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With the 35-year-old police cadet missing without a trace and no leads to her whereabouts, Patch recreates a time line of her disappearance and the events that followed.

By Leigh Clifton | Email the author | April 6, 2011

It has been nearly a month since the Indian Rocks Beach resident Kelly Rothwell disappeared.

There have been no sightings, cell phone calls or credit card purchases that would suggest Rothwell is safe or even alive, since the 35-year-old Indian Rocks Beach woman dropped out of sight on March 12.

As family, friends, associates and police investigators hunt for Rothwell, Patch has created a timeline that marks her disappearance and the events that have followed.

It shows how quickly friends, her immediate family and investigators responded, when Rothwell — who has been described as dependable — disappeared.

Rothwell’s absence was first noticed when she failed to meet some friends from the police academy for a Saturday night out. She was not at her desk at the St. Pete Police Academy on Monday morning.

The timeline also shows how the departure of David Perry, Rothwell’s live-in boyfriend, for New York coincided with her disappearance.

Perry, a 46-year-old retired New York State prison guard, first refused to talk with investigators, but then said last week he does not know what happened to her.

1:30-3:38 p.m., Saturday, March 12thRothwell has lunch with friend Donna Scharrett at Chili’s Restaurant on Rt. 19, Clearwater. She leaves the restaurant,telling Scharrett she’s headed to her Indian Rocks Beach condominium to break up with live-in boyfriend David Perry. A time stamp on Scharrett’s lunch receipt shows the two settling up and heading out at 3:38 p.m. Rothwell drives away in her Subaru.

4:30-5:30 p.m., March 12th: Downstairs neighbor Ken Williamson and his wife hear a loud pounding noise on the floor of Rothwell’s condominium, which is directly above the unit where he and his wife live. The pounding sounds like something being dropped on the carpeted floor, Williamson said. It is followed by the sound of a vacuum cleaner running in Rothwell’s master bedroom.

6:30 p.m., March 12th: Rothwell is a no-show for a planned get-together at Caddy’s, on Sunset Beach, that include some of the cadets at the St. Petersburg Police Academy.

6:30 p.m., March 12th: Scharrett gets a text from Rothwell’s phone, advising that she will call later. Scharrett recalls there are misspellings, which are unusual for Rothwell.

Before midnight March 12th: Perry, Rothwell’s live-in boyfriend, leaves Indian Rocks Beach for Elmira, NY. Perry leaves behind many belongings.

10 a.m., Sunday March 13th: Bill Nobles, a police cadet and classmate of Rothwell, calls Scharrett, asking if she has seen Rothwell, who did not show up for the party at Caddy’s.

10:15 a.m., March 13th: Scharrett tries Rothwell’s cell phone several times, with no answer. Scharrett is worried about her friend’s safety, since Rothwell had disclosed that she and Perry have had “domestic” problems. Scharrett calls Nobles back, and he advises her to call the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office and ask for a “House Check” for her friend. She contacts the Sheriff’s Office, which dispatches a patrol car.

11 a.m., March 13th: Scharrett hears back from the Sheriff’s Office that no one is at the condominium and that vehicles belonging to Perry and Rothwell are not in their assigned parking spaces at the condominium complex.

Noon, March 13th: With the help of neighbors who have a key, deputies enter Rothwell’s condo and find no one at home.

Early afternoon, March 13th: Rothwell’s green Subaru is found a couple miles from her house, parked near a Holiday Inn.

9 p.m., March 13th: Homicide Detective Michael Bailey, Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, goes to Scharrett’s home and takes a statement from Rothwell’s best friend.

Monday, March 14th: Rothwell does not show up at the St. Pete Police Academy. Prior to this, she has never missed a day of class.

March 14th: David R. Perry, Perry’s 21-year-old son, shows up at the condo and tries to remove a cardboard box, which detectives take into their possession and have at this time.

March 15th: Florida detectives make contact with Perry in Elmira, New York, but the retired corrections officer refuses to talk with investigators or to allow New York police to search his car.

Monday, March 21: Nancy Rothwell, Kelly’s mother, meets Scharrett at her daughter’s condo. She tries to assist in the search for her daughter.

Tuesday, March 22William Constantine, a close friend of Scharrett, meets Nancy Rothwell at Kelly’s condo. Constantine is a psychic and medium who offers his assistance at no charge to the Rothwell family.

Wednesday, March 23rdTV’s Nancy Grace interviews Rothwell’s neighbor, Ken Williamson, her sister Kristen and psychic William Constantine. The case starts to get national attention.

March 24th: Perry surrenders his car to New York detectives. Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office executes a second search warrant of the Indian Rocks Beach condominium that Rothwell shared with Perry.

10:30 a.m., Sunday, March 27th: Detectives with Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, Homicide Division, learn David Perry has returned to Florida and is cleaning out a storage locker at a local storage facility. They approach him and ask him to provide a DNA sample. Perry refuses.

Friday, April 1stNew York attorney Thomas Reilly tells the Associated Press that his client, David Perry, did nothing wrong and does not know the whereabouts of Kelly Rothwell. He also asserts his client’s right to refuse to speak to police.

April 1-3rd: Perry is seen driving a gray rental car near his home at 1708 W. Church St., in Elmira, NY.

Wednesday, April 6: Kelly Rothwell is still missing. Friends and loved ones keep vigil for Rothwell via the Facebook Page titled: “Help Find Kelly Rothwell.”

Wednesday, April 13St. Pete Police Academy is scheduled to graduate its spring class of recruits. Rothwell’s name is listed among the students, with the notation: “Not in attendance.” There will be a candlelight vigil and prayer circle to honor Rothwell following the 6 p.m. graduation ceremony.

http://largo.patch.com/articles/timeline-what-happened-to-kelly-rothwell-2

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Apr 26, 2011

St. Petersburg, Florida – Her story has captured the attention of the nation.

Missing police cadet Kelly Rothwell is the subject of a massive search across the country. The 35-year-old disappeared without a trace on March 12th. She was last seen at a Clearwater Chili’s having lunch with her best friend. Kelly was on her way to the Indian Rocks Beach condo that she shared with her boyfriend, David Perry, to break up with him.

No one has seen her since then.

Detective Michael Bailey tells 10 News, “She could be anywhere in the United States, obviously, between Florida and New York. That’s an area David Perry is familiar with. Probably not a bad idea to check it out.”

Kelly’s ex-boyfriend, David Perry, is a retired corrections officer who detectives say fled to New York right after she went missing. He hasn’t helped in the search, detectives say.  In addition, he has not provided any DNA samples that they requested.

He won’t even do an interview or provide them with a timeline as to Kelly’s last whereabouts.

Kelly’s story has gained so much attention that the National group Cue Center for Missing Persons, out of North Carolina, is getting involved. They are bringing search teams and dogs to find her.

Group Founder Monica Caison says, “I was born and raised in the area and am familiar with the area. I can’t wait to start looking at some areas.”

Caison loves her career with the group that’s been around for 17 years.  It is her passion. She says the key to cracking this case is to keep Kelly’s story in the spotlight, and one way to do that is a website.

The website will be up and running by the end of the week. It’s called “Help find Kelly Rothwell.”

Caison says, “It gives us a place where people can send messages to the Rothwell family, as well as tips or leads.”

This weekend, a vigil is being organized for Kelly, not in Florida, but in Elmira, New York, her ex-boyfriend’s hometown. Kelly’s friends and family are hoping that the vigil brings more attention to her case and could encourage Perry to talk.

Detective Bailey says, “Elmira is a small town. I’m certain because of coverage, everyone is aware of the case, so it’s important for them to see that a lead may come from that.”

It could be that lead that allows detectives to find Kelly Rothwell in Pinellas County.

Detectives have also confirmed to 10 News that they are putting together billboards next month with Kelly’s information.  It could help jog someone’s memory. They are also continuing to speak with Kelly’s classmates at the police academy, where she was at the top of her class.

If you know where Kelly is or have any information on her disappearance, there’s a reward of up to $1,000 waiting for you.

You can remain anonymous.

http://www.wtsp.com/news/article/189062/250/ONLY-on-10-Teams-head-to-Fla-to-look-for-missing-cadet

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Published: 4/26

Elmira, N.Y. – As authorities continue the search for Kelly Rothwell, many Elmira neighbors are hoping to shed some light on the situation.

Kelly Rothwell is the girlfriend of David Perry.

The former Elmira man is a person of interest in her disappearance last month.  After she went missing, in Florida, Perry returned here to Elmira.

This on going situation has touched a number of neighbors here in the southern tier.  Some are planning a candle light vigil this weekend.

JoLynn Morgan is planning the vigil.  She said, “It’s a family event.  We have candles, bring candles, bring your good vibes and wishes for the Rothwell family.  We’re trying to bring Kelly home.”

Morgan says along with the candle light, there will be poems read.  She says there will also be a prayer reading lead by a local pastor.

If you’re interested in participating in vigil, you’ll need to head to Eldridge Park, this Saturday, April 30th.  It starts at 7:30 p.m. at the carousel.

David Perry is not considered at suspect in the Kelly Rothwell missing persons case, just a person of interest.

So far, he has refused to be questioned by authorities.

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The sisters of Kelly Rothwell, Lauren, left, and Lindsey, take part in a candlelight vigil held after the graduation ceremonies for her cadet class.

April 13, 2011

ST. PETERSBURG – Kelly Rothwell was supposed to graduate from a St. Petersburg College police academy on Wednesday night.

Instead, her family and friends gathered outside the college’s Allstate Center and held a candlelight vigil in her honor.

Rothwell went missing one month ago, and no one has seen or heard from her since.

Lindsay Rothwell, Kelly’s twin sister, said she has no idea what happened to her.

The graduating class presented a plaque in Kelly Rothwell's memory to her family.

“We hold onto hope always,” Rothwell said. “Because she will come home. Somehow or another, she will come home.”

“I just wish that the person that might be responsible for all this would cooperate and talk to help all of us out,” Rothwell said.

On March 12, Kelly Rothwell told a close friend over lunch that she was going to break up with her live-in boyfriend David Perry, 46, a former New York state prison guard.

Perry was located by authorities in New York shortly after Rothwell was reported missing. He has refused to answer detectives’ questions about Rothwell and has also refused to take a DNA test.

Rothwell, 35, of Indian Rocks Beach was a police academy recruit since November. She had not missed a day until she was reported missing.

Rothwell’s mother, Nancy, said in March it was out of character for Rothwell to not contact family or friends for a long time. She said her daughter is a private person, so she didn’t share any concerns with her regarding any troubles she may have been having with Perry.

The missing woman’s sister said it has been hard.

“Every time you hear a phone call, you think it might be her or knock on the door,” Lindsay Rothwell said. “It’s heartbreaking.”

Anyone with information about the case should contact the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office at (727) 582-6200. To remain anonymous, call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-873-TIPS (8477) or go to http://www.crimestoppersofpinellas.org.

News Channel 8 reporter Peter Bernard contributed to this report.

http://www2.tbo.com/content/2011/apr/13/132212/vigil-for-missing-woman-tonight-at-st-pete-police-/news-metro/

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March 26, 2011

Calling the case of missing police cadet Kelly Rothwell suspicious, the Pinellas County Sheriff’s office executed a second search warrant Thursday at the Indian Rocks Beach condo, where Rothwell lived with her boyfriend David Perry.

Rothwell, a police cadet training in St. Petersburg, was reported missing March 13. She was last seen March 12, when she was on her way to break up with Perry, according to her friend Donna Scharrett, who first contacted police.

Det. Mike Bailey also released new information Friday about attempts by investigators to meet with Perry, who has refused to talk with detectives.

Bailey said that Perry, who left for New York the weekend Rothwell disappeared, has consented to have his vehicle searched by detectives there. He also is providing a timeline of his activities through a spokesman for his attorney.

Bailey said that Perry consented to only give information on three hours of that timeline. According to Bailey, it is unclear at this time whether or not Perry has, in fact, hired an attorney.

“The information we have received via email about Perry’s limited cooperation is from an attorney spokesperson. We are not aware if he has actually hired an attorney to represent him,” Bailey said. “Our question remains that we are left to wonder is why he would need an attorney if he has not been charged with any crime. We just don’t know.”

Bailey said that the Florida investigation included processing Rothwell’s car, found at a Holiday Inn two miles from her house. Bailey declined to say if any substantial evidence pertaining to Rothwell’s disappearance was found.

Detectives interviewed friends, family and neighbors of Rothwell and Perry.

Bailey confirmed that on March 14 David Perry’s son, David Perry Jr., showed up at the condo and tried to remove a cardboard box, which detectives took into their possession and have at this time.

Bailey has declined to describe the contents of the box. Perry Jr., who lives near Indian Rocks Beach, then left Florida and returned to Elmira, New York. Bailey said that Perry Jr. just returned to Florida.

Perry Sr. has been unavailable for comment.

The last time anyone heard from Rothwell was March 12, when she had lunch with Scharrett at a Chili’s restaurant. Scharrett said that Rothwell told her she planned to end her relationship with Perry.

Rothwell had planned to move in with friends in the Palm Harbor area. Scharrett said that Rothwell had described Perry’s behavior as very controlling and possessive, and that he had been reading her emails.

Scharrett asked deputies to perform a welfare check at the condo. Neither Rothwell nor Perry were inside the condo, and both of their cars were gone. Most of the furniture and belongings were undisturbed.

http://clearwater.patch.com/articles/sheriffs-office-executes-second-search-warrant-at-kelly-rothwells-condo

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(CBS/WTSP) INDIAN ROCKS BEACH, Fla. – Kelly Rothwell, who was training to be a police officer, has been missing since Saturday – and her boyfriend has left town, according to police.

Donna Scharrett was the last person to see the 35-year-old Rothwell. They had a girls night on Friday, and a grocery store surveillance camera caught a glimpse of both women as they grabbed pizzas for dinner, reported CBS affiliate WTSP.

The next morning the two went to yoga and then had lunch at Chili’s. That was the last time Scharrett saw her friend.

Scharret told WTSP that Rothwell had plans to go home and break up with her boyfriend David Perry, whom she had tried to break up with before unsuccessfully.

Indian Rocks Beach detectives say Rothwell was sharing an apartment with Perry, 46, who was a retired corrections officer, the station reported.

Since Rothwell has disappeared, Perry has skipped town in Pinellas County, Fla. Detectives say he is now in New York and refusing to cooperate with the investigation.

Sunday, detectives found a man at Rothwell’s apartment taking out the trash and watering the flowers; it ended up being Perry’s 21-year-old son, David Perry Jr., according to WTSP.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-20044238-504083.html

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April 01, 2011 |

INDIAN ROCKS BEACH, Fla. — Kelly Rothwell liked to tell friends she had the best backyard: From the living room window in her second-floor condo, she could see the blue water of the Gulf of Mexico gently rolling onto the white, sandy beach. It was a soothing sight for Rothwell, a 35-year-old police recruit whose loved ones say her life was anything but tranquil.

Rothwell hasn’t been seen in almost three weeks, and detectives, family and friends grimly concede there’s a good chance she is dead.

On March 12, she told a close friend over lunch that she was going to break up with her live-in boyfriend David Perry, a former New York state prison guard. The normally sunny Rothwell was becoming increasingly disturbed at his possessive behavior, friend Donna Scharrett said, and had decided to move out of the condo, away from the stunning view but closer to her support system.

“She was excited and positive but at the same time, serene,” said Scharrett, who befriended Rothwell at a group meditation on the beach. “She was telling me how she was looking forward to the change in her life. Leaving Dave and graduating from the police academy.”

Rothwell drove away from that lunch, Scharrett said, determined to begin her new life.

No one has seen her since that day.

“She’s an extremely regimented person,” said Pinellas County Sheriff’s detective Michael Bailey, noting that Rothwell would have never missed one police academy class, much less several weeks of lessons.

Rothwell’s body hasn’t been found, and detectives have scant evidence to prove any crime was committed at all. Perry has refused to take a DNA test or even talk to authorities beyond having his lawyer give them a loose, three-hour timeline of the night Rothwell disappeared. Perry’s lawyer, Thomas Reilly, did not return messages from The Associated Press, and messages left at listings for David Perry in Elmira, N.Y., were not returned.

Neighbors there said Perry was friendly enough and has kept a tidy home there.

Bailey and Detective Amy Plourde have had to find out as much as they can about Rothwell’s life by talking to her friends, family and neighbors.

Rothwell was born and raised in Maryland and went to college in southern Colorado. As a human resources employee for a hotel chain, she moved to Florida in 2006 and immediately rented the Gulf-front condo. Neighbor Ken Williamson described the young woman as “quiet and sweet.”

“But when we got Dave in here, that was a different story,” said Williamson, who is 76.
Perry, now 46, met Rothwell in line at Sweet Tomatoes, a salad bar chain. Rothwell’s sister Lindsay said Perry wasn’t living in Florida at the time but moved from New York “in a matter of two to three weeks.”

Lindsay Rothwell didn’t know much about the couple — “Kelly was always private with her relationships” — but said she visited them once and found herself wary of Perry because he had a bad temper.

“He kind of made her distant from her family,” the sister said. “She always seemed like she couldn’t talk. It’s almost like he put her in a trance.”

Perry was a corrections officer in Elmira, N.Y., and had at least two children from a prior relationship. According to New York Department of Corrections records, Perry was hired in 1986, went on sick leave in 2004 and never returned to duty. He retired in 2005.

Lindsay Rothwell and others who knew Rothwell said Perry monitored her online activity and texted her incessantly.

Neighbor Williamson said Perry’s temper would change quickly and he would get angry at small incidents. Once, Williamson washed his deck, which was near Perry’s parking space. Water had dripped on Perry’s car.

“He went ballistic,” Williamson said, adding that he called police because he felt so threatened. No arrests were made.

Kelly Rothwell’s company downsized and she lost her job. In late 2010, she decided to switch careers and enrolled in police academy, a choice that came as no surprise to her friend Scharrett.

“She would typically come to my house and we would sit here for hours drinking herbal tea, talking about life,” Scharrett said. “We both have this romantic notion that, yes, we can change the world one person at a time.”

Rothwell would always visit Scharrett, never the other way around. In fact, Scharrett had never even met Perry.

Once in the academy, Rothwell took classes on various laws and procedures. She paid special attention to the domestic violence portion of the lessons.

“That did open her eyes a little bit to the fact that she didn’t think it was a very healthy relationship and she might need to get out,” said Plourde, the detective.

Rothwell told Scharrett: “I’m going to have to face a lot of my own fears.”

On March 11, Rothwell spent the night at Scharrett’s. The two drank wine and ate frozen pizza and stayed up talking until 3 in the morning. The next day, they went to a meditation-breathwork session — Rothwell was interested in New Age beliefs — and then to Chili’s for lunch, where Rothwell said she had made up her mind to leave Perry. A friend at the police academy had a home she could stay in, and Scharrett promised to help her move the next day.

Scharrett also asked Rothwell if she wanted her to go along when she talked to Perry.

“It’s going to be OK,” Scharrett recalled Rothwell saying. “It’s going to be a good conversation.”
Sunday morning, another recruit from the police academy called Scharrett. Rothwell was supposed to meet a group of academy students but didn’t show.

“I literally almost threw up,” Scharrett said. “I instantly knew.”

She called authorities, who immediately went to the condo. No one was there.

On Sunday, Rothwell’s Subaru was found two miles away, parked near a hotel that had no record of her checking in.

Investigators say they consider Perry a witness.

“I don’t understand why he’s not cooperating and I don’t understand why he’s not out there trying to find her,” Lindsay Rothwell said.

Scharrett has ordered orange bracelets that say “Help Bring Kelly Rothwell Home,” and has blanketed Pinellas County with flyers. She’s active in a Facebook page dedicated to Rothwell.

“I’m working really hard at trying to do things but there’s really nothing I can do,” she said. “Everyone has lost in this. Everyone.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/04/01/florida-police-recruit-missing-boyfriend-wont-talk/#ixzz1KjmMWNoZ

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By JESSICA HOPPER
March 17, 2011

Police are searching for a Florida police cadet who disappeared after telling a friend she and her boyfriend were having “domestic issues.”

Kelly Rothwell, 35, was last seen Saturday when she left a restaurant after meeting her friend, Donna Scharett. That same weekend, her live-in boyfriend, David Perry, abruptly left for New York. Perry, 46, is a retired corrections officer.

“He’s elected not to discuss anything to do with this case or provide us any background,” Pinellas County Detective Michael Bailey told ABC Affiliate WFTS.

Scharett met Rothwell at a Chili’s restaurant Saturday afternoon. Rothwell, 35, was gushing about training at the Pinellas Police Academy in St. Petersburg, Fla. She’d recently decided to switch careers from working in human resources with Hilton Hotels to becoming a police officer.

“She was looking forward to big changes in her life…really looking forward to starting her career with the Pinellas County Sheriff’s office,” Scharett said. “She’d found her voice and that’s one of the things she told me over lunch.”

The two women also discussed Rothwell’s boyfriend, Perry.

“They had their problems,” Scharett, 46, said. “He was a very controlling person, very domineering and Kelly [Rothwell], up until joining the academy, she was very shy and introverted, very timid.”

“We’ve only met him a handful of times. We’ve all had our suspicions about him, he seemed to be controlling,” Lauren Rothwell said. “I’m pretty confident that he has everything to do with this. People just don’ t leave when their girlfriend is missing.”

Lauren Rothwell last spoke to her sister last Wednesday.Over the last few months, Lauren Rothwell said that her sister had become increasingly private.

Neighbors of Rothwell also describe her boyfriend, Perry, as domineering.

“When he was around, she would hardly say anything to anybody,” Ken Williamson, a neighbor, said. “Dave had a personality where he’d be really nice and then turn on you in an instant and come at you like a tiger.”

Neighbors Call Missing Woman’s Boyfriend ‘Domineering’

Rothwell and Perry lived above Williamson. The day Rothwell was last seen, Williamson said he and his wife heard loud noises coming from above them in the late hours of Saturday night.

“We heard loud thumping, banging like somebody threw something real hard a number of times…and then it stopped and the next day police were out here,” he said.

Scharett, the friend that met Rothwell for lunch, called police on Sunday. Rothwell had made plans to meet friends at a bar the night before and never showed up, an out of character move.

“She never returned any calls and I just immediately got a sick feeling and that’s when I called the Pinellas County Sheriff’s office and asked them to do a house check. That was because of the domestic issues she’d shared with me,” Scharett said.

Police found Rothwell’s car outside a hotel two miles south of her Indian Rocks Beach home. Her purse and wallet were not in the car, police said.

The woman’s family found out Monday that she was missing from a message the police left on her father’s answering machine.

“Initially I was panicked,” Lauren Rothwell said.

She called her sister’s boyfriend, Perry.

“He of course [said], I don’t know what happened to her. He said she had left to go over to a friends and never made it to a friend’s house,” Rothwell said. “I had a feeling that he was behind what was going on. I hung up.”

Police have not identified Perry as a suspect in her disappearance, but they want to talk to him.

“He’s a witness we’d like to speak with,” Sgt. Thomas Nestor said. “We’re trying to put together a timeline and last we knew she was leaving a restaurant and going home.
http://abcnews.go.com/US/pinellas-police-search-missing-florida-police-cadet-kelly/story?id=13150529

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