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Iranian Girl Was abducted In California

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  • Iranian Girl Was abducted In California



    Endangered Missing

    DONNA JOU

    DOB: Oct 14, 1987

    Missing: Jun 23, 2007

    Age Now: 19

    Sex: Female

    Race: White

    Hair: Brown

    Eyes: Brown

    Height: 5'3" (160 cm)

    Weight: 110 lbs (50 kg)

    Missing From:

    RANCHO SANTA MARGARITA

    CA

    United States


    Donna graduated from Clear Lake High School, May 2006, GPA 4.4, SAT scores of 1,570.

    She played basketball for Clear Lake High School Team, academic year 2004-2005.

    While climbing the educational ladder towards her dreams, Donna was a dedicated student and volunteer of her community. She was tutoring mathematics during her last two years of high school, donated over 100 hours of her time to help her fellow students.Donna worked full time as a volunteer in St. John Hospital's Pathology Laboratories under direction of Dr. Moore, summer 2005. She also has supported the Interfaith Ministries as a volunteer, this includes, collecting nonperishable foods from grocery stores and delivery to food pantries for less fortunate, 2004-2005.

    During her senior year at Clear Lake High School, she took a course named "Independent Study Mentorship (ISM)" Under direction of her mentor NASA senior scientist/Dr. Deborah Harm, she studied Neurophysiology, Vestibular System, Spaceflight negative effects on astronauts' balance upon their return to Earth. This was at National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Johnson Space Center (JSC), Houston, Texas.


    Donna was admitted to the NASA's Summer High School Apprenticeship Research Program or SHARP for Summer 2006. As well as baby sitting for the Battered Women Shelters, she has volunteered as a cashier in a secondhand clothing store located in Nassau Bay, Texas in support of women shelters. Donna has many more accomplishments preparing herself for future. Her family is proud and looks forward to continue supporting her on this journey of accomplishments.


  • #2
    Unfortunately oonai ke gom mishan dige joone salem be dar nemibaran. mesle oon dokhtare badbakhti ke too kansas gom shode bood. khanevadash vase peyda shodanesh ye alam kharj karde boodan akharesham khabar resid ke koshtanesh. 18 salesham bishtar nabood. faghat oon nabood, ye 2,3 nafar dige ham hamin bala sareshoon oomad.
    born to be successful.

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    • #3

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      • #4
        Ishallah zood peydash konan
        ~ Bahar ~

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        • #5
          Every weekend for the past year, Nili Jou would take a trip to San Diego to pick up her 19-year-old daughter Donna from her dorm.

          They would spend their weekends relaxing in their tiny Rancho Santa Margarita apartment, shopping, watching Iranian movies, and lying by the pool. The mother-daughter weekends were always over so fast – and Nili would drop off Donna back at San Diego State University, where she was pre-med and on the fast track to realizing her dream of being a neurosurgeon.

          Five weeks after Donna moved home for the summer, Nili watched as a tattooed man disappeared with her daughter – Donna's hands wrapped tightly around the stranger's waist, her long brown hair blowing as his motorcycle turned off the 241 Toll Road at Portola. Nili didn't know the man hidden under the helmet was a convicted sex offender her daughter met on the Internet. She didn't know it might be the last time she saw Donna.

          Nili sat on her brown leather sofa Friday, staring at her son, Daniel, 21, a student at Harvard, wringing her hands and looking for answers.

          Nothing made sense. It wasn't Donna – a straight-A student who called her mother every night on her way home from a summer physics class at Santiago Community College. But the lure of excitement and adventure may have been too much for a bored teenager.

          "They look for somebody who's vulnerable and they exploit it," said Mary Davis, spokeswoman of Santa Ana-based Web Wise Kids, an Internet safety firm. "Meeting someone on the Internet is a Russian roulette situation. There are 100 cases of people falling in love with people they meet on the Internet, but there is always a change that that person is bad."

          Donna's 75-year-old grandmother bustled around the cramped kitchen, stirring simmering pots, sending whiffs of garlic through the air. But Donna – the devoted granddaughter who took her for walks – is gone. There is nothing she can do but cook – and wait for her to come home.

          On Friday, Sheriff's investigators narrowed their search to John Steven Burgess, a convicted sex offender who calls himelf SinJin Stevens. He drives around in a blue 1998 Ford Ranger pickup with the vanity plate SINJIN 1 – and a 1981 Yamaha motorcycle with license plate of 14X1224. He disappeared the same day Donna did – and authorities want to talk to him.

          "He's wanted for questioning in the disappearance of Donna Jou," Sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said.

          Burgess, who was convicted of lewd and lascivious acts with a child and of sending harmful material to a minor using the Internet, never registered as a sex offender. A warrant has been issued for his arrest.

          The daughter of a hospital lab technician and a Boeing aerospace engineer, Donna scored 1570 on the SAT – 30 points shy of perfection. She reads, writes and speaks Farsi. One of her framed drawings hangs on her mother's wall. She volunteered at a Houston shelter, baby-sitting the children of battered women, and donated her time at a Houston hospital. She wanted to make a difference in the world, her brother said.

          The Jous moved to Rancho Santa Margarita last July – after Donna graduated from high school. Her friends scattered across the country after graduation – and she had little time to make new ones before classes at SDSU started. When she moved home for the summer, she surfed the Internet on her mother's laptop – but no one knew she was planning to meet a random stranger.

          "Maybe she was bored because all her friends are in San Diego," said Daniel Jou said. "Maybe she wanted to do something instead of spending all of her time around here."

          "It's a shame these guys are out there able to use the Internet … that is used by so many young people," said Daniel Jou. "It's just a matter of time. If it wasn't Donna, it could have been someone else."

          A plate above the Jou's door spells out in Farsi a holy verse promising protection. But authorities say Burgess never made it to the door June 23, parking his Yamaha motorcycle around the corner and calling Donna to come out. Donna ran out – and told her mother a friend's boyfriend – Kyle – was going to pick her up.

          But authorities believe this was the first face-to-face meeting Jou had with Burgess, who she met a month ago on the Web site .

          Burgess promised her to take her to a party at the house he rents at 3617 Faris Drive in Los Angeles, Amormino said. Burgess' roommates – mostly foreign students – told investigators Jou was at the party.

          Around her neck hung a silver horseshoe charm her mother gave her. That was the last anyone has seen Donna.

          "I believe heaven and hell are both here on this earth," said Nili Jou. "I haven't done anything to go through the hell and she hasn't either."

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          • #6
            Missing O.C. woman's family struggles with her fate

            In the two months since the disappearance of 19-year-old Donna Jou, a bookish, sheltered biology student who dreamed of being a neurosurgeon, clues to her fate have been both dramatic and maddeningly inconclusive.

            There is an abandoned toolbox with ominous contents. There are puzzling text messages she may or may not have sent her mother.

            And there is a feeling of certainty, among her family and investigators, that a convicted sex offender named John Steven Burgess -- described by one detective as "a very smooth-talking con man" -- knows more than he will reveal.

            "It's torture," said her mother, Nili Jou. "My daughter only lived 19 years, and he's not telling me where she is."

            It was Burgess, 35, investigators said, who somehow lured Jou from her mother's Rancho Santa Margarita apartment onto the back of his motorcycle June 23. It was Burgess' dilapidated rental house in Palms where witnesses last saw her alive. It was Burgess, investigators say, who repainted his 1998 Ford Ranger and fled after Jou vanished, and it was his tool box -- containing a motorcycle helmet, his truck's license plate, rope, rubber gloves and a scrub brush -- that turned up near his house.

            So when police caught up to him late last month as he was trying to ditch a bag of crack cocaine in the parking lot of a Motel 6 in Jacksonville, Fla., everyone hoped the case would break wide open.

            Instead, Burgess now sits in a Los Angeles jail on an unrelated charge of failing to register as a sex offender. He refuses to talk about Donna Jou, and though police call him a suspect, they have not charged him in her disappearance. Between him and the street stands $250,000 bail.

            "It's an unusual case, where our client is being held on Case A, where clearly the focus is on Case B," said Burgess' attorney, George Bird Jr. He said Burgess could not answer questions about his whereabouts around the time of Jou's disappearance without the risk of incriminating himself in the failing-to-register case.

            Jou's mother, an Iranian immigrant, is outraged that a Los Angeles judge reduced Burgess' bail from $1 million at his arraignment Monday, where he pleaded not guilty to failing to register as a sex offender. She said she was in disbelief when detectives warned her, before Burgess' capture, that his constitutional rights prevented them from making him speak about her daughter's disappearance.

            "In my country, by now, they'd take it out of him," she said, but here "he has the right to keep it to himself and make parents suffer. A convicted sex offender can have a whole family hanging in the air."

            After her daughter's disappearance, Nili Jou took two weeks off from her job as a phlebotomist at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach, but she has since returned to work. She found her mind fraying without something to focus on. Now and then, at work, she pauses to consider what grief and worry have done to her appearance.

            "I tell myself, 'These poor patients haven't done anything to look at this face, when they're in pain themselves,' " she says.

            Donna Jou's family is one of high achievers. Her father, Reza Jou, works in Houston as a systems integration manager for NASA's International Space Station. Her older brother, Daniel, studies physics and philosophy at Harvard. Her older sister, Lisa, is an attorney in San Diego. Donna Jou herself excelled academically, with a near-perfect SAT score and a brilliance for math. But in key ways, said those who knew her, she didn't understand the world.

            "She believed people were good," her father said. "She never had any experience with bad people."

            Her family describes her as physically tiny -- 5 feet 3, about 100 pounds. A biology student at San Diego State, Jou was staying with her mother in Orange County for the summer and working at a Payless shoe store. Investigators say Burgess apparently met Jou on Craigslist.com and passed off another man's photo as his own.

            On the day she disappeared, she told her mother she was going out with a friend but didn't specify where. Her mother, who was about to leave for a party, said she saw her daughter put on a helmet outside their apartment and climb onto a motorcycle with a man, though she didn't see his face.

            "I was sure that she knows this person," the mother said.

            Because she happened to be heading in that direction, the mother said, she followed the motorcycle for a few miles on the 241 toll road but lost sight of it when it pulled off on Portola Parkway in Irvine. That night, she received two text messages. One said:

            Goodnight Momy. Love you

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            • #7
              battery dead. in san diego and be home later. love you Momy

              She has doubts that her daughter sent them, since she usually abbreviated text messages, using "u" for "you," for example. After her daughter vanished, Nili Jou said, she was able to access her daughter's voice-mail messages and began dialing numbers she found on it, eventually reaching Burgess. She said he confirmed Donna had been at his house, and said he didn't know where she'd gone. "He was relaxed and very friendly," she said.

              Two days after she disappeared, when she didn't show up for a physics class she was taking at a local community college, her mother reported her missing.

              The case is being handled by Orange County sheriff's detectives and the Los Angeles Police Department. Police say they don't know what Burgess might have told Donna Jou to entice her onto his motorcycle, but her family says she was lonely and bored in Orange County and might have been looking to meet friends. Investigators have performed forensic testing on Burgess' truck and his toolbox but won't say what, if anything, the tests revealed.

              Burgess, who uses the alias Sinjin Stevens, was convicted of three counts of battery in 2002. The next year, he was convicted of performing a lewd act on a child.

              Police say Burgess made a living by using Craigslist to find international students -- many of them from Eastern Europe -- and charging them to sleep on mattresses strewn about his rented house on Faris Drive in the Palms area.

              "He subletted it so many times, he probably had a good income," said Orange County Sheriff's Department Det. Dan Salcedo. He said some prospective tenants became wary of Burgess on meeting him, and others left after a few days even though they had paid a month's rent.

              Tuesday afternoon, Donna Jou's father, Reza Jou, and his niece, Behnaz Nikfarjam, sat in the office of Sheriff's Department spokesman Jim Amormino while he tried to explain the complications surrounding the case. Because Burgess is believed to have traveled to Northern California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida after Jou vanished, Amormino said, it's impossible to know where to look for her.

              Amormino explained that the charge Burgess faces -- failing to register as a sex offender -- is relatively easy to prove. With his prior felony conviction, it carries a possible sentence of six years in prison.

              "If he's put away for a while, hopefully we have time to put the case together," Amormino said.

              "You're not worried that someone will try to bail him out?" asked Nikfarjam.

              "I am worried," he said.

              "Are there any legal remedies that you can do?" asked Reza Jou.

              "I wish," Amormino said. "I wish there was something I could tell you that would increase it to $10-million bail. But there's another law in this country -- no excessive bail." He tried to reassure them that if Burgess disappeared again, they would find him. "The world is too small. He has no place to run."

              "We don't have a life anymore," Reza Jou said. "For the past two months I haven't worked. I can't focus on anything else but Donna -- if she's hungry, if she's thirsty, if she's sick."

              Jou's family did not attend Burgess' arraignment Monday -- they said they were not informed of it -- but they have read a news account that described Burgess as smirking.

              "Some people are just sick, and it's a thrill for them to watch people experience pain," said Jou's older sister, Lisa Jou, a civil attorney in San Diego. She said the family wishes it had done more to warn Donna about the dangers of meeting people over the Internet.

              "We feel guilty," she said. "How do you think any family feels that their child is facing something like this because you didn't prepare them?"

              She has trouble thinking of a circumstance in which her sister remains alive. Donna was not the kind of person to run away from home, she said. Even if she wanted to, she did not have the savvy to do it. "She might run out the door and slam the door in someone's face and tell them off, only to come right back," she said. "It wasn't disappearing off the face of the earth."

              Burgess, who pleaded guilty to the drug-possession charge in Florida and received time served, will appear in court again Sept. 5 for a pretrial conference on the failure-to-register charge. Jou's family plans to demonstrate.

              Donna Jou's brother, Daniel, is a soft-spoken 21-year-old student at Harvard who is staying with his mother for the summer and studying for the LSAT. He is troubled by the $250,000 bail for Burgess. "I understand the constitutional issues at play here," he said. "It's not like they're going to change any time soon. It's just unfortunate to be on this side of it."

              Sitting beside his mother in the small, well-appointed Rancho Santa Margarita apartment, he tried to think of hopeful scenarios in which his sister might still be alive.

              "She might be extremely disoriented, living under a bridge somewhere. She might be restrained by some other person, some accomplice," he said. "You can imagine things."

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              • #8

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                • #9
                  Convicted sex offender named suspect in missing teen case

                  A convicted sex offender arrested in Florida on a drug charge has been named a suspect in the disappearance of a 19-year-old California college student.
                  John Steven Burgess, 35, made his first court appearance Monday after being extradited from Florida to answer to a charge of failing to register as a sex offender while he was living in Los Angeles.

                  While he has not been charged in the disappearance of Donna Jou, a prosecutor who asked the judge to set $1 million bail for Burgess said he was considered a suspect in the case.

                  Burgess denies any involvement in the teenager's disappearance, defense attorney George Bird Jr. said.

                  Superior Court Judge Keith L. Schwartz set bail at $250,000 and ordered Burgess to return to court Sept. 5. In the meantime, Burgess remained in jail.

                  Authorities said Jou was last seen on June 23 getting on the back of Burgess' motorcycle. She was believed headed to a party at his rented house in West Los Angeles.

                  The next day her mother received a text message saying Jou's cell phone battery was dying but that she would be home soon. Jou, a biology student at San Diego State University, has not been heard from since.

                  Burgess was convicted of three counts of battery in 2002 and of performing a lewd act against a child the following year.

                  Last week, he pleaded guilty to a third-degree felony charge for possession of crack in Florida and waived extradition to California.

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                  • #10
                    Suspect in woman's disappearance leaves free on bail

                    The prime suspect in the disappearance of San Diego State biology student Donna Jou is again free. John Burgess, 35, was released from Men's Central Jail in Los Angeles on Wednesday after posting $250,000 bail while he awaits trial on charges that he had failed to report his address to the state's registry of sex offenders.

                    Jou, 19, of Rancho Santa Margarita, was last seen by family members June 23 when Burgess picked her up on his motorcycle after they met through the craigslist website, authorities said.

                    Burgess was found last month in Jacksonville, Fla., allegedly with a small amount of crack cocaine and was extradited to California. Burgess hasn't been charged in the Jou case.

                    Orange County sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said there were "no major breaks in the case."

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                    • #11
                      Suspect In OC Student's Disappearance Posts Bail

                      The suspect in the disappearance of a Rancho Santa Margarita college student was freed on bail Wednesday on a charge of failing to register as a sex offender.

                      John Steven Burgess, 35, is due to appear at the Los Angeles Airport Superior Court next Wednesday for a pretrial hearing on the failure to register charge -- he has not been charged in connection with the disappearance two months ago of Donna Jou -- and the young woman's father plans to be there.

                      "I don't think they'll allow me to talk to him," Reza Jou said of the upcoming encounter, the first time the father has come face to face with Burgess.

                      "I've seen only pictures" of him, he said. "For me, it's something. My heart is broken. My dream has been shattered. This child was very special."

                      Jou was last seen by her family on June 23, leaving her Orange County home on the back of a motorcycle. She was later seen by witnesses at Burgess' West Los Angeles home at a party, authorities have said.

                      Investigators said Jou met Burgess through Craigslist.com, passing off another man's photo as his.

                      Burgess was convicted of three counts of battery in 2002 and performing a lewd act against a child the following year, and sentenced to 146 days in jail, placed on three years' probation and required to register as a sex offender.

                      Shortly after Jou was reported missing, authorities said they were looking to question Burgess, who also goes by the name, Sinjin Stevens, but he disappeared before they could.

                      Los Angeles police later found a tool box, 1 1/2 miles from Burgess' house in the Palms district of Los Angeles, containing a motorcycle helmet, and a license plate with SINJIN1, as well as rope, a pair of gloves and a scrub brush, authorities said.

                      Burgess was arrested on July 25 in Jacksonville, Fla. after dropping a baggie with cocaine inside when he saw police while riding a bicycle near a Motel 6.

                      Orange County investigators traveled to Florida to speak with him, but he refused to meet with them.

                      Earlier this month, Burgess pleaded guilty to felony possession of drugs and sentenced to time served, Bird said.

                      Burgess, who had been held on a $1 million warrant, waived extradition and was brought to Los Angeles to face the failure to register charge.

                      During his last court appearance, a judge lowered bail to $250,000. During that same hearing, authorities for the first time named Burgess a suspect in Jou's disappearance.

                      Reached at his office this afternoon, Burgess' attorney, George Bird Jr. said he had not heard from his client. He said he learned about Burgess posting bail through calls by the media.

                      Bird said in usual circumstances, prosecutors would likely make an offer to settle a case during a pretrial hearing, but that may change if Jou's family is in court.

                      Bird said his client should be prosecuted solely for failure to register, not for playing any role in the disappearance of Jou, for which he has denied playing any role.

                      "A prosecutor can't stand up and say (failing to register) is a victimless crime with the family sitting in court saying they're victims," Bird said.

                      The elder Jou said he is "very disappointed" that Burgess has left jail.

                      "My child still is missing," he said. "This man tells us it's his constitutional right (not) to speak. He doesn't tell where my daughter is or what he's done to my child."

                      "Now he's free on the street," he said. "This is a disservice to the community."

                      Reza Jou, who lives in Houston and is a systems integration manager and engineer for NASA's International Space Station, said he has contacted local politicians for help but feels little aid is forthcoming.

                      "It's extremely frustrating," he said. "We're desperately looking and seeking help. It's over two months now."

                      Jou, a San Diego State University honohonors student and a pre-med student who wants to be a neurosurgeon, had corresponded about a month before meeting Burgess, investigators said.

                      Her family has offered a $15,000 reward for information leading to her safe return.

                      Jou, who was taking summer classes at Rancho Santiago Community College in Orange, is said to have a 4.0 grade point average.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Suspect in woman's disappearance leaves free on bail

                        The prime suspect in the disappearance of San Diego State biology student Donna Jou is again free. John Burgess, 35, was released from Men's Central Jail in Los Angeles on Wednesday after posting $250,000 bail while he awaits trial on charges that he had failed to report his address to the state's registry of sex offenders.

                        Jou, 19, of Rancho Santa Margarita, was last seen by family members June 23 when Burgess picked her up on his motorcycle after they met through the craigslist website, authorities said.

                        Burgess was found last month in Jacksonville, Fla., allegedly with a small amount of crack cocaine and was extradited to California. Burgess hasn't been charged in the Jou case.

                        Orange County sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said there were "no major breaks in the case."

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                        • #14
                          Suspect in Missing Student Case Released on Bail

                          The family of Donna Jou is stunned and disappointed. The man investigators called their main suspect has been released from jail after posting a quarter-million-dollar bail.

                          Thirty-five-year-old convicted sex offender John Stephen Burgess is a free man Wednesday afternoon. He was released Wednesday morning after posting $250,000 bail. Last week, Judge Keith Schwartz reduced his bail amount from a million dollars, the lesser amount because there weren't charges filed against him in connection to the disappearance of 19-year-old Donna Jou.

                          Authorities had been holding Burgess for failing to register as a sex offender, but they didn't have enough evidence to charge him in the Jou case.

                          Joe's family is terribly upset and in an excusive interview Wednesday, Donna Jou's mother says she fears she will never know what happened to her daughter.

                          "Can anybody imagine that I will never get the answer. If he doesn't talk, if he doesn't help me, who will? I'm begging everybody out there, if they know anything, please, please. I don't know where Donna is, if she's alive, if she's hurt. What has happened to my daughter?" said Nili Jou, Donna's mother.

                          Donna Jou was last seen by her family June 23 driving away on the back of Burgess's motorcycle.

                          Burgess drove the 19-year-old to a party at his Los Angeles home. The straight-"A" San Diego State University student disappeared after that.

                          On July 5 Burgess left the L.A. area, the same day Sheriff's investigators named him a person of interest in Jou's disappearance. The same day they released his picture and the description of his blue 1998 Ford Ranger pickup to the media.

                          Three days later, authorities found a toolbox from Burgess's truck along with his custom license plate, a motorcycle helmet, scrub brush, gloves and rope, all suspicious, according to Sheriff's investigators.

                          However, charges were never filed against Burgess in connection with Jou's disappearance and Wednesday morning the convicted sexual predator posted bail and was released. Jou's family is outraged, upset and desperate for new information.

                          Meantime, Donna's mother sent a plea to the mother of Burgess.

                          "I hope his mother sees my tears. Please, tell your son, tell your son to help me," said Nili Jou.

                          Comment


                          • #15
                            Court protest by family of missing California teen

                            devastating," said Reza Jou, her father. "I cannot function without her. I live in misery not knowing my child's whereabouts."

                            Jou was last seen June 23 at a party at Burgess' rented house in West Los Angeles.

                            Burgess, a convicted sex offender, left California shortly after her disappearance and was arrested July 25 in Jacksonville, Fla., after police allegedly spotted him trying to dispose of a baggy of cocaine.

                            He was convicted of felony possession of drugs and sentenced to time served before being extradited to Los Angeles on an outstanding warrant for failure to register as a sex offender.

                            Burgess, who was formally named as a suspect in Jou's disappearance two weeks ago, is free on $250,000 bail, despite objections from Jou's family.

                            At the courthouse, Jou's family said they wanted to give Burgess a letter asking for his help.

                            "We just want to ask Mr. Burgess please, please, Mr. Burgess help us," said Nili Jou, her mother. "Help us to find my daughter."

                            Two weeks after the young woman disappeared, residents found a black plastic tool box in the street 1 1/2 miles from Burgess' house, authorities have said.
                            The box contained a license plate, a pair of gloves, rope and a scrub brush. The license plate read SINJIN1, which authorities believe represents Burgess' alias, Sinjin Stevens.

                            Investigators also found a motorcycle helmet in the box. Jou was last seen hopping on the back of a motorcycle and wearing a helmet.

                            Jou is a biology student at San Diego State University and was living with her mother in Rancho Santa Margarita for the summer when she vanished.

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