Up and Vanished - Up and Vanished Weekly | VANISHED: Denise Griffin
Episode Date: October 15, 2025When New York State Troopers embarked on a high speed chase on Monday June 28, 1993, they did not foresee the scene they would soon stumble upon. Inside the vehicle they discovered the decomposing bod...y of a woman. After interrogation the driver confessed to killing multiple women, and was found guilty of nine counts of second degree murder. But authorities’ work was just beginning. Even after 30 years, two of his victims remain unidentified. Listen in as Payne and Maggie unpack the depravity of convicted serial killer Joel Rifkin, and later sit down with Laurah Norton, host of “One Strange Thing” and “The Fall Line” to discuss how forensic science may help determine if a woman named Denise Griffin may in fact be one of Rifkin’s unidentified victims.Up and Vanished Weekly is available wherever you get your podcasts. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, Up and Vanish listeners, it's Rob.
We wanted to share with you that we'll be spotlighting episodes of our new sister series,
Up and Vanished Weekly, hosted by Payne Lindsay and Maggie Freeling.
Every week, Up and Vanish Weekly dives into a new missing or murdered person's case,
bringing you interviews with experts and advocates who take you behind the scenes of the investigation.
On behalf of the entire Up and Vanish team, we hope you enjoy Up and Vanish Weekly.
More on Apple Podcasts.
This podcast discusses mature and sensitive content, including descriptions of violence
that may be triggering for some audiences.
Listener discretion is advised.
It's 3.15 a.m. on June 28, 1993.
As New York State Troopers are patrolling the Southern State Parkway, they notice a truck
with no rear license plate.
Moments later, they pull behind the tan-1984 Mazda pickup and turn their lights on.
Instead of stopping, the driver increases their speed, and troopers soon find themselves
in a quickly escalating high-speed chase.
Officers continue their pursuit, but the chase abruptly ends when the driver collides
with a pole.
Troopers slow to a stop, approach the truck, calling out to the driver.
As they close in, they see a bumper sticker that reads,
Sticks and Stones may break my bones, but whips and chains excite me.
They cautiously approach the truck, not knowing the state of the driver.
As they inch closer, they identify an unmistakable odor.
The driver is pulled from the vehicle and troopers discover a horrific scene.
Inside the vehicle is the decomposing body of a woman.
The driver is immediately taken into custody and interrogated by authorities.
As grisly as this discovery was, things soon became much more ominous.
What initially began as a high-speed chase quickly evolved into the discovery of one of New York's most notorious serial killers,
initiating a decades-long process to track down and identify his many victims.
from Tenderfoot TV in Atlanta. I'm Payne Lindsay. And I'm Maggie Freeling. And you're listening to Up and Vanished Weekly.
Hey, y'all. Welcome.
back to Up and Vanish Weekly. I'm Maggie Freeling. Today, I want to break away from our normal
way of doing things to talk to you about a couple of disappearances that happened in the New York
area back in the 1990s. I grew up around this area where the disappearances happened, but I was
very young at the time. I grew up knowing who Joel Rifkin was. He was infamous on Long
Island, but I never knew anything about the women whose lives he took.
Rifkin's crimes are gruesome and senseless. He's admitted to killing over a dozen women, but two have never been identified. They're known as victim six and victim nine. And because they went missing before modern technology, there's no paper trail or digital footprint to trace, so not much is known about them or what may have happened to them. But that doesn't mean they don't have people who care about them even today.
I first found out about 6 and 9 while I was watching a recent A&E documentary called Cold Case Files, The Rifkin Murders.
New York State troopers are actively trying to find out who 6 and 9 are.
And in order to do that, they have to understand more about the man who's admitted to taking their lives.
And so we're going to do the same.
But I know it's tricky because in many ways it's a slippery slope to talk about serial killers because some of them,
commit their crimes for attention and notoriety. So talking about them only feeds their egos. But I do
think that to try and unpack who victims six and nine are, we have to understand the context
around the crimes that Rifkin admitted to, starting with who he is and how he became one of the
most prolific serial killers in New York. Here's Payne with more.
Joel Rifkin was born on January 20th, 1959.
His mother was an unwed college student who put him up for adoption.
At just three weeks old, he went into the care of Bernard and Gian Rifkin.
He was an only child for a few years until age three, when Joel's parents adopted a girl
named Jan.
The family lived in East Meadow, Long Island.
At a young age, he developed learning disabilities, physical challenges, and a child.
a stutter and endured incisive bullying as early as a kindergartner. Rifkin was different from
his peers and was an outcast throughout middle school and high school. He remained close to his
mother, but he lacked social connection with others. As he withdrew, his resentment manifested
into sexual deviation and fantasies of killing. When Rifkin was arrested on June 28, 1993,
he had been working as a landscaper. The decomposing remains in his car with the
later be identified as 22-year-old Tiffany Bresciani. During his interrogation, Rifkin confessed to
killing multiple women. He explained that his victims were sex workers, whom he met and then
violently murdered. After he murdered them, he dismembered their bodies, so they could not be
identified. Rifkin admitted that he became fascinated with the idea of raping and strangling
women at a very young age. When he claimed his first victim, he said he soon became addicted,
murder. He went on to share with authorities how at times he would brutally remove their fingerprints,
dismember their bodies, and discard their body parts in various places, including the Brooklyn
Canal and East River. When authorities searched his home, they found a variety of women's
items dishevelled around his room. Just months later, Rifkin was convicted of nine counts of
second-degree murder and sentenced to 203 years in prison. At his sentencing in 1996,
He addressed the victim's families.
According to a New York Times article, here's what he said.
Some of you believe that I felt that their murder was in some ways justified because they were prostitutes.
But this is untrue.
I never felt that way.
Some of them were my friends and were kind to me.
My victims were people with dreams and families, and some of them had children of their own.
What I have done can never be forgiven.
but I ask you to believe me when I tell you I will never understand the part of me
that caused me to do these terrible things to your children.
Not only will I go to my death reliving these horrors,
but I will go there never knowing why I did them at all.
And in a strange twist, Rifkin also gave these chilling words.
Please believe that there are other Joel Rifkin's walking your streets right now.
Like me, they will eventually be caught,
but not until they have caused more suffering and deaths.
I hope society can prevent this.
After years of living in the shadows, authorities have pulled a ruthless monster off the streets,
finally ending his reign of terror.
But in a way, the work was just beginning.
With several victims left unidentified, authorities now have the difficult task of understanding the profile
and final moments of Rifkin's known victims
to help solve the mysteries around the remaining Jane Doe's.
Something that stands out to me about Rifkin is the inward conflict he's expressed about the women he killed.
Most serial killers show little or no remorse for their crimes.
But Rifkin is different.
He's expressed that these girls were his friends and he doesn't know why he killed them.
Rifkin began serving his sentence in 1996, and he'll remain in prison for the rest of his life.
Normally, you would think that capturing and prosecuting a serial killer like Rifkin would be the end of the story.
But in 2023, Rifkin shocked many by saying he was open to cooperating with authorities to help solve who six and nine are.
But figuring out the identity of six and nine has proven to be vexed.
very difficult, mainly because of the disorganization with how missing people were documented
back in the 90s and even today. A quick search on NamUs of the New York City and Long Island
regions between 1989 and 1993 shows there are still 28 missing females and over 160
unidentified females still waiting to be identified. Even when I narrow down the search, there are
currently 15 missing females that fit the demographic of a Rifkin victim, and they all went
missing from these New York counties Rifkin was praying in. To help identify his other known
victims, Rifkin provided information about the women he recalled, such as their names, descriptions,
and how he killed them. He also described where he put their bodies. Investigators have showed
Rifkin over 100 photos of women in the sex work industry from that time period to see if he
could pick out anyone resembling victim six and nine. Rifkin stopped on a picture of a woman
named Denise Griffin and said she looks like number six. Victim number six's body was never found,
but Rifkin admits he killed a young woman around the same time Denise went missing and dumped
her body somewhere in the Bronx. Investigators went to the area on the Bronx that seemed
like the spot Rifkin was talking about, but they were unable to find anything.
So was Rifkin lying or potentially misremembering?
When authorities pressed Rifkin again about number six, he said it's more likely than not
that Denise Griffin is number six. But with so little information to go on and no remains
to use to make an ID, it's proven to be very difficult for authorities to confirm if number
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All right, now back to our case.
So who exactly is Denise Griffin? Here's pain with what we know.
Because Denise vanished in the early 90s, tracking down information about who she is,
in the circumstances around her disappearance is very difficult.
After doing a few online searches, here's what we were able to find.
Denise Griffin was born sometime between 1967 and 1968.
At the time of her disappearance, she was 24 years old
in living in Eatontown, New Jersey, which is about an hour drive from New York.
Some sources indicate she may have been married at the time.
But again, this has not been confirmed.
We know Denise had a C-section scar, so it's possible she has a surviving child.
Any additional information about her immediate family remains unconfirmed.
The last known sighting of Denise was May 17, 1991.
There are reports that she was possibly seen in Manhattan or Brooklyn near Coney Island Hospital.
When searching for case file information on Denise, it can only be confirmed that she's a missing person,
and there's no information available about who reported her missing,
or any other information from law enforcement, family, or friends,
about the circumstances of her disappearance.
According to some online sources,
there are reports that in November 1988,
Denise was arrested for driving under the influence
and making terroristic threats against a county clerk.
But since so little is known about Denise's life
and the kind of person she was prior to her disappearance,
it's important to keep these kinds of reports in perspective.
With so little information about one of Rifkin's
long suspected victims, authorities have had a difficult time,
connecting the dots between Denise Griffin and his unknown victim number six.
To have any hope of solving this mystery,
police would have to work closely with the man who claims to have killed her
and see what clues he may offer to help solve this decade's old mystery.
Although information on Denise Griffin is not widely available,
the lead is not a dead end.
Rifkin, like many serial killers,
kept trophies or mementos from his victims.
The earrings Rifkin describes from number six look similar to one of the trophies found
in his home, which is a promising lead.
Investigators were able to get a partial DNA match from the earrings, but unfortunately,
they can't put a partial profile into the database to see if it matches Denise,
so they need to find a family member to compare the sample.
And while we wait for that, they are also pursuing leads.
to uncover who victim nine is.
Number nine was found in a 55-gallon steel drum floating in Newtown Creek in Brooklyn on May 13, 1992.
A silver snake bracelet was found on her, but no DNA was able to be recovered from it.
As part of their reinvestigation, New York State Police decided to exhume number nine's remains to get her DNA.
However, they quickly realized this plan was more complicated than they anticipated.
Number nine is buried on Heart Island, New York City's public cemetery.
This is where people who have no one to claim them are buried.
Over one million individuals are buried on Heart Island, and unfortunately, many are in mass graves.
When authorities went to exhume number nine, they found her mixed with 150 other people.
Sorting through everyone to locate and identify her will take time.
The only information the National Association for Missing an Unidentified Person System lists for Victim Nine
is that she was a white woman about 5-7, 140 pounds, between 20 and 50 years old.
It's a wide swath of people to try and pinpoint just one missing person from.
There are 400 missing females from the years Rifkin was active.
Any one of these daughters, sisters, mothers, cousins, aunts,
friends could have come to New York and countered Rifkin and are still unidentified.
There are so many people who have dedicated their lives to covering people like Joel Rifkin
and others who have dedicated their lives to finding people like Denise, where little is known about them.
And that includes my friend Laura Norton, the host of the podcast, The Fall Line, and One Strange Thing.
I've known Laura since I got into doing this kind of work. We're kind of a podcast fan
and have been on each other's podcasts, and I've admired and respected her ever since I first
heard of her. Laura takes time and care with each victim and their story and treats them like
the humans they are, whether they have a face or not. And for years, Laura has covered all
kinds of cases that other media does not take the time to, whether it's because of their lack
of interest, bias, or because like Denise, there's not much evidence or information
to go on. And because Denise's case is a bit of a puzzle, I want to get her thoughts on it. So stick
around for my conversation with Laura after a quick break. You're listening to Up and Vanished Weekly.
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banking account manager. All right, now back to our case. Laura, thank you for being here to talk
with me about Denise, the little we know and how we can find more information. Absolutely. I'm happy
to join you. So you are truly an expert in this field. The work you do is amazing. Can you just
give me kind of a top line what your thoughts are on Denise? Well, in terms of fitting the profile,
as I know it, I think that roughly she does, of course, fit the profile. She seems to fit chronologically
into what Rifkin was doing at the time. What struck me the most was just how little information
was available, even compared to the other possible victims that they looked at in terms of the
information I was reviewing. And so the first thing that struck me was how can we get more
information on Denise to try and compare? And I know that was something you were concerned about too,
right? That's the main thing. It's like, where's her family? Where's this information on her?
Who is looking for her? Do you often find cases like this? Yes. And when we begin to dig into those cases,
Of course, the easiest cases to work on that have little information available, oftentimes that lack of information falls at the feet of the media.
It falls at the feet of police that have either been overwhelmed by a number of cases in the large metro area or cases that have simply been abandoned based on the profile of the victim.
They're victims that are considered the less dead, you know, based on sexuality, based on intersectional issues, based on profession.
You know, were they involved in sex work?
But sometimes it's also people who didn't have a lot of strong connections at the time that they disappeared.
And when we see victims like that, the first thing we start to do is try and go back not one year, not five years, but maybe even 10 or 15 years.
And to do that, you really have to get back into not only things like census records or ancestry records.
You begin to look for things like marriage records.
she began to look at things like birth certificates.
But I also start to go back and look at things like middle school year books, high school year books.
Try to find those connections that existed before someone was an adult to see people who might have known them.
Because the interesting thing is, we think of ourselves now as a society that is very transitory,
but it hasn't always been that way.
A lot of people stay where they grew up and they stay in the same small areas.
And I noticed that some people who were commenting,
even on social media who said they knew Denise were from New Jersey.
So you start with those kinds of people.
And of course, I know you do this as a reporter.
What's the first thing you do?
You start messaging people and saying, can I get a comment?
But if you go and try and find like alumni groups for a high school, even if someone didn't graduate, they may know that person.
You can find old addresses.
You can go to those addresses, you know?
And we tend to think about Googling an address.
I know you go to libraries.
You go to the library, what do they often have?
Old phone books.
So that's the kind of place where we start to try and make those little connections where they're not so obvious.
So, you know, an armchair detective who hears this and wants to help find Denise is something like a birth certificate or a marriage record publicly available?
It totally depends on the state.
Some of this is going to be on ancestry.
So you can at least see that it exists.
And whether or not it's going to be publicly available is totally.
dependent on the state. In general, it's going to at least show you there's a record,
and that can get you on the way. Because if it's there, someone can go. But I do want to
caution armchair detectives. Just because it's there, it doesn't mean that you personally need to
reach out to people, but that is something that at least creates a connection, right? And that
let you know, okay, if I'm going to make, say, a missing person's poster, I can target that
poster for that area.
You know, geolocate it, it costs $10 to run a Facebook ad or an Instagram ad.
People will respond to that.
I remember listening to, it was actually Billy Jensen talking about geolocating and using that
kind of technology is fascinating.
So I want to talk about the DNA that was found in this case.
So there was a partial profile found on the earrings that may be Denise's earrings.
They were the ones that Rifkin says he remembers that particular victim, number six, wearing.
But they were not able to upload this profile.
So can you help explain to listeners the problem with partial DNA?
Now the investigators are saying they need to find her family.
So they're probably using a lot of these techniques we just discussed in tracking down her family to get a full profile.
Absolutely.
And as you and I were discussing privately amongst ourselves, I do want to
add the caveat that like I'm not a DNA expert. I wrote a book that covered some of this
stuff, but I described myself as like a high school student of DNA who works with people
who are experts and they have kindly explained things to me. But the basic concept, and I was
just talking to my friend Karen Binder, who is one of the sort of old school genetic investigative
genealogist here up in New Jersey. She runs a whole program. We were talking about this. The issue
with a partial profile is that there's not enough discrimination to it. It's missing some
essential key features. The way to think about it is would be a kind of bad witness description
of a perpetrator, right? So imagine this. A dark-haired woman with some tattoos walked into a
convenience store. I just described both of us. I'm twice your size. We look nothing alike.
you have a lot more tattoos than me, and we have facial features that are completely different.
However, we both fit that profile. And based on that, we'd both get grouped in. And that's kind of how
partial DNA works, because working in unidentified persons, I've actually shared pieces of DNA
with a couple of the John and Jane Doe cases I've worked on. And that little piece of DNA basically
makes me a fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh cousin to that person. But if they had just been able to get
that one little piece, it would have solved nothing. So they need enough of these special
segments of DNA to meet this threshold that will actually help them match up. And the reason
they're going to need family members is that you can't retest DNA that's already on file in
different ways. That's something a lot of people don't quite get, right? But if they can get a
close family member of Denise and run it against that, they may be able to fill in some of those
missing pieces and then say, oh, okay. And then be able to lay it against it and say, these match up
in this precise way. Suddenly the profile has a higher discrimination. So that also brings us to
Namus, which is something I've been wanting to talk about forever. And I'm so happy to have you
here to talk about it. We don't have a unified, unidentified, unidentified and missing person
system in the U.S. We have Namas. Can you kind of explain for listeners who might not be familiar
or what exactly NamUs is?
Sure.
So Namus was developed for that purpose.
It was based kind of roughly on some of the community ones that already existed, like the donut work, which was developed by my late friend, Todd Matthews.
The issue with Namus is that at the current moment, reporting is not compulsory in all states.
It's roughly half of the states have compulsory Namus reporting.
So until Namus reporting is compulsory for all states, we simply do not.
not have a listing of all the missing and unidentified people out there in the system.
So what you're saying is there are law enforcement agencies that are not uploading some of
their missing people to this system. There are some who have uploaded none.
I think a lot of people would find that shocking to know.
Yeah. And what it comes down to is I think that a lot of law enforcement agencies don't quite
understand the purpose of it yet. I think it comes down to having it explained.
a little differently. There's already NCIS. There's CODIS. And so people see it as entering information
over and over again. I think the essential piece that's missing is that those systems are not
available to the public. And NamUs is. So when we have NamUs, anyone can access it. A family member
can access it. Someone who was looking around, you know, has heard of a case can access it.
And having that public-facing system is so essential. And I think that law enforcement
really has to understand that. There's also a huge backlog. So, for instance, there is a
personnel who works only with indigenous sovereign nations in the United States to help them
get their backlog. And that's Cornelia Perry. And she started out only working to help Navajo
cases from the Navajo Nation get uploaded. But now she's actually going out and helping get
other cases uploaded. And this wasn't because people didn't want to upload them. It was because
there were such a huge backlog of cases, so many tiny departments who did not have
administrative support to do it. So you're looking at a department that has two or three people
in it. There's simply not somebody to sit there and upload 200 cases to NamUs. So it's the
idea of having that administrative support as well. Training people how to put the information
into NamUs because you upload it and then it has to be approved before the information
appears. And there's a whole back end that the average user can't see that has information
like dental records, DNA results, ruleouts, all kinds of stuff as well. So just having more support
would be incredibly helpful. Yeah. And just to put this in context of Denise, maybe this woman could
have been from California. A missing person's report was filed in California, but that never made it
into NamUs. You could have a missing person from California and then an unidentified person that shows up
in New York, a body, and never have that report put in Namas. So someone might not even know
to check for that missing person?
It's one of the biggest issues.
And one of the other issues is that people are often not reported missing
or the reports don't get filed correctly or a case can be improperly closed.
That was the case of Susan Lund, the woman that I discussed in my book,
her case was improperly closed by law enforcement.
So her remains stayed unidentified for another 30 years.
So these are all kind of the holes in the system that we really have to look at.
More of our discussion after a quick break.
You're listening to Up and Vanish Weekly.
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Now, back to the show.
So I guess just in terms of Denise, when you were looking into it, how did you feel about the potential of her being victim number six?
I mean, obviously, I'm not an expert on this case, but in terms of the potential victims they were discussing, she seemed likely to me to be someone that should be compared.
And I hope that they do go and speak to her remaining family members.
Based on just some quick looking around I did, there did seem to be some people who claim to be related to her.
And so I hope that they do go out and get some buckle swabs so they can begin to look into this.
So in terms of victim number nine, and I just hate calling them numbers, but I mean, this is where we're at.
This is what law enforcement is calling them.
She is in a mass grave.
We do know that.
We just don't know who she is.
I am so curious about the process of going through a mass grave trying to identify her.
So it sounds impossible, I think, at the face of things, but I really want to point to something that's been going on in Detroit for a few years now. And it's called Operation United. And it is a task force that's made up of the local FBI, Detroit police, and forensic anthropologists in the area. And they had a huge issue with mass graves of unidentified victims and also unclaimed persons that have been buried together for a long time. And some of them were mass graves and some of them.
them were simply graves were record to not been kept well over a couple of cemeteries,
if I'm correct. And we're talking hundreds of people. So they had records, but they couldn't
figure out precisely who was where. So what they've begun to do is work together with the
anthropologists, the FBI, and police to do not exhumations, but excavations. So an exhumation
would be fully bringing up a decedent out of the ground and, you know, studying that way. An excavation
would be digging down into the earth until you're able to expose enough to do an identification
based on some key factors. And those would be anything unique about the bone, dental records,
things you have on hand and things we know that they know about a few victims. And so they've been
very carefully just going through and IDing people that way so that if it's someone who is a homicide
victim and they still don't know who killed them, they can then fully exhumed that person for
DNA testing or in some cases they're getting a sample right there and they're very slowly chipping
away at this problem. We did an episode actually on the fall line about this and interviewed everyone
involved. And a lot of the anthropologist involved in this had actually dealt with mass graves
and countries where huge war crimes had been committed and have been looking at this. But there
are practical ways to do this. It's just a matter of getting organized and getting the right
people in there to do it. So how long does something like that take? A long time. I think a lot of it
is the red tape part of it. Okay. You know, but the thing with forensic anthropologists and
biological anthropologists working together is they often are training their students because a big
part of students work is field work and this is field work. So the combination of the medical
examiner, the attorneys involved, the police, the FBI, they would go all together with a team of a hundred
people and they would just work. And this was all started by one woman, a local detective
who had just piles of missing person cases on her desk. And she knew that the answers were there
in the potter's field. Wow. And so she began to just make these connections. So this absolutely can
happen. It just takes concerted community effort. And they're still closing cases, one by one by one,
getting people ID and getting remains returned to families. Wow. So I think that's what they're hoping to do
with number nine, and I think we do have her dental records, so hopefully they will find her
quickly. Yeah, I hope so, you know, but yeah, dental records are such a key factor, an ID,
and I suspect for a lot of the victims and decedents who are buried out there, they will have
enough records to do some ID. Laura, thank you so much for discussing all this with me. Absolutely.
It's challenging to solve cases like Denise's and unidentified victim six and nine.
The likelihood that their cases will be solved declines with each passing day.
With Denise, it's unclear if investigators will ever find her loved ones to get DNA or more information.
If you're listening to this episode and you believe you may be related to Denise Griffin,
I encourage you to reach out to authorities to help get this case solved.
Until authorities are able to get additional DNA to use for testing,
the painstaking process of searching for the families of victims six and nine continues.
During his confession, Rifkin identified his victims as sex workers.
And I need to pause and talk about this because far too often the victims of horrific crimes
get labeled with taboo titles like prostitute.
Society and even authorities make judgment calls about them.
And inevitably, they become forgotten.
And it's astonishing to me that the victims whose lives were taken get lost in the process
and their humanity gets glossed over just because of what they do to make ends meet.
This can make it difficult to identify these women,
and it's not uncommon for people like this to go unidentified
for years because loved ones are ashamed at how they're being portrayed.
The stigma associated with this lifestyle that distances the victims from their families
and contributes to either no missing person report or a delayed report is a huge issue.
And then, once a report is made, victim blaming can lead to a lack of response from community
and law enforcement.
And when we look into these issues, it's easy to see why for decades, serial killers have targeted sex workers.
According to the National Institute of Health, sex workers are victims of violence at up to 18 times higher than the national average for women.
In a study examining prostitution, violence, and post-traumatic stress disorder, adult prostitutes, their word, not mine, reported that 82% had been physically assaulted,
83% have been threatened with a weapon, and 64% have been raped while working.
And I want to make very clear, we cannot confirm Denise or Victim 6 and 9 were sex workers.
For now, we'll wait until more information can be found that will help authorities confirm these women's identities.
Denise Griffin is described as being 5'6, 105 pounds with blue eyes and strawberry blonde hair.
Identifying marks include a cheloid on her left shoulder and a lateral possible C-section scar across her lower abdomen.
Denise would now be 57 years old.
Victim 9 is described as being 5.7, 140 pounds, between 20 and 50 years old.
If you have any information about Denise Griffin's disappearance, please contact New Jersey
State Police at 609-882,000, and reference case number H0259-359-325.
You can also contact the New Jersey Cold Case Unit at 609-882-2000, extension.
527. A huge thank you to Laura Norton for joining me for this episode. If you're not familiar
with her work, go check out her podcast, The Fall Line, and One Strange Thing, and check out
her new book, Lay Them to Rest. It has become a personal favorite of mine.
Everybody thank you so much for tuning in to this.
this week's episode. I'll be back with you next week as we dig into another case. Stay safe,
y'all.
Up and Vantage Weekly is a production of Tinderfoot TV in association with Odyssey. Your host are Maggie
Freeling and myself Payne Lindsay. The show is written by Maggie Freeling, myself and John Street.
Executive producers are Donald Albright and myself.
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Research for the series by Jamie Albright,
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