Jeremy Scott Reagan

Victim: Jeremy Scott Reagan

Date & Time of Incident: August 27, 2022

Location: Forest Park, Oklahoma

Clothes: Yellow t-shirt, brown shorts

Distinguishing Features: Glasses, hearing aides, ear gauges, tattoos.

Narrative:

Jeremy left home on a hot August day. After a family argument, he had to cool down and gather his thoughts. He was headed to the Lexington Wildlife Management Area, a place he knew well. Jeremy took some supplies with him, enough for a few days.

Jeremy was last seen at the On Cue at 23rd and Douglas in Midwest City, Oklahoma. His phone and truck were found on August 29th at the Lexington Wildlife Management Area. Law enforcement and canines have searched part of the Lexington WMA. Family continue their search.

Jeremy is loved by his family who desperately want to find him. If you have any information that might help, contact OSBI 1-800-522-8017.

Jeremy’s NamUs page, including details of his tattoos.

Jeremy’s Facebook page

Lexington Wildlife Management Area

Ed Foreman

Victim: Edward Lee Foreman

Date & Time of Incident: March 6, 2015

Location: Geary, Oklahoma

Clothes: Unknown

Car: Hummer Truck 2

Narrative:

On March 6, 2015, Sherriff deputies received a phone call to perform a wellness check on the 54 year old Ed Foreman. Neither Ed’s daughter nor girlfriend had been able to get in touch with Ed, which had never been a problem before.

In Ed’s Geary home, the deputies found evidence of a brutal crime. Ed and his Hummer Truck were gone. His cell phone was also missing. The truck was later found by a hunter not far from Ed’s home. Ed’s remains have not yet been found.

A man seen driving Ed’s truck on March 6th is still a person of interest. The man was described as being in his 30’s, may be white or bi-racial with dark eyes or hair.

If you have any information concerning Ed, please contact OSBI: (800) 522-8017.

Thank you to

Alice at Defrosting Cold Cases

NamUs

Francine Frost

Date & Time of Incident:  February 16, 1981

Location:  Tulsa, Oklahoma

Victim:  Francine Frost, aged 44 years

Clothes: Denim skirt, white girdle, plaid top

Car: 1980 Skylark

Narrative: On a cold winter evening, Francine headed to her local Skaggs Alpha Beta, a chain grocery store found all over the Midwest. She did not return home.

The next morning, Malcolm, her husband, went looking for her. He found her car in the store parking lot, keys dangling from the door lock. He then filed a missing persons report with the Tulsa PD.

Unknown to the Frost family, an anonymous call on January 1, 1983, directed the police to a burial sight near Martin, Oklahoma. Remains of a white female were found buried outside Martin city limits. Being more than an hour from Tulsa, a connection to Francine was not made and the remains were laid to rest in a cemetery under Jane Doe.

Many years later, Francine’s grandson, Cory, began scouring the internet, looking for any similarities between his beloved missing grandmother and unidentified women. A description of the woman’s clothes that accompanied one Jane Doe stood out to Cory. His mother, Vicki, later confirmed that the clothes found with the Jane Doe’s remains matched what her mother was wearing the night she disappeared.

The remains of Jane Doe were exhumed in 2015. Her DNA was sent to the University of North Texas for analysis. By August 2016, Francine Frost was no longer missing. The Frost family could say goodbye to their beloved family member.

Francine’s killer is still at large. if you have any information concerning her abduction and murder, contact Tulsa PD or Muskogee Sheriff Department.

After Francine was found, her family set about to change how Law Enforcement reported missing people. In 2019, after it passed the House of Representatives and the Senate, Governor Stitt of Oklahoma signed Francine’s Law.

“The legislation would require the Oklahoma Chief Medical Examiner and the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation to enter all missing persons and unidentified bodies into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) within 30 days. The measure allows for the process to be rushed for those under the age of 18 or those who have gone missing under suspicious circumstances. Those cases must be entered into the system immediately.” Oklahoma Senate

Tulsa PD: (918) 586-1357

Muskogee Sheriff: (918) 687-0202

National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)