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Detective Stuart Somershoe of the Phoenix Police Department said his agency, which has over 500 missing person
cases open, just finished entering 100 cases into NamUs. He's hopeful his department can make a match. "It's kind of time-consuming, but I think it's a worthwhile program," Somershoe said. NamUs grew out of a Justice Department task force working on the challenge of solving missing person cases. One need that the task force identified was to give people who could help solve cases better access to database information. "Billy's Law" sailed through the House late last month and is pending in the Senate, where supporters are confident it will easily pass. The bill would authorize $10 million in grants annually that police, sheriffs, medical examiners and coroners could use to train people to use NamUs and to help cover the costs of entering data into the system. It would also authorize another $2.4 million a year to run the system and ensure permanent funding. The bill would also link NamUs with a major FBI crime database that's now available only to law enforcement, partly because it contains sensitive information about ongoing investigations. That confidential data would be withheld from NamUs when necessary. Billy Smolinski, of Waterbury, Conn., was last seen Aug. 24, 2004, when he asked a neighbor to look after his dog. His pickup truck was later found outside his home, though not where he usually parked it. His wallet and other belongings were still inside. The Smolinski family first struggled to get police to take a missing adult case seriously. It took a long time for investigators to finally conclude Billy had been killed, perhaps as a result of a love triangle gone sour. The family put up reward posters, searched places where they thought his body might have been hidden and kept pressure on police. Smolinski said she came to see how police were often overwhelmed, but to her NamUs is a "no-brainer." "If they find remains I'm hopeful they'll identify him through NamUs," Smolinski said. ___ On the Net: National Missing and Unidentified Persons System:
http://www.namus.gov/
[Associated
Press;
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