors.com. Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast, is research written and produced by your hosts, Sean and John. The information shared in this podcast is accurate at the time of recording. If you have questions, concerns, or corrections, please email us. Links to source material for this episode can be found on our website, sinsandsurvivors.com. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are solely those of the podcast creators, hosts, and their guests.
Starting point is 00:22:16 All individuals are innocent until proven guilty. This content does not constitute legal advice. Listeners are encouraged to consult with legal professionals for guidance.

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