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  "path": "/issues/2026-4-25/the-curious-case-of-chandra-levy",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-25T00:00:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://airmail.news",
  "tags": [
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    "Washington, D.C.",
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  "textContent": "\n\n  In the months following the 2001 disappearance of Chandra Levy, her face was everywhere, from tabloid covers to cable-news reports.\n\n##### Twenty-five years ago, her disappearance dominated the news—until 9/11 diverted the nation’s attention. Few tuned in for the twists and turns that followed\n\nBy Joseph Rodota\n\nThe name Chandra Levy is now mostly forgotten, or prompts questions which begin: “Wasn’t she … ?” But in the summer of 2001, she was the most famous missing person in America.\n\nLevy arrived in Washington, D.C., the previous September and began a six-month internship with the Federal Bureau of Prisons. She was 23, from the midsize city of Modesto, in California’s Central Valley. Bright and ambitious, she breezed through San Francisco State University in three years and was in her final semester of the master’s program in public administration at the University of Southern California.\n\nIn mid-April 2001, Levy informed her landlord she was going home at the end of the month. Her parents—Bob, an oncologist, and Susan, an artist—made plans to join her in READ ON",
  "title": "The Curious Case of Chandra Levy"
}