Jul 15, 2009
Mar 10, 2022
Wendy
Eaton
65
15
58 inches
90 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
On a spring afternoon, May 17, 1975, in Media, Pennsylvania, 15-year-old Wendy Eaton vanished. A sophomore at Penncrest High School, Wendy had stayed home to sunbathe while her family went to a local country club to play golf. Later that afternoon, she spoke with a friend and mentioned she was going to walk into town to buy a birthday card and gift for her older brother. Wendy was last seen at approximately 2:40 p.m. at the intersection of Indian Lane and Media Station Road, just three blocks from her home on Moccasin Trail. She was wearing a yellow sleeveless terrycloth blouse, cutoff denim shorts, and white sneakers with a blue stripe. Wendy was also known to wear gold-rimmed eyeglasses and had pierced ears; she was deaf in her right ear and was left-handed. When her family returned home around 7 p.m., they found Wendy gone. Inside her room, her bathing suit was on the floor, and a John Denver album she had been listening to was left out. Her purse and Bibles were also left behind. An immediate search began, and bloodhounds were brought in to trace her scent. The dogs followed her path from her home to the intersection where she was last seen, but then the trail went cold, suggesting she may have gotten into a vehicle. Her family was adamant that she would not have run away, describing her as a good student who was reliable and kind. She was musically talented, active in her church and scouting, and was scheduled to attend a choir rehearsal at Middletown Presbyterian Church that evening�a rehearsal her family said she would never have missed. In the years that followed, the investigation explored various avenues. The family considered the possibility that she might have been drawn into a religious cult, given her interest in religion, but no evidence ever supported this theory. A disturbing event occurred when a man and a teenage boy were arrested for extortion after demanding a $10,000 ransom from Wendy's parents for information about her whereabouts. However, the demand was a cruel hoax, and they had no knowledge of what happened to her. Decades passed without answers, and the case that haunted the community remained cold. In May 2021, 46 years after she disappeared, the investigation saw a significant development when it was reclassified from a missing person case to a homicide. Investigators were seen digging in a wooded area near the intersection where Wendy was last seen, though no public statements were made about what, if anything, was found. The disappearance of Wendy Eaton is an active investigation, a half-century-old mystery that continues to seek resolution for a family and community still waiting for answers.
May 17, 1975
Media
Pennsylvania
Delaware County
No
25839
Pennsylvania State Police
Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County
19131
Andrew Martin
Corporal
2201 Belmont Avenue, Pennsylvania
2154525216
State
Law Enforcement
K2-14911
1989-05-22
Pennsylvania State Police
6578
Brown
Brown
Brown
05/29/2026