The Springville Three (1992)
The Springfield Three (Sherrill Levitt, Suzanne “Suzie” Streeter, and Stacy McCall) went missing on June 7, 1992. Despite over 5,000 public tips, almost 30 years later, there are no clues to what happened to the three women. (Image: News-Leader)
The Disappearance:
On June 6, 1992, friends Suzanne “Susie” Streeter and Stacy McCall graduated from high school in Springville, Missouri. Little did anyone know, this would be their last milestone.
Stacy McCall (Middle) and Suzanne “Suzie” Streeter (Right) pose with their friend at their high school graduation from Kickapoo High on June 6, 1992. Their last big milestone before they disappeared alongside Sherrill Levitt, Suzie’s mom. (image: KHQ Today)
The girls went out to celebrate their graduation and planned on crashing at their friend, Janelle Kirby’s home. However, the house was too crowded, so the girls went to Suzie’s house to sleep. The girls were last seen by their friends around 2:00 a.m.
The next morning, the girls were supposed to go to a water park with Janelle and her boyfriend. But when Janelle got to Suzie’s home around 9:00 a.m., things seemed suspicious.
Sherrill Levitt’s home, where she lived with her daughter Suzanne “Suzie” Streeter. This was the last known location of the mother and daughter, and Suzie’s friend Stacy McCall before they went missing (image: Mystery U)
The front door was unlocked, but neither the girls nor Suzie’s mother, Sherrill Levitt, were home. All three women’s cars were parked in the driveway. Suzie and Sherrill’s dog appeared agitated, but there was no sign of a struggle. The only thing broken was a porch light.
The cars of missing persons Suzie Streeter, Sherrill Levitt, and Stacy McCall. All three were still in the driveway of Levitt’s home when the three went disappearing. (image: Mystery U)
While at the home, Janelle answered the home’s phone. On the other end was a male who made sexual innuendos. Janelle hung up, but the caller called back. He was sexual again and Janelle hung up before leaving the home.
Worried about her daughter, Janis McCall, Stacy’s mom went to Suzie and Sherrill’s home. She noted all three women’s purses in the living room. Janis noticed the phone had a voice message so she listened to it. It was from a strange man, but Janis accidentally deleted the message while listening to it.
Janis frantically called 9–1–1. Police observed the same things as Janis and Janelle. Janis waited 16 hours to make the call to police. Other friends and family members became worried, visiting the crime scene. Police estimated 10–20 people visited the crime scene, corrupting it.
What happened to Suzie Streeter, Stacy McCall, and Sherrill Levitt?
No one knows. The voice message that Janis erased may have contained clues to who the women’s abductor was. Police also found a relative of Sherrill cleaned the home after finding it in disarray, erasing any possible DNA evidence.
The case appeared on America’s Most Wanted in December 1992. A call from someone with prime knowledge of the disappearances came through and the operators attempted to send it to Springfield Police. However, the man hung up before they could trace any contact information. Police begged for the caller to call back again, but he didn’t.
In 1997, a convicted kidnapper and robber named Robert Craig Cox claimed that he knew who murdered the three women.
In 1992, Cox lived in Springfield but when interviewed, he said he’d been at church when the women disappeared. Cox’s girlfriend confirmed this story, but then recanted the statement. Police are unsure of Cox’s involvement, but Cox maintained that he’d say what happened after his mother died.Robert Craig Cox, a suspect in the missing persons case of Sherrill Levitt, Suzie Streeter, and Stacy McCall who admitted he knew where the bodies were while serving time for kidnapping in a Texas prison. (image: True Crime Articles)
Also in 1997, authorities declared Sherrill Levitt and Suzie Streeter dead. Stacy McCall’s parents refused to have authorities declare her death, as they had hope their daughter would reappear.
In 2007, investigators received a tip that the girls were under the foundations of the parking garage at Cox Hospital in Springfield. A mechanical engineer scanned the corner of the parking garage with GPR technology. He found three anomalies “consistent with a grave site location.” However, the garage was built in 1993, over a year after the disappearances. Investigators thought the lead was not credible and digging up the garage would be too costly.
Despite over 5,000 tips
and much media coverage, the case still remains unsolved as of December 2019.The Springfield Three, missing since June 7, 1992. (image: Hidden Crypt)
My Theories and Impressions:
I think Sherrill was the intended target, as do many others. The girls were unsuspectingly there and impeded the abductor. Since the girls might speak out, the abductor snatched them too.
The Springfield Three cold case frustrates me because there is no DNA evidence so I don’t think anyone will ever find out what happened to the women.
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