A young man warned murder victim Ciara Glennon not to get into a white Holden station wagon the night she disappeared from Claremont.The man and two others waiting at a bus stop near Christ Church on Stirling Highway saw her talking to the occupants of the car.She had her knees bent and the palms of her hands resting on her knees to bring her down to the car's passenger window level.One of the men called out to her that she was stupid to hitch-hike.Ms Glennon looked up and waved him off with a middle finger sign, and continued talking to the car occupants.The young men at the bus-stop looked away. When they looked back, both Ms Glennon and the car had disappeared.Ms Glennon's body was found in coastal scrub 40km north of Perth two weeks later.She was the last of three young women who disappeared from central Claremont after leaving local nightspots.The 27-year-old Mosman Park lawyer was seen standing on the footpath in Stirling Highway talking through the window to the occupants of the Holden.Police have never released a description of the car.So far no witnesses have come forward to say they saw her get into that car or any other.Police have not been able to trace the Holden, its occupants or the occupants of the five other cars known to have been passing at the time.They are very anxious to do so.At a press conference on Thursday, Major Crime detective superintendent Jeff Byleveld said it was not clear whether or not the wagon was a taxi, and said witness accounts of it could not be confirmed.But at least one of the young men is positive it was a white Holden station wagon without taxi markings.It is a mark of honour among many young men to instantly distinguish Holdens from their similar-looking rival Fords.Ms Glennon disappeared around midnight on March 17, 1997. She had been drinking at the Continental Hotel, now the Claremont,Young men in a car in Stirling Highway also feature in newly released information about the sighting of a car seen next to Sarah Spiers in Stirling Road more than a year earlier.Ms Spiers (18) was the first of the three young women to disappear.On Australia Day 1996, she vanished after calling a taxi from a phone box in Stirling Road, Claremont, diagonally opposite Christ Church.The new information is that the young men in a car in Stirling Highway saw her cross Stirling Road to wait by the kerb.They discussed offering her a lift as good samaritans, but decided against it. They then saw the headlights of a car arrive from the direction of the subway, and stop.No trace of Ms Spiers has been seen since. Police have been unable to obtain a description of the car or had contact with its driver.Link: http://www.postnewspapers.com.au/20080830/news/001.shtml