Whitney Heichel's Cell Phone Found In Bushes: Clues Emerge As Police Search For Missing Oregon Woman (VIDEO)

Missing Woman's Cell Phone Found In Bushes

The cell phone of Whitney Heichel, the Oregon woman who disappeared under "suspicious" circumstances earlier this week, has been found by a group of children at an apartment complex a few miles from the woman's home.

According to CBS News, children playing in a field near Troutdale Terrace Apartments in Troutdale, Ore., found Heichel's phone in some bushes on Thursday. The cell phone reportedly had Heichel's photograph as the screen saver and contained text messages asking if the missing woman was "okay."

"I was pretty shocked. I mean I knew right away…I recognized the face," April Fletcher, the mother of one the children, told ABC News.

The news outlet notes the apartment complex is about four miles from Heichel's home in Gresham, Ore.

At a Friday morning news conference, Gresham Police Department spokesman Lt. Claudio Grandjean confirmed that the device had been found. He added that "no other items were found along with the phone," CBS News writes.

Heichel was reported missing on Tuesday morning by her husband, Clint, after the 21-year-old failed to show up for her morning shift at a local Starbucks.

A few hours later, Heichel's SUV was found parked in the back corner of a Walmart parking lot. "The passenger side window was busted out, the backseats were down, there was mud on her tires," the woman's husband told KPTV. He added that the tires had not been muddy the night before.

Police have called the woman's disappearance "suspicious."

Photos Of Whitney Heichel (story continues below) :

Whitney Heichel
Whitney Heichel(01 of16)
Open Image Modal
This department of motor vehicles image provided by the City of Gresham, Ore., shows Whitney Heichel. Police said Friday Oct. 19, 2012, that children playing outside an apartment complex have found the cellphone of Heichel, an Oregon woman who vanished three days ago under suspicious circumstances. Authorities said the phone will be examined Friday for clues about what happened to Heichel after she failed to show up for work Tuesday morning.(AP Photo/DMV via City of Gresham) (credit:AP)
Jonatha Holt(02 of16)
Open Image Modal
This image provided by the Multnomah County Sheriff's office shows the booking photo for Jonathan Daniel Holt taken early Saturday Oct. 20, 2012. Holt, 24, of Gresham, Oregon, a resident of the apartment complex where Whitney Heichel lived with her husband, was arrested for investigation of aggravated murder Friday night, about the same time her body was found on Larch Mountain, east of Gresham. He was scheduled to be arraigned Monday in Clackamas County. (AP Photo/Multnomah County Sheriff) (credit:AP)
(03 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
Clint Heichel(04 of16)
Open Image Modal
Clint Heichel, husband of Whitney Heichel, 21, of Gresham, Ore., breaks down as he attempts to speak at a press conference Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012 in the council chambers for the City of Gresham. Police say children playing outside an apartment complex have found the cellphone of Whitney Heichel, who vanished three days ago under suspicious circumstances. (AP Photo/The Oregonian, Brent Wojahn) (credit:AP)
(05 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
Whitney Heichel(06 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(07 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(08 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(09 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(10 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(11 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(12 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
(13 of16)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Facebook)
Clint Heichel(14 of16)
Open Image Modal
Clint Heichel, husband of Whitney Heichel, 21, Gresham, who is the subject of a suspicious disappearance case in Gresham listens at a press conference in the council chambers for the City of Gresham Thursday Oct. 18, 2012.(AP Photo/Brent Wojahn, The Oregonian) (credit:AP)
Lorilei Ritmiller(15 of16)
Open Image Modal
Lorilei Ritmiller, mother of Whitney Heichel, 21, Gresham, who is the subject of a suspicious disappearance case in Gresham speaks at a press conference in the council chambers for the City of Gresham Thursday Oct. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Brent Wojahn, The Oregonian)LINK (credit:AP)
Clint Heichel and Lorilei Ritmiller(16 of16)
Open Image Modal
GRESHAM, OREGON - October 18, 2012 - Clint Heichel gets a hug from Lorilei Ritmiller, mother of Whitney Heichel, as he breaks down after he attempted to speak at a news conference Thursday Oct. 18, 2012 in the council chambers for the City of Gresham. (AP Photo/Brent Wojahn, The Oregonian) (credit:AP)

Just hours before the phone was found, Heichel's mother, Lorelei Ritmiller, "urged people in the Portland area to keep looking for her daughter, who she described as the 'sunshine' in her heart," ABC News writes.

"She's this compassionate laughing person. Her heart is as big as the sun ... This is just a great human being. This is a person you'd think no one could ever hurt," Ritmiller said.

According to an earlier report on The Huffington Post, a gas station attendant may have been one of the last people to see Heichel before she disappeared:

According to a flyer on the "Find Whitney Heichel" Facebook page, the woman's debit card was used that morning at several ATMs and three different gas stations. Clint Heichel said two of those transactions, both of which were gas purchases, occurred just eight minutes apart, one at 9:22 a.m. and another at 9:30 a.m.

One gas station attendant reported seeing the SUV with Whitney Heichel in the passenger seat and an unidentified man behind the wheel, according to the flier. The man reportedly "was acting suspicious and hurried, buying only a small amount of gas."

The apartment complex where Heichel's cell phone was found is located "between the parking lot and the gas station," CBS News reports. Police are now calling the Troutdale apartment "a key area."

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go