Feb 23, 2013
Oct 06, 2022
Stephanie
Douglas
58
25
64 inches
115 lbs
125 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
In the small city of McMinnville, Oregon, a sense of unease settled over a community in the late autumn of 1990. On the night of November 27th, 25-year-old Stephanie Lynn Douglas, a mother of three, vanished from her apartment on Sesame Street. That evening, around 10:30 p.m., she had tucked her children and a visiting niece into bed. Her husband was at work at the time. At some point during the night, Stephanie received a telephone call. Afterward, she penned a brief, slightly misspelled note and taped it to her neighbor's door. It read, "Please check in on my kids. I had an emergecy. [sic]" Another neighbor reported seeing her leave, and Stephanie allegedly told this person she was going to help someone dig up marijuana in the woods. She has not been seen or heard from since that night. The following morning, Stephanie's husband, Stanley Douglas, returned home from his job to find the children safe but his wife gone. He reported her missing. He also told police that he had found her car in the parking lot of a local department store. A strange detail that caught the attention of investigators was the condition of the vehicle; while other cars in the lot were coated in a layer of frost from the cold night, Stephanie's car was clear, suggesting it had been driven there more recently. The investigation into her disappearance would soon become entangled with another dark event. Just two weeks after Stephanie vanished, her best friend, June Cross, also went missing. In January 1991, authorities searching for Stephanie discovered a body in a rural part of Yamhill County, near a campsite known to be used by a man named Harold Stookey. The remains, however, were not Stephanie's; they were identified as those of June Cross. Harold Stookey was ultimately convicted of the murder of June Cross, but he was never charged in connection with Stephanie's disappearance and denied any involvement in either case. Authorities believe Stookey may have convinced Stephanie to leave her home on the night she went missing, though his motive remains unclear. Over the years, investigators have looked at several individuals. Stephanie’s husband, Stanley, allegedly had a history of being abusive and failed a polygraph test after her disappearance, but he had an alibi for the time she vanished and has never been officially linked to the case. Other potential suspects included Larry Shipley, a convicted murderer once married to June Cross, and Scott Cox, a presumed serial killer. Despite several reported sightings in the months after she disappeared, none were ever confirmed. The case eventually went cold, and in March of 2005, it was handed over to the Yamhill County Cold Case Team. Foul play is strongly suspected in Stephanie's case, and authorities believe she was likely murdered, but a lack of evidence has prevented any charges from being filed. The story of Stephanie Douglas is a haunting one, leaving her children and family without answers for decades. A young mother who vanished after a mysterious phone call and a hastily written note, her case is a complex web of troubling connections and unanswered questions, leaving a permanent shadow over the community.
Nov 27, 1990
McMinnville
Oregon
Yamhill County
97128
No
22487
McMinnville Police Department
McMinnville
Oregon
Yamhill County
97128
Bill Christensen
Detective
121 Southwest Adams Street, Oregon
5034347307
Local
Law Enforcement
90-9340
McMinnville Police Department
Brown
Hazel
Hazel
05/31/2026