Adam Puzio, father of Iwona Mogiła-Lisowska, will never forget on November 10, 1992. That day, the man returned home from Yugoslavia in the morning, where he occasionally traveled on business. After 8:00 in the morning, the man went to ul. Świetlików 10 in Łódź to visit her beloved daughter Iwona.
He bought her champagne as a gift, which she liked very much. They talked for a while, then Adam went home to rest after the trip. He also knew that he would talk to his daughter again because they were going to have dinner together that day. Unfortunately, the man had no idea at the time that not only would it not happen, but it was also the last time he saw 31-year-old Iwona.
Around 4 p.m. that day, Mogiła-Lisowska went with her husband to a fish shop to see her mother who worked there. The woman picked up the dinner and the keys to her parents' house, as was her custom. Then she got into her Polonaise and left. Iwona's mother remembered that her daughter did not wave her goodbye, which was quite unusual for her.
The next morning, Puzio, concerned about the absence of his daughter the previous evening, wanted to check if she was okay. He knocked on the door of her apartment, but his son-in-law answered him. He informed his father-in-law that Iwona did not come back for the night. It was nothing unusual, however, as the 31-year-old was a journalist and sometimes spent the whole night at work. At that time, she was working at the Tele-24 television station in Łódź.
The next day, Iwona's parents heard from their son-in-law that their daughter went to Germany for a week. It also did not cause much concern, as Lisowska had traveled there earlier. She worked several times as a waitress in a restaurant near Mannheim, and helped its owners with accounting.
The woman was not reported to the police until November 19, nine days after she was last seen. The journalist's parents refrained from doing so because of her husband's suggestions. Maciej Mogiła-Lisowski claimed that the woman would come home soon and she would be stupid to find out that the whole city was looking for her.
Proceedings in the case were suspended, discontinued and reopened many times. Michał Fajbusiewicz talked about the case several times in the popular crime television program "997". The journalist's father did not give up and conducted the search on his own. To this end, he went to Germany and even tried to persuade the Minister of Justice himself to take an interest in his daughter's case.
The man's tenacity was appreciated by the aforementioned Michał Fajbusiewicz. The journalist recalled the situation when Puzio was waiting to meet him, spending the night in the car in front of the house of the "997" driver for three nights. At that time, the editor was recording episodes of his program and was away from home.
Iwona's father also resorted to even more unconventional methods. Over the years, he has consulted about thirty seers. Some indicated that the woman's body was located on the plot of land where the house where the 31-year-old lived was built. So the entire area was thoroughly combed, but Lisowska's body was not found. Next to the wall that forms the border between the garden and the house, clothes belonging to the missing woman and a carpet from her house were found. This place was to be indicated by one of the clairvoyants.
The garden septic tank was also checked. Some believed that this is where the killer was supposed to hide the missing body. It was indeed a lead, since bones had been discovered there. However, specialists who examined them found that they belonged to an animal, not a human. An interesting hypothesis was related to the vision of one of the people. She saw the woman's body and pointed on the map where it was supposed to be. It turned out that it was the area of the Jewish Cemetery at ul. Bracka in Łódź. There was an idea that the murderer could put Iwona's body in one of the graves. However, this theory has never been confirmed.
Unfortunately, all these actions did not work. Iwona's father started a procedure for recognizing his daughter as legally dead. The man wanted to formally regulate the issues related to the missing person's house. The proceedings in this case lasted two years and ended in 2005. The date of Mogiła-Lisowska's death was formally adopted on December 31, 2002. The building in which the woman lived is now used as a warehouse.
Adam Puzio put his daughter a grave in the cemetery in Łagiewniki a few years ago. The man decided to take this step because he heard such advice in his sleep twice. Father put up a fence and a cross. There was also a board with information about Iwona. Mother and sister, however, removed the sign.
The most likely scenario is that the woman is unfortunately already dead. It is often indicated that the perpetrator could have been Mogiła-Lisowska's husband. We know perfectly well from crime novels and many similar cases that it is the spouse that is most often the first suspect.
To this should be added Lisowski's rather strange behavior after the disappearance of the woman. The man seemed to be stalling and wanted to delay the start of the search for his wife. It is difficult to say how thoroughly it was checked by the police. Some emphasize that the husband comes from an influential family and thanks to the contacts he managed to avoid responsibility.
I do not know what specific matters Iwona dealt with during her work, but it is also possible that the woman found a scandal or crime and was silenced by people who could lose a lot if the journalist described the information she managed to reach (assuming that something like this actually happened).
The scenario that the woman would run away from her current life and start it somewhere else seems rather unlikely. To this day, it has not been possible to establish what happened to the missing girl. I hope one day the truth will be found. Iwona's father deserves it especially, as he spent many years looking for his daughter.
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