logo
Shock twist in case of woman missing for 63 years: ‘No regrets'

Shock twist in case of woman missing for 63 years: ‘No regrets'

7NEWS11-05-2025

In July 1962, 20-year-old Audrey Backeberg went missing from Reedsburg, Wisconsin. The family's babysitter said she and Backeberg hitchhiked to Madison on July 7 before they took a Greyhound bus to Indianapolis, according to her missing person report.
The babysitter said she last saw Backeberg walking away from the bus stop, around a corner. Investigators pursued different leads on her whereabouts for years, but the case eventually went cold.
That is, until earlier this month when the Sauk County Sheriff's Office announced Backeberg had been located — 'alive and well'.
Backeberg disappeared of her own volition, with no criminal activity or foul play involved, authorities said.
The woman who spent more than 60 years listed as a missing person in Wisconsin is now living in another state.
The case was assigned to a Sauk County detective early this year as part of an ongoing review of all cold case files, Sheriff Chip Meister said in the release. Witnesses were re-interviewed, all evidence was re-evaluated, and new insights were revealed.
But the secret to cracking the case was her sister's Ancestry family history profile, Detective Isaac Hanson told WISN -TV of Milwaukee.
'That was pretty key in locating death records, census reports, all kinds of data,' Hanson told WISN.
'Ultimately, we came up with an address.'
Hanson phoned the local sheriff's department and asked someone to stop by at the address he found, WISN reported.
Ten minutes later, Backeberg, now in her 80s, gave Hanson a call.
An abusive husband may have been a factor in her disappearance, Hanson said, but he promised their conversation would remain private. The sheriff's office also did not disclose what state Backeberg is living in.
According to The Chippewa Herald, Backeberg had two children with a former husband, Ronald, who died in 2006. Hanson confirmed to the Herald that Backeberg did remarry and has a new last name that he declined to share.
Hanson told the Herald he notified Backeberg's family members, who had mixed emotions but were 'elated'.
'She sounded happy,' he told WISN. 'Confident in her decision. No regrets.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police don't know how many shops are selling illegal tobacco
Police don't know how many shops are selling illegal tobacco

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Police don't know how many shops are selling illegal tobacco

NSW Police Minister Yasmin Catley has warned that law enforcement officers cannot be expected to regulate the ballooning tobacco black market and conceded it was not clear how many tobacconist retailers would sign up to a new licensing scheme designed to combat the problem. After Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Wednesday ruled out scaling back the tax on tobacco – which has rocketed from 26 cents per cigarette in 2010 to $1.37 in September 2024 – the debate has shifted to who should take on greater responsibility for tackling the explosion of illicit products. Catley on Thursday downplayed the idea that police should take over from NSW Health to enforce compliance, despite Premier Chris Minns earlier this week raising the prospect of handing officers a greater role in tackling black market tobacco. 'Police aren't regulators, and there's no question about that. They are not regulators. The police are out there catching crooks, and that's what we want them to do,' Catley said. Earlier this week, Minns ignited a conversation over whether the federal government's 'massive' excise on tobacco should be reduced as a means of combatting the explosion of illegal tobacco and vapes across Australia, with the lucrative trade providing a rich vein of revenue for criminal organisations. Loading But with NSW Health and the existing regulatory framework failing to stem the number of shops selling illicit tobacco, Catley said the introduction of a licensing scheme from July 1 would give the government a better understanding of 'how many shops are turning up' and 'where they are'. Police thought there might be about 6000 to 8000 tobacco retailers, but that was 'anecdotal', Catley said. Oversight of the current retail identification number (RIN) required to sell tobacco products was poor, senior government sources said, with little punishment for failing to register under the scheme. On Thursday, the store manager of an EzyMart near Martin Place in Sydney's CBD told the Herald he was aware of the new licensing scheme, saying: 'Of course, all the shops have to be signed up.'

Police don't know how many shops are selling illegal tobacco
Police don't know how many shops are selling illegal tobacco

The Age

time3 days ago

  • The Age

Police don't know how many shops are selling illegal tobacco

NSW Police Minister Yasmin Catley has warned that law enforcement officers cannot be expected to regulate the ballooning tobacco black market and conceded it was not clear how many tobacconist retailers would sign up to a new licensing scheme designed to combat the problem. After Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Wednesday ruled out scaling back the tax on tobacco – which has rocketed from 26 cents per cigarette in 2010 to $1.37 in September 2024 – the debate has shifted to who should take on greater responsibility for tackling the explosion of illicit products. Catley on Thursday downplayed the idea that police should take over from NSW Health to enforce compliance, despite Premier Chris Minns earlier this week raising the prospect of handing officers a greater role in tackling black market tobacco. 'Police aren't regulators, and there's no question about that. They are not regulators. The police are out there catching crooks, and that's what we want them to do,' Catley said. Earlier this week, Minns ignited a conversation over whether the federal government's 'massive' excise on tobacco should be reduced as a means of combatting the explosion of illegal tobacco and vapes across Australia, with the lucrative trade providing a rich vein of revenue for criminal organisations. Loading But with NSW Health and the existing regulatory framework failing to stem the number of shops selling illicit tobacco, Catley said the introduction of a licensing scheme from July 1 would give the government a better understanding of 'how many shops are turning up' and 'where they are'. Police thought there might be about 6000 to 8000 tobacco retailers, but that was 'anecdotal', Catley said. Oversight of the current retail identification number (RIN) required to sell tobacco products was poor, senior government sources said, with little punishment for failing to register under the scheme. On Thursday, the store manager of an EzyMart near Martin Place in Sydney's CBD told the Herald he was aware of the new licensing scheme, saying: 'Of course, all the shops have to be signed up.'

Only Canberra can stop the black-market tobacco trade it fostered
Only Canberra can stop the black-market tobacco trade it fostered

Sydney Morning Herald

time6 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Only Canberra can stop the black-market tobacco trade it fostered

The Albanese government's laudable attempt to use a tax as a public health measure to break the lethal grip of tobacco has blown up in the faces of state governments. Canberra's well-intentioned but ill-thought-through excise duty increase has not only forced the cost of cigarettes purchased legally to soar – from $20 in 2019 to $57.99 for one popular brand – but driven consumers to cheaper illegal tobacco products. As an unintended consequence, not only is the federal tax take shrinking, but the burden of controlling the newly burgeoning illegal trade has fallen to beleaguered state health departments or police forces. Premier Chris Minns has called for the federal excise on tobacco to be reconsidered as illegal sales proliferate in NSW, pointing out any requirement for police to step in to investigate black-market cigarettes would come at the cost of dealing with other crimes. He noted the proliferation of tobacconists selling illegal products in his electorate of Kogarah were pushing out other high street retailers because selling blackmarket tobacco was now so lucrative. All the while, the quixotic federal government doubled the tax on a packet of cigarettes, yet expects revenue to decline by a third. Aside from health and tax considerations, the influx of black-market cigarettes has also been a boon for organised crime gangs. The Australian Border Force estimates they control about three-quarters of the trade, generating significant profits. Last month, the Herald reported there were about 60 tobacconists for every McDonald's restaurant. The excise duty comprises more than two-thirds of the retail price of a packet of cigarettes. The tax has provided a major, although shrinking, stream of revenue for the federal government, falling from $16.3 billion in 2019-20 to an estimated $7.1 billion in the next financial year. The number of authorised NSW health inspectors has doubled and a new licensing scheme, effective from July 1, will tie the licence to compliance. NSW also increased fines for people selling black-market tobacco products from $11,000 to $154,000, and up to $22,000 for selling to children. Given the plethora of new outlets, they have yet to prove much of a deterrent. As Minns said: 'It's a bit like someone standing on a beach trying to stop the waves.' Loading The premier's call for a tax rethink on tobacco excise is self-evident and common sense, given the vaulting black market trade has potential to compromise optimistic claims that excise duty tax has reduced smoking. NSW is attempting to put tax on the agenda for this month's national health ministers' conference. But unpicking the federal tax policy is unlikely to resolve a complex problem that has now gone too far to be addressed by one single solution. The illegal tobacco trade is mess created by the federal government. It should not be up to state police or health departments to fix. It is a matter that must and can only be solved by Canberra regulators, Home Affairs, Border Force and federal health inspectors.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store