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Nova Scotia

Kimberly McAndrew case unsolved after 25 years

Next week marks 25 years since Kimberly McAndrew worked her last shift at the Canadian Tire on Quinpool Road, then vanished.

Retired detective still hopeful that mystery will be solved

McAndrew's former co-worker Mary Watson says something bad must have happened. (CBC)

Next week marks 25 years since Kimberly McAndrew worked her last shift at the Canadian Tire on Quinpool Road, then vanished.

It was Aug. 12, 1989. McAndrew wasa cute and cheerful cashier with braces. The 19-year-old Dalhousie University student left work a few minutes early, just before 4:30 p.m.

But she never made it home.

Two decades later, co-worker Mary Watson still finds it painful.

People dont just disappear. Something bad happened, she said.

McAndrew is listed as a missing persons case. Unofficially, however, its considered a homicide.

I dont think Kim got out of the Canadian Tire parking lot, said Tom Martin, a retired police detective.

Martin spent long hours on the case looking for McAndrew. He even searched a well in Point Pleasant Park.

Hes convinced she trusted the wrong person.

Ifsomeone would'vegrabbed Kimshe would've screamed her head off," he said. "Then you'vegot to look at it and say what are the other waysand trickery is something that is used a lot in abductions."

Just last year, police dug up a property in Shad Bay, owned by the brother of a convicted sex offender, Andrew Johnson.

Johnson is a person I would call a very, very strong person of interest, Martin said.

Retired police detective Tom Martin believes the case can be solved. (CBC)

Martin has moved on,but this case is still close to him. He said he believes it still can be solved with more time and resources given to detectives, and with someone giving up a secret.

Watson is hopeful that speaking about her memorieswill trigger someone elses.

"She just walked out of the store and disappeared. I don't know if, where she was taken from, but it's hard,"Watson said.

Halifax Regional Police said there are no new developments in the case.

The province is offering up to$150,000 as a reward for any information that leads to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible for McAndrew's disappearance.