On a summer night in 1977, Cheryl Hughes left to pick up a pizza in Chillicothe, Ohio and never made it home. Cheryl was a young wife and mother who worked at the RCA plant in Circleville, where workers manufactured television glass during the height of the industry there. A few days after she disappeared, her body was discovered along a rural road near South Shore, Kentucky, about an hour away from where she was last seen.
The details surrounding the case have lingered for decades, especially for Cheryl’s best friend and co-worker, Janet Donahue. The two had known each other since childhood and worked together at RCA. Before Cheryl vanished, Janet later said Cheryl had confided in her about an affair involving a local police officer.
As the years passed and answers never came, Janet became so frustrated with the lack of progress in the investigation that she eventually got her detective’s license and started trying to look into the case herself. That part of the story has always stuck with me because it says a lot about how deeply this case affected the people closest to Cheryl.
Unfortunately Janet was eventually told much of the original case file had been lost due to water damage. What remains today is scattered between old newspaper articles, memories from the people who were there, and an 11-page Kentucky State Police report that reportedly begins with a detective writing:
“To say the least, this is a very confusing case.”
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