Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 27, 1999 · Details of Disappearance. Williams was last seen at approximately 12:00 p.m. in the 500 block of Main Street in Nucla, Colorado on May 27, 1999. He stopped by a local office and mentioned that he was en route to assist a stranded motorist in less than a mile east of his store.

    • Overview
    • Bio
    • Case

    1/2

    Real Name: Dale Duane Williams

    Nicknames: No known nicknames

    Location: Nucla, Colorado

    Occupation: Auto Shop Owner

    Date of Birth: July 15, 1956

    Height: 5'7"

    Weight: 170 lbs.

    Marital Status: Married

    Characteristics: Caucasian male with graying brown (or sandy) hair and blue eyes. Dale has a scar under his chin, scars on each side of face along jawline, and a birthmark on the left side of his face under his jawbone. He was wearing a dark blue T-shirt and blue jeans.

    Details: On Sunday, July 4, 1999, a family swimming at the confluence of the San Miguel and Dolores Rivers in Unaweep Canyon in western Colorado made a grim discovery. Submerged in the muddy waters was a white 1994 Ford F250 pickup truck. The Montrose County Sheriff’s Department responded to the scene. It quickly became apparent that this would be more than a simple vehicle recovery operation. Investigators realized this might be the break they desperately needed in a case that had captured the attention of surrounding communities. The truck belonged to a man who suddenly vanished six weeks before. Hopes, however, were quickly dashed when no other signs of the missing man were recovered. Authorities need help to solve this baffling mystery.

    The recovered pickup truck was registered to forty-two-year-old Dale Williams. The longtime area resident was an active community leader, devoted husband, and doting father of two teenage daughters. He owned and operated "Dale's Pro Body Shop", an auto body shop in the nearby town of Nucla. He also owned Showtime Movie Rentals, along with other businesses and buildings. On the evening of May 27, 1999, he failed to make it home for dinner. His wife of twenty-three years, Diana, assumed he was preoccupied with a job at the body shop and lost track of time.

    By bedtime, however, Diana was concerned. She called Dale’s shop a couple of times, but he did not answer or call back. She figured that he did not hear the phone ring because he was using the air ratchets or another loud tool. At around 10pm, she went to bed. As she laid there, she felt something was wrong. She tossed and turned all night and woke up several times. Each time she woke, he still was not home.

    Diana woke at dawn and was horrified to discover Dale had not made it home all night. As soon as she got their children off to school, she drove straight to his garage. When she first walked into his shop, she noticed that the door was unlocked. The hood was still up on a van he was working on. His tools were laying around it. It appeared as if he had walked away for just a few minutes and would be back. She immediately went over to his mother Ida’s house. She had also not heard from him in the past day.

    Dale often shopped at junkyards, looking for spare parts to use at the body shop. Diana and Ida thought that would be a good place to start their search. When they did not find him at the junkyards, they figured that he might have accidentally driven off the road somewhere. They figured that something had happened to him, but they also felt that they would be able to find him. However, they were unable to find any trace of him. His family knew something was wrong, especially because his daughter was supposed to graduate that weekend.

    Within a few hours, Diana notified police, and word of Dale’s strange disappearance spread through Nucla. Investigators began piecing together his day. They learned he made a brief stop at his friend Tami Lowrance’s office about 12:15pm on May 27. She had a windshield that needed repaired on a truck. He told her that he would not be able to repair it until the following Wednesday. She thought it was strange because it was not necessary for him to stop by and tell her that; he could have called her instead.

    • 3 min
  2. Nucla Colorado, May 27, 1999. Disappearance. Dale Williams lived with his wife and two daughters in the small town of Nucla, Colorado (which is about five and half to six hours from Denver). Dale owned an auto body shop called "Dale's Pro Body Shop," while also owning a video store in town.

  3. People also ask

  4. Oct 23, 2023 · Dale Williams missing since May 27, 1999. Acting on a tip, the Montrose County Sheriff’s Office and Colorado Bureau of Investigation secured a warrant and searched a property in Nucla over...

  5. My dad, Dale Williams, disappeared 19 years ago from Nucla, Colorado. Nucla is a very small town on the western slope with an aprx population of 1200 when my father went missing. I was 19, in college and not living at home, but my sister was still in high school and was 17.

  6. Story by Timber Schuman. • 4mo • 1 min read. Take a look at my cinematic short documentary on the not-so-cold case of Dale Williams, a Nucla man missing for 24 years. Was there foul play...

  7. May 23, 2019 · GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. – Authorities believe Dale Williams got a call on May 27, 1999: A motorist was stranded in the Paradox Valley in Colorado's Western Slope and asking for help. Williams, a 42-year-old body shop owner in the nearby town of Nucla, headed that way, first stopping at a local business to discuss a job he was about to start.

  1. People also search for