Ruth Sharon Hoffman
Missing since: 06/30/86
Missing from: River Rouge, Wayne County, Michigan
Classification: Endangered Missing
Date Of Birth: 10/05/41
Age at disappearance: 44
Height:5’6″
Weight:135 lbs.
Distinguishing Characteristics: White female. Blonde, medium length hair; blue eyes.
Marks, Scars: Pierced ears, once in each ear. Dark, circular shaped birthmark below left knee; vertical hysterectomy scar, very deep dimples in cheeks. No tattoos.
Clothing: Red, small sized half top, cropped with bare midriff, Gloria Vanderbilt blue jeans (size 9), White Nike tennis shoes, Brown leather coat; mid-length. She was also carrying a brown leather purse, with a saddle bag style flap over center zipper.
Jewelry: Gold Diamond stud earrings, approximately 1/2 carat each.
Dentals: Full dentures on top. Upper teeth are missing; she wore a full denture plate due to a previous car accident. All lower teeth were still in place.
Medical: She has a chemical imbalance and suffers from paranoid schizophrenia. She was taking Lithium at the time of her disappearance. She would sometimes have problems with depression.
Nicknames: Ruth Hall, Lyndon, Russie, Lindon, Vinton, Mohkloff
Fingerprints: Available.
Other: Ruth is a nonsmoker; she very rarely drank alcohol. No history of drug use.
Circumstances of Disappearance
Hoffman was last seen at approximately 14.00 leaving her residence on June 30, 1986, on foot, in the vicinity of the 50 block of Leroy Street in River Rouge, Michigan.
Earlier that morning, Hoffman returned in a taxicab to the home she shared with her daughter in River Rouge, Michigan. She had been out all night and came back wearing hospital scrubs instead of the clothes she had on the night before. She was covered with bruises. Ruth told her daughter she had been beaten and raped by two men known to her, after she went to a local bar for a job interview. Ruth said she had been to the hospital and had a rape kit taken, and that her clothes were at the hospital. She asked her daughter not to call the police. After bathing, changing her clothes and putting on makeup, Ruth went outside for a walk to clear her head.
Her family never saw her again. She was officially reported missing on July 7, 1986.
Records indicate Ruth visited a medical clinic on July 3, 1986, just days after she left home. She was seen as a new patient and was given a diphtheria / tetanus immunization.
Seven years after she disappeared, on October 8, 1993, a traffic ticket was issued to “Ruth Sharon Russie” in Pennsylvania. The ticket gives Ruth’s birth date and an address in Belleville, Michigan. It said her license was expired.
Video dedicated to Ruth Hoffman
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:
Wayne County Sheriff’s Department
313-213-5141
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http://www.realcrimes.com/Hoffman/Ruth_Hoffman.htm
Ruth Sharon Hoffman
My mother, Ruth Sharon Hoffman, 44, disappeared from River Rouge, Michigan, on June 30, 1986, after having been brutally raped. Today Mom would be 64. (See age enhanced image.)
Back then, Mom and I, both divorced from abusive husbands, shared an apartment. I was eight months pregnant, and Mom was even more excited than I was as we worked together on a nursery for the new baby. We were both feeling happier than we had in a long time as we helped each other rebuild our shattered lives.
On July 29, Mom had a 9 p.m. appointment for a job interview with the owner of the Poorhouse Saloon, which was known as the local “cops bar.” Despite the fact that she was beautiful and a gifted musician and singer, it was not easy for Mom to find work. In 1983, she had been diagnosed with a chemical imbalance in the brain and placed on Librium to control schizophrenia. As long as she took her medication and lived a structured life, she did quite well, but potential employers didn’t always understand that. So she was very excited about this promising new job interview.
At 11 p.m., when she wasn’t home yet, I called the bar to see if she was still there. They said she had left an hour ago. I asked if there was anyone with her when she left, and they said they didn’t know. When it got to be 2 a.m. and she still wasn’t home, I started calling hospitals and the local police station. I stayed up all night pacing the floor.
The next morning a yellow cab pulled up in front of our apartment. When I saw my Mom was in it, I gave a huge sigh of relief. However, when she got out of the cab, I saw she was wearing hospital scrubs and was so bruised and battered that it looked like she’d been in a car wreck. She was shaking and crying hysterically and told me that she had been raped and beaten. I got her into a hot bath, and she calmed down enough to describe what had happened. She said the owner of the bar had promised her the job, but told she had to fill out a formal application. He said he needed to drop off his buddy from out of town at his motel room and suggested that Mom come with them to pick up the application form, because he’d left his briefcase in his friend’s room. When they arrived at the motel, the bar owner told her to come in with them and fill out the application right then and there so she could start work the very next day.
They went into the motel room, and the owner immediately said, “Let’s have fun, the three of us!” Mom told him to take his hands off her, and he yelled, “All you bitches are the same! You think you’re better than everyone else!” The two men began hitting and kicking Mom and knocked her to the floor. They, then, took turns raping Mom for hours.
After her bath, Mom got dressed and announced she was going for a walk to get some air. I tried to convince her to let me call the River Rouge Police, but that idea seemed to terrify her and she begged me not to do it. I got the distinct impression that a cop was involved in one way or another with what happened to her.
As Mom left the apartment she told me, “Those bastards won’t get away with this!” I never saw her again.
When it got to be 10 p.m. and Mom still wasn’t back, I went to the River Rogue Police Department and told them everything. They took notes and told me to come back in a week to sign papers and to give them a picture of my Mom.
One week later I returned, signed the missing person’s report, and told police that a rape swab had been performed at Wyandotte Hospital. After that I called every day, until an officer told me to stop doing that, because they needed time to work on her case. So, then, I began calling only once a week. I knew my Mom was alive and out there somewhere, as I had received a statement from the Allegan Medical Clinic in Allegan, Michigan, showing that “Ruth S. Hall”, (“Hall” was the name of Mom’s first husband), had come in on July 3, 1986, to get a diphtheria and tetanus shot. I could only assume that the shock of the rape and the fact that she did not have her medication had caused her to lose touch with reality.
For two years I continued to call the police once a week. They finally became very rude and told me to “stop bugging” them. So, I cut back to calling only once a month to see if they had any leads. Again, an officer told me that I had to stop “bugging” them. When I asked to speak with the officer in charge of Mom’s case, I was told they weren’t sure who that was.
Since police were obviously doing nothing, I hired private investigators. However, the cost became prohibitive, because I was also dealing with mounting medical expenses. I had been diagnosed with spedo tumor ceberi, (fluid on the brain), and had to have over 300 spinal taps. During the span of 12 years, I had 34 operations. By then, I had remarried, and my husband carried on for me when I was unable to.
In October 2004, my husband and I went down to the police department and asked to see Mom’s file. When the officer came back from looking for it, he said to his partner, “That’s strange, I found only the jacket. The case file is missing.” He, then, told me, “I think your Mom came in here and removed the report,” as if people could walk in off the street, get into the police files, and remove whatever they wanted. He went on to say, “Look, lady, just accept the fact that your mother doesn’t want anything to do with you.”
We later discovered that the police never did file a missing person’s report.
A new ray of hope — I sent for Mom’s driving record and learned that on Oct 5, 1941, she’d received a traffic ticket in Belleville, Michigan, for making an improper turn and driving with an expired license. She was using the name “Ruth Sharon Russie,” (the name of another ex-husband). The address on the ticket was 20749 Martinsville Lot 82, but by the time we could follow up on that, Mom was gone.
In February 2005, I filed a new missing person’s report, this time with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office. Sgt. Larry Crider said he would gladly take my Mom’s case and even went so far as to come to my home to have me fill out the paperwork. That wonderful man was able to get Mom’s case into the National Crime Information Center computer system within a week. He gave me both his work and cell numbers and told me to call anytime. The bottom fell out of my world when Sgt. Crider was not permitted to work the case. I’m now told that I have to find a Cold Case detective.
Mom was dealt a raw deal in life in a number of ways. Raised in foster care, with ten siblings, she was the first of them to get out of the System and find a job. One by one, she, then, took her brothers and sisters out of foster care and raised them herself.
I’m sure that, wherever Mom is now, she remembers only fragments of her past. But I haven’t forgotten a thing! I am Mom’s only child, and her loss leaves a big black hole in my life. I will never stop looking for her, and, when I find her, will make sure that somebody pays for this terrible injustice.
Debbie Hall Smeaton (Ruth’s daughter)
If you have any information on this case please contact CUE Center For Missing Persons using the contact form below or contact Cue Center at (910) 343-1131 24 hour tipline (910) 232-1687.
All information submitted to CUE Center For Missing Persons is confidential.
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