A major update in regard to the 1978 cold case death of Cheryl A. Thompson is being announced Thursday.Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters along with Loveland police will announce a major development in the decades old case. The press conference is set for 1 p.m.It’s been over 40 years since Thompson was found murdered in Loveland, Ohio.On March 24, 1978, police said Thompson left her home at 8312 Wooster Pike in Cincinnati to head to Gatsby’s on Madison Road. Her brother reported her missing the next day after family and friends could not find her.Then, on April 8, 1978, Thompson’s body was discovered by an Ohio Department of Natural Resources game protector on the bank of the Little Miami River in Loveland. The Hamilton County coroner ruled Thompson’s death a homicide and said she died by means of strangulation and blunt force trauma to the head.LPD says they “have never forgotten Cheryl and has worked with several Ohio agencies over the past four decades to bring this case to closure for the Thompson family.”Thompson was reported missing in late March of 1978, and her body was found in early April of the same year on the bank of the Little Miami River in the 260 block of East Kemper Road in Loveland.An autopsy performed by the Hamilton County Coroner’s Office ruled Thompson’s death a homicide, by means of strangulation and blunt force trauma.
A major update in regard to the 1978 cold case death of Cheryl A. Thompson is being announced Thursday.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters along with Loveland police will announce a major development in the decades old case.
The press conference is set for 1 p.m.
It’s been over 40 years since Thompson was found murdered in Loveland, Ohio.
On March 24, 1978, police said Thompson left her home at 8312 Wooster Pike in Cincinnati to head to Gatsby’s on Madison Road. Her brother reported her missing the next day after family and friends could not find her.
Then, on April 8, 1978, Thompson’s body was discovered by an Ohio Department of Natural Resources game protector on the bank of the Little Miami River in Loveland. The Hamilton County coroner ruled Thompson’s death a homicide and said she died by means of strangulation and blunt force trauma to the head.
LPD says they “have never forgotten Cheryl and has worked with several Ohio agencies over the past four decades to bring this case to closure for the Thompson family.”
Thompson was reported missing in late March of 1978, and her body was found in early April of the same year on the bank of the Little Miami River in the 260 block of East Kemper Road in Loveland.
An autopsy performed by the Hamilton County Coroner’s Office ruled Thompson’s death a homicide, by means of strangulation and blunt force trauma.
This content is imported from Facebook.
You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.