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Some of the missing are women who lived on society's fringe. Some were active or recovering drug users. Some had gone to jail, producing criminal records their families believe are the reason police didn't take their disappearances seriously. Gloria Walker was 43 when she disappeared May 20, 2007. She was an alcoholic and dabbled in drugs, said her aunt, Sandy Drain. "I think police looked at it as, 'Oh, just another drug addict gone," said Drain, who now cares for Walker's two sons, 16 and 26. Janice Webb was on her way to a Father's Day gathering with her family when she disappeared, said fiancee Ronnie Bowie of Lakewood. Her grandmother lives in Sowell's neighborhood. Webb, the 47-year-old mother of a grown son, was a drug user, but had a good heart and would "give you the world," Bowie said. "She did things I wasn't proud of," he said. "That still don't give nobody the right to kill." Though Bowie disapproved, Sowell's neighborhood was one of the areas Webb frequented. Bowie says he went to police in Lakewood to report his fiancee missing, but they refused to take it because she was an adult. "They said, 'I'm sorry about your loss. But she's a grown woman.'" Later, he went back with her sister, but they still wouldn't listen. "If I was rich," he said, "they'd have been looking for her."
[Associated
Press;
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