Aug 22, 2015
Feb 26, 2020
Agnes
Young
81
43
62 inches
66 inches
120 lbs
125 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
In the small community of Long Branch, Pennsylvania, Agnes Ann Young, a 43-year-old woman, vanished under deeply unsettling circumstances around October 16, 1986. Agnes was known to have faced personal struggles; a car accident in her teenage years left her with lasting injuries, and she was classified as disabled. Her mental health records also indicated a history of suicide attempts. Despite these challenges, her sudden disappearance raised immediate concerns, although a formal missing person's report wasn't filed until October 1st of that year, and it remains unclear who made the report. For years, there was no sign of Agnes, and her family, including eleven older siblings, had not seen her since 1985 or 1986. The mystery surrounding Agnes's whereabouts deepened significantly over a decade later. From 1991 to September 2001, her Social Security disability checks continued to be cashed monthly, suggesting that someone was accessing her funds. The situation came to a head in 2001 when Agnes's husband, Edward R. Young, applied for his own Social Security disability benefits, citing a nervous condition. This triggered a review of Agnes's existing benefits, and the Social Security Administration requested a meeting with both of them. Edward arrived at the appointment alone, offering a strange and ultimately suspicious explanation for his wife's absence. He claimed she had gone on a sightseeing trip to New York City with friends earlier that month and speculated that she may have tragically perished in the September 11th terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. When pressed for details, he could not identify the friends or the vehicle they traveled in. This improbable story unraveled further as investigators delved into the case. Bank officials confirmed they had never seen Agnes when her disability checks were cashed, though Edward denied ever cashing them himself. It also emerged that Edward had given conflicting accounts to Agnes's family over the years, telling them she had been committed to a mental institution in Pittsburgh and was later transferred to another facility in New York after the first one supposedly burned down. Extensive searches of mental health facilities in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and New York yielded no record of Agnes ever being a patient. The investigation took a dark and final turn in May 2002. As authorities arrived at Edward's home with a second search warrant to look for his wife's body, they discovered he had died by suicide from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. With his death, any potential answers he held about his wife's fate were lost forever. The case of Agnes Ann Young remains an unsolved and poignant mystery, a story of a vulnerable woman who disappeared, leaving behind a trail of unanswered questions and the lingering suspicion of foul play.
Oct 16, 1986
Long Branch
Pennsylvania
Washington County
No
24199
Pennsylvania State Police
Bell Vernon
Pennsylvania
Westmoreland County
15012
560 Circle Drive, Pennsylvania
7249296262
State
Law Enforcement
B02-1261977
Pennsylvania State Police
Brown
Brown
Brown
06/03/2026