Stephanie Lyn Crane
Stephanie, circa 1993; Age-progression to age 39 (circa 2023); Stephanie's "GIMMIE" sweatshirt
- Missing Since 10/11/1993
- Missing From Challis, Idaho
- Classification Non-Family Abduction
- Sex Female
- Race White
- Date of Birth 09/28/1984 (40)
- Age 9 years old
- Height and Weight 4'2, 65 - 85 pounds
- Clothing/Jewelry Description A maroon and white-striped hooded sweatshirt with "GIMMIE" imprinted on the front in white lettering, maroon sweatpants and maroon and white shoes. A photo of the sweatshirt is posted with this case summary.
- Distinguishing Characteristics Caucasian female. Brown hair, blue eyes. Stephanie has a cowlick on the right side of her hairline and a scar near her right eye. Her hair is very thick and curly, and her face is freckled. She has a space between her two upper front teeth. Some agencies spell Stephanie's middle name "Lynn." Her nickname is Steffi.
Details of Disappearance
Stephanie's mother gave her money for a snack and dropped her off at the Challis Bowling Alley in Challis, Idaho on October 11, 1993. She went bowling with friends, then departed at approximately 4:45 p.m.. She was last seen walking on Highway 93 towards Challis High School at approximately 6:00 p.m. that evening. The school was across the street from the bowling alley.
Accounts differ as to whether Stephanie was going to the high school for soccer practice, or whether she was heading for her family's residence, about 500 yards away. By 8:15 p.m., she hadn't arrived home and her parents notified the police. An extensive search covering 7,000 square miles in two counties turned up no sign of her. A yellow pickup truck with red pinstripes was seen in the area around the time she vanished, and may be connected to her disappearance.
Keith Glenn "Mark" Hescock has been investigated for possible involvement in Stephanie's case, and also the disappearance of Amber Hoopes. Hescock kidnapped a fourteen-year-old girl from outside her home in the early morning hours of June 5, 2002. He had known her family.
The girl was able to escape that afternoon when he went to work, leaving her chained to a bed in his home. When the police attempted to arrest him, Hescock fled in his vehicle and lead them on a forty-mile high-speed chase, which ended at a dead-end road in the Big Hole Mountains. There he shot and killed a police dog, shot and wounded an officer, and then committed suicide.
Hescock had previously worked for Hoopes's grandparents, and his neighbor says he was hunting in Challis the weekend Stephanie disappeared from that location. He also owned a yellow pickup truck similar to the one that may be connected to Stephanie's case, and Stephanie's great-grandparents believe he was the "weird guy" with a yellow pickup truck who camped next to them when they went camping near Twin Peaks, Idaho the weekend before Stephanie went missing. Authorities have not been able to link Hescock to either Stephanie's or Hoopes's disappearance, however. His only criminal record in Idaho had been for poaching, but he had felony convictions in other states.
Authorities have five to ten persons of interest in Stephanie's case, none of whom are family members. One of them, a woman, refused to answer any questions without an attorney present; another, a man, took a polygraph on the case and his answers were "deceptive but inconclusive."
Investigators believe Stephanie was taken against her will by a stranger. Her case remains unsolved. She has three younger sisters and is described as a tomboy who was part of the youth bowling league and enjoyed going hunting and fishing with her father.
Her parents divorced in mid-1994 and both of them are now deceased; her mother died in 1997 and her father in 2012, both of natural causes. Her sisters and many members of her extended family are still alive, however.
Investigating Agency
- Custer County Sheriff's Office 208-879-2232
Source Information
- Child Protection Education of America
- Operation Lookout
- NamUs
- Idaho Bureau of Criminal Investigation
- Cyber Sleuths -- the Reality of Crime News
- KIDK
- NamUs
- The Watertown Daily Times
- The Deseret News
- America's Most Wanted
- KPVI 6
- Classic Auto Collision Center
- KVAL News
- East Idaho Cold Cases
- The Abyss Podcast
- KIVI TV 6
- The Challis Messenger
- The Idaho Falls Post Register
- The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
Updated 12 times since October 12, 2004. Last updated May 14, 2024; age-progression updated.