The Deck - Ivory Green (Jack of Spades, New York)
Episode Date: April 19, 2023Our card this week is Ivery Green, the Jack of Spades from New York. Ivory was just 17 years old when she vanished while on her way home in Utica, New York. Despite a slow start to the investigation,... investigators have tried to make up for lost time, spending years putting together the pieces that point toward the people responsible — people who refuse to talk, even 19 years later. If you know anything about the disappearance of Ivory Green on March 6, 2004, please call the Mohawk Valley Crime Stoppers 866-730-TIPS(8477), or submit an anonymous tip online at p3tips.com. You can also call the Utica Police Department Criminal Investigations Division directly at 315-223-3510. To learn more about The Deck, visit www.thedeckpodcast.com. To apply for the Cold Case Playing Cards grant through Season of Justice, visit www.seasonofjustice.org. Follow The Deck on social media and join Ashley’s community by texting (317) 733-7485 to stay up to date on what's new! Have you listened to THE DECK INVESTIGATES yet? In this first season, Ashley takes a deep dive into the cold case of Darlene Hulse, the 4 of Hearts from Indiana. Darlene Hulse was forcibly taken from her home in Argos, Indiana on August 17, 1984. Though Darlene’s body would be found a day later, just six miles from her home, her killer has evaded law enforcement for almost four decades and her case has remained cold…until now. Click HERE to sign the petition and demand justice for Darlene Hulse.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Before we get started in today's case, I wanted to remind you all of the petition for
Darlene Hulse.
Her case is the one we covered extensively in the deck investigates.
Millions of you have listened to her story, but as of this recording, her petition only
has about 90,000 signatures, and her daughters at least want to get to 100,000 before they
start presenting this petition to the people in power.
I know that some of you probably forgot,
you live busy lives, you were listening
while you were driving or doing something
or with the kids, so this is your friendly reminder.
Please go sign that petition.
You can find a link to it at darlinhulse.com.
I have a link to it right in the show notes
for this episode.
If you haven't listened to the story yet, go do that now. There are 15 episodes on
Darling Hulsey's story. So again, please, please go sign, do it for her family. This is the reason
that we're telling these stories every week. So with that, we can now jump in to our new episode.
episode. Our guard this week is Ivory Green, the jack of spades from New York.
Ivory was just 17 years old when she vanished while on her way home in Utica, New York.
Despite a slow start to the investigation, investigators have tried to make up for lost
time, spending years putting together the pieces that point toward the people responsible,
people who refuse to talk, even 19 years later.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is The Deck. Shuleck Green Smith was expecting her daughter Ivory to walk through the door any minute.
It was March 6, 2004, and Ivory had left earlier that evening, around like 4pm, to go hang
out with some friends, which wasn't unusual.
She was a social 17 year old girl, and as long as she came back every night, Shirlette
had no problem letting her stretch her wings a little bit.
And as far as Charlotte knew, she was coming back.
She got in a call from Ivory at about 745 saying that she was walking home and asking
about dinner.
Now, Charlotte didn't know where she was walking from, but after she hung up, she heated
up a plate of food, chicken, barbecue ribs, and potato salad.
She expected Ivory to walk through the door any second.
But as the minutes ticked by, Sherlett realized something was wrong.
Sherlett, she never made it, I never heard a chick, she turned a lot.
That plate of food sat in the fridge all night, untouched.
And Sherlett stayed up waiting for her daughter, waiting for the door to swing open like it always
did, but the lock never clicked, and Ivory never showed.
By the next morning, she couldn't stay in their apartment any longer, so she walked over
to a nearby community center.
It was a popular spot, especially with the kids and younger adults who lived in their apartment
complex.
Ivory hung out there a lot too, and it even worked there, so it was the first place
she let thought to go.
But when she arrived and spoke to one of the women who worked there, her heart sank.
No one had seen her daughter.
From there, she set off on foot, stopping everyone she recognized, and asking if they had
seen Ivory walking home the night before, because someone had to have seen her.
Udica isn't a massive city, and their family have friends and other family members
all across town.
But out of everyone, Charlotte flagged down, only one woman claimed to have seen Ivory.
It was Ivory's godmother, and Charlotte told our reporter that she had claimed to have
seen Ivory walking, and even pulled her to head home. But the problem was, Gillette didn't know where her daughter had been.
And from the way Gillette described their interaction, it doesn't sound like
Ivory's godmother told Gillette where her interaction with Ivory went down.
By the time Gillette made it across town and back, it was about 6 p.m. and getting dark.
So she headed home and found the apartment was still empty.
She didn't call my call to police station.
I was in tears, because I didn't know what happened.
I wouldn't like her not to make it home."
Charlotte told our reporter that when she contacted the Utica Police Department, she was told
that she had to wait 24 hours before she could officially file a report.
And so the next day she did.
But, when we spoke with Sergeant Michael Curley of the Utica Police Department, he said that hours before she could officially file a report. And so the next day she did.
But when we spoke with Sergeant Michael Curley of the Utica Police Department, he said that
they don't have any record of a report being filed until March 16, which is 10 days after
ivory was last seen.
Here's Sergeant Curley.
So according to mom Shirley Green, she reports that on March 6, 2004, that's the last
time that she actually physically sees or speaks to her daughter, the report comes into the Utica Police Department on March 6, 2004, that's the last time that she actually physically see as her speaks to her daughter.
The report comes into the Utica Police Department
on March 16, 2004.
So we have a 10-day discrepancy as to when mom
states that she last saw and spoke to her daughter,
and with respect to the date that she makes
the missing persons report.
So there's a lot of mistime in 10 days to figure out
exactly what happened to ivory, where she was,
who she was with, what kind of activity
she was participating in. So I think, unfortunately, in most cases, you want to get off the ground
running right away in an 10-day capacity. There's a lot of information that you have to go backwards
first before you can go forwards to make the investigation. Now Shalette told us this isn't true.
She says she filed a report as soon as she could and physically went to the station every day to
check in. So why there is a 10-day gap there, she doesn't know.
And Sergeant Curly wasn't assigned to Ivory's case at the time that this was all going down,
so he can't speak to it either.
But ultimately, the report was filed.
And since Ivory was a minor, her case initially went to the juvenile aid division at the Utica
Police Department.
What the juvenile aid is, what do they do with a missing person?
Initially, they'll make what's called the New York State of File 6 report.
File 6 report is when we put out statewide bulletins or nation-wide
bulletins that a missing person has been entered and that it should anyone
locate them in a period of time to notify the Utica Police Department.
That would be the first steps.
The second steps would then be attempt to locate her at home, see if she returns at any point and speak to the individuals
that she was known to most associate with
or the locations in the city that she was known most associate with.
When the juvenile aid division looked into Ivory's past,
they found that she had a history of running away.
And while that didn't mean police stopped looking for her,
it was something they were aware of.
Again, Ivory had a history of running away. She had a history of being on the street. police stopped looking for her, it was something they were aware of.
This is also something Charlotte denies.
She told us Ivory had never run away from her home before and hadn't spent any nights
away without telling her mom where she was, which is why she got so worried so quickly
when Ivory didn't come home.
Now we did come across a newspaper article in our research that quoted Sherlett saying
Ivory had run away from a group home that she'd previously stayed in.
But she told us that article wasn't accurate either.
According to her, Ivory had spent some time in a group home, although she didn't tell
us what for.
And when it comes to her running away, she said Ivory would have no reason to run from
the home because she would visit her.
I don't want to get too hung up on this discrepancy, though, because regardless of her
past, she had been missing for almost two weeks by the time the juvenile A division kicked
off their investigation.
And when they did, they started by trying to establish who Ivory was with right before
she went missing.
But that proved to be much more difficult than they expected.
So, part of the investigation clearly has been, have we been able to identify anyone that
was with Ivory at the time of her disappearance?
A lot of differing information has come forth as to when the last time people saw her,
what her actions were, when they saw her.
So I don't know that anyone has truthfully told us
that they were with Ivory at the moment
that she was less seen.
Investigators were met with a wall of silence
when it came to who Ivory may have been with.
They spoke with her friends,
tracked down anyone she may have been associated with,
but everyone they spoke to couldn't, or wouldn't say where she'd been, who she'd been with,
or what she was doing. But investigators weren't out of options.
We knew right away that I've probably had a phone, so the investigators made an immediate effort
in attempt to get any information they could from cell phone providers from any kind of digital access, but again, you know, 2004, access to criminal investigations with
the large providers as a whole lot different it is in 2022.
Now, Sherlett doesn't believe Ivory had a phone.
When our reporter spoke with her, she said she thinks the call she received on the sixth
was made from a friend or family member's phone.
Although she's not sure, who would have lent her the phone or where exactly in on the sixth was made from a friend or family member's phone.
Although she's not sure who would have lent her the phone or wear exactly in Utica she
was calling from.
Cell or not, though, there was no way for investigators to track ivory through whatever
phone she used.
And they ran into the same issue when they looked into surveillance footage.
You know, I think a lot of us think that 2004 wasn't that long ago, but in the effort of technology,
it's eons ago, right? Like surveillance photos weren't what they were now. Nothing was digital.
It was all VHS or camcorder stuff, you know.
So, the canvases were done for that stuff, but the businesses, the homes didn't have ring doorbells back then.
They didn't have electronic cloud-based servers. They could have phones.
It was extremely expensive.
They have a surveillance photo on both your business
and your residence at that time.
So just, you know, canvases were undertook
to attempt to locate things like that,
but they just weren't as prevalent as they are now.
So they had no cell data, no surveillance footage,
no one who would talk to them about where ivory had been
before she vanished. It was just dead end after dead end.
They knew something had happened to her, but what that was remained a mystery.
But the thing about people is that they like to talk, maybe not directly to police, but
to each other.
And as the weeks went by, police started to hear whispers.
And then the rumbling started to occur that something nefarious might have happened to
Irene.
No one would give any details, but from what police could piece together, Ivory had been
involved with a tough crowd. Despite being 17, she gravitated toward an older group, many of whom had criminal records,
and by late April, two names in particular kept coming up over and over in their conversations.
A pair of cousins, Benjamin and Plummer Reed.
Now both guys were already known to police.
Benjamin, who went by Benji, was 23 and had a history of criminal violence
as did Plummer, who was 27.
Now Plummer, and I guess by extension Benji,
were also distant relatives of Ivory's.
Plummer is Scherlet's niece's half brother,
according to Scherlet.
Now once the police started hearing those names,
they began connecting some dots.
And while everyone they talked to had slightly different stories to tell, they put together
one solid theory.
Benji and Plummer Reed either knew what happened to Ivory, or they were directly responsible
for her disappearance.
Of course, that was just a theory.
There was nobody, and without anyone saying that they witnessed a crime, investigators
couldn't be sure.
But it was enough to make the juvenile aid division
hand over her case to a missing persons detective
in the Utica Police Department.
But again, despite having names,
there wasn't anything concrete to tie Benji or Plummer
to Ivory's disappearance.
They were known to roll with the same crowd,
but without physical evidence,
there was nothing that could be done.
Sergeant Curly didn't share with us if they were interviewed over the course of that first
month, but they were on police's radar.
And by April 29th, they were front and center.
And then at the end of April, on April 29th, 2004, there was a shooting between two individuals
which led to the arrest of one party, who had shot the other party in the head, that kind of really spurred the case into, perhaps this was much more than a missing
person investigation.
The individuals Sergeant Curly is referring to R. Benji and Plummer.
He'll be calling them individuals throughout the episode because he couldn't name them
in our interview.
But even though he couldn't call them by name, he gave us permission to do so.
Anyway, on April 29, police got a call that Plummer had been shot in the backyard of his great
aunt's house. When police and paramedics got to the scene, he was somehow still alive,
despite having been shot in the head. They rushed into the hospital where he survived,
and police were able to piece together what had happened.
Plumber had been sitting in a broken-down car in the backyard just kind of hanging out,
and Benji walked up and got in, too.
And then, seemingly unprovoked, Benji pulls out a handgun and shot Plumber three times
in the head, before coming to blows with him outside the car and eventually fleeing
the scene.
This was an unexpected, random act of violence between two people who, by all accounts, were
on decent terms.
Benji turned himself in later that evening, and he immediately denied being involved
in the whole thing.
But Plummer, who was still alive and talking, was 100% sure it was him. Although as far as I can tell, neither Benji nor Plummer could, or maybe would, tell police
why the shooting had occurred in the first place.
But a few days later, police got a call from Charlotte.
She said that she knew what the motive was, because she had been on the phone with Plummer
when it all went down. He was about to tell her what happened to her daughter.
Now Plummer hadn't told police he was on the phone with anyone, especially not sure
let.
But she was adamant.
He told her that he had seen a new segment on Ivory's disappearance which made him want
to tell her what happened.
But just as he was about to confess whatever it was
he knew, she heard a loud pop on the other end.
She heard what she described as a tireback firing. We now know, clearly, those were the shots
fired as corroborated by individuals in the residence at the time, but it's 2004. It's
very difficult to obtain cell phone records at times, very difficult to obtain any other
corroborating information as the individuals involved certainly were speaking.
The suspect wasn't going to tell us anything as to why he shot him.
And the victim at that point, I think clearly, and rightfully so, became afraid for his
life.
And at that point, his thus far never said any more information about the disappearance
of our agreement.
He has denied to this date that he was on the phone with her and was about to tell her
information about Ivory. However, we have certainly no indication to discount what Charlotte was saying.
Charlotte even spoke to Plummer after the shooting and asked him to tell her what he was going
to say, but he said he didn't remember.
And whether that was true, she didn't know.
Unfortunately, this code of silence wasn't uncommon.
Ivory was from an area where there wasn't a lot of trust
in police.
There still isn't to this day.
In fact, talking to the police at all
is one of the worst things someone can do in that area.
Here's Lieutenant Scott Sifinelli.
Based on my experience, a lot of people
don't want to tell what happened to them,
because they were the bad guy two weeks ago.
And we've proven that.
So they can't, you know, snitch, as they say,
because someone will snitch on them.
This is made finding out what happened
to ivory difficult to say the least.
Some people have even tried to throw off the investigation.
We have numerous individuals who have provided statements whether it to be to their own personal
benefit, to throw us off track, for whatever reason, have told us that they saw ivory at
a particular time which may jive with the investigation to we know and some unfortunately
have been just so wildly inaccurate that has created leads for no reason.
There are individuals who said that they witnessed ivory getting into a vehicle and was taken
away at a time that we know probably is very unlikely.
So at that point, you have to certainly track down who the individual providing the information
was, who the individual and the vehicle may have been.
Could ivory even have been in that particular location?
So it's a tremendous amount of man and women power to investigate leads that have gone
virtually nowhere and a lot of times have been wholly inaccurate on their face.
There was a lot that Sergeant Curley and Lieutenant Cifanelli couldn't tell us regarding who they
spoke to and how they verified what information was accurate versus what wasn't.
But Sergeant Curley told us that they were eventually able to pin down where ivory was last
scene.
From all the information we have, the last place that Ivory Green was seen was in the
O'Nightest Square area in Utica walking to her residence.
According to her mother, she had received a phone call from Ivory just prior to that,
stating that Ivory would be home shortly.
She was walking home, and then, unfortunately, as we know tragically, she never arrived
home.
In the last place, we can piece together based on a multitude of information
is that she was walking near the United Square area.
United Square was just a mile and a half
from the Green's apartment,
comfortably within walking distance for ivory,
especially since she didn't have a car
and was used to walking everywhere.
But as for where she was coming from
or who she was with, that remained a mystery.
Even though the investigation felt like it was stalling, Charlotte never gave up, and
she continued working to bring awareness to her daughter's story.
She held a dance in honor of Ivory's 18th birthday, and then a march to bring attention
to her case on what would have been her 19th.
A billboard went up at the start of 2006 as well. And meanwhile, investigators continued trying to interview everyone they could.
Every individual that was arrested in the U of Police Department for a three or four-year period
was debriefed about the missing person, Ivory Green.
You know, it was everybody that came in, whether you got picked up on a petat larceny,
shoplift and charger, you were there for a major crime.
Everyone got spoke to about Ivgrain and what they knew.
So a huge part of the investigation was attempting to cultivate information in a variety of
street sources as well as information we had.
And I think it's a two-pronged attempt in both, you know, a catch-22, that the information
you got came from a lot of sources.
However, it was a lot of self-serving.
Those individuals wanted to help themselves at the time of their arrest.
So you couldn't
discount what they said until you ran it down, but you realized that you just spent a few
days running down, fervilist leads that took you nowhere.
It was, in a word, frustrating.
By the two-year anniversary of Ivory's disappearance, investigators felt like they were stuck
running in circles.
They knew Plummer and Benji knew something.
By that point, Benji was serving out his sentence for attempted second-degree murder, and
Plummer had been in custody for a parole violation.
But neither of them would talk.
No one would talk.
Searches were coming up empty, and everyone was left wondering what had happened to Ivory.
However, they were about to get what seemed
like the big break they were waiting for. Because as the investigation into Ivory's disappearance
was going on, there was another seemingly unrelated investigation running simultaneously.
It dealt with one of the biggest drug trafficking gangs in Utica, and in April of 2006, an FBI special agent filed a criminal complaint against them
that suggested ivory's disappearance wasn't random.
So, to explain everything, I need to rewind to May 2005. When the O'Nighter County Drug Enforcement Task Force and the FBI began investigating a drug trafficking gang,
the gang operated under the front of being a recording studio called Brick Money Entertainment,
run by this guy named Raymond Garrett.
Brick Money was responsible for a lot of the drugs coming into Utica at the time,
and one of their members was a man named Brenda Watkins, who happened to be Ivory's cousin.
Now as the Drug Enforcement Task Force and the FBI were investigating Brick Money, they
learned that back in 2003, Brandel pocketed money that he was supposed to use to purchase
cocaine from dealers outside of Utica.
Obviously, Raymond Garrett and the other brick money members
were not happy about brandels stealing their money,
which eventually caused him to leave and start his own
drug dealing operation called Get Money Click.
But brick money was violent,
but these weren't people who would just forgive and forget
one of their own members betraying them like that.
And over the course of the investigation,
the investigators on that case started to hear whispers
that in retaliation, brick money members abducted
and killed Ivory.
To investigators on Ivory's case, this seemed like a huge deal.
This could be that missing piece of the puzzle investigators
were waiting for.
Sergeant Curly even told us that some of the names
that came up in the brick money investigation
had also come up in Ivory's case.
But there were some holes.
For one, if brick money were gonna go
after one of Brandel's loved ones,
Ivory just doesn't make a ton of sense.
He had other people who were closer to him.
And two, investigators kept running into the same issue.
People just weren't giving them accurate information.
At the time that brick money was being investigated,
parts of that group were supposedly working
as informants for federal and local investigators.
During the course of those comments,
they were making statements as to how the drugs
and guns were coming into the city.
And I think during the course of time,
it was well proven that the information that they were providing
was wholly inaccurate and put police and investigators on a track that was nowhere near where they
needed to be and then tangentially provided information and other cases that led nowhere
as well.
Including ivory.
You know some of the information about ivory came out of that investigation.
I think over time and in the totality of what we've learned that there's probably not
a lot of relevancy to that investigation and the missing of ivory.
So it was back to the drawing board.
They continued interviewing everyone they could running down every lead.
And despite not having much cooperation, there have been a decent amount of leads, even
if some of them seem far-fetched from the start.
Could you have to go into it? You have to chase a lead in an optimistic way, right?
We don't want to go right off the bat saying, I said nothing. If you have that attitude, you're gonna end up with nothing, right?
So a lead comes in and you hope for the best and you work it based on your training and experience and you know at the end
It is what it is, right?
You hope for the best and you do your best and then sometimes it's a swing and a
miss. They had lots of swings and misses but they never gave up and neither
did she let over the years she continued to advocate for ivory but not just for
ivory. She's volunteered with Nick Mc and helped comfort families with
missing children of their own.
Eventually, she got married and moved out to Georgia, but she keeps in contact with the
Utica police.
So, here's where Ivory's case stands today.
Investigators have gathered hundreds of leads, led multiple searches, and interviewed everyone
they could.
And while they still aren't 100% sure what happened, investigators have
landed on one thing. Ivory was most likely murdered.
So the timeline we have is that on March 6, 2004, mom states that that's the last time she's
seen Ivory. On March 16, 2004, she has reported formally missing to the Utica Police Department.
On April 29, 2004, the shooting of that individual occurs
and then we believe somewhere in that month and a half time frame,
Ivergreen goes missing and I think unfortunately at this point, and I think mom is on board, that
Ivergreen was probably murdered during the initial few days of her going missing.
It's been difficult for them to piece together exactly what happened, and a lot of what they
know today they're keeping close to the vest.
They know Ivory was with both Benji and Plummer in the days leading up to her disappearance,
and so a lot of the investigation has centered around them and the people that they're known
to associate with.
The two specifically involved in the investigation on top of the associates are part of the
investigation that we have centered on for the course of the investigation on top of the associates are part of the investigation
that we have centered on for the course of the investigation from the last 18 years and
believe that they have a strong bit of knowledge if not a direct hand in what happened to
Ivory.
But what exactly happened to Ivory?
What the last few minutes of her life were like, that's still a mystery.
Charlotte believes Ivory was abducted while she was walking home and whoever grabbed
her killed her once they realized what they'd done.
But Sargent Curly has a different theory.
From the information we have, it wasn't an abduction type case.
It wasn't a forceful grabbing and dragging into a vehicle or taking with someone that
the individual she went with from the information that we have was very complicit and compliant on her part, you know, whether whatever the reason
for her going with them at that time, I think, is a huge part of the investigation that
we're just not willing to publicly speak about because it speaks to the motive that we
may need going forward to put a prosecutable case together or interviews, but there was
no force required to get ivory to go with the individual she
went with. Sergeant Curly and Lieutenant Sifinelli have two goals. The first is to find out who killed
Ivory so they can be brought to justice. And the second is to find Ivory's body so sure led
can bring her home. Over the years, they have been given dozens of tips, but none of them have led to the discovery of ivory's remains.
We've searched lake bodies, we've searched river bodies, we've searched wooded areas, they've searched national grid,
own properties that people have stated, they've searched abandoned buildings,
that one information was that she may be buried in New York City. We went all the way down there to look at places.
So, it's traversed one end of the state to the other and in a time to locate Iver and bring some
closure to Sherlock in any capacity just to bring her daughter's remains home
and give her a chance to bury her. No stone, literally no stone has been
unturned in time to locate her. The problem is the people were speaking to the
information again. You don't search 20 different areas if you're getting
concrete information. You have street information that people have heard
or information that people are trying to throw you off the path.
And we're not going to discount any of it,
but none of it unfortunately has been relevant or useful
to locate here.
This investigation has been an uphill battle from the start.
And the longer it goes unsolved, the more difficult it becomes.
Partly because so much time has passed and partly because some of the people involved
have been murdered themselves.
There's a lot of people we can't go back to anymore in this investigation.
We have what we have, there's a lot of people over 18 years that change locations,
that tragically pass away, that are victims of violent crime themselves.
So, you know, as time goes on, it's certainly an uphill battle to try to
determine definitive information as to the location and whereabouts and what themselves. So, you know, as time goes on, it's certainly an uphill battle to try to determine
definitive information as to the location and whereabouts and what happened to every
in that night.
But even though some of the people they would like to go back to have passed away, there's
one thing they've got up their sleeves that might do all the talking for them, DNA.
There were leads that consisted of possibly securing evidence that could
have DNA on it. So we do have evidence on hand, but without getting into specifics, I'm
not going to say what that evidence is or what lab results could have been. But yeah,
there's stuff in the UPD property room that was held for forensic reasons.
Lieutenant Sifanelli wouldn't tell us where they got the evidence that they have.
They couldn't have been from Ivory and Sherlett's apartment since she didn't go missing from
there.
But whatever it was from, and whatever they have, they're keeping it under wraps.
They also have Sherlett's DNA on file, so if they find remains, they can determine if it's
Ivory and they can bring her home.
And they will bring her home. So this investigation is very active and ongoing. Lieutenant
Sifanelli maintains a direct role in it even with his new position in the United
County District Attorney's Office. We have a dedicated investigator at the
Utica Police Department. Every year we try to at least do some kind of media
outreach either we go on the radio or we put posters out to never forget about
Ivory Green. We're going to do everything we can and in that we're going to run down every lead we
possibly can. Charlotte told us all she wants to know is what happened to her daughter.
It's been just over 19 years since Ivory disappeared and that's longer than she was alive.
Lieutenant Sifinelli is dedicated to getting
sure let the closure that she so desperately wants.
I've told that to so many people that right now
we're working for mom, right?
I mean, it seems like we're just simply working for mom
to get her an answer.
And that hasn't worked out in regards
to making somebody feel bad enough to tell
us something.
And maybe the reality is, we haven't just, we haven't talked to that person yet who has
that information, who holds that key.
I think we have, but remains to be seen.
We have a Mohawk Valley Crime Stoppers, 100% anonymous tip line that we utilize for a lot
of crimes.
Some tips have even come in for ivory.
So, individuals wishing to provide an anonymous tip, can you either go to p3tips.com, download
the app, post it on the Play Store or the Apple I store, or you can call an 800 number,
1-866-730-8477, 1-866-730-TIPS.
And that is the Mohawk Vali Crime Stopper Tip, or you can call the Utica Police Department
for your own investigations of vision at 315-223-3510.
The Deck is an audio chuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about the deck and our advocacy work,
visit thedeckpodcast.com.
So, what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
Aaaaah!