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If you have any information regarding this case, please contact the following:

Dave Dauenhauer
CBI Agent
3416 North Elizabeth St.
Pueblo, CO 81008
Phone: (719)253-3808

Brian Norton
Monte Vista Sheriff's Department office
719-657-4000

Questions:
Jacqui Flint
DaniceDay.com Site Administrator
Phone: (917)447-2535
email: jacquiflint@hotmail.com

Jonene Day
Danice"s mother
email: jonene752@yahoo.com

Rod Day
Danice"s father
email: Rodney852@yahoo.com
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April 30, 2002

Letter to the Editor

Monte Vista Journal
By Jamin Johnson

To the Editor:

I am outraged by letter to the editor from B. Martin of Monte Vista [Monte Vista Journal, April 24] I just read. I must say as a member of Danice [Day]'s family that there's not one of us that has given up hope that she is still alive. You expect us to take comfort in the fact that Danice's body has not yet been found and you can't understand why we are so upset. We need to know what has happened to her; we can no longer sit by and wait. We need answers, we need support, but we certainly do not need a complete stranger telling us how we should and should not feel.

When I wake up in the morning the first thing I do is turn on the news to see if over the night maybe someone might have located my cousin. I can't understand how you could think that Danice just left her two little babies. Then I realize that you did not know her, so you could never understand our pain.

Thank you for telling us to be optimistic, but seeing how she has been missing for nearly five months, our optimism is wearing thin. We do not want to realize this horror, but we are becoming increasingly aware of the fact that we may not see Danice again.

Furthermore, we are deeply hurt by the accusations that we are placing false blame. While it is frustrating, believe me when I say that every accusation our family has made has stemmed from well-established knowledge. We are not prejudiced against law enforcement officials as you implied, seeing how three of our close family members are police officers, including my own father.

Please understand that while we constantly pray that she is still living, we long for closure. Know that we grieve daily that we may never see Danice again, and while we appreciate your opinion, we disagree. Next time we'd appreciate your sensitivity for our grief.

Jamin Johnson, cousin of Danice Day
Laramie, WY

Letter to the Editor

Monte Vista Journal
By Julie K. Flint

To the Editor:

I am Danice Day's sister from Laramie, Wyo. and I would like to peacefully respond to the previous letter to the editor about keeping the hope in our situation ["On Danice Day: Don't lose sight of what's really important,"[Monte Vista Journal, April 23]

I would first like to comment on your statement "If it were my daughter..." I feel like you cannot even begin to speculate how this type of a situation would effect you and your family's emotions and sense of hope. We are enduring a mish mash of emotions and reactions, none of which were predictable. Hope is not lost in our family, but we are making our judgement from our intimacy with Danice and the knowledge of her situation, one from which she was trying to escape and make a better life for herself and her children.

This situation has not fully come through in the media by which you have gotten your details. We would love to believe that Danice did go for a break and will walk back in the door to restart this blessing of a life, but we also live with the reality of the knowledge of her life at the time and feel as though foul play is a possibility. This I don't feel is hopeless, but merely facing all the options and putting our efforts into where our intuition tells us to place it. We firmly believe that Danice would not walk out on the two highlights of her life-her children. She was a loving mother who loved nothing more than doing just that.

As far as the term "scumbags" goes, I am not aware of the use of this term. I am also unaware of your source for this word, but do agree that it is not a responsible term to use for the unknown.

We appreciate your hope, and it is always helpful. My hope is that you would use the passion that you are showing for this case, and encourage community that has yet been seen. It is through community involvement that this case will get the attention that it is due and one day come to an answer.

Peace to you.
Julie K. Flint-Morgan
Laramie, WY

April 23, 2002

Letter to the Editor: On Danice Day: Don't lose sight of what's really important

Monte Vista Journal
By B. Martin

To the Editor:

To the Editor: I would like to say a few words on the Danice Day disappearance. This is coming from a person who has continually read the articles that have been in the paper the last couple of months.

First, I would like to know why everyone continues to say "the scumbags who did this to Danice." What would "this" be? The papers have not mentioned her body being found nor have they mentioned any evidence of foul play. The only evidence they have is that she is not here and has not been seen.

If this were my daughter, I would have an optimistic outlook and have hope that she will return. I would want to believe that maybe she has just taken off somewhere because of whatever pressures she might have had since, after all, she is a teenager mother. As her parents, I would not want to believe, nor would I think, the worst. This is what all articles seem to be saying. We don't know that there are any "scumbags" involved nor do we know that she will never be coming back. I would just like to tell Danice Day's parents, children and family to continue hoping, because you just never know.

As for the alleged cover-up by the Rio Grande County Sheriff's department, what is everyone talking about. Desi Medina turned the case over to Undersheriff Charles Martinez. According to newspaper articles, Sheriff Martinez questioned Victor Braun (Day's boyfriend) extensively. He was out at Victor's place of residence and place of employment on a daily basis. So who is it that is covering up? I know I sure would like to know. It has been said that if the investigation would have been handled properly then we would know what happened to Danice. Could we maybe not know because there is nothing to know? The Rio Grande Sheriff's department is having the blame placed on them because sometimes it is easier to place blame and makes the involved parties feel a little better because someone is getting in "trouble" and therefore gives the impression that something is being accomplished. Why does everyone always jump to conclusions and automatically blame the law enforcement officials. Police officers are human too and are capable of making mistakes, just like every other person in this world. What is wrong with offering a hypothetical scenario, which is what Desi Medina appeared to be doing at the minutes of the meeting that has everyone in an uproar. The only thing that would make this wrong would be if Desi was present at the time this alleged offense occurred:

Then he could be found guilty of some cover-up or something. Let the officials do their job without all of the criticism that seems to come so easily when things are not going perfectly. Remember this is not a perfect world and people will and can make mistakes. Law enforcement officials are just people. If Peter Comar feels he can do a better and more accurate job then that is his right. Let him do it. Quit all the criticism and the finger pointing and instead help support the local law enforcement officials.

And everyone remember, Danice Day is just missing, so don't lose sight of what is really important-finding her. Quit trying to place blame. Remain hopeful.

April 10, 2002

National group joins search for woman, 19

Special to The Denver Post
By Mark H. Hunter

ALAMOSA - A national missing persons foundation has joined the hunt for a 19-year-old Monte Vista woman who disappeared in early January.

District Attorney Peter Comar, 12th Judicial District, announced that the Carole Sund/Carrington Memorial Reward Foundation is posting a $5,000 reward for information that helps them find Danice Day. The single mother of a 3-year-old boy and a 10-month-old girl hasn't been seen by friends or family since she left her waitress job Jan. 9 and went to her boyfriend' s rural ranch.

Danice Day has long blond hair, large blue eyes, pierced ears and a pierced left eyebrow. Her car, keys and wallet were recovered at a ranch where she was living with Victor Braun, the baby's father, reports say.

Braun told investigators that Day left his place with someone he didn't know. That person is a suspect but hasn't been charged, officials say.

The foundation is named after Carole and Juli Sund and Silvina Pelossa, who disappeared and were later found murdered near Yosemite National Park in February 1999. Francis and Carole Carrington, Carole Sund's parents, posted a reward for their safe return and the return of their rental car.

"The Carringtons believe that the posting of these rewards and the media attention they received contributed to the car being located and gave them the first break in the case," Comar read from a foundation statement.

The $5,000 foundation reward will be added to a $1,000 reward posted by the San Luis Valley CrimeStoppers. Anyone with information is asked to call Shawn Woods, 12th Judicial District Investigator, at 719-589-3715, or CrimeStoppers at 719-589-4111.

"We know reward money can make a difference, because the foundation has already assisted in the apprehension of 17 murder suspects and one child molester," Comar said. "To date, the foundation has paid a total of $55,000 in rewards to citizens who did the right thing by coming forward and sharing the information they had."

In an unprecedented legal move, Comar took the Day case from Rio Grande County Sheriff Desi Medina on March 26 after Medina told the Rio Grande County commissioners about his friendship with Victor Braun and his father, Vernon. Medina also gave a graphic "opinion" of how Day was allegedly murdered. He later said his statements were "off the record" although it was a public meeting.

Day was reported missing Jan. 12 by her father, Rod Day. Undersheriff Charles Martinez headed the probe because of Medina's relationship with the Brauns, but Comar decided the case was tainted and put Woods in charge.

Attempts to contact the Brauns were unsuccessful, and they have not made any public statements.

April 09, 2002

Remembering Danice as a person

By Jacqui Flint

Danice Day disappeared in early January. Many stories have been printed about her disappearance and the investigation into her death. In addition, plenty of rumors have floated around the area, but at this point no one can say the true story of her possible death. This, of course, is very important to my family and I, but perhaps equally important to me is to remember who she was as a person. Danice was much more than a nineteen year-old waitress, she was my little sister.

My mother said that when she was expecting Danice, we, my mother, Rod (my stepfather), older sister and I, were all very excited. "She would be the bridge connecting us all," my mom said. From the time she was first brought home from the hospital, I knew my mother was right. She was going to be very special. My mother layed her on the couch in the living room. I layed my head next to her so I would be facing her. I was overjoyed by the fact that there was someone new in the house. Even though I was only six at the time, she became my best friend and I always wanted to take care of her.

I looked forward to going home every day after school because I could see Danice. I think I had this bond with her from the very start. I think she knew I was going to be there for her and I always tried to be. It was something inherent in both of us. I remember when I was eight and she must have been two or three, we both got the chicken pox about a week before Christmas. We got to spend the whole week at home together itching ourselves and being silly. We were jumping on the couches and destroying the house. I am sure our mother couldn't wait for them to heal so I could go back to school and stop egging Danice on. There was one particular pock that I remember very clearly. It was on the right side of her nose and the scar never went away. Every time I looked at her, I was reminded of the week of the chicken pox.

When it was time for Danice to start school, I couldn't wait to take her to her first day of kindergarten.. I think I even helped her lay out her clothes the night before and got her up the next morning. I walked with her to school and was actually very sad that she would be in school. It was almost as if I wanted her all for myself and didn't want to share her with the other kids. It was probably against her will that I made her stay close to me on the playground and kept checking on her at recess. It wasn't as if she was shy or anything and in the small town we grew up in, she already knew plenty of little girls to play with.

That whole year, I made every effort to make sure that I watched out for that cute little blond girl on the playground. Every child is the smartest child in the world, according to their family, but Danice really did excel very fast Things seemed to come pretty easy to her and most of her report cards indicated that she was, by all accounts, brilliant.

This doesn't mean as much as the fact that she had a good heart and never forgot to tell people that she loved them. My grandmother and mother both said that this is one their fondest memories of Danice. " She never forgot to say "love you Gram" every time she left," my grandmother said. My mother expressed the same sentiments when she said that Danice never gave up on her. Danice cried for nearly two hours the last time she saw my mother and they had to say goodbye (this past Christmas).

Danice had this habit of coming in my room to sleep with me just about every night. I am not sure if she had nightmares or just didn't like sleeping alone. We talked, giggled, or just watched TV before falling asleep. We had our nightly ritual before going to bed. It went something like this:

I would say "Night."

She would say, "Night."

I would say, "Love ya."

She would say "Love ya."

I would say "See you in the morning.

She would say, "Kay."

This was a ritual we always made sure to say, clear into adulthood, even when we weren't going to be staying the night together.

Like all kids approaching their teen years, Danice had her share of problems, that is not a secret. . I saw a drastic change in Danice when she entered Junior High. It broke my heart because of the potential I saw in her. All was not lost, of course. I kept loving her and supporting her, as did the rest of my family. She still graduated high school. I also know that she wanted to eventually go to college or beauty school.

Last year she wrote me a letter telling how good she and the kids were doing. She said that she was taking steps to find the "real Danice." She had been in a rehab program for addiction and was seeking counseling. Her writing this, of course, made me hopeful and sad. Hopeful that she could truly be happy with herself and sad that maybe she didn't know how special she was either way.

I talked to Danice about two days before her disappearance. My family had just had one of the best Christmases I can remember. Danice was, from observation, doing really well and I couldn't get over what a beautiful woman and great mom she had become. That Monday, something inside me said "I just want to call her and tell her how much I miss her and see how the kids are doing." I usually had a hard time reaching her on her cell phone, but this time she answered. We talked for a couple of minutes and she, for some reason, seemed surprised that someone could miss her that much. Sometimes when we hung up the phone she would say "I love you," and I would jokingly reply "I know you think you do." She would always get a little irritated by that statement and I would have to make sure she knew I was just kidding. This time, there was no joking, but there was still the "I love you," and that seems more important than ever right now. Through everything, one thing never changed about Danice, she was always still very loving towards everyone.

As my friend and I were walking through the park the other day, he said "When you look back on this year, you won't remember the fact that you were broke and having trouble making it in New York City. You won't think of the boss' who you despise, you probably won't even remember me, the only thing you will remember is the loss of your sister." He is right, the loss of a sibling is something you never ever forget and when you don't have any closure as to how you lost that sibling, it is all the more painful. There are many stages of grief. There are minutes when you don't think about it and you feel guilty, there are days when you are in denial and think that he/she is going to walk through the door and then there is the part when you blame yourself.

"If I only could have loved her more," you think to yourself. You also think of all the good times you had with them or the funny things that person did like eating peanut butter and syrup mixed together as dinner or the way you used to sing along to the silly songs of New Kids on the Block, thinking they were really talented.

Then there comes a time when you face reality and that is going to be tough. I knew from the first day that I was told Danice was missing that I would probably never see her again, but that doesn't make it any easier. On the back of the graduation picture Danice sent to me, she wrote, "You have always been there for me, thanks for everything....you are my best friend."
I am happy she knew I loved her and that gives me some comfort.

April 02, 2002

Letter to the Editor

Monte Vista Journal
By Rod and Judy Day

During the past three months, many friends and family members have contacted us as to how we feel about the disappearance of our darling daughter, Danice. How do we as parents express the greatest loss a parent can feel? Each day we wonder whether we will be able to see her, or be able to love and hold her again. The "terror" we feel each night that the next day will only bring another day of not knowing and the possible reality that we will never see her again.

We have been devastated by what has happened concerning the investigation of our daughter. Now we are told that the entire investigation may have to start over from the beginning. Are our hearts heavy? Yes. Are we angry? Yes. Were the last 77 days just wasted time? Perhaps.

Since January 12 (the night we reported Danice missing), we have prayed daily that when we contact the RGSO they will give us word that our daughter has been found, but each day turns out the same," We have no leads." And now, in our hearts, we ask "Why?" Has there been interference in the case of our missing daughter? Has the Sheriff's office done everything possible to find our daughter? Has the Sheriff's obvious friendship with the named suspects caused our daughter's case to be hindered in any way? We have put our trust in our local Sheriff's Department and that trust has been diminished by the Sheriff being more concerned about the suspects in this case than our missing daughter. What about concern for her two beautiful children, Joshua (3) and Kaylie (11 months)? How do we as grandparents explain this type of unforgivable behavior to these babies?

Things have changed. We now direct our trust and prayers toward the D.A.'s office and the CBI. Hopefully, there will be a speedy investigation to find the answer to what has happened to our daughter. And if foul play is involved - the appropriate measures will be taken. We are also confident that the people of the San Luis Valley, in a combined effort, will help insure that justice will be served to any public official that has misused his position.

We do not want our anger and frustration over the recent developments concerning the RGSO to cloud our minds from reality. Our reality is that our daughter is still missing and possibly fatally hurt. To that end, we ask anyone with any information regarding Danice, please call the D.A.'s office at 719-589-3715 or Crimestoppers at 719-589-4111. You can remain anonymous and we so want Danice's children to know the truth.

Lastly, we want to thank all of our friends and family whom we know pray each day for Danice, her babies, us, and for a speedy "closure" to this nightmare. Thanks also to Marsha Triplett for "bringing to light" the discrepancies that could be the turning point for our daughter.

Rod and Judy Day - Del Norte, CO

April 01, 2002

Doubts linger over missing woman's case

Special to The Denver Post
By Mark H. Hunter

MONTE VISTA - A case of a young Monte Vista woman missing since early January has turned into a nightmare for her parents, a nationwide search for her and a local controversy.

Danice Day is 19 years old, has long blond hair, large blue eyes, pierced ears and a pierced left eyebrow. The single mother of a 3-year-old boy and a 10-month-old girl hasn't been seen since she left her waitress job at Dos Rios Restaurante on Jan. 9 and went to her boyfriend's rural ranch, according to reports.

Day was living with Victor Braun, father of the baby girl, according to her friends. Rio Grande County Undersheriff Charles Martinez said Victor and his father, Vernon Braun, are considered suspects in her disappearance.

"Victor was the last person seen with her," Martinez said. "Victor said she left his residence with a friend but nobody knows who the friend was. An argument ensued because she was going out with someone he didn't know."

Day's car, keys, wallet, cellphone and clothing were all recovered at the Braun residence, according to her father, Rod Day, who reported her missing Jan. 12.

"Each day we wonder whether we will be able to see her, or be able to love and hold her again," Rod Day said in a written statement. "The terror we feel each night - that the next day will only bring another day of not knowing and the possible reality that we will never see her again."

Rod Day and his wife, Judy, are caring for the son and the baby is with her father.

Martinez said that since Jan. 12, deputies have called in the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, posted Day's picture on several "missing person" Web pages and law enforcement databases, searched the Braun ranch, scoured nearby foothills on horseback, and even asked two psychics and a Native American shaman for help. Many San Luis Valley businesses have posted her photo on doorways and local newspapers have published articles about her disappearance.

"I can't picture her leaving her children," said Pam Bricker, one of Day's former teachers at the Byron Syring Delta Center, a Monte Vista alternative school from which Day graduated in May 2000. "This has been very distressing for all of us. She is a sweet bubbly girl and very, very smart."

The Brauns are acquaintances of Rio Grande County Sheriff Desi Medina, a relationship that is "a potential conflict," according to District Attorney Peter Comar of the 12th Judicial District, and cause for "taking over this investigation," according to a March 21 letter from Comar to Medina. Comar officially took over the case last week.

"We would ask that any individual who feels they have information regarding the disappearance of Danice Day call 719-589-3715," Comar said. "Please do not call the Rio Grande County Sheriff's Office as they have no further involvement in this matter."

Comar's decision was provoked by comments Medina made to the Rio Grande County board of commissioners last month.

"Danice went to her and Victor's residence and Vern and Victor were in another room and Danice came in and told Victor that she was going to leave him," Medina said, according to the meeting minutes. "Victor got up to hit Danice and she moved and he hit her in the esophagus, which killed her."

"We were shocked with his comments about how she was killed," said Vern Rominger, commission chair. "If they know all this, why hasn't something been done?"

Medina now claims his statements were "off the record," although it was a public meeting.

He denied showing any favoritism to the Brauns, and said he turned the case over to Martinez in January to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest. He pledged cooperation with Comar.

"I'm friends with everybody," Medina said. "Victor and Vern have been underdogs, but I treat everybody the same."

Attempts to contact the Brauns were unsuccessful and they have not made any public statements about Day's disappearance.

Anyone with information is asked to call the District Attorney's Office or San Luis Valley Crimestoppers at 719-589-4111 to collect a possible $1,000 reward.