

James Foote, Florida (SOLVED)



In 2007 the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, the Department of Corrections, and the Attorney General’s Office worked with the Florida Association of Crime Stoppers to forge a new way to solve some of the state’s unsolved cases. It’s a regular deck of cards in which the face of each card features a photograph and some factual information about an unsolved homicide or missing persons case. In July 2007, 100,000 decks of cold case playing cards (two decks highlighting 104 unsolved cases) were distributed to inmates in the Florida’s prisons. Two cases, the murder of James Foote and the murder of Ingrid Lugo, were solved as a result.

Connecticut and Indiana have also taken up this idea, and produced decks of cards with homicide victims (sometimes missing persons) on them. We found a few images of the cards to show you. A friend of mine gave me a deck of the Connecticut set at a party recently, where they made quite the impression. They’re a little bit reminiscent of the “Iraqi Most-Wanted” playing cards that coalition forces distributed after the invasion of Iraq in 2003.





Maurice White, Indiana





Linda Weldy, Indiana









Ingrid Lugo, Florida (SOLVED)





Yvonne Davenport, Florida





Floyd W. Ellis Jr., Connecticut





John Doe, unidentified victim, Connecticut





Anita and Champa Patel, Connecticut





Diedra Dancy, Connecticut





White or Hispanic Female, unidentified remains, Connecticut





Erika Cirioni, Connecticut







Thank you Chris Young!

