🚨 WANTED FOR MURDER – Nearly 29 Years on the Run 🚨
On May 16, 1997, 38-year-old Sugie Vasquez was murdered in Orange, Texas. Authorities allege her husband of 21 years, Rogelio Guerra Vasquez, beat and stabbed her to death before dumping her body in a pond. He disappeared before he could be brought to justice and has remained a fugitive ever since.
Today, Sugie’s family is still waiting for answers and accountability.
The FBI is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Rogelio Guerra Vasquez. Investigators believe he may have ties to or be living near Monterrey, Mexico. He should be considered armed and dangerous.
Someone knows where he is.
Please take a moment to review the case details, photos, and age-progressed images. Even the smallest tip could help finally bring justice to Sugie and peace to the family she left behind.
🔎 View the case:
solvethecase.org/case/1997-8…#Wanted#FBI#ColdCase#JusticeForSugie#SolveTheCase#Fugitive#Texas#ShareToSolve
🤖 Since launching Penny on Solve the Case, the number of victim profiles created has increased by 300%. She searches public databases and news sources to build case pages in minutes, making it easier than ever to ensure victims aren't forgotten.
If you know of an unsolved case that isn't in our database yet, give Penny a try at solvethecase.org/create — it only takes a few minutes, and every case added keeps a victim's story alive.
🔗 solvethecase.org/create
🚨New Feature: Meet Penny, your AI Case Assistant 🤖
One of the biggest barriers families face when trying to share a case is simple…getting everything entered, organized, and published.
It’s overwhelming.
It’s time-consuming.
And for many, it stops the case from ever being seen.
That’s why we built Penny.
Start with just the basics — a name and last known contact —
and let Penny help with the rest.
No complicated forms.
No guesswork on what to enter.
No starting from scratch.
Let Penny review articles and case details to automatically generate structured case pages, organize timelines and key information.
Because every case deserves to be seen.
And every family deserves help telling their story.
🔎 Try it now: solvethecase.org/create
(Browning, MT) Ashley was just 20 years old when she vanished from the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Browning, Montana on June 5, 2017. She was last seen at a gathering that evening and sent a final text to her sister — then silence. Can you help share her case? #SharetoSolve#SolveTheCase#ashleyheavyrunnersolvethecase.org/case/2017-6…
(Tucson, AZ) Not much is known from the sudden disappearance of Nancy Guthrie from her home in Arizona. View her case page to see the relevant timeline and points of interest. #SharetoSolve#SolveTheCasesolvethecase.org/case/2026-8…
🚀 New on Solve the Case: Community-Built Family Trees
🔗 solvethecase.org/genealogy
This new tool helps investigative genetic genealogists (IGGs) compare missing person family trees with DNA networks from unidentified individuals — speeding up the path to identification.
🔍 Why it matters:
Family trees give IGGs searchable clues: surnames, clusters, and relationships that can link unidentified persons to missing loved ones.
👥 How the community can help:
• Build family trees using public records
• Submit trees for review
• Add names connections that support real casework
(No DNA is collected or stored.)
🧬 IGGs: We need you.
Review trees, assess accuracy, and use the tool to support your unidentified person investigations.
👉 Start a tree. Review a tree. Help make a match.
Together we can help families get answers.
Join @JoeGiacalone and his True Crime with the Sarge channel for an exclusive live interview with Aaron Benzick, founder of Solve the Case.
We’ll dive into:
• How Solve the Case tackles decades-old cold cases
• The power of DNA technology and investigative genealogy
• Real-life examples of breakthroughs in unsolved crimes
• How you can help support the search for answers
youtube.com/watch?v=0WG5Gfpq…
Your support can make a difference for families still waiting for answers. Every dollar donated to the Solve the Case non-profit helps us:
🔹 Create virtual flyers so victims’ faces and stories are seen where they matter most
🔹 Keep our website and database running for families, law enforcement, and genetic genealogists
🔹 Build new tools and features that bring the community together to help solve unsolved cases
Cold cases don’t solve themselves — but together, we can shine a light on them. ✨
👉🏻 Donate today: solvethecase.org/donate
🚨 FUGITIVES NEED FOUND 🚨
Cold cases aren’t just about solving crimes—they’re also about holding fugitives accountable. Too many suspects remain at large for years, even decades, leaving families without justice and communities at risk.
Getting fugitives into custody is a vital milestone in the justice process. For families, it means progress, closure, and the knowledge that someone is being held responsible.
👉🏻 Fugitive cases are supported on Solve the Case. Share them, spread the word, and help bring these individuals to justice.
Every share could be the one that leads to an arrest. Let’s not delay justice any longer. #NationalColdCaseMonth#SolveTheCase#ShareToSolve