She asks her mother of 3 missing boys to be dead

On Monday, a judge in Lenawee County, Michigan, will lead a hearing for a mother to Michigan, who requests the dishes to explain their three sons, which are officially missed dead for 15 years. According to AP, the authorities believe that Tanner, Alexander and Andrew Skelton – who were 5, 7 or 9 – died – and they clearly suspect that the father of the boys, John Skelton, is responsible, even though he was not accused of killing his sons. By November, he will be expected to complete a 15-year prison sentence because he did not give the boys back to his alienated wife Tanya, who was looking for a divorce from him at the time when her sons disappeared.

The case began on the day after Thanksgiving in 2010, when Skelton was supposed to bring the boys back to home in Morenci, which he did not live far from. This handover never happened and police officers later said that Skelton's cell phone had been persecuted to Ohio on this November day at 4:30 a.m., just above the border. The police say that the phone was switched off and was then switched on again in Morenci at 6 a.m.

In his part, Skelton denied that the boys had been injured and said they were considered to be ongoing an underground group. He was arrested, charged with illegal imprisonment and sentenced to 10 to 15 years behind bars in 2011. Every time he was ready, the probation was refused and WTOL notices that the Michigan Parole Board recently decided to reject his probation inquiries. His maximum sentence will run at the end of November.

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WTOL reports that the hearing in relation to the petition was originally set for the past year, but was delayed due to diseases (it is not clear whose illness). The custody porter finds that relatives have to wait at least five years according to Michigan's law before they can ask for a missing person to legally declare dead. In the meantime, only closure and able to be able to conclude legal or financial matters associated with the case wants to be able to conclude, her legal team says. Nevertheless, this was not a simple request for you. “No parent wants to lose a child, but have to let the dishes enter and declare it for deceased is just unfathomable,” she said last year. (More missing children's stories.)

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