Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Friends search for ‘magnetic’ missing artist Tonee Turner

Over 100 hold vigil for beloved local woman

- By Ashley Murray

Braddock Carnegie Library’s art lending room may have held the area’s most diverse crowd Saturday night as people across ages, races and religions gathered to say, “Tonee, come home.”

Tonee Turner, the library’s beloved ceramics teaching artist who also works as a full-time metal fabricator at Studebaker Metals in Braddock, has not been seen nor heard from since Monday.

“This room is a reflection of Tonee,” said Dana Bishop-Root, associate director of the library associatio­n and the organizer of Saturday’s vigil.

More than 100 people filled chairs, sat on the floor, and stood in the doorway holding white candles and fresh-cut flowers in the same location where Ms. Turner’s own art exhibition titled “Breath of Light” was on display in March 2018.

Ms. Turner’s tearful family sat in the front row, looking out on a network of friends, co-workers and mentors, who described Ms. Turner as “magnetic.”

A neighbor whom Ms. Turner, 22, of Hazelwood, sheltered for a month after a bad breakup stood up to share a few words. A family whom Ms. Turner helped with their children’s African education program delivered an invocation of peace. Children whom Ms. Turner taught at a Spanish-language summer camp sat cross-legged on the floor. A Catholic nun shared a Bible verse.

“I’m so grateful for all of you caring about my daughter,” said Ms. Turner’s mother, Darlene Johnson, 47, of Turtle Creek. “A mother is always going to love her child, but [I] see so many people who love her. To be honest, I’m starting to think the worst because of the time that’s gone by without hearing anything [from her] . ... Today I walked on a bridge by myself just seeing what she might have saw.”

Ms. Turner was last seen around 6 p.m. at Dobra Tea in Squirrel Hill on Monday, according to family. Her belongings were found by a young cyclist on the Homestead Grays Bridge pedestrian walkway that evening, and the man gave them to his father, Ms. Turner’s

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