The disappearance of two-year-old Wallace Guidroz from Tacoma, Washington, in 1983 remains a haunting mystery. Despite decades of investigation, the case has seen numerous twists and turns, yet definitive closure eludes those seeking answers. This article delves into the intricate details surrounding Wallace's disappearance, the subsequent investigations, and the enduring quest for justice.
On January 10, 1983, Wallace was last seen at Point Defiance Park in Tacoma. His father, Stanley Lee Guidroz, reported that while he and Wallace were at the park, the toddler began playing with a young girl accompanied by her mother near a duck pond. Stanley claimed he left Wallace with them to walk around the pond with a man he presumed was the girl's father. After approximately 25 to 40 minutes, Stanley returned to find Wallace, the woman, and the child gone. The man suggested they split up to search, but he never returned. Stanley searched for two hours before notifying the police at 7:42 p.m. Despite extensive searches, Wallace was never found.
Authorities created composite sketches of the unidentified man and woman based on Stanley's descriptions. The man was described as Caucasian, in his late twenties to early thirties, approximately six feet tall with a medium build, shoulder-length sandy brown hair, a mustache, and a beard, wearing a baseball cap. The woman was also Caucasian, in her early to mid-twenties, about 5'2" tall, weighing 115 to 120 pounds, with light blonde hair falling below her shoulders and long eyelashes. The child was described as a Caucasian girl with long blonde hair, around two or three years old. Despite publicizing these sketches, the individuals were never identified. A woman later reported that a couple matching these descriptions had attempted to abduct her children at the park that day, but this account could not be verified.
In the aftermath of Wallace's disappearance, Stanley and his wife, Chom Guidroz, divorced in 1985. Chom relocated to Illinois, where she passed away in 1995 at the age of 37. Stanley returned to his native Louisiana in 1986. In 2011, he was arrested and charged with second-degree murder for the stabbing death of his wife, Pepettra Guidroz, to whom he had been married for eight years. Stanley confessed to the crime and, in August 2012, pleaded guilty, resulting in a 40-year prison sentence. ...Read More
ER
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