Arley D. Campbell, age 53, was born in Kimball, NE on April 24, 1958 and was taken early from us on Sunday, July 10, 2011 in Waynesville, MO. Arley loved Disneyland and always had a beaming smile that would make the world seem brighter. His life's motto was Live, Laugh, and Love because he lived life to the fullest, laughed the loudest and loved with all that he had. Arley was a loving son, caring brother, devoted father and doting grandfather. He is leaving behind his beloved family; his father, James; his mother, Doris; his brother, Jim (Anna); his daughters, Amy and Megan (Joey); and his grandson, Zachary. He was greeted at Heaven's pearly gates by his son Matthew who preceded him in death. The celebration of life service will be held at Diamond Canyon Christen Church in Diamond Bar, CA on Saturday, August 13th at 2 P.M. In lieu of flowers please make a donation to the Make-A-Wish Foundation in memory of Arley Campbell.
*Arley D. Campbell was killed by a hit and run driver
Mystery still surrounds hit and run -- Family pleads for help
Arley Campbell was hit and killed July 10 in Pulaski County on Veteran's Bridge
August 09, 2011|by Jay Scherder | jscherder@ky3.com
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PULASKI COUNTY, Mo -- Mystery still surrounds a hit and run in Pulaski County nearly a month after it happened. Fifty-three year old Arley Campbell was found dead under the Veteran's Bridge on Highway 28 two and a half days after he was run over.
The family is now pleading for any information that might help solve this case.
Arley Campbell traveled to the After Hours bar on Highway 28 on July 9. Security cameras caught him inside acting happy. He left the bar by himself and started walking down the highway heading north. After that no one knows what happened.
"I talked to him on the phone 5 or 6 times a day," Arley Campbell's mother Doris Campbell said, "every day."
On July 10, Doris son suddenly stopped answering.
"He laid there two and a half days before anyone found him," Doris explained.
Arley was found at the bottom of Veteran's Bridge on Highway 28 in Pulaski County. His daughters came into town from California to lay him to rest. They created a memorial on the side of the road with a message to the person responsible for their father's death. "You will be judged."
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