http://missingandmurderedaustralia.b...ssing%20Female
Personal Details Year of Birth: 1993 At Time of Disappearance on 24 March 2009 Age: 15 Height (cm): 160.0 Build: Thin Hair Colour: Black Eye Colour: Brown Complexion: Medium Nationality: Racial Appearance: Cambodian/Laos background
Circumstances:Rista was last seen in the Mount Pritchard area. Rista is missed by her whole family especially her little sister Alpha.
Hunt for Rista: missing teen has 'no source of income' July 20, 2009 - SMH
Missing ... Rista Chathavixay. A teenage schoolgirl has been missing from her suburban Sydney home for almost four months, police say. Rista Chathavixay, 16, was last seen by her boyfriend on March 24 at Mount Pritchard, in Sydney's south-west. "At the time [of] her disappearance, Rista failed to attend school and the fast-food restaurant where she worked part-time," police said in a statement. Advertisement: Story continues below "She was reported missing ... by her family after she failed to contact her friends or family for several months." Rista has not accessed her bank accounts and has "no source of income", police said, sparking serious concerns for her welfare. She is described as being of Asian appearance, about 160 centimetres tall, thin, with brown eyes and long black hair. Anyone with information about Rista's whereabouts is urged to contact police.
SWEET SIXTEEN AND MISSING: PLEA TO FIND RISTA
Arjun Ramachandran - SMH 22 July 2009
Missing ... Rista Chathavixay. Schoolgirl Rista Chathavixay had fallen out with her parents and had been living with her teenage boyfriend just before she went missing, police say. She has not been seen since March 24 in Mount Pritchard, near Liverpool, and police are concerned for her welfare. The 16-year-old has no source of income and has not accessed her bank account, used her mobile phone, contacted family or friends or been to school or work (at a local McDonald's), said David Hatchwell, acting crime manager at Green Valley Police.
"We do have concerns for her wellbeing, she's a young Asian girl ... and [we don't know] whether she's found another boyfriend and being kept by him or whether she's met [with] some foul play," he said. Rista was reported missing by her boyfriend a few days after she broke up with him on March 24 at his Mount Pritchard home, Detective Sergeant Hatchwell
She had been living there with him and his family since last November after a "run in" with her father at their Heckenberg home, he said. The boyfriend reported Rista missing a few days after the break-up, after he did not see her at their school - Ashcroft High - or at nearby hang-outs, he said.
"She was a fairly quiet girl. She used to go to Liverpool shops and Mount Pritchard he said.
"There was no history of disappearance, only that she had a run-in with her dad.
"We have contacted all her known friends and the people she used to hang out with, and also people that the ex boyfriend might know." Rista's ex-boyfriend had been helpful in the investigation and was not considered a suspect, Detective Sergeant Hatchwell said. The pair had argued and Rista had suggested the pair take a break from the relationship, he said. "There were no major dramas. It was a fairly amicable break-up from our investigations.
Prior to her disappearance, Rista had only limited contact with her parents, mainly with her mother, he said. There was an alleged sighting of Rista in the Campbelltown area a few months ago, but this could not be verified, Detective Sergeant Hatchwell said. Rista's manager at Bonnyrigg Heights McDonald's said she was working there only once a week, and had been there for only a few weeks before her disappearance.
Since making Rista's case public earlier this week, police had received no new leads, Detective Sergeant Hatchwell said. Teenage girls frequently went missing from their family homes in the Green Valley area, but Rista's case was of concern because she had not been sighted in a long time, he said.
Gone and Fairfield families left baffled
BY CHRIS BOULOUS - Fairfield City Champion 29/07/2009 5:50:00 AM NOT knowing is like living in darkness. That is the theme for this year's National Missing Persons Week which begins on Sunday, August2. There are approximately 35,000 people reported missing in Australia every year, including 900 people in NSW every month. As the theme suggests, the worst part is not knowing not knowing where they are, not knowing if they're safe. Not knowing if they are alive. That is the situation facing the family of Rista Chathavixay, who was last seen by her ex-boyfriend at his home in Mount Pritchard on March 24 this year. It is believed the pair had an argument about the status of their relationship.
Police are concerned that Rista could have been the victim of foul play, as she has not accessed any of her bank accounts and has no known source of income. She has also failed to attend school and the fast-food restaurant where she worked part-time. ``We have concerns about Rista's welfare and encourage anyone with information to contact the police,'' Green Valley detective Mark Kneipp said. ``We have heard rumours she may be in Campbelltown but we need more help from the community. The family just needs to know they need closure.''
Rista's case is one of several unsolved in NSW, with 80 long-term missing persons reported in the south-west alone. Missing persons unit manager Kelly Kortlepel said National Missing Persons Week was a chance to rekindle the search for long-term missing persons and raise awareness about the growing problem. ``The week is an opportunity to raise awareness of the growing problem of wandering especially for older people who may go missing due to the effects of dementia or memory loss,'' she said. ``Just as sightings from the public helped police locate British backpacker Jamie Neale when he wandered off the track in the Blue Mountains, we hope this week will remind people that our ageing population need us to keep an eye out for them too.'' National Missing Persons Week is from August 2 to 8.