Return of Jayme Closs renewing hope for families of missing persons
By:
CBS 58 Newsroom
Posted: Jan 17, 2019 10:03 PM CDT
-
3:13
Milwaukee Admirals
-
1:55
Community remembers man who died after being struck by a garbage...
-
2:20
Mayor Johnson signals support for reconfiguring 794 as discussions...
-
2:29
81% believe democracy under threat; only 23% not worried about...
-
3:27
Remembering Milwaukee’s women’s pro team amid WNBA fever
-
1:58
Wisconsin tribe files lawsuit against social media companies...
-
2:24
Key takeaways in 2024 matchups, top issues for voters
-
2:19
’We’ve been crying out for this for a very long time’:...
-
1:18
CBS 58’s Ready Weather team takes on Weather Day at American...
-
1:14
’This is the gold standard’: Milwaukee Bucks unveil new food...
-
1:40
Spring and baseball
-
1:35
Bango, Bucks Beats and Rim Rockers take to the court to hype...
WISCONSIN (CBS 58) -- The return of Jayme Closs has renewed hope for families still searching for their missing loved ones.
Sara Bushland disappeared from Spooner in northwestern Wisconsin 22 years ago. She was just 15.
Lesley Small, Sara's sister, says when she heard about Jayme's escape it gave her hope her sister could be found alive too. Small believes someone knows something.
"It's time to do what's right. Life is too short to think that this is okay. They just need to do what's right," Small said.
Small is now working on a documentary called Sara Was Here. She hopes the film will encourage that person to come forward.
Sign up for the CBS 58 Newsletter