On the night of Sunday, January 5th, 1992 in the small town of Gilmer, Texas 17-year-old Kelly Dae Wilson vanished without a trace. With virtually no clues and fewer leads the investigation moved slow, but it certainly wasn’t for the lack of effort on the part of Kelly’s family, a diligent Gilmer Police Sergeant named James York Brown, and Upshur County Sheriff Buck Cross. One of the first leads came when 20-year-old Angela Hammond disappeared 500 miles north of Gilmer in Clinton, Missouri, but it fizzled out fast. After that, the investigation into the disappearance of Kelly Dae Wilson took a series of turns for the worse, including red herrings and a bad case of Satanic Panic. Part 1 of 3.Submit your DNA data from a consumer testing company to Othram’s database,
dnasolves.com. It’s only used for law enforcement investigations:
https://dnasolves.com/user/registerYou can support gone cold – texas true crime at
https://www.patreon.com/gonecoldpodcastFind us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram by using @gonecoldpodcastThe History of Gilmer by Hettye Calloway (1926), A Brief History of Upshur County by G. H. Baird (2017), The Richmond Enquirer, The Baltimore Sun, The Gilmer Mirror, The Dallas Morning News,
KETK.com, The Chicago Tribune, The Tyler Courier-Times, The Longview News Journal, and
Medium.com were used as sources for this episode.#KellyDaeWilson #WhereIsKellyDaeWilson #JusticeForKellyDaeWilson #SatanicPanic #Gilmer #GilmerTX #UpshurCountyTX #Texas #TX #TexasTrueCrime #TrueCrime #TrueCrimePodcast #Podcast #ColdCase #Unsolved #Murder #UnsolvedMurder #UnsolvedMystery #UnsolvedMysteries #MissingPerson #Missing #Disappearance