By David Lohr
(Continued)
Desperate for information, Nonnie's family announced a $10,000 reward for information leading to her whereabouts. That reward has since climbed to $25,000.
Last month, the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office transferred Nonnie's case from the missing persons department to homicide investigator Kate Battan.
"As time goes on, it's strange that if she was voluntarily missing, we have absolutely no evidence," Battan said in an interview with The Denver Post. "None of her financial records have been accessed. It's odd that there have been no sightings."
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Nonnie Dotson |
During an interview with the same paper, Lackland Air Force Base spokesman Kenny Pruitt said the military has classified Nonnie as a missing person. "Definitely not AWOL," Pruitt said.
Nonnie's friends and family recently held two memorial services for Nonnie in Littleton and in San Antonio.
"We wanted Nonnie not to be forgotten, and we are afraid she is being forgotten because there's no word and no clues on her disappearance," Nonnie's mother Candice Dotson Doyle told WOAI.com. "For this to happen to her is horrible, and for us getting as little help as we've gotten I think is a tragedy."
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