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thedrifter
04-11-08, 04:49 AM
Missing Newlywed Marine Calls Home
Couple on 'Unauthorized Absence' From California Base Caught on Tape in Midwest
By DAVID SCHOETZ

April 10, 2008 —


The Naval Criminal Investigative Services is no longer searching for a pair of newlywed Marines who disappeared from their Southern California military posts last week.

Naval investigators dropped the case after surveillance footage captured at a convenience store in Missouri and an ATM in Kansas showed Lance Cpl. Margaret McMahon and Pfc. George "Kevyn" Reid II alive and unharmed, NCIS spokesman has Ed Buice confirmed.

"Family members positively identified the couple," Buice said, adding that the missing Marines  both scheduled for deployment to Iraq this summer  have updated their MySpace accounts while on the run and McMahon finally contacted her family members Wednesday.

McMahon's family had reported the 20-year-old Marine missing last week and said publicly that Reid, 22, whom McMahon married in January, may have taken his bride against her will. The family even contacted their local congressman on Long Island, who sent a letter to defense officials urging them to oversee the search for the pair.

The U.S. Marine Corps at Camp Pendleton, Calif., confirmed on Thursday, April 3, that the official status of McMahon and Reid had been officially changed to "unauthorized absence"on April 1, a day after the husband and wife failed to show up at their respective work posts.

Typically, NCIS does not handle "unauthorized absence" cases but was called in because of the family's abduction allegations to help the local Escondido Police Department. The newlyweds shared an apartment in Escondido, Calif., about 20 miles from Camp Pendleton.

The Escondido Police Department announced last Friday that it had dropped its missing person's investigation after concluding that the pair was in Kansas and therefore outside its jurisdiction.

"NCIS continued its search for the two out of an abundance of caution, until yesterday evening," Buice said. The only apparent offense the missing Marines may be guilty of is leaving the military without permission  nothing felony in nature that would require NCIS involvement.

It will now be up to the Marines and the pair's respective superiors to determine what happens to McMahon and Reid if and when they resurface.

"It's too early to comment on any disciplinary action that may be taken by their respective commands," Mike Alvarez, a spokesman for First Marine Expeditionary Forces told ABC News.

Authorities in California searched the couple's apartment last week but found no evidence of foul play. Their Chevrolet Cavalier was missing from the apartment.

McMahon is identified as a communications staff member at Camp Pendleton's headquarters, while Reid works as a communication employee at Marine Corps Air Station, Miramar.

Both have served as Marines for 10 months, and both were preparing for deployment.

Ellie

thedrifter
04-11-08, 05:40 AM
NCIS drops missing couple case

By TERI FIGUEROA - Staff Writer

ESCONDIDO ---- The Naval Criminal Investigative Service is calling of its search for a married Marine Corps couple reported missing from their Escondido home last week, military officials announced Thursday.

The agency said they believe they couple is together and unharmed, although they remain on the run, according to information provided Thursday by I Marine Expeditionary Force spokesman Mike Alvarez.

The disappearance of Lance Cpl. Margaret McMahon-Reid and her husband, Pfc. George Reid II, drew headlines after they failed to show up at work and family members suggested they may have been abducted.

But on Thursday, NCIS officials said the couple had been spotted ---- on security video tapes ---- while shopping at a convenience store in Hazelwood, Mo., on April 1, the same day the Marine Corps officially classified the missing couple's case as one of "unauthorized absence."

The couple also has recently contacted family members and updated MySpace pages, according Alvarez.

Once the Reids were deemed to be unharmed, the NCIS dropped the case. The investigating agency handles criminal cases; the military command of the missing person handles cases of unauthorized absence.

Alvarez could not immediately say if the Marine Corps is actively searching for the couple.

Escondido police, who had been looking for the couple, dropped the case last Friday after security footage surfaced showing McMahon-Reid withdrawing cash from her bank account in Salina, Kan.

After the Reids were reported missing, police said a search of the couple's Escondido apartment turned up nothing suspicious.

They found no evidence of foul play, but rather signs that McMahon-Reid, 20, and her 22-year-old husband simply had packed their things and took off.

They left almost no possessions in the apartment ---- but military uniforms were left behind in the closet.

Both Reids joined the service 10 months ago as communications equipment operators. Neither has served in combat.

There was some discrepancy Thursday as to the middle name of the missing man. Military officials said his middle name is Kevyn; Escondido police said the man's mother told them his name is Kevlyn.

If the couple remains missing for 30 days or longer, the Marine Corps could deem them deserters. Should that happen, the military may pursue a felony fugitive arrest warrant.

For people who are deserters, the arrest warrant means that any contact with a policeman, even during a routine traffic stop, could lead them to be arrested and handed over to the military.

According to information provided by Alvarez, nearly 1,200 Marines were classified as deserters as of September.

Contact staff writer Teri Figueroa at (760) 740-5442 or tfigueroa@nctimes.com.

Ellie