|
|
|
Search
Warrant: Girly Named Young Son as Sole Benefactor in Life Insurance
Policy |
|
Diazien's Divorce
Attorney Attempted to Adopt the Child |
(Albuquerque) A search warrant filed in District Court
on September 26, 2000, provides new insight into the disappearance
of Girly Chew Hossencofft.
The warrant states that by July of 1999, "Girly Hossencofft
had a life insurance policy with (her young son) named as the
beneficiary." As reported earlier in The Horner Report,
Felissa Garcia Kelley filed a Motion to Withdraw as Diazien Hossencofft's
divorce attorney in July of 1999. According to court documents,
Ms. Kelley attempted to legally adopt Hossencofft's son. It's
worth repeating: Girly named that child as her sole beneficiary
in her life insurance policy.
According to the September 26, 2000, search warrant, police received
a telephone call from Karen Vandiver on September 15, 1999. Vandiver
explained that she was a lawyer who worked with Felissa Garcia
Kelley. The warrant simply goes on to state, "On several
occasions, Vandiver heard Hossencofft talking to Garcia-Kelley
about his wife stating, "She will never live to see the
money."
When police executed their search warrant late last month at
Felissa Garcia Kelley's law office, they found several items
of clothing believed to belong to Diazien Hossencofft.
The primary item of interest is a pair of shoes. Court documents
state that the tread on those shoes appears to match the "distinct
shoe tread type pattern" discovered on a gray tarp on September
10, 1999.
That tarp--found along Highway 60 a few miles west of Magdalena--contained
Girly's bloodstained green and white blouse, a pair of pink and
orange shorts with blood, a pair of green panties with blood,
a white cloth with blood, two pieces of duct tape with blood
and hair, and a piece of gauze with blood.
Investigators recently confirmed that Diazien Hossencofft mailed
his shoes to Ms. Kelley last year while he was in a federal prison
in Atlanta, Georgia.
Hossencofft had recently been arrested in South Carolina. He
was transported to Atlanta where he stayed for a few days before
he was returned to New Mexico. |
copyright 2000 M. Horner
|