In September of 1964, Terry and Alan Westerfield were dropped off at the movies and were never seen again. For the last six decades, the Fayetteville Police Department has been trying to unravel the mystery behind their disappearance.
Episode Info
If you have any information about the disappearance of Terry and Alan Westerfield in September of 1964, please get in touch with Lieutenant Jeff Locklear directly at 910-433-1960, or, if you would like to remain anonymous, call the Fayetteville/Cumberland County Crime Stoppers at 910- 483-TIPS.
Photos of the red car Karl Bock borrowed the day Terry and Alan Westerfield went missing. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
Contact sheets with numerous photos of Terry, Alan, and their mother, Margie. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
A photo of Terry and Alan Westerfield. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
A photo of Terry and Alan Westerfield. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
A photo of Terry and Alan’s biological father, Melvel Westerfield. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
Age-progressed photos of Terry and Alan. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
A photo of Margie Westerfield. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
A photo of Margie Westerfield. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
A photo of the boy’s stepfather, Karl Bock, in 2000. Courtesy: Fayetteville Police Department
Photo of the theater where the boys were allegedly last seen. Source: The Fayetteville Observer-USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Episode Source Material
Original reporting by Annie Roderique-Jones and Dan Callahan.
- The News and Observer (Raleigh, NC): Search pushed for missing boys via newspapaers.com.
- Fayetteville Observer (Fayetteville, NC): Without a trace by Nancy McCleary.
- Fayetteville Observer (Fayetteville, NC): Gone 60 years: Thursday marks the anniversary of Fayetteville’s missing brothers by F.T. Norton.
- WRAL News (Raleigh, NC): Missing brothers case is NC’s oldest unsolved disappearance.
- Fayetteville Observer (Fayetteville, NC): Westerfield Boys Are An Unsolved Mystery by Eddie Dees.
- Time (New York, NY): Fayetteville: America’s Most Pro-Military Town by Nathan Thornburgh.
- U.S. Army (Washington, DC): Fort Bragg takes over Pope Air Force Base under BRAC by Paraglide.
- Britannica (Chicago, IL): Vietnam War (1954-1975) by Ronald H. Spector and Britannica Editors.
- Military Installations (Washington, DC): Fort Bragg.
