Tammy Lynn

Tammy Lynn




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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "What Happend [sic] To Tammy Leppert??" . Archived from the original on October 27, 2009 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ De Groodt, Helene (September 7, 1978). "Cover Girl" . Orlando Sentinel . Orlando, Florida. p.ย 4 โ€“ via Newspapers.com.

^ "Tammy Lynn Leppert: Biography" . IMDb . Retrieved 2016-09-09 .

^ The Orlando Sentinel Orlando, Florida Thursday, September 07, 1978 - Page 4

^ LYNN LEPPERT Retrieved on 16 Jan 2018

^ Jump up to: a b c d e "NamUs MP # 1376" . findthemissing.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 20 January 2009 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b c "Tammy Leppert" . missingkids.org . National Center for Missing & Exploited Children . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Case File 211DFFL" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ Florida Today Cocoa, Florida Saturday, November 30, 1985 - Page 5A

^ Florida Today Cocoa, Florida Monday, February 25, 1985 - Page 11

^ "NamUs UP # 4527" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 15 October 2008 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 6796" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 23 March 2010 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Case File 16UFLA" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . Retrieved July 8, 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 852" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 11 February 2008 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 6642" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 4 February 2010 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Case File: 900UFVA" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . 12 December 2012 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 7193" (18 May 2010) . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 1567" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 11 April 2008 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Case File: 607UFTN" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . 20 January 2013 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 7660" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 26 August 2010 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Orange County News Release" . Orange County Sheriff . Retrieved 18 January 2019 .

^ "NamUs UP # 6661" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 9 February 2010 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Case File 760UFVA" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ Alexander, Keith L.; Hedgpath, Dana; crime (13 June 2018). "Remains found in 1991 identified as those of missing Arlington woman" . Washington Post . Retrieved 30 September 2019 .

^ "Case File 120UFVA" . The Doe Network . Retrieved July 8, 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 8493" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 9 February 2011 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 1390" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 25 April 2008 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Hot Case 1053" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 6088" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . October 23, 2009 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 6150" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 2 November 2009 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Case File 713UFVA" . doenetwork.org . The Doe Network . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "NamUs UP # 12683" . identifyus.org . National Missing and Unidentified Persons System . 30 June 2014 . Retrieved 8 July 2015 .

^ "Scarface (1983)" .


Tammy Lynn Leppert (born February 5, 1965; disappeared July 6, 1983) was an American former child and teen model , actress and beauty queen who went missing under mysterious circumstances at the age of 18.

Leppert was employed primarily as a model throughout her late-childhood and teenage years, [1] appearing on the front of CoverGirl magazine in October 1978. [2] She began participating in beauty contests at 4 years old. As a child, she competed in nearly 300 beauty pageants and won the vast majority of them, taking home about 280 crowns. Just before her disappearance, she appeared in the 1983 film Scarface as the girl who was a distraction to the lookout car during the bloody chainsaw shower scene. Before that, among other minor roles, she played a participant in a boxing match in the teen movie Spring Break . Reportedly, her legs, hips and torso were used in the main poster for the movie. It is claimed she had plans to go to Hollywood in 1983. [3]

Leppert had a lead role playing herself in a movie called Cover Girl Behind the Scenes. [4]

After the shooting of the film Spring Break was finished, Leppert went unaccompanied to a weekend party. She came home from the party "a different person" according to her close friend Wing Flannagan's testimony. When she was playing in her next film, Scarface, she suddenly returned home after the fourth day of filming. Her mother assumed that Leppert had been afraid of being murdered by someone, and that she had become overtaken by this delusion. Her mother felt obliged to have her examined by a doctor, but after 72 hours in a medical center, Leppert was released and there seemed to be no signs of drug or alcohol use according to doctor statements. [5]

Leppert was last seen in Cocoa Beach, Florida on July 6, 1983. She was reported to have worn a blue denim shirt decorated with flowers, along with a matching skirt, a gray purse, and sandals. [6] [7] Some agencies have stated that she left without shoes or money. [8] A friend of Leppert's told authorities he had an argument with her while driving her from her home in Rockledge, Florida and later "left her [...] in a parking lot." [6] Although he is the last person believed to have seen her, he is not considered a suspect. However, her mother has claimed that Leppert was "afraid" of him. [1]

Christopher Bernard Wilder was linked by the FBI to the murders of 12 women from Florida to California; officials say Wilder lured women with promises of photographing them for magazines. Leppert's mother filed a claim for more than $1 million against Wilder's estate. Authorities have not linked Wilder to Leppert's disappearance. [9]

After Tammy Leppert's disappearance, Cocoa Beach Detective Harold Lewis received two telephone calls from a woman claiming that Leppert was still alive. In the first call, the woman said that Leppert was well and would make contact when the time was right. During the second call, she said that Leppert was doing what she always wanted: going to school to become a nurse. [10]

At the time of her disappearance, Leppert was between 5'0" and 5'5" and weighed between 105 and 115 pounds. She had curly blond hair and hazel eyes. [1] [7] [8] It is also speculated that she may have been three months pregnant. [8]

Some presume that Leppert may have been a murder victim of serial killer Christopher Wilder , who killed 8 or 9 young women before dying in a shootout with police in 1984. Leppert's family sued Wilder before he was killed, but eventually halted the process, as some had doubts as to whether he was involved in Tammy Leppert's disappearance. Their agent also stated that she did not believe Wilder killed Leppert.

Another person of interest in the case was John Crutchley , a convicted kidnapper and rapist suspected of killing as many as 30 women. He committed suicide in prison in 2002. [1] Leppert's mother theorized that her daughter could have been murdered due to her knowledge of local drug trafficking. She said Leppert exhibited signs of paranoia, as she was cautious when consuming food and would not drink from open containers. She had also allegedly filed a report to police. [1]

Several age progressions have been created to show what Leppert may have looked like if she were still alive, by forensic artists Danny Sollitti, Diana Trepkov, and those from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children . [6] [8] Profiles detailing the case have been created by the Doe Network , National Missing and Unidentified Persons System , and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children in hopes of generating leads from tips. [6] [7] [8] Leppert's DNA profile has since been processed, but her dental records and fingerprints have not been accessed by local police. [6] It is believed that her dental information had been acquired at some point, but that poor record keeping resulted in the data being lost. [1]

According to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System , the following unidentified decedents have been ruled out as being the remains of Tammy Leppert.

The television program Unsolved Mysteries profiled Leppert's disappearance in September 1992, Season 5 Episode 1. This episode includes: Tami [sic] Lynn, Hudson Valley UFO (Pts. 1 & 2) and Daredevil Doe & UD. Language: English Runtime: 42 minutes Release date: December 31, 1992. [33]

July 6, 1983 (agedย 18) Cocoa Beach , Florida, U.S.
Missing for 38ย years, 2ย months and 8ย days
A decomposed white female found buried in a shallow grave. It is believed she died about six months before she was found. [11]

A partial skeleton of a white female discovered by a hunter. The subject had been estimated to have died eight months before. [12]

Slidell, St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana

A pregnant female disposed of in Lake Pontchartrain . [13] A weight had been tied to her body as an attempt to hide the body. [14]

A severed torso and leg believed to have belonged to a white female found inside of a dumpster. The victim wore a rubber bracelet on her ankle. She had died within two months to a few days of discovery and there was evidence that she may have been kept in a freezer or a similar device to preserve the remains. [15] [16]

A decomposed body of a white female found in a desert area. She had died months before. [17]

A white woman killed in the process of an attempted robbery. She was intoxicated at the time of her death. [18] [19]

A skeletonized body of a white female believed to be a teenage runaway. She had died about six weeks before her discovery. [20] The victim was identified in 2018 as 20-year-old Tracey Hobson, an unreported missing person from Anaheim. [21]

A female of an unknown race with Hispanic characteristics found skeletonized in a wooded area. She had died between the years of 1989 and 1991, most likely within nine months. [22] She was previously speculated to have been of African descent and at a younger age, between thirteen and eighteen. [23] The victim was later identified as Marta Haydee Rodriguez, 28. [24]

A white woman with Hispanic characteristics found by construction workers in 1993. She had decayed teeth and had died between the years of 1987 and 1992. [25] [26]

The partial skeleton of a white female believed to have died between two and seven years before her discovery in a wooded area. [27] [28]

A skeleton of a white female with Hispanic characteristics found underneath brush on a private property. She had died between the years of 1990 and 1996. [29]

A partial skeleton of a white female wearing her hair in braids found under leaves near a cemetery. [30] She had died within eight months preceding the discovery of her remains. [31]

A female of an unknown race with Hispanic characteristics was discovered mummified underneath a sheet. [32]

Distraction at the Lookout Car - Chainsaw Shower Scene

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ Jump up to: a b c Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19thย ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p.ย 334. ISBNย 1-904994-10-5 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d Tony Burke, "Obituary: Tami Lynn", Blues & Rhythm , No.353, October 2020, p.18

^ Dan Phillips, "Tami Lynn's Unlikely Hit Had A Funky Flip" , Home of the Groove , February 23, 2008. Retrieved 30 June 2020

^ Jump up to: a b "Tami Lynn, Chart-Breaking Soul Singer From New Orleans, Has Died" , Offbeat , July 8, 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2020

^ Jump up to: a b c "Tami Lynn", The AFO Foundation . Retrieved 11 November 2019

^ Jump up to: a b c d e Geoffrey Clarfield, "In Exile on Main Street" , The Brooklyn Rail , October 2011. Retrieved 11 November 2019

^ Jump up to: a b "Dusted Reviews: Tami Lynn - Love Is Here And Now You're Gone" . Dustedmagazine.com . 2006-01-05 . Retrieved 2013-03-30 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Home of the Groove: Tami Lynn's Unlikely Hit Had A Funky Flip" . Homeofthegroove.blogspot.com . 2008-02-23 . Retrieved 2013-03-30 .

^ "Love Is Here and Now You're Gone - Tami Lynn, Tamiya Lynnย : Releases" . AllMusic . Retrieved 2013-03-30 .

^ Jump up to: a b Elyse Lewis, "Tami Lynn, Matthew Colthup team up for NPR concert" , Suncoast News , December 17, 2014. Retrieved 11 November 2019

^ "Matthew with Tammy Lynn & The US Stones" , YouTube . Retrieved 11 November 2019

^ "Tami Lynn R.I.P." , Soul-Source.co.uk , 2 July 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2020



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Tami Lynn (born Gloria Jean Brown ; January 25, 1939 โ€“ June 26, 2020) was an American soul singer . She scored a Top Ten hit on the UK Singles Chart in 1971 with the song "I'm Gonna Run Away From You". [1]

Gloria Brown was born in Gert Town , New Orleans , Louisiana . [2] She attended school with Allen Toussaint and Ellis Marsalis Jr. , [2] and sang in church choirs, and with visiting groups such as the Clara Ward Singers , as well as in a school production of Show Boat . She also sang gospel music on WMRY radio shows, and after substituting for an absent performer and being discovered by local musician Alvin "Red" Tyler , began performing rhythm and blues songs in local clubs. [3] Taking the stage name Tami Lynn, she was heard by Allen Toussaint and Harold Battiste , signed for AFO Records , and toured with other company artists, before singing in New York City as an opening act for John Coltrane , Miles Davis and Ella Fitzgerald . [4] [5] [6]

Jerry Wexler heard Lynn sing at a convention in 1965. [6] [7] Wexler had her record the Bert Berns penned and produced [8] song, "I'm Gonna Run Away From You", for Atco Records , but the song was not released at the time, although it was released in the UK on Atlantic (AT.4071). In 1971, "I'm Gonna Run Away From You" was released as a single , with "The Boy Next Door" as the B-side , on Mojo and Atlantic , where it became a hit in the UK among devotees of Northern soul . The tune hit number 4 in the UK Singles Chart in 1971. [1] A full-length album, Love Is Here and Now You're Gone , followed in 1972, produced by John Abbey , and was reissued on CD in 2005 by DBK Works . [9]

Lynn occasionally worked as a backup singer . She sang on many Dr. John 's albums, and the musician put her in contact with the Rolling Stones with whom she sang on Exile on Main St. . [6] She also recorded with King Floyd , Wilson Pickett , and Sonny & Cher , [5] [7] and performed with other musicians including Miles Davis, Irma Thomas and Joe Cocker . [2] [6] "I'm Gonna Run Away From You" returned to the UK Singles Chart in 1975 after being reissued, hitting number 36 the second time around. [1] Following the song's success, Lynn toured with Dr. John. [5] [10] Another album was the 1992 funk CD , Tamiya Lynn . [8] In 2008, she appeared at the Ponderosa Stomp . [2]

Lynn lived in New York City for many years, [6] before moving to Florida. In 2014, she performed in concert at New Port Richey, Florida , with guitarist Matthew Colthup. [10] [11]

She died in Florida on June 26, 2020. [4] [12]

( 1939-01-25 ) January 25, 1939 Gert Town, New Orleans , Louisiana , United States
June 26, 2020 (2020-06-26) (agedย 81) New Port Richey , Florida , U.S.

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