Jun 02, 2011
Aug 08, 2022
Ilonka
Cann
76
22
66 inches
122 lbs
130 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
In the spring of 1970, in the quiet area of Huntington Mills, Pennsylvania, a young mother named Ilonka Cann, known affectionately as "Tootsie," was living on a farm with her husband and their toddler son. On the morning of May 26, the 22-year-old, who had long blonde hair, blue eyes, and was pregnant with her second child, was last seen by her husband of two years, Charles Cann II. He stated that he saw her at their home at 7:20 a.m. before he left for his teaching position at a local junior high school. When he returned that afternoon around 3:30 p.m., he found a deeply unsettling scene: Ilonka was gone, and their 15-month-old son was upstairs, alone and crying in his crib. Charles reported his wife missing to the authorities the following day, sparking an investigation into her sudden and perplexing vanishing. An extensive search was launched in the area immediately following the report of Ilonka's disappearance. Law enforcement and dive teams scoured the surrounding landscape, including a pond on the Cann property, but found no trace of the missing young woman. In the days that followed, a strange action was taken by Charles Cann's father, who abruptly quit his own teaching job the day after Ilonka was reported missing. He also provided inconsistent statements regarding his son's whereabouts in the days following her disappearance. Friends and family of Ilonka described her as a quiet, loyal, and honest person who was deeply devoted to her child, insisting she would never have abandoned him. Despite these convictions from loved ones, the days turned into years with no sign of Ilonka and no answers as to what happened to her. Decades passed, and the case grew cold, though it was never forgotten by her family or investigators. About a year after she vanished, Charles Cann began a relationship with a woman named Grace Brown, who moved into the home he had shared with Ilonka. Though they lived as partners for years, Charles never divorced his missing wife. Eventually, Ilonka was legally presumed to have died in 1977, seven years after she was last seen. The investigation saw renewed activity in the summer of 2022, when authorities conducted another search on the Cann property, draining two ponds and excavating an island. The most significant development came in early 2024, when a coroner's inquest was convened. After hearing testimony, including from Ilonka's sister and from Grace, who recounted a time Charles allegedly threatened her with a gun and claimed to have killed Ilonka, a jury officially ruled her death a homicide. Charles Cann was called to testify but declined, invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. To this day, no one has been charged in connection with her disappearance and presumed death, and her body has never been found, leaving her loved ones with a painful and unresolved loss.
May 26, 1970
Huntington Mills
Pennsylvania
Luzerne County
No
3996
Pennsylvania State Police Troop P
Hanover Township
Pennsylvania
Luzerne County
18706
Edward Urban
Detective
2001 South Valley Parkway, Pennsylvania
5708214110
State
Law Enforcement
M648707699
1970-05-27
Pennsylvania State Police Troop P
Blond/Strawberry
Blue
Blue
06/03/2026