Quantcast
breaking news

Candlelight vigil for Mandy

Updated: February 26, 2013
watch video
WATSEKA -- A man's daughter has been missing nearly three weeks. With leads going nowhere, he doesn't know where to turn. Her family says she disappeared.

33-year-old Amanda Walters-Pentecost was last seen in Hoopeston February 1. A camera spotted her walking around town, and she hasn't been seen since.

Police found her purse with lot of her were belongings inside, but her phone was missing. That clue gives her family mixed emotions about what has happened to her.

"It's a tremendous baring on our minds and hearts," Tim Walker said.

Walker has been wracking his mind for weeks, trying to figure out where his daughter could be.

"It's something that I thought would never happen to me. We just don't know where to turn, what to do."

People are taking search parties beyond the streets of Hoopeston and friends are sharing pictures on Facebook; getting the word out any way they can.

"There's no words that can say how much I thank them."

Amanda's family says when they try to call her, it goes straight to voice mail. No one has been able to get in contact with her. It's something her cousin says is completely out of character.

"I know Mandy wouldn't have set her things down and just walked off. She would've called somebody she would've told somebody," Misty Kottke said.

"It's just not like her," Walker said.

After weeks of searching, they're preparing themselves for the day she doesn't come back; one of the hardest things they've ever had to do.

"We're not oblivious to the fact that the weather conditions were not good on the days she went missing."

"Just say my prayers to the good Lord. That's all I can say, that's the only one I can turn to."

That's who the community is also turning to. Watseka's local church is having a candlelight vigil.

"We're coming together in unity, and believing in God for the impossible."

All this family says they can do now is lean on each other and memories.

"She wrote poems a lot. She always read them to me. I told her she should be a poet. God bless you guys I can't talk no more, I'm sorry."

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

The forecast for the next few hours....

DALLAS -- After months of deliberation, leaders of the Boy Scouts of America made a historic decision. ...

SPRINGFIELD-- The Illinois Senate narrowly approved a bill that would ban hand-held cell phones behind the wheel....

PONTIAC-- A suspected gas leak caused a school to be evacuated Thursday....

CHAMPAIGN-URBANA -- Changes could be in store for bus riders including new routes in the fall. ...

SPRINGFIELD -- Advocates are working to expand Medicaid in the state....

PEORIA COUNTY -- The state is wrapping up its case against Christopher Harris for the murder of five people in Beason in 2009. ...

SPRINGFIELD -- Drivers may soon go a little faster on state roadways....

PEORIA COUNTY -- As the state wraps up its last day of testimony in the Christopher Harris murder trial, we're getting a different story of what might have happened the night five people were...

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS -- The UI's farm stand is back open for business....

 
More From WCIA News
 
Connect with ciLiving

 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Illinoishomepage.net
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved