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Kevin Garrett Heinl

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Kevin Garrett Heinl

Birth
Hoffman Estates, Cook County, Illinois, USA
Death
8 Mar 2011 (aged 19)
Attica, Fountain County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.9302979, Longitude: -87.9232788
Plot
Section B, Lot 204, Grave 12
Memorial ID
View Source
Kevin Garrett Heinl of Roselle
Kevin Garrett Heinl, 19, was born Sept. 9, 1991, in Hoffman Estates. Kevin was the life of every social gathering and was loved by everyone whose lives he touched. He had a big smile and an even bigger heart. He loved snowboarding, dancing, music and was a 2010 graduate of James B. Conant High School. Kevin will be missed by many and never forgotten by the ones he loved so much. He was the beloved son to William "Gary" and Nancy (nee Rossell); loving brother to Sara Spielgel, Christopher (Laura), and Heidi (James) Scheidt; cherished grandson to Donald and Joanne, and the late John and Dorothy Rossell; dear uncle to Tyler and Aidan; fond nephew to Doris (Robert) Baur, Elizabeth (Nicholas) Muros, Ann Murphy, Robert (Lynn) Rossell and Robert T. (Susan) Heinl; and cousin to John (Rebekah), Caribeth (Beaux) Keyes, Jennifer Baur and Daniel. Visitation will be on Tuesday, from 3 to 9 p.m. at Willow Creek Community Church, 67 Algonquin Road (Chapel B entrance), South Barrington. His funeral will be on Wednesday, at 11 a.m. at the church. Burial will be private. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the church, www.willowcreek.org or 224-512-6662.
Arrangements by Countryside Funeral Home, Roselle. www.countrysidefuneralhomes.com
====================================
Authorities confirmed mid-afternoon Thursday that the remains found Tuesday in a field in Fountain County, Ind., are those of a missing Schaumburg man.
Fountain County Coroner Joe Gritten matched the dental records of 19-year-old Kevin Heinl, who has been missing since early March, with the bones found in a field along County Road 650 North, a few miles away from where Heinl's car was found abandoned March 8.
Kevin Heinl's wallet was found with identification inside along with his body.
An autopsy is scheduled Friday to determine the cause of death.
For Heinl's family, this news offers some closure.
"Obviously, we're devastated," said Heinl's brother, Chris Heinl of Streamwood. "The hardest part right now is we don't know what happened to him. A 19-year-old kid just doesn't turn up dead in a cornfield."
Chris Heinl said his family is upset it took the Fountain County Sheriff's police so long to come up with any leads on his brother's disappearance.
"I'm so disappointed and frustrated with the way they handled the case from day one," he said. "There is no reason my brother had to lay out there for two-and-a-half months. They should have gotten dogs. They should have done a helicopter search. They never really made any kind of attempt to do that."
Fountain County Sheriff Bill Sanders could not immediately be reached for comment Thursday on the criticism, but he did say at the time the car was found that police combed the area, checking fields, bridges, abandoned barns and houses.
Heinl's family took a variety of steps in their own search. "My family hired a private investigator. We spent $10,000," Chris Heinl said, adding that the family also reached out through social networking sites and fliers seeking clues.
Heinl left his parents' home in Schaumburg the afternoon of March 8, supposedly for a new job at Rainforest Café at Woodfield Shopping Center. He never showed up.
The Conant High School graduate's 2003 Honda Civic was found abandoned about 9 p.m. that night half-mile north of Newtown, Ind., a small town about 35 miles east of Danville, Ill., by sheriff's police.
Police in Indiana initially followed Heinl's car after it passed the scene of an accident at high speed. Officers found the car abandoned off Hwy. 341 between a large cemetery and grain elevator, with its engine and windshield wiper blades still running and the driver side door open.
Heinl's cellphone was located four days later in the hands of a 14-year-old girl from Newtown, who identified Heinl from a photograph as the man who approached her on the street the morning of March 12, handed her a cellphone and walked away, authorities said.
That was the last anyone saw Heinl.
Daily Herald

Rest in peace, Kevin.

Kevin was the life of every social gathering. He was always smiling and telling people "I love you!". He was kind to everyone, and never had an enemy. He was dedicated and attended Willowcreek Community Church, where he was baptized as a believer on November 20, 2004. He graduated from Aldrin Elementary, Frost Jr High and Conant High School June 6, 2010. He attended Harper Jr College and worked for UPS. He was loved by all who knew him and will never be forgotten. He was buried May 26, 2011 at the age of 19.
Kevin Garrett Heinl of Roselle
Kevin Garrett Heinl, 19, was born Sept. 9, 1991, in Hoffman Estates. Kevin was the life of every social gathering and was loved by everyone whose lives he touched. He had a big smile and an even bigger heart. He loved snowboarding, dancing, music and was a 2010 graduate of James B. Conant High School. Kevin will be missed by many and never forgotten by the ones he loved so much. He was the beloved son to William "Gary" and Nancy (nee Rossell); loving brother to Sara Spielgel, Christopher (Laura), and Heidi (James) Scheidt; cherished grandson to Donald and Joanne, and the late John and Dorothy Rossell; dear uncle to Tyler and Aidan; fond nephew to Doris (Robert) Baur, Elizabeth (Nicholas) Muros, Ann Murphy, Robert (Lynn) Rossell and Robert T. (Susan) Heinl; and cousin to John (Rebekah), Caribeth (Beaux) Keyes, Jennifer Baur and Daniel. Visitation will be on Tuesday, from 3 to 9 p.m. at Willow Creek Community Church, 67 Algonquin Road (Chapel B entrance), South Barrington. His funeral will be on Wednesday, at 11 a.m. at the church. Burial will be private. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the church, www.willowcreek.org or 224-512-6662.
Arrangements by Countryside Funeral Home, Roselle. www.countrysidefuneralhomes.com
====================================
Authorities confirmed mid-afternoon Thursday that the remains found Tuesday in a field in Fountain County, Ind., are those of a missing Schaumburg man.
Fountain County Coroner Joe Gritten matched the dental records of 19-year-old Kevin Heinl, who has been missing since early March, with the bones found in a field along County Road 650 North, a few miles away from where Heinl's car was found abandoned March 8.
Kevin Heinl's wallet was found with identification inside along with his body.
An autopsy is scheduled Friday to determine the cause of death.
For Heinl's family, this news offers some closure.
"Obviously, we're devastated," said Heinl's brother, Chris Heinl of Streamwood. "The hardest part right now is we don't know what happened to him. A 19-year-old kid just doesn't turn up dead in a cornfield."
Chris Heinl said his family is upset it took the Fountain County Sheriff's police so long to come up with any leads on his brother's disappearance.
"I'm so disappointed and frustrated with the way they handled the case from day one," he said. "There is no reason my brother had to lay out there for two-and-a-half months. They should have gotten dogs. They should have done a helicopter search. They never really made any kind of attempt to do that."
Fountain County Sheriff Bill Sanders could not immediately be reached for comment Thursday on the criticism, but he did say at the time the car was found that police combed the area, checking fields, bridges, abandoned barns and houses.
Heinl's family took a variety of steps in their own search. "My family hired a private investigator. We spent $10,000," Chris Heinl said, adding that the family also reached out through social networking sites and fliers seeking clues.
Heinl left his parents' home in Schaumburg the afternoon of March 8, supposedly for a new job at Rainforest Café at Woodfield Shopping Center. He never showed up.
The Conant High School graduate's 2003 Honda Civic was found abandoned about 9 p.m. that night half-mile north of Newtown, Ind., a small town about 35 miles east of Danville, Ill., by sheriff's police.
Police in Indiana initially followed Heinl's car after it passed the scene of an accident at high speed. Officers found the car abandoned off Hwy. 341 between a large cemetery and grain elevator, with its engine and windshield wiper blades still running and the driver side door open.
Heinl's cellphone was located four days later in the hands of a 14-year-old girl from Newtown, who identified Heinl from a photograph as the man who approached her on the street the morning of March 12, handed her a cellphone and walked away, authorities said.
That was the last anyone saw Heinl.
Daily Herald

Rest in peace, Kevin.

Kevin was the life of every social gathering. He was always smiling and telling people "I love you!". He was kind to everyone, and never had an enemy. He was dedicated and attended Willowcreek Community Church, where he was baptized as a believer on November 20, 2004. He graduated from Aldrin Elementary, Frost Jr High and Conant High School June 6, 2010. He attended Harper Jr College and worked for UPS. He was loved by all who knew him and will never be forgotten. He was buried May 26, 2011 at the age of 19.

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