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Don’t Look Behind You

Don’t Look Behind You

Titel: Don’t Look Behind You
Autoren: Ann Rule
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the Black Angus restaurant in Burien, Washington.

    Bob Hansen was pleased when Nick married Melissa. Bob posed with his two sons: Nick (center), and Ty. It wasn’t long, however, before Bob reneged on his gift of a house to the newlyweds. That ended their relationship—forever.

    If anyone could have saved Kandy Kay Hansen, it was Tom Yarbrough, who rescued her and loved her completely after she hit bottom in a broken-down car on the border of Utah and Nevada. Tom was old enough to be her father, but he was very kind and caring. Tom managed a casino. He wanted to marry Kandy, and, strangely, her father said yes. But their wedding was never to be.

    Bob Hansen, at 61, discovered Costa Rica and it seemed the answer to everything he wanted. He hadn’t been successful in dating American women, but he discovered any number of dark-haired beauties in Costa Rica in their late teens and early twenties. He eventually bought a luxury condo there on March 7, 2007, for $250,000 and spent less and less time in the Northwest.

    Bob Hansen’s second wife, Cecilia, a lovely young Costa Rican woman who celebrated her twenty-first birthday in November 1987.

    Ty Hansen, in his late twenties, was a master mechanic, and sold a few cars. When he moved to a new location, a fast-talking con man walked into his office one day and convinced him to become “the Loan Arranger.” This was taken on his opening day in June 1988.

    Bob Hansen, celebrating his sixty-fourth birthday in October 1988.

    Bob Hansen expected to move into this plush condo, Los Amigos, in Rohrmoser, Costa Rica, and retire there forever. But he was denied citizenship and was shocked and disappointed.

    Bob Hansen, 64, and his second wife, Cecilia, 21, in Costa Rica, posing next to a truckload of palm nuts.

    Cecilia Hansen roller-skating in front of Bob Hansen’s home on Green River Road. She was tiny enough to be a child.

    Cecilia in the kitchen of the yellow house in Auburn. Her marriage to Bob Hansen was coming to a close. She felt like a possession and he called her “MY Beauty.”

    Flory Hansen, Bob’s third wife. She felt she should marry him because she “owed” him for building her parents a safe and sturdy home in Costa Rica.

    Flory Hansen, basting salmon that Bob caught. Bob wouldn’t allow her to go beyond their property line without him. U.S. Immigration officers found out he’d brought her into the country illegally.

    Flory standing in a burned-out forest on Blewett Pass in the Cascade Mountains in 2002.

    Worth an estimated $5 million, Bob Hansen was alone now. He shows his age as he displays a king salmon in his yard in 2004. He was estranged from his sons and grandchildren, and he pinned his hopes on a new life in Costa Rica.

    Bob Hansen’s last home was this simple rambler in Auburn, Washington—and not the new condo in Costa Rica.

    Cindy Tyler and Ty Hansen, friends since junior high, worked together to solve the mystery of his mother’s disappearance almost fifty years earlier. The platonic friends cheered each other up when they ran into one frustration after another.

    Kathleen Huget was helping a Realtor friend clean an empty house when she discovered eerie clues to a mystery of major proportions! She chose to fight for justice for a long-missing woman. (Huget Family Collection)

    Left to right: Bobby (Joann’s son by her first marriage), Ty Hansen, and Nicole Hansen (after her transgender surgery). Ty and Nicole didn’t even know they had a half brother until Ty began to investigate his mother’s disappearance. They were happy to finally meet him, but they have once again lost touch and are trying to find him.

    Ty Hansen promised his mother’s murder suspect, “I won’t stop until I find her bones!” Forty years after Joann Hansen vanished, he literally moved tons of earth looking for her remains. Radar imaging indicated there was something buried here.

    A photo of Joann Hansen shortly before she vanished in August 1962. The shape of her face is mirrored in the artist’s rebuild of the woman’s skull found in Suncadia, an area where the chief suspect once hunted.

    The artist’s reconstruction of the woman’s skull found in Suncadia, a new resort east of the Snoqualmie Mountains of Washington. It resembled Joann Hansen a great deal.
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