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The mysterious disappearance of Mary Day

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Sherrie Calgaro


In 1981, 13-year-old Mary Day disappeared from her Seaside, Calif., home, with no sign of her anywhere. It would be 22 years before she reappeared, bringing along more questions than answers.

Mary Louise Day was born on February 19, 1968, to Charlotte Pressler and Charles Day in Little Falls, New York.  

The Day girls

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Sherrie Calgaro


Within the next three years, the Day family grew with the birth of Mary’s sisters, Kathy, left, and Sherrie, center. Mary is pictured on the right

A difficult childhood

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Sherrie Calgaro


Life wasn’t always easy for the family. Mary, right, Kathy, center, and Sherrie, left were in and out of a foster home.

A new stepfather

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Kathy Pires


While the girls were in foster care, Charlotte divorced Charles Day and married William Houle, who enlisted in the Army soon after. 

Sherrie adopted

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Sherrie Calgaro


In 1976, Charlotte retained custody of daughters Mary and Kathy Day, but Sherrie, right, was adopted by the foster family, separating the sisters. 

A new family

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Kathy Pires


While Mary and Kathy Day  were still in foster care, Charlotte and William Houle had two children of their own – Billie Jean and William Jr. In 1978, William Sr. was assigned to a base in Hawaii and the family moved together

The inheritance

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Sherrie Calgaro


A few months after the Houles moved to Hawaii, Charles Day passed away and left an inheritance to his daughters, Mary and Kathy. According to Kathy, she and Mary used a secret code word when talking about the inheritance: “Mohawk.” 

William and Mary

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Kathy Pires


Mary Day ended up in protective custody in December 1980 while in Hawaii. Detectives say that her stepfather, William Houle, had been reportedly physically abusing her. 

Off to California

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Kathy Pires


In January 1981, the Houle family, without Mary, moved to Seaside, California, when William Houle was reassigned to Fort Ord. But a few months later, Mary, pictured in red at at left, was released from protective custody and moved back in with the Houles. 

The last night

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Sherrie Calgaro


One night in 1981, the Houles went out for dinner but left Mary at home. When they returned, William Houle’s beloved dog was sick. Believing Mary poisoned the dog, William beat her, he admitted to police.The next morning, according to Kathy, Mary was gone. 

Where’s Mary?

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Sherrie Calgaro


According to Kathy, she asked her mother, Charlotte, where Mary was.Charlotte told Kathy that Mary ran away and to never ask about her again. 

A sister’s concern

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Sherrie Calgaro told “48 Hours” that when the Houles relocated to New York, she went to visit them. When she asked about Mary, Charlotte told her Mary ran away. Kathy told Calgaro, “We’re not allowed to talk about Mary.” Sherrie, who was 10 when Mary disappeared, was concerned. As an adult, she filed a missing persons report in 1994.

The search for Mary

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NCMEC


Seaside Police launched their investigation when they received the case in 2002. An age progression photo was generated through the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

Back to the house

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Seaside Police Department


Seaside Police Detective Joe Bertaina was asked to lead the investigation into Mary Day’s disappearance. In 2003, he took Kathy back to the Houles’ home in Seaside: Mary’s last known whereabouts. Kathy Pires showed the detective a corner of the backyard where she said her parents told her not to play.   

A girl’s shoe found

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Seaside Police Department


Detective Bertaina’s captain, Steve Cercone, brought in a team of cadaver dogs to search the backyard. All four dogs alerted on the specific corner where Kathy says she was not allowed to play. When the team started to dig, they found a little girl’s shoe. 

Charlotte Houle speaks

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Seaside Police Department


Police tracked down Charlotte and William Houle in Kansas. Charlotte agreed to speak to local detectives about the case. Throughout the interview, she maintained Mary had run away.

Phoenix Mary

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Phoenix Police Department


After finding the shoe and speaking with Charlotte and William Houle, detectives thought they had a homicide on their hands. Then, the case took an unexpected turn. Nine months after interviewing the couple, a woman in Phoenix, Arizona, was pulled over during a routine traffic stop. Police said it was Mary Day.

Mary’s story

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In his interview with “48 Hours,” Detective Bertaina spoke about traveling to Phoenix to meet Mary in person. He recalled the awful memories Mary had, but it was the memories Mary could not remember that he found troublesome.   

The DNA test

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In his interview with “48 Hours,” Steve Cercone said he wasn’t fully convinced this person was the real Mary Day. He thought she might be an imposter, but a DNA test was ordered and the results came back positive

Sisters reunite

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Sherrie Calgaro


With DNA proving Mary’s identity and the case closed, Sherrie Calgaro invited Mary to move in with her in North Carolina. In this photo, sisters Sherrie, Kathy, center, and Mary were reunited.

Doubts remain

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Sherrie Calgaro


After Mary moved in, Sherrie Calgaro started to have doubts over whether this was her sister. This Mary had a southern accent, which Sherrie and detectives found unusual for someone who didn’t grow up in the south. Calgaro also found her sister’s magazines that were addressed to someone named Monica Devereaux.

Kathy’s doubts

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Kathy Pires had her own doubts. She claims that this Mary didn’t remember that their birth father, Charles Day, had left them an inheritance. Phoenix Mary also didn’t remember their code word for it, “Mohawk.” 

Case is reopened

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In 2008, cadaver dogs, in an unrelated search, alerted near a home in Fort Ord where the  Houles moved to shortly after Mary’s disappearance. Steve Cercone, by then the Police Chief, hired Mark Clark, pictured, a retired homicide detective, to look into the case. Clark told “48 Hours” correspondent Maureen Maher he was convinced there was a murder, and that Phoenix Mary was an impostor. 

A new look

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In 2017, with Mary’s health failing, Judy Veloz, then acting chief of the Seaside Police Department, took a look at the case. Veloz told “48 Hours” she traveled to Mary’s home in Missouri to speak with her face to face.

Mary’s teen years

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Mary told Judy Veloz about a woman she stayed with not long after she ran away – Morie Kimmel. Kimmel says Mary won her heart and she took care of Mary for a year, before she ran away again.

Unseen photograph

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Seaside Police Department


While Judy Veloz continued to track down the details of Mary’s life after vanishing, one of Morie Kimmel’s relatives had a photo that would help turn the case around:a photo of Mary taken at least a year after the alleged murder, seen here in the middle. With this photo, Veloz submitted her report and closed the Mary Day investigation for good.

Finding closure

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In 2017, ’48 Hours” was there when Sherrie Calgaro, who still had doubts, visited Phoenix Mary in Missouri. Calgaro was still in search of answers. After the meeting, Calgaro told correspondent Maureen Maher that she found her answer – that the mysterious woman is her sister, Mary. Not long after this visit, Mary passed away.

Feeling torn

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Mark Clark


After reading Judy Veloz’s report, Mark Clark admits that it made him second-guess his investigation. But even though he can’t prove his imposter theory, he can’t quite shake his old hunch.  

Who is buried there?

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Steve Cercone leans towards the identity of Phoenix Mary being the actual Mary Day after reading Judy Veloz’s report. Still, he wonders about the cadaver dogs and asks if that was not Mary buried in the backyard, who was?



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North Carolina’s Asheville devastated after Helene’s damage cuts power, floods roads

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Floodwaters pushed by the remnants of Hurricane Helene left North Carolina’s largest mountain city largely cut off Saturday by damaged roads and a lack of power and cellphone service, part of a swath of destruction across southern Appalachia that left an unknown number dead and countless worried relatives unable to reach loved ones.

In North Carolina alone, more than 400 roads remained closed on Saturday as floodwaters began to recede and reveal the extent of damage. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said that supplies were being airlifted to that part of the state. Cooper said two people died in his state, Helene killed at least 52 people across multiple states.

Among those rescued from rising waters was nurse Janetta Barfield, whose car was swamped on Friday morning as she left an overnight shift at Asheville’s Mission Hospital. She said she watched a car in front of her drive through standing water and thought it was safe to proceed. But her car stalled, and within minutes water had filled her front seat up to her chest. A nearby police officer who saw her car stall helped her to safety.

“It was unbelievable how fast that creek got just in like five minutes,” Barfield said.

Tropical Weather
Emergency personnel watch as floodwaters rise, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in Asheville, N.C.

Erik Verduzco / AP


Early on Saturday morning, many gas stations were closed because they didn’t have electricity, and the few that were open had hourlong lines wrapped around the block. The hub of tourism and arts, home to about 94,000 people, was unusually still after floodwaters swamped neighborhoods known for drawing visitors including Biltmore Village and the River Arts District, which is home to numerous galleries, shops and breweries.

More than 700,000 power customers were without power across North Carolina, including 160,000 in Buncombe County. Interstate 40 and I-26 were impassible in multiple locations, and a state transportation department map showed that most routes into Asheville and across much of the mountains were snarled. North Carolina’s Department of Transportation posted on social media on Saturday afternoon that “all roads in Western North Carolina should be considered closed.”

In Asheville, there was no cellular service and no timeline for when it would be restored. 

“We have had some loss of life,” County Emergency Services Director Van Taylor Jones told reporters. However, he said they were not ready to report any specifics. Officials have been hindered in contacting next of kin by the communications outages. Asheville police instituted a curfew from 7:30 p.m. Friday to 7:30 a.m. Saturday. 

“The curfew is to ensure the public’s safety and will be in effect until further notice,” police said. 

Asheville transit services were also suspended, police said. The city advised residents to boil “all water used for human consumption,” as there was at least one significant water line break during the storm. Many residents might not be getting water or reduced or no pressure water. 

Jones said the area experienced a cascade of emergencies that included heavy rain, high winds and mudslides. Officials said they tried to prepare for the storm but its magnitude was beyond what they could have imagined.

“It’s not that we (were) not prepared, but this is going to another level,” Sheriff Quentin Miller said. “To say this caught us off-guard would be an understatement.”

Tropical Weather
The banks of the Swannanoa river overflow an effect of Hurricane Helene, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in Asheville, N.C.

Erik Verduzco / AP


Atlanta resident Francine Cavanaugh said she has been unable to reach her sister, son, or friends in the Asheville area.

“My sister checked in with me yesterday morning to find out how I was in Atlanta,” she said on Saturday. “The storm was just hitting her in Asheville, and she said it sounded really scary outside.”

Cavanaugh said her sister had no idea how bad the storm would be there. She told Cavanaugh she was going to head out to check on guests at a vacation cabin “and that’s the last I heard of her. I’ve been texting everyone that I know with no response. All phone calls go directly to voicemail.”





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Embattled Steward Health Care CEO Ralph de la Torre to resign

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Steward Health Care CEO skips Senate hearing


Senators plan to hold Steward Health Care CEO in contempt for skipping hearing

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The CEO of a hospital operator that filed for bankruptcy protection in May will step down after failing to testify before a U.S. Senate panel.

Steward Health Care CEO Ralph de la Torre has overseen a network of some 30 hospitals around the country. The Texas-based company’s troubled recent history has drawn scrutiny from elected officials in New England, where some of its hospitals are located.

A spokesperson for de la Torre told the Associated Press Saturday that he “has amicably separated from Steward on mutually agreeable terms” and “will continue to be a tireless advocate for the improvement of reimbursement rates for the underprivileged patient population.”

A CBS News investigation that spanned nearly two years documented how private equity investors and de la Torre extracted hundreds of millions of dollars while healthcare workers and patients struggled to get the life-saving supplies they needed.

In August, the company closed two Massachusetts hospitals, leaving about 1,200 workers jobless, according to the state.  

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who chairs the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, said earlier this month that Congress “will hold Dr. de la Torre accountable for his greed and for the damage he has caused to hospitals and patients throughout America.”

De la Torre’s resignation is effective Oct. 1. The Senate approved a resolution on Wednesday that was intended to hold him in criminal contempt for failing to testify before a committee.

The Senate panel has been looking into Steward’s bankruptcy. De la Torre did not appear before it despite being issued a subpoena. The resolution refers the matter to a federal prosecutor.

Steward CEO
The empty chair of Steward Health Care CEO, Dr. Ralph de la Torre, who did not show up during the U.S. Senate Committee hearing on September 12, 2024.

Kayla Bartkowski/The Boston Globe via Getty Images




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Climate Watch: Protecting the Planet | How climate change threatens plant and animal species

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Climate Watch: Protecting the Planet | How climate change threatens plant and animal species – CBS News


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In this episode of “Climate Watch: Protecting the Planet,” CBS News senior environmental correspondent Ben Tracy speaks to scientists and experts about the growing number of critically endangered plants and animals and how humans can help.

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