Baltimore, MD - July 8, 2021 - A former professional boxer who had been lost for almost 24 hours was found Thursday afternoon on a Pikesville resident's bench by an Orthodox Jewish grandmother, a true good Samaritan. 

60-year-old Kenneth Baysmore was found at approximately 3 PM on the 3500 block of Slade Avenue, about nine miles from his Madison Avenue home.  Winner of the 1979 National Golden Gloves bantamweight title and the 1984 USBA super featherweight title in 1984, Baysmore had been diagnosed with early onset dementia in 2009 a result of his long career in boxing.

Baysmore’s wife, community activist Zulieka Baysmore, noticed that her husband was missing shortly after 7 PM Wednesday evening after giving conference call testimony to the Maryland Redistricting Committee. Search teams and the Baltimore City Police Department scoured city streets in both Baltimore and Washington, D.C. for the missing man, working on the theory that he may have been searching for a previous family home. 

Numerous local community members said that they had seen an unidentified man sitting on the bench on Slade Avenue from as early as 11:00 AM Thursday morning. One woman reported noticing the man while dropping her son off at camp in the morning, and seeing him in the same place hours later when she went to pick up carpool at dismissal time, while others observed that the man looked lost and confused. 

Slade Avenue resident Ruth Goetz, a prior candidate for the Baltimore County Central Committee who is also Facebook friends with Zulieka Baysmore, followed the social media updates on the missing man.  She noticed Kenneth Baysmore sitting on a neighbor’s bench during a routine drive down her block at about 3 PM, recognizing him from the Facebook posts.

Finding the missing pro boxer was truly a miracle, said Goetz.

"It's all in the hands of G-d,” Goetz told Baltimore Jewish Life. “Everyone is put in the right place at the right time in order to do the right thing.  I'm just lucky that I got to be the messenger."