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But they haven't said in a U.S. State Department bulletin exactly how they were able to arrive at the profile. Evers and the boy's father, Bob, have been following the case closely from their home in Ohio, where the real Jason Robert Evers was kidnapped and killed in 1982. They were preparing to attend a June 2 parole hearing for Adrian Williams, who was sentenced to a maximum of 50 years in Jason's death. The appearance of a man police say is an imposter just before that Ohio hearing has deeply troubled both father and daughter. "He's definitely not my son," Evers said in an interview from his Ohio home. "And I don't need somebody living my son's life." For Amy Evers, like her father, the pain has never really gone away. But she also tries to deal with the feelings that only a big sister can suffer when she was the one looking out for her little brother, and the last to see him that summer of 1982. "I hope he is a good guy, and he didn't do anything bad. But my brother is gone," she says. "All that was left of him was bones. And the fact that my brother didn't even have a chance to really live makes me really mad." Federal agents say they discovered the man as part of a program the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service started in 2005 to expose imposters by checking state death records. Now, like police and prosecutors, Amy Evers has lots of questions for the anonymous man. She wonders how he could have gotten her brother's Social Security number and then a birth certificate in his name in 1996, if he was only a teenager himself then, and why he would suddenly walk away from his own life. Evers asks if he could have grown up in the same Cincinnati neighborhood as her family, or whether he grew up somewhere else and just picked her brother's name at random. She's angry with him, she says, but mainly wants to know his reasons. "What was always in the back of my head was, what did this guy do in the first place to want to change his name?"
[Associated
Press;
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