https://www.fox26houston.com/news/daughter-finds-missing-houston-mom-after-more-than-50-yearsDaughter finds missing Houston mom after more than 50 yearsHOUSTON - A Houston woman who’s been looking for her missing mother for more than 50 years is finally getting answers.
Patricia Thomas-Wardell was just 18 years old when she went missing way back in 1970. At that time the Beltway 8 Toll Road didn’t exist. Her daughter Cynthia was just a year old, and she’s been searching for her mother her entire life. Now DNA confirms a woman found dead in the woods near what is now the Beltway, was confirmed to be Cynthia’s missing mother.
"It’s been just like a bad nightmare," the grieving daughter says.
With no real memories of her mom, Cynthia has been clinging to photos of her mother, preserving old newspaper clippings about her disappearance, and holding on to stacks of letters, like the one she showed me from Unsolved Mysteries, after years of begging for help to find her mom, to anyone who would listen.
"As I became an adult I was able to hire private detectives and things like that," Cynthia explained. "My family has been scammed by people who contacted us saying they have information about where my mother is, and they ask for money."
Several family members gave DNA samples to Houston Police investigators in 2016 in hopes of locating Patricia.
"We’re able to solve more missing person cases with the use of DNA, familial DNA." Houston Police Department Missing Persons Detective Darrin Buse explains
This past Friday, Detective Buse told the family DNA confirmed Patricia had been buried minutes from where they live, in a county cemetery as a Jane Doe, for years.
"It's hard to understand. It’s hard to wrap your head around after all these years. She’s been so close all this time," her brother Raymond Thomas, 82, who was a TSU student when his baby sister went missing. "It’s been very, very difficult."
"It’s been lots of nightmares, you know, wondering where she is," Patricia's 75-year-old sister Maxine McNeely added. "It’s just been horrible."
"Even though it’s a bad outcome, it’s still a good outcome," 72-year-old Leroy Thomas concluded. "Now we know for sure where she is."
After more than 50 years, although it’s her grave they're visiting, Patricia’s siblings and her baby girl are the closest they’ve been to her in decades, but they were met by a locked gate at the cemetery entrance.
"I’m just ready to go in," Cynthia said. "The lock is like torturing me right now."
When Harris County found out, they immediately sent someone to let the family in. The key to unfasten the padlock couldn’t turn, and the gates couldn’t swing open fast enough.
"I'm glad to know she’s here," Cynthia said. "I can’t wait to just be next to her."
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There at her mom’s grave for the very first time, 52 years of emotion spilled out.
"And now maybe I can really and truly be happy and that’s what I’m trying to get to because I’m all messed up right now," Cynthia said tearfully.
Turns out, that after Patricia went missing in 1970, her skeletal remains were found in the woods near CE King Parkway in January 1971. Somehow it wasn't put together that it was the missing 18-year-old until now by a Missing Persons investigator, who has his fair share of cold and new cases. "We work north of 9,000 cases a year," Det. Buse explained.