Dryden NY: A Town Of Tragedy: Part 2- Aliza May Bush


Examining the Dark Depths of Dryden: A Continuing Saga of Tragedy – Unraveling the Enigma of Aliza May Bush’s Mysterious Disappearance. In the small town of Dryden, New York, secrets lurk behind every corner and mysteries unfold with each passing day. As we delve deeper into the investigation, we uncover chilling details about the true crime case, including the disturbing fact that Aliza May Bush vanished without a trace, leaving a community in turmoil and a family desperate for answers. Join us as we piece together the puzzle of this harrowing tale, determined to bring justice to a town plagued by tragedy.

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27 Comments to “Dryden NY: A Town Of Tragedy: Part 2- Aliza May Bush”

  • @Nat-lg2ks

    I think Aliza kept climbing out of her crib and her mum tried to restrain her into the crib until she went still, then found shed killed her

  • @Nat-lg2ks

    My own baby was allergic to milk protein causing him to struggle to breath ๐Ÿ˜ฎ so I think sids in this group would be high but not many kids have this allergy from what Ive heard.

  • @LisaLisa-qc8xe

    I respect you SO much for your perspectives and relatability for this case Stephanie especially at the end/summary

  • @saraharnold9954

    According to Google, Christine Lane was released after 9 years but I canโ€™t find anything that says if she had more kids or what she did upon releaseโ€ฆ

  • @randistilwell1891

    "Nine years into her sentence for second-degree manslaughter, Christine Lane was released"

  • @margooneil5289

    She was release after nine years

  • @Rainbowofthefallen

    Just commenting for the algorithm ๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿค

  • @roguemarauder3154

    She clearly murdered her daughter in a fit of rage

  • @stellapratt9659

    one of my sisters died of SADS aged 44

  • @masonlavigne3504

    My uncle was her boyfriend when this happened Kevin Dexter poor guy

  • @josephine19671

    I understand the stress of a mother having her child not complying when you dont feel goodโ€ฆ Something very similar happened to me when my daughter was 3 months old, I was tired not feeling good and she just kept crying, I had made shure her diaper was clean, she had just eaten, no fever, all was good but she just would not stop crying, and I was soooo tired could not cope with this and really felt the urge to push down on her to make her stop! But then I decided that since she was in her crib, there was no danger for me to just leave her there crying close her bedroom door and go to my living room to calm down. And 10-15 minutes later she just fell asleepโ€ฆ maybe she was just tired and had difficulty falling asleep and after a while fell asleep. When she stopped crying I went in her room silently and just looked at her beautifull angel face and understood what I almost did ๐Ÿ˜ข she is now 27, I told her about this and if she comes in a similar situation just leave the room and call me โค

  • @Lucy-ym8ch

    I'm usually very against the parents in these cases but I entirely believe Christine Lane this time.

  • @janeewells3225

    We are all sinners deserving of Godโ€™s wrath. Jesus Christ lived the sinless life we couldnโ€™t and was crucified on the cross enduring the wrath of God we rightfully deserved so that through our faith in Him we may be saved from the wrath of God. Repent. The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.

  • @monchichll

    My brother was a difficult child. He would not sleep at all. He did not scream he was happy just sittin in his crib. When he got a lil older he developed a bit of a temper. His way of throwing a tantrum was holding his breath. After several ambulances came and went one of the paramedic suggested to my parents to just give him a smack when he does it again. Not hard just enuff to shock him into breathing. He would hold his breath till he turned blue. Determined lil bugger he was. Because of that my mum dragged him to all sorts of doctors and specialist to make sure there was no lasting damage. He was also very accident prone and my parents got asked amd he was asked wether he was been beaten. That was in the 70's mind you. He really was accident prone (jumpin of his bunk bed headbudding the corner of the wardrobe, driving his tricycle of a 6foot wall, slippin thru the steps of the wooden stairs at a fishing cabin, head first against window havin the pane come out onto his forehead millimeter above his eyes).

  • @JessiDeerSims

    HelloFresh even stalking me on YouTube bro

  • @AWholeBeew

    I was seven years old when Aliza Bush went missing. I grew up in a small town about a half-hour from Dryden, and my dad worked in neighboring Ithaca. This case has always stuck with me because it was initially assumed that Aliza was abducted. My parents read an article in the local paper about it and then had a talk with my brothers and me about how if anyone ever grabbed us to take us, we should scream and fight it, even if we were told not to, even if there was a weapon. They said that even if the kidnapper used the weapon on us, we'd have a better chance of surviving and getting help by making a scene and drawing attention than we would if we were quiet and got taken. The '80s and '90s in Upstate NY were weird times and a weird place to be a kid. I remember all of the Dryden horror, from Aliza to the Harris family to the two Dryden High School cheerleaders murdered and dismembered by a neighbor. I saw the missing persons flyer for Sara Ann Wood in my school hallway. I saw missing person posters for Heidi Allen when I'd visit my uncle in Oswego. I don't know how old you are, Stephanie, in comparison to me (41), but did your childhood in Upstate NY also feel kind of eerie, especially as a little girl?

  • @erinderrick6783

    Wow. Just the thought of me putting my lifeless child in a garbage makes me sick to my damn stomach. It literally turned over and made me nauseated. The fact that she went to great lengths to dispose of her and send herself a damn mitten is very very damming and absolutely evil

  • @jerimiller5651

    My oldest Daughter was 5 when I had my newborn Son. While I went 10 feet to get his bottle-she went WAY out of her way to step on his head. I was infuriated!! I screamed"Go upstairs to your room!" I know not to discipline a child when you're furious. Besides, I wanted to comfort him! That was most important.

  • @Bonghotdogwater

    I think when she said she believed her daughter was still alive, she was in denial because she didnt want to believe that the nightmare of reality actually happened. I dont think she meant she actually believed it, she just dissociated to make it easier for her to live with the fact her daughter died.

  • @refinnej5302

    I'm in no way excusing her, but at this time in the US, mom shaming was extreme. "Step away" wasn't promoted like it is now. Other mothers lied about their hardships to not be seen as a terrible mom and so there weren't communities to turn to for such support. There wasn't a FB group to vent to strangers to in so the venting would be to other adults you knew in person who you felt would judge you, or even call CPS on you for even though you didn't do anything wrong.

    This is why we need to make sure mothers are well informed and have a way to find support.

  • @theresarische6069

    Love you and your program!

  • @TheCrazyDumbsaint

    I had my son when I was 23, but still had the mindset of a teenager. I was a single mother, and my son was diagnosed with colic. I am SO THANKFUL that I had my parents help. On top of the colic, my son just didn't like going to sleep, even when he was exhausted (he still doesn't almost 11 years later lol). But yeah, I've definitely had to leave the room a few times because the crying can be so stressful.

    On another note, I was really paranoid about SIDs. Like, I had that monitor that will go off if the baby doesn't move or breathe for a bit, but I still checked on him multiple times a night. I think I still did that until a couple years ago! Just the idea of going into his room in the morning to find him not breathing scared the shit out of me. Sometimes it still does, and I'll go in his room and make sure his blanket or pillow isn't covering his face, but I don't do it as much as I used to.

  • @bender1566

    SIDS can happen past one, my baby sister died from Sidโ€™s and she was almost twoโ€ฆ but if Iโ€™m right no one knows how/why it happens

  • @tenabruce3548

    For her to use people, who were hunting for her daughter, all along she killed her daughter!!! She killed her, and got rid of Aliza , in the most horrible way!!!!! RIP BABY ANGEL ๐Ÿ‘ผ IN HEAVEN!!! She should of got first degree , not second degree!!! So Very Very Sad ๐Ÿ˜ข!!!! ๐Ÿ‘ถ๐Ÿป๐Ÿ‘ผ๐Ÿ’”โฃ๏ธโœ…๐Ÿ’ฏ๐Ÿ’•๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ’๐ŸŒบ๐ŸŒน๐ŸŒธ๐ŸŒท๐ŸŒผ๐ŸŒป๐Ÿฅ€๐ŸŒˆ๐Ÿ‘ผ๐Ÿ‘ถ๐Ÿป๐Ÿฅฐ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™ BURN ๐Ÿ”ฅ IN HELL !!!! In Prison, U Will Get Ur Karma, Since The Prisoners Hate Baby Killers!!!

  • @jerimiller5651

    As calculated as she was about the mitten-Shes only sorry she got caught. Poor little angel. Expecting the MONSTER to save her.

  • @jerimiller5651

    I'm getting scared-please don't tell me she gets off….

  • @jerimiller5651

    What a liar! No doubt she did it over a two timing man like Susan Smith. Need the death penalty.

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