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With the community’s support, we hope new information will come to light and assist us in the investigation.”
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“We’re hopeful there is someone out there who has information about what happened that day. Seaburg’s case, this is a first step in seeking justice for his murder and for other families impacted by these unsolved crimes,” said LCSO spokesperson Angela Green. “While we don’t have any updates to report currently on Mr.
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However, LCSO has hired a part-time detective dedicated to cases like this. No arrests have been made, and there are no new leads. However, in the 25 years since Seaburg’s murder, the case has grown cold. Soon after the shooting, composite sketches of the suspects were drawn up from witness accounts. They left in a mid-’80s white Honda Accord with Mississippi tags. Two suspects, described by witnesses as blond twenty-somethings with shoulder-length hair, were seen “casing” the motel throughout the day, according to Tallahassee Democrat archives. Within hours, the 71-year-old was found with two fatal gunshot wounds in what investigators called a botched robbery. He booked a night at the Best Inn motel on North Monroe Street at around 9 p.m. 4, 1997, Seaburg drove from Chicago to Tallahassee to settle his aunt’s estate. “And even though he was a big shot, he was so down to Earth.” “Uncle Al, he would always be wisecracking,” Hansen said.