OSBI seeks help with 25-year-old cold case
According to OSBI, David was last seen on April 9, 2000, at his home in Locust Grove.
OKC cyclists celebrate 'Bike to Work Day' May 16
Authorities say the right image is an age-progressed photo of David at age 31.
If you have any information, contact tips@osbi.ok.gov or 1-800-522-8017.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Denver man called United Airlines real customer service — then got transferred to someone who took $17K. How?
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On United's end, however, a representative told him the three-hour call connected with David was only in their internal call log for 12 minutes. United confirms they logged several calls from Smoker's number and have launched an internal review. However, the airline couldn't explain how the call was transferred to the alleged scammer or why their own logs recorded a much shorter call duration. Smoker has filed a fraud report with his credit card provider while awaiting resolution. 'They have a system that people are supposed to trust,' Smoker said. 'I trusted that system. There was no reason that I shouldn't have trusted that system, and I was scammed as a part of it.' 'We've been in direct contact with the customer to understand what happened in this case,' a United spokeswoman said in a statement. 'We are reviewing this matter thoroughly. We're committed to finding a fair resolution for him.' She did not answer any questions on how Smoker's call could have been redirected. A broader rise of airline scams While Dan Smoker's case stands out as he was somehow intercepted or rerouted through United's offical line, it's part of a broader trend of scammers cashing in on airline cancellations. The urgency and panic that comes with rebooking a cancelled flight makes airline customers a prime target for phishing in scammers books. Recent investigations by consumer watchdogs like the Better Business Bureau (BBB) and AARP show how widespread the threat has become. The BBB issues frequent alerts about fake airline customer service numbers leading to billing scams, and reports via their Scam Tracker database note how even trusted sources like Google can populate fraudulent numbers that impersonate airline support. Scammers often purchase top ad placement or manipulate Google search results to insert fake numbers at the top of your query—meaning customers often think they're getting help, not pitching money. 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