Baltimore Sun

Billboard will beg the public: ‘Find my killer’

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About a mile down the road from where Jody LeCornu was fatally shot in 1996, her twin sister has planned a billboard emblazoned with the young woman’s face and a simple plea —“Find my killer.” The billboard is Jennifer Carrieri’s latest push in a more than 20-year effort to keep LeCornu’s memory alive and to draw out new informatio­n about her murder. The new billboard is bright red, with a photo of LeCornu smiling next to an offer for a $32,000 reward and the date of her death. The sign is planned to go up Oct. 29 — one day after the twins’ birthday — in the 5700 block of York Road, near St. Dunstans Road. LeCornu, 23, was found fatally shot in her car in the parking lot of a York Road shopping center just before 4 a.m. on March 2, 1996. Investigat­ors believe she was shot in the back while seated inside her car on the lot of the Drumcastle Shopping Center in the 6300 block of York Road, according to Baltimore County police. The case remains unsolved. Every few years, Carrieri tries to come up with creative ways to share her sister’s story. gress, 18,000 of the notes were printed before the Treasury Department changed the design. Only three of the notes remain in private collection­s today, and each one is valued at over $1 million. Another of the bills sold in Dallas four years ago for $3.29 million. Because the United States never demonetize­s its currency, the bill is technicall­y still legal tender, says Treglia. You could take it to the bank to exchange it for $1,000 in cash. But just because you can, doesn’t mean you should, he said. It is, after all, worth millions.

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