No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsExpat LivingAnother year and still no answers for parents of missing US tourist

Another year and still no answers for parents of missing US tourist

August 11 is not the type of anniversary Roma and Luda Gimelfarb would wish for any parent. 

Five years have gone by and still there is no sign of the Gimelfarbs’ son, David, who went missing on Aug. 11, 2009 at Costa Rica’s Rincón de la Vieja National Park, in the northwestern province of Guanacaste.

David Gimelfarb, who was 28 when he disappeared, traveled to Costa Rica alone for a brief vacation before he was to return to his doctoral studies in psychology in the U.S. city of Chicago. On the morning of Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2009, David left his passport and other possessions in his Guanacaste hotel, drove a rental car to the national park, signed the park’s logbook, and disappeared. No one has heard from or seen him since.

A three-week search of the park – which spans 14,000 hectares of rugged rain forest terrain – by Costa Rican Red Cross, National Police, foreign volunteers and even U.S. Blackhawk helicopters with infrared technology turned up no sign of David in 2009.

For the Gimelfarbs, the years may continue to pass, but the couple will never stop trying to find their son.

“Time doesn’t heal you,” Luda Gimelfarb said on Monday. “This year we’re trying to remind people that we’re still looking.”

Last year, the Gimelfarbs traveled 1,370 kilometers (850 miles) across Costa Rica, from Rincón de la Vieja to the Panamanian border, and then down the Caribbean coast. Then, just before they were to fly back to the United States, they received threatening phone calls from someone claiming to have kidnapped David. The caller demanded $250,000, even sending a grainy and dark photo of a young man holding a copy of the daily newspaper La Teja. An FBI analysis of the photo was inconclusive, Roma Gimelfarb said, still not entirely convinced the photo wasn’t his son.

Costa Rican investigators said the phone calls came from inside La Reforma prison, north of the capital. But they were unable to trace the calls to a specific cellphone or inmate, and no arrests were made. 

This year, the Gimelfarbs plan to focus on Costa Rica’s border area with Nicaragua, where they will hand out the same missing person handbill as in years past, with a $100,000 reward offer for information leading to David’s return to his family.

A spokeswoman for Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Police, or OIJ, told The Tico Times the investigation is ongoing and the case remains open, but investigators have little new information to follow up.

“There is no new information to indicate what happened [to David]. There are no new people to interview regarding the case,” OIJ spokeswoman Maricel Rodríguez said.

140811DavidGimelfarbFlyer

Please report any tips to the family by emailing gimelfarb@comcast.net or calling the OIJ at 800-8000-645. 

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Willing to Take In Salvadoran Facing U.S. Expulsion

A senior Costa Rican government official has confirmed that the country remains open to receiving Kilmar Abrego García, a Salvadoran man at the center...

FBI Team Lands in Guatemala to Hunt Down Escaped Barrio 18 Leaders

A team from the FBI's Joint Task Force Vulcan touched down in Guatemala yesterday to assist local forces in tracking down 16 fugitive leaders...

Former Costa Rican Presidents Defend Democratic Institutions

Eight former presidents of Costa Rica issued a joint statement on Thursday defending our country's democratic institutions, particularly the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), against...

Costa Rica Agriculture Gains from US Executive Order

Costa Rica’s agricultural exporters breathed easier last week after the United States lifted tariffs on key products, restoring duty-free access under long-standing trade agreements....

Costa Rica Tourism Crisis as 22,000 Jobs are Lost in Downturn

Costa Rica's tourism industry faces a sharp downturn, with roughly 22,000 jobs lost in the past year. This drop hits hard in coastal and...

Costa Rica Supreme Court Extends OIJ Directors Suspension

The Supreme Court of Justice extended the suspension of Randall Zúñiga as director of the Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) for three more months on...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica