http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2013/02/02/turkey-sarai-sierra-missing-american/1886059/ Missing American woman found dead in Turkey
Victor Kotsev, Special for USA TODAY3:38p.m. EST February 2, 2013
Sarai Sierra, 33, on her "dream" trip abroad, was supposed to return to New York on Jan. 22 after two weeks in Turkey.
Sarai Sierra
(Photo: Family photo via AP)
Story Highlights
Police found driver's license on body
Sierra didn't return on Jan. 22 flight to New York
Police are interrogating individuals in the case
ISTANBUL — A New York mother of two was found dead Saturday evening almost two weeks after she was reported missing, Turkish police told USA TODAY.
"It's her," a police official said when asked whether the body belonged to Sarai Sierra, before quickly hanging up without identifying himself. Turkish police have not returned repeated follow-up calls.
The Turkish daily Hurriyet reported that the body of a woman with stab wounds to the abdomen was found at the foot of the ramparts of the city walls in the Sarayburnu district of Istanbul. Police found Sierra's driver's license on the body.
Sierra, 33, on her "dream" trip abroad, was supposed to return to New York on Jan. 22 after two weeks in Turkey. She disappeared after last talking to her family on Jan. 21, when she was supposed to meet a man she had been chatting with for months online at Galata Bridge on the Bosporus.
Turkish media reported police were interrogating 11 individuals detained in connection with the case.
On Friday, police said they had taken a man known only by his online handle "Taylan" into custody for questioning. They did not elaborate on whether he had been charged. It is unclear whether "Taylan" is included in the 11 detained Saturday.
Sierra's husband, Steven Sierra, and brother, David Jimenez, arrived in Istanbul last Monday to look for her, meeting with police and U.S. Embassy officials and giving police access to her online accounts. Steven Sierra told USA TODAY by phone Wednesday that he was having difficulty holding on to hope.
"To be honest, as a human, I am scared, especially when I think about what could be going on now with my loved one," he said.
Sarai Sierra, an avid photographer, had wanted to go abroad to develop her photography skills. She took side trips to Amsterdam and Munich, posting her photos online on Instagram, before disappearing.
"She always knew she wanted to go overseas," said Maggie Rodriguez, Sierra's close friend who had planned to join her friend on the trip but backed out for financial reasons. "She knew she wanted to do a European trip. Whereabouts wasn't always set in stone, but she knew she wanted to go over to Europe, at least once in her life, to check out the sites and embrace the culture for herself."
Contributing: Jabeen Bhatti and Ruby Russell in Berlin
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