An 87-year-old “at risk” man was reported missing Sunday morning, the Oakland police Department announced in a news release.
Fu Sheng Yee, was last seen at around 8:30 am in the 1900 block of 38th Avenue. He was last seen wearing a tan sweatsuit.
Yee is about 5 feet tall, 110 pounds, with gray and black hair and black eyes. The Oakland resident is in good physical condition, as reported by his family, but is considered “at risk” due to his age and dementia condition.
According to his family, Yee is often seen traveling around Oakland and San Leandro including Chinatown, the Eastmont AC Transit Station, Bayfair Mall and the Bayfair Mall AC Transit Station.
Anyone who has information about Yee’s whereabouts may contact the Oakland Police Department’s Missing Persons Unit at (510) 238-3641.
The U.S. Coast Guard has suspended its search for three men and their 31-foot-long fishing vessel after seven days of searching the ocean.
The agency said in a news release that its crews had searched more than 94,000 square miles, “an area larger in size than the states of Georgia and South Carolina combined.”
The three missing men have been identified as Dalton Conway, Caleb Wilkinson and Tyler Barlow. The three men were hired by the owner of the boat, a fishing vessel named the Carol Ann, and departed Brunswick, Georgia, on Oct. 14 to fish about 80 miles offshore. They did not return on their scheduled date of Oct. 18, and did not respond to attempts at communication.
The missing crew and boat were reported to the Coast Guard, spurring the massive search, which involved multiple helicopter and aircraft crews, several Coast Guard boats, and searchers from the U.S. Navy, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.
The Carol Anne, a 31-foot fishing vessel.
U.S. Coast Guard
“Despite the unwavering dedication of our crews, regrettably, we have not been able to uncover any traces of the vessel and have made the difficult decision to suspend the search for three beloved family members,” said Capt. Frank DelRosso, commander of Coast Guard Sector Charleston, in the news release. “We extend our heartfelt gratitude to our partner agencies and the countless volunteers who have lent their assistance in this arduous search. Undoubtedly, they, like us, share in the deep sympathy we hold for the families of the missing individuals.”
Anyone with new information about the case is asked to contact the Coast Guard.
According to CBS News affiliate WTOC, the family of Barlow has set up a GoFundMe and intends on using the money raised to help with the search.
Tom Gerbier, an Air France pilot reported missing Wednesday, was found Thursday after falling 1,000 feet to his death at California’s Sequoia National Park. The 38-year-old was hiking Mt. Whitney, the tallest mountain in the continental United States, when he died.
The National Park Service said Gerbier set off early Tuesday morning from Whitney Portal, the gateway to Mt. Whitney. He was reported missing after failing to appear Wednesday at work to pilot a commercial flight and was ultimately found by deployed ground teams.
“This rescue was made possible through the assistance and collaboration of Inyo County Sheriff’s Office, Tulare County Sheriff’s Office, Inyo Search and Rescue Team, and the climbing community,” the National Park Service wrote in their statement.
A French national from Fontenay-sous-Bois was located in an area known as “The Notch.” During a helicopter search, the park service spotted the “motionless hiker” and recovered Gerbier to transfer him to the Tulare County Sheriff’s Office for identification.
Gerbier’s death marked the second fatality this year for the park, which is administered jointly by the service as Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. Gerbier was scheduled only briefly to be in California — and had been on a stopover for his airline.
Mt. Whitney is the highest peak in the contiguous United States.
David McNew via Getty Images
“[Air France] regrets to confirm the accidental death of one of its pilots … while he was on a stopover in Los Angeles (California),” they told the San Francisco Chronicle in a statement Friday.” The company offers its most sincere condolences to his family and loved ones.”
Mt. Whitney has fascinated mountain climbers for decades and reportedly stands unparalleled on the continent at about 14,494 feet. In 2011, 7-year-old California native Tyler Armstrong became the youngest ever to summit it.
The park service claimed on its website that Mt. Whitney is “the most frequently climbed mountain peak in the Sierra Nevada.” They also claimed that “technical climbing equipment is not usually necessary between mid-July and early October.”
It currently remains unclear if Gerbier used any climbing equipment during his trek.
Authorities in Georgia said they are working to confirm that a child’s body found at a garbage facility is a missing toddler whose father has been accused of lying about his son’s abduction.
East Point Police said they discovered the remains they believe to be 2-year-old J’Asiah Mitchell on Wednesday at the East Point Transfer Station after the child was reported missing on Aug. 16 by his father.
“We have not confirmed the identity of the child J’Asiah Mitchell; however, there is high probability based on the circumstances surrounding this case,” police said Wednesday.
Police added they are now looking at Artavious North, 23, as a possible suspect after he initially reported that J’Asiah was kidnapped during an armed robbery.
A photo of J’Asiah Mitchell.
The young child’s disappearance prompted a frantic search.
Asia Mitchell, J’Asiah’s mother who is separated from North, told local news outlet WSB-TV last week that she had no idea who would take her son.
“He’s only two. He doesn’t know what’s going on, just like I don’t know what’s going on. I’m just as confused as he is, and he’s probably as scared as I am,” the mom told the outlet.
Days later, police said that despite what North had allegedly told them and the boy’s mother, there were no signs of an armed robbery or kidnapping. North was arrested and charged with making false statements and false reporting of a crime.
Search efforts continued, and Mitchell turned to GoFundMe for help.
“We are searching everywhere driving on foot and everything in between in order to find J’asiah,” Mitchell stated in the GoFundMe.
As of Thursday, the GoFundMe had been retitled Rest in Peace Jasiah Deon Mitchell, and his mother confirmed they had found him. She said she would now be using donations for his funeral service and thanked those who had offered support and prayers.
“This was so so unexpected,” she wrote. “I never thought i would have to do this but things happen for a reason Gods Plan.”
Authorities Tuesday said they have not received enough DNA samples from Maui residents to help identify the remains of Lahaina fire victims that have been recovered so far. This comes amid uncertainty over the number of people who remain unaccounted for in the fire, with the latest FBI estimates putting that number at between 1,000 and 1,100. Lilia Luciano reports from Maui.
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As the grueling search for hundreds of missing people continues in Lahaina, questions continue to arise over the local government response to the Maui wildfires. On Thursday, Herman Andaya, administrator for the Maui Emergency Management Agency, resigned his post just one day after he defended his controversial decision not to activate the island’s warning sirens when the fires broke out. Jonathan Vigliotti has more.
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The death toll in the Maui wildfires crossed 100 as first responders Wednesday continued the arduous task of combing Lahaina for human remains. Anywhere from 1,100 to 1,300 people remain unaccounted for, a FEMA official said. Jonathan Vigliotti reports from Maui.
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With the death toll in the Maui wildfires rising and hundreds of people still unaccounted for, Lahaina residents who survived the fire are searching for missing loved ones. Lilia Luciano has more.
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Crews continued the search for the more than 1,300 people still missing on Maui. Only four of the 99 confirmed dead had been identified as of Tuesday, with the death toll expected to climb in the coming days. “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell reports.
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Paris — A fire ripped through a vacation home for adults with disabilities in eastern France on Wednesday, killing at least nine people, the head of rescue operations said.
Lt. Col. Philippe Hauwiller, who was leading the rescue work of firefighters, said crews were searching for the bodies of two others who were feared dead in the fire. Authorities said 17 people were evacuated, including one who was sent to a hospital with serious injuries.
Firefighters battle a blaze that broke out in a vacation home used by a group of people with disabilities, in Wintzenheim, France, August 9, 2023.
Patrick Kerber/picture alliance/Getty
Hauwiller said only those who were staying on the ground floor of the private accomodation in the town of Wintzenheim were able to escape the fire, which the local administration of the Haut-Rhin region said broke out at 6:30 a.m. The 11 remaining occupants were trapped on the upper floor and in a mezzanine area that collapsed, according to Hauwiller.
Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said on social media that she was heading to the site of the fire.
Christophe Marot, the secretary general of the local administration, said on news broadcaster France Info that the vacationers included adults with “slight intellectual disabilities.” Ten people with disabilities and and a person accompanying the group were believed to be among the dead.
Firefighters work to extinguish a fire that erupted at a home for disabled people in Wintzenheim, eastern France, August 9, 2023.
SEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP/Getty
The fire department deployed 76 firefighters, 4 fire engines, 4 ambulances to contain the blaze and treat the victims. Forty police officers were also mobilized.
The fire was quickly brought under control, the statement said.
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This article was originally published on Feb. 18, 2022.
Maya Millete, 39, went missing in January 2021. What was happening between her and her husband before she disappeared and what does spellcasting have to do with it?
January 7, 2021: Maya Millete last seen
Maya Millete
Maricris Drouaillet
Mother of three, Maya (May) Millete was 39 when she was last seen on surveillance video arriving at her home in Chula Vista, California.
January 8-9, 2021: Where’s Maya?
Larry Millete
Maricris Drouaillet
Maya’s husband of 21 years, Larry Millete, was the last person to see Maya. When asked about Maya, he told her family different stories about where she might have gone.
January 9, 2021: “Help Find Maya”
Maricris Drouaillet
After not hearing from Maya for two days, her sister Maricris Drouaillet reported her missing to the Chula Vista Police Department. Family and friends made flyers to spread awareness about her disappearance.
January 10, 2021: A worried family
Richard and Maricris Drouaillet
CBS News
Maya’s older sister, Maricris and her husband Richard Drouaillet were hoping against hope that Maya was somehow OK, but they say they knew something terrible had really happened when Maya didn’t show up for her daughter’s birthday.
January 11, 2021: Extra help
Attorney Billy Little
CBS News
Attorney Billy Little, a former criminal defense investigator for the U.S. Navy, heard about Maya’s disappearance and wanted to help. On January 11, 2021, Little went to the Millete home and looked for clues. He says Larry Millete seemed unconcerned about his wife and it looked like he was airing out the house.
January 13, 2021: Staying hopeful
Maya and Larry Millete
Maricris Drouaillet
“I love you honey, just come back home,” said Larry Millete during a phone interview with local media. “I’m still very hopeful that will (with) all this media coverage, she’ll turn up and say, ‘Hey, I’m OK.’” On that same day friends, family, and neighbors searched for Maya at Mount San Miguel Park.
January 23, 2021: Search warrant issued
Two weeks after Maya’s disappearance, the Chula Vista Police Department searched the Millete’s Chula Vista, California, home.
CBS News
The Chula Vista Police Department issued a search warrant at Maya and Larry Millete’s home. The goal was to obtain evidence that would lead to finding Maya. Investigators seized some of Larry’s guns.
February 5, 2021: “Bring her home”
Maya’s family makes a public plea for help find her.
Chula Vista Police Department/Facebook
The Chula Vista Police Department and Maya’s family held a press conference pleading for help to find Maya. “Please bring her home.” Maricris Drouailett cried. “If you have any information, please help us find my sister …”
February 2021: Dedicated search volunteers
The search parties were made up of dozens of friends, family members, colleagues of Maya’s and also strangers. They began looking for her in vast desert areas east of Chula Vista, near the Arizona border.
Help Find Maya/Instagram
Since Maya’s disappearance, a group called “Help Find Maya” has been out searching for her most weekends. The group has searched areas in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, Otay Lakes and Marron Valley Road.
March 2021: Spellcasting
Larry Millete’s bloody altar
Billy Little
Billy Little says he found evidence that Larry Millete purchased spells online. According to Little, Larry first tried spells to get Maya to fall back in love with him. But as the couple’s marital problems worsened, police say, Larry eventually wanted to harm her. He later asked a spellcaster, “Please punish May and incapacitate her enough so she can’t leave the house. It’s time to take the gloves off.”
May 7, 2021: Firearms surrendered
Larry Millete was served with a gun violence restraining order and had to surrender firearms to authorities.
San Diego Superior Court
During the investigation by the Chula Vista Police Department, multiple search warrants were served at the Millete home. On May 7,2021, Larry Millete was served with a gun violence restraining order and had to surrender more firearms to authorities.
October 19, 2021: Larry Millete arrested
In October 2021, Larry Millete was arrested for his wife’s murder. He pleaded not guilty
CBS News
Nine months after her disappearance, Larry Millete was arrested for the murder of his wife Maya. He has pleaded not guilty and continues to say she willingly left and abandoned the family.
October 30, 2021: #TeamMaya
Asked why she’s helping in the search for someone she doesn’t know, Keri Park tells CBS News’ Jonathan Vigliotti, “it should be a community effort … you just want closure for this family so much. … And that’s why we’re out here. It’s why we keep coming. They deserve it. … Maya deserves it.”
CBS News/Cindy Cesare
Many dedicated search volunteers like Keri Park have never met Maya. She and others drive for hours to get to the search locations and have spent days looking for Maya. “It’s just hard. I mean, you just want closure for this family so much,” Park told “48 Hours” contributor Jonathan Vigliotti. “And I just want to bring her home.”
January 7, 2022: One year later
Maya Millete was last seen in January 7, 2021 in Chula Vista, California.
Maricris Drouaillet
After a year without Maya, the Help Find Maya community has created merchandise, held vigils, rallies, and raised more than $50,000 for search efforts. They put QR codes on flyers for people to scan for more information and to recruit volunteers.
Justice for Maya
Maya Millete’s family and friends were adamant that she did not leave her children voluntarily.
Maricris Drouaillet
Anyone with information about Maya’s disappearance is asked to contact San Diego County Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477 or the Chula Vista Police Department at 619-691-5139.
This article was originally published on Feb. 18, 2022. It was updated on July 22, 2023.
Maya Millete, a young wife and mother of three disappeared from her Southern California home in January 2021. From almost the beginning, Maya’s family and friends grew suspicious of her husband Larry. Investigators say the couple had been having marital troubles and shortly before Maya’s disappearance, Larry had been contacting spellcasters to have a hex put on his wife so that she would stay in the marriage. Where is Maya Millete?
A DESPERATE SEARCH
More than a year has gone by since 39-year-old Maya May Millete, mother of three young children, vanished in Chula Vista, California.
Maricris Drouaillet: I still have hope. I still have that hope that we’ll find her alive.
Maya Millete, a mother of threee, was last seen in January 7, 2021 in Chula Vista, California.
Maricris Drouaillet
Maya’s sister, Maricris, and her husband Richard Drouaillet have fought hard so Maya’s disappearance doesn’t become a cold case.
Richard Drouaillet: It’s been a really, really tough year for the whole family … we still don’t have answers yet.
Maya was 13 years old when she immigrated to the United States from the Philippines with her parents and five siblings in 1995. Maricris says her sister thrived in Honolulu, Hawaii, where the family settled to build a new life.
Maricris Drouaillet: She’s always been, you know, the smart one. And — she’s very active at school. … education — it’s very important to the family. … I’ve always been so proud of her.
Maya met her future husband Larry Millete when they were both working at a fast-food restaurant in Honolulu. Larry’s family had also immigrated from the Philippines. When Larry turned 18 and joined the Navy, the couple decided to get married.
Jonathan Vigliotti | CBS News correspondent: They were so young.
Maricris Drouaillet: Yeah.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Teenagers.
Maricris Drouaillet: Yes … She’s the first one to get married so it was a shock for everyone, but we respected her decision.
Larry and Maya Millete
Maricris Drouaillet
Maya and Larry moved to Southern California and built their careers working for the Navy. Larry was an optician at the Naval Medical Center, and Maya worked as a supervisor contract specialist at Naval Base San Diego.
Claudia Julao: She was my mentor from day one.
Allison Alexander: She was like this little, tiny person but she was a big personality.
Claudia Julao and Allison Alexander worked with Maya at the base and became friends.
Claudia Julao: We actually negotiate contracts for the U.S. Navy. … And she was very good at it. … I used to you know joke around with her because she had a photographic memory.
Allison Alexander: I had a lot of respect for her. … She was a very strong and confident leader. A lot of the women in the office really looked up to her.
Claudia Julao: There was no glass ceiling. We could get wherever we wanted, didn’t matter where we came from.
Maya and Larry decided to wait 10 years before starting a family. The couple eventually welcomed two daughters and a son.
Maricris Drouaillet: It’s joy to see them, you know that they have their own family, too. … We’re always out camping … We’re always outdoors.
Richard Drouaillet: Larry was a good dad … always attentive to the kids, great parents.
Jonathan Vigliotti: What kinda mother was she?
Maricris Drouaillet: Very caring, loving mother. She, hands on. … She’s always teaching them somethin’, especially, you know, music. … she has some videos with her son … singing with her.
Richard Drouaillet: Word by word. Word by word. Brings us to tears every time we watch it.
Claudia Julao: Her kids were everything. … She enjoyed her kids.
In early January 2021, Maya was focused on planning a ski trip to Big Bear for her daughter’s birthday. But her family grew concerned when she suddenly stopped communicating on January 7.
Maricris Drouaillet: For her not to tell us … what’s gonna happen for her daughter’s birthday, you know, that was a big deal.
Maricris says when their brother J.R. drove over to check on Maya the next day, her husband Larry told him Maya had been in the bedroom for several hours. J.R. knocked on the door but got no response.
Maricris Drouaillet: He kinda just thinks, “OK, maybe she’s just, maybe she’s sleeping” … Larry did say that they had an argument. … He left it at that.
Maricris Drouaillet: We believed Larry … they had an argument and she just, she just wanna be left alone.
The following day, when there was still no news from Maya, Maricris and Richard drove over to the Millete house.
Richard Drouaillet: When we walked in, the house was a mess which I’ve never seen their house messy … and it was cold. … It was January … and he had the AC running, which was really odd.
This time, Larry told them Maya was out.
Jonathan Vigliotti: So, Larry says Maya’s been where?
Richard Drouaillet: Hiking. She went hiking.
Suspicious that something wasn’t right, Maricris reported her sister missing to the Chula Vista Police Department that night.
Jonathan Vigliotti: How did the police react?
Maricris Drouaillet: They sent — three officers … went through the house. … They questioned us …
Maricris and Richard were upset with what they say was a lack of concern from the police.
Richard Drouaillet: It seemed like there was no urgency from the police department to investigate it properly.
By January 10, Maya had now been missing for three days. Her family gathered at her home to celebrate her daughter’s birthday, hoping against hope.
Maricris Drouaillet (sobbing): We’re all, like, looking at the door, hoping she’ll walk in on her daughter’s birthday. She never did. I felt so bad … After that she said, “Mommy didn’t show up for my birthday.” I didn’t know how to comfort her.
As Maya’s family tried to keep some normalcy for the sake of the children, Richard was watching Larry during the party.
Richard Drouaillet: Just laid back, wearing his Navy sweats on a Sunday, no shoes.
Richard Drouaillet says he was watching Larry during the party. ” Larry had no concern whatsoever on his face for his missing wife. … Not even for his daughter’s birthday.”
Maricris Drouaillet
Richard Drouaillet: Larry had no concern whatsoever on his face for his missing wife. … Not even for his daughter’s birthday.
That night, Claudia got the distressing news that Maya was missing and drove over to the Millete house. By now the birthday party had turned into a search party.
Claudia Julao: So, they were outside with babies and blankets, trying to look for their sister, their daughter. … Her parents are elderly … The brothers and the brother-in-law were out knocking on doors, giving out flyers.
Claudia Julao: He had no interest in helping.
As word spread that Maya was nowhere to be found, more friends stepped in trying to help.
Billy Little: My wife… Lou was working at the 32nd Street Naval Base. … said that a friend of hers went missing. … the family is concerned … would you help them? …, somebody asks for help, you just do it, right?
Billy Little: So, if she was still alive, I needed to get to her quickly. … that’s why I went straight to the last place she was seen, which was that house … I had no idea that it would turn into what it was.
A TREASURE TROVE OF CLUES
On January 11, 2021, four days after Maya Millete was last heard from, attorney Billy Little – a former criminal defense investigator for the U.S. Navy – decided to step into the missing person’s case.
Billy Little: I knew what had to be done, and I did it.
Billy Little: I went straight to where the last place she was seen, which was that house.
Little wanted to talk to Larry Millete. Amongst other things, he had found it odd that Maya’s husband wasn’t the one who initially called the Chula Vista Police Department.
Billy Little: In fact, when the family wanted to call 911, he discouraged it.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Were there police around also investigating at this point? No?
Billy Little: No. According to the family, the police had come. He had given them I guess the same story.
Larry Millete gave Maya’s family different accounts about where she could have gone, from hiking to visiting wine country. But according to Maya’s family, friends and colleagues at the naval base where Maya negotiated contracts for the U.S. Navy, she was not the kind of person who would just take off.
Maricris Drouaillet
In news reports at the time, a Chula Vista Police spokesperson stated that Larry was being cooperative, they were treating it as a missing person’s case and had found no indication of foul play. Little says after he showed Larry his naval civilian ID, he let him in.
Billy Little: I started looking for things that I thought might be suspicious in the house.
Just like Maricris and Richard, he noticed something strange.
Billy Little: Most of the windows in the house were open. … It was clear he was trying to air the house out.
Little knew from Maya’s family that the couple had had a fight on the day she was last heard from.
Billy Little: I was … looking to see … if there’s any damage in the house that would indicate some domestic violence.
Billy Little: I’m also looking for defensive wounds on his hands, which I don’t see.
But Little says he did see something outside the Millete bedroom.
Billy Little: We went upstairs where her bedroom was, the first thing I noticed was the hole in the door right next to the handle … cause it’s right in the area where, if you need access to a locked room, you’re going to punch right through there.
Billy Little: And I touched the patch and it felt new; it felt wet. … I made a comment to Larry about, “Hey what’s this?” And he says, “Oh yeah, Maya punched a hole … in the door there.”
Inside the bedroom, Little says he noticed another hole on the wall that also appeared to have been recently repaired.
Billy Little: That would’ve been too high for Maya to punch because she was smaller … and I said, “Larry, what about this hole?” … And he said, “Oh yeah, she got mad and punched that, too.”
Jonathan Vigliotti: Larry’s creating a picture here of a woman who is violent … Is this adding up to you?
Billy Little: No … none of this story is adding up.
Jonathan Vigliotti:When you left the house that day after collecting those puzzle pieces, what were you thinking?
Billy Little: I thought Larry killed her and we need to find out what he did and what he did with the body.
Billy Little: But … I wasn’t ready to tell Maricris yet because I didn’t know, right? I could be wrong.
Little began canvassing the neighborhood and knocking on doors to track down home security footage to see if anything suspicious was caught on camera around the Millete house.
Billy Little: So, I knew we had to get that quickly and preserve it quickly.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Time was of the essence.
Billy Little: Oh god, yes.
What little found was a treasure trove of clues. He says a camera from a neighboring house recorded the voices of the Millete children playing in the yard, at 1030 p.m., on the night their mom was last heard from.
Billy Little: On … a school night … and it’s cold outside … and the weather — I believe it was in the … high 40s that night.
Another camera recorded Larry backing their Lexus into the garage at 5:58 a.m. the next morning.
Billy Little: So, you can’t see what’s going on, but you can see it going in the garage.
Larry then leaves the house at 6:45 a.m. and doesn’t return home for almost 11-and-a-half hours.
Jonathan Vigliotti:You could have … moved on. Why did you stay on this case and take matters into your own hands?
Billy Little: In my mind, my job wasn’t nearly complete.
Jonathan Vigliotti: It was just beginning.
Billy Little: It was just beginning (tears up) … When I see Maricris and I see her crying, I’m just like, I got to figure this out.
Billy Little: It’s just not in me to quit, so I don’t.
As Billy Little continued investigating, Maricris and Richard turned to local media and organized the first search for Maya on the hiking trails behind her house.
Richard Drouaillet: We’re desperate for answers … We wanted action and we wanted to do something. Stayin’ at home, sitting down wasn’t gonna bring us answers.
Aleida Wahn: Her sister goes on television and is begging the public for help, “help me find my missing sister” and that really moved people.
Aleida Wahn, an attorney and true-crime author, saw Maya’s case on the news and started following it closely.
Aleida Wahn: You realize that this was somebody that was very vibrant … was really out there living her life. And that is part of why it’s all so shocking that she’s missing … It shocks your conscience.
As the case gathered steam in the media, on January 23, 2021, two weeks after Maya’s disappearance, the Chula Vista Police Department searched the Millete house.
Aleida Wahn: And what they did find was that Larry had a lot of firearms. They seized two Glock handguns, a rifle and a shotgun. … and they found that he was in possession of an illegal assault weapon.
Two weeks after Maya’s disappearance, the Chula Vista Police Department searched the Millete house. Investigators had found this image of Larry’s guns on his phone. They seized some of Larry’s firearms.
San Diego Superior Court
Investigators also downloaded images from Larry’s phone. Three days later, the police were back.
Aleida Wahn: On January 26, they served another search warrant … and the police take the navigation system, the GPS, from Larry’s Lexus
Meanwhile, Maya’s friends had been revealing details about the couple’s relationship.
Claudia Julao: I will say March or so of 2020, the obsession became obvious.
Larry’s behavior had grown alarming before his wife went missing.
Claudia Julao: He would do subliminal messages for her to be that perfect spouse. And it was everywhere she walked, at different times, they would turn on. … That is insane. … It sounds like from a movie.
SIGNS OF TROUBLE
Claudia Julao: She didn’t just walk out. That’s something she would never do.
About a month after Maya’s disappearance, her husband Larry Millete hired a lawyer and stopped cooperating with investigators.
Claudia Julao: I believe that he did something to her.
Billy Little was told by Maya’s friends and family that troubling signs in the marriage began emerging the year before.
Billy Little: And it started back in January of 2020 when they started having marital problems.
Maricris Drouaillet: Larry would call every single one of us … trying to ask for help to intervene, you know, into the marriage.
Billy Little obtained numerous texts from Maya and Larry’s friends and family indicating the couple was having trouble in the marriage.
Maricris Drouaillet
Larry was complaining that Maya was having a midlife crisis.
Richard Drouaillet: He’s like, “Well, she’s been going out with her friends more often. And she has a lotta single friends.”
Maricris Drouaillet: But my sister is saying you know, “It’s not me, it’s Larry.”
Maya’s friend Claudia spent time with the couple socially.
Claudia Julao: His relationship was very, kind of to the side and just very watchful. … From what my observation of him, he always had to be in control.
Claudia recalls an instance when Larry couldn’t get a hold of Maya at work.
Claudia Julao: You know when … somebody might be agitated or you overhear their voice … I did hear, you know … “Where are you? …it takes you this long to get from your car to your office …Who were you talking to?“
Maricris Drouaillet: He wants her … to be submissive for her to comply to him … to be the same person as, you know, she used to.
Maya’s advocates argue that Maya was a devoted mother who was dedicated to her job and family and would never leave her children.
Maricris Drouaillet
But Maya’s loved ones say that Maya was changing.
Richard Drouaillet: She was growin’ into someone new. A strong woman, for sure.
As the months passed in 2020, Larry’s grip on Maya tightened.
Billy Little: He’s now tracking her spending habits. He’s gotten into all of her social media accounts. … She doesn’t have any privacy.
And he suspected she was straying.
Billy Little: Larry … accused her of having affairs with several men at work, wrote emails to her boss at work … he knows that, if he tells the boss that she’s having an affair with somebody at work, that she will get fired.
Billy Little: He tells all of Maya’s family, she’s cheating, she’s sinful, help me get her back on the Christian religious way … starts forcing her to go to church.
These are texts that Larry sent to Maya’s family.
Billy Little: He’s quoting the Bible … and it says “for the lips of the adulterous woman drip honey … Her feet go down to death. … Her steps lead straight to the grave” … He’s talking about Maya.
Billy Little: In his own words … he said that he was “getting desperate” … And he felt that the “devil was tempting him.”
At some point, Maya’s family says they told her they were concerned about what was unfolding.
Maricris Drouaillet: At that time, we knew … that my sister is ready to move on. … We told her, “Whatever your decision is, we’re here to support you.”
By the fall of 2020, Billy Little says Larry was growing increasingly desperate to hold onto Maya.
Billy Little: And, so, what does he do? He goes to witchcraft.
Billy Little: There are people on the internet that’ll sell you for five bucks, you know, how to make a spell that will get her to be attracted to you … to bind your marriage in blood. And that’s what he tried to do … does a witchcraft blood altar.
A photo of Larry Millete’s witchcraft altar. Billy Little says he found evidence that Larry Millete purchased spells online. According to Little, Larry first tried spells to get Maya to fall back in love with him. But as the couple’s marital problems worsened, police say, Larry eventually wanted to harm her.
Billy Little
Billy Little [referencing photo]: That is the picture that he took of the altar … An old photo of them with blood thrown on it.
Jonathan Vigliotti: And he writes of this spellcaster … “She is kind, professional and courteous. My casting has not yet manifested, but I’m really hoping and counting on it.” …leaving a review like one would leave on Yelp for a food order.
Billy Little: Like, it’s an Uber ride. … Like, “Oh, five stars. Good job spellcaster.”
Billy Little: So, he’s not quite as smart as he thinks he is. He doesn’t realize that all of that stuff is pointing the finger at him.
By December 2020, Maya and Larry were sleeping in separate rooms. Little says Maya found speakers in her room and confronted Larry. He admitted he had been playing subliminal messages while she slept. Maya messaged a friend and said her marriage was definitely over.
Jonathan Vigliotti: What was that message that was coming out of those speakers under the bed?
Billy Little: It’s right there.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Oh, “No more men.”
Billy Little: “No more men.”
On New Year’s weekend, Maya told her family her decision.
Maricris Drouaillet: She’s ready for divorce, she’s finally made up her mind. … I just told her, “Just be careful. Just be careful.”
On January 7, the last day she was heard from, Maya filled out a divorce intake form and made an appointment with a divorce attorney.
Allison Alexander: I think she told him that she was going to file for divorce.
Claudia Julao: He snapped when he found out that he was finally losing her.
What had happened in the house that night? Little thinks he knows after a neighbor reached out with some information.
Jonathan Vigliotti: The neighbors, do they say, oh yeah, we heard gunshots?
Billy Little: Yeah. Not only did they tell me that they’ve got gunshots, but they’ve got the … audio.
A home surveillance system from the neighbor captured loud bangs around 10 p.m. that night. Little also believes they are gunshots.
Billy Little: It’s coming from Larry and Maya’s house.
Remember, Billy Little had tracked down that other home security footage that police agreed captured audio of the Millete kids playing in the backyard at 10:30 p.m.
Billy Little: The picture is becoming more and more clear. … He’s got to clean up, and he’s got to move the body … so he needs to send those kids outside on a school night … at 10:30.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Do you try to speak to law enforcement?
Billy Little: I did. … I told them what I had found. … And time and time again, there was just no follow up by the police.
The Chula Vista Police Department declined “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview, but in April 2021, they told local media that it had been an active investigation since mid-January, and they were keeping their cards close to the vest.
Richard Drouaillet: It’s tough … there was very minimal details. And that was part of our frustration working with the police department.
Aleida Wahn: The family now is having various rallies in front of the Chula Vista Police Department, basically demanding answers. But … the police are not going to release a lot of information to the family. This is potentially a murder investigation.
In May 2021, the police served Larry Millete with a gun violence restraining order. Among the reasons: investigators had found an image of guns on Larry’s phone. Another photo, which had been redacted, featured the couple’s 4-year-old son surrounded by weapons.
Authorities retrieved more firearms from the Millete house.
Billy Little: I think that was a smart move by the police … it protects the children while they try to buy a little bit of time. … but it also protects them if they have to go in and arrest him.
In the summer of 2021, investigators named Larry Millete a person of interest in his wife’s case.
Aleida Wahn: You keep wondering … is this going to be the time that they are going to arrest Larry?
On October 19, nine months after the disappearance of Maya, investigators did just that.
CHIEF KENNEDY (press conference): Today at 11:42 a.m., the Chula Vista Police Department SWAT team … arrested Larry Millete for the murder of his wife Maya Millete.
And with that, even moreevidence came to light.
A LOOK AT THE EVIDENCE
Maya’s family and friends anticipated the news of an arrest for months.
Allison Alexander: I understand that there is a case that needs to be built. There is only one shot. But it just seemed like it was too long.
In October 2021, Larry Millete was arrested for his wife’s murder. He pleaded not guilty
CBS News
Yet when Maya’s husband Larry Millete was arrested for her murder in October 2021, it was still a mixed range of emotions.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Claudia, what was your reaction?
Claudia Julao: Relieved, yet at the same time, sad … and so although you keep that hope up now it became real.
Richard Drouaillet: I think we had different reactions. I said, “Finally” (emotional). She started crying.
Maricris Drouaillet: He’s been with us for 20 years. My sister did love him. She gave him three kids. He just couldn’t let it go.
In a press conference, San Diego County District Attorney Summer Stephanlaid out some of the details of the months-long law enforcement investigation.
SUMMER STEPHAN: In homicide cases, there’s often a triggering event. In this case, the last call recorded that May made was to a divorce attorney.
That call was at 3:48 p.m. home security cameras captured Maya arriving at her house at 4:42 p.m. There were no images of her leaving.
Investigators had also turned up more evidence of Larry trying to keep Maya in the marriage through the supernatural before she went missing.
SUMMER STEPHAN: I’ve never had a case where that was involved.
But the spells they discovered went beyond more than asking Maya to be attracted to him. According to the arrest warrant, Larry now wanted Maya to be harmed.
Aleida Wahn: Before Maya went missing, Larry sent this message to a website that claims to cast spells … “Please punish May and incapacitate her enough so she can’t leave the house. It’s time to take the gloves off.”
It was evidence, they say, of his “unbalanced mindset” and “homicidal ideation.”
Aleida Wahn: The day Maya went missing, Larry sent countless emails to spellcasters. “I think she wants me to snap … I’m shaking inside, ready to snap.”
What’s more, according to the arrest warrant, Larry had allegedly snapped before.
Jonathan Vigliotti: One of Maya’s friends said that Maya told her Larry choked her, to the point where she was unconscious.
Maricris Drouaillet: I just heard that. … Oh, I was mad. How could he do that?
Sisters Maricris Drouaillet, left, and Maya Millete. “I want her to be found. I want to bring her home to her kids, to our families,” said Maricris.
Maricris Drouaillet
Maya had never shared that with Maricris.
Maricris Drouaillet: She didn’t share … what she’s going through, ’cause she didn’t want the family to worry about her … she was also protecting Larry … and she was protecting the children.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Were you aware of any physical abuse?
Claudia Julao: No.
Allison Alexander: No.
Allison Alexander: She would say little things here and there, but … not always to the same person.
Claudia Julao: There were already incidents that were huge red flags that if we all knew it at the same time, it would have been a bigger picture.
Claudia Julao: I feel guilty, you know, after the fact, once she went missing it was a very harsh reality for me (cries). … I wasn’t able to help her … And I will forever live with that.
Evelyn Rodriguez: Nobody had the full picture right besides the two of them.
Evelyn Rodriguez is an associate professor of sociology who teaches on topics of race and identity at the University of San Francisco. She reviewed the case for “48 Hours.”
Evelyn Rodriguez: The signs of domestic abuse can be so hard to identify … because we as a society … are unable to distinguish the line that divides that kind of, like zealous, passionate love from controlling behavior.
Evelyn Rodriguez: Larry Millete checks all the boxes for domestic partner abuse.
Evelyn Rodriguez: He knew what Maya’s pressure points were. … And so he weaponized her work … He weaponized her children, her family, her religion before he got desperate enough to try these other means of controlling her and keeping her in that marriage.
Rodriguez suggests when Larry turned to spellcasting as another method to control Maya, he may have been inspired by an old-world form of folk magic in the Philippines.
Evelyn Rodriguez: And this is stuff of, like, the old world to our parents even.
Evelyn Rodriguez: Somehow that has evolved into what I think Larry was able to find.
But Rodriguez points out that it is important not to lose sight of what the issue is here.
Evelyn Rodriguez: Really the story here is that this was an abusive partner, regardless of his culture, who was exhibiting every single … sign of domestic abuse.
With Maya’s alleged killer behind bars, her family knew their work was not done. They were more determined than ever to find her — energized with new information that had come out after Larry’s arrest. Aleida Wahn was part of that search.
The search parties are made up of dozens of friends, family members, colleagues of Maya’s and also strangers. They began looking for her in vast desert areas east of Chula Vista, near the Arizona border.
Help Find Maya/Instagram
Aleida Wahn: The thing that this case really needed was to be able to know where to search. That was the problem here. You can’t just search the entire world.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Where are we right now?
Richard Drouaillet: It’s a hot spot that Larry could have brought Maya’s body out here.
Like Billy Little, investigators obtained footage that showed Larry leaving the house in the couple’s Lexus for almost 11-and-a-half hours the day after his wife was last heard from. They analyzed the car’s navigation system.
Richard Drouaillet: According to the information that we have now … he was about two-and-a-half hours out from his house when he put his address in.
Somewhere two-and-a-half-hours away from his house, Larry had entered his address to find his way back home. That information was enough to center the searches on places Larry was familiar with, like the desert area where he and Maya had gone hiking.
Jonathan Vigliotti: What are you specifically looking for as you comb this area?
Richard Drouaillet: At this point, unfortunately, I hate to say it, but we’re probably just looking for clothing or bones.
Maya Millete’s sister, Maricris Drouaillet, right, during a search in the Anza-Borrego Desert on October 23, 2021.
CBS News/Cindy Cesare
Over the months, droves of volunteers have responded to her family’s calls to the community and have joined Team Maya.
Richard Drouaillet: We’re just so thankful and blessed to have everybody here.
James Shelby | Volunteer searcher: I’m San Diego City retired firefighter … I got a team, and we go out and we systematically cover … areas where someone could possibly hide a body. And it’s very sad to even talk about but you have to do it. And it’s the proverbial needle in a haystack.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Why are you here today?
Damien Hurt | Volunteer searcher: Really just to support the family. … Hopefully we can bring peace to the family.
Jonathan Vigliotti: What drives you to do this for a total stranger, somebody you don’t even know?
Keri Park | Volunteer searcher: It felt that it should be a community effort … you just want closure for this family so much. … And that’s why we’re out here. It’s why we keep coming. They deserve it. … Maya deserves it.
As the search for Maya continues in the vast lands of eastern San Diego, the quest for justice is just beginning in the halls of the San Diego court system.
Aleida Wahn: The problem with this case … is you don’t have a body.
THE SEARCH CONTINUES
Larry Millete has been behind bars since his arrest in October 2021, awaiting trial. He pleaded not guilty to charges of murder and illegal possession of an assault weapon. If convicted, Larry could face up to 25 years to life in prison.
Billy Little: His ego was so damaged by the fact his wife didn’t want to be with him anymore and he couldn’t handle it. So, he killed her.
Although there is still hope Maya could be found any day, a victim’s body is not required to convict someone of murder.
Billy Little: This is one of the strongest circumstantial cases I’ve ever seen… you don’t have a body. So what? … You don’t get to get away with murder because you’re good at disposing of bodies.
But Larry maintains Maya left on her own. His defense attorney Bonita Martinez turned down “48 Hours”‘ request for an interview but spoke with reporters after a hearing where Larry was denied bail.
BONITA MARTINEZ [to reporters]: … his wife was used to leaving the house in the past. … And you cannot rule out that she’s alive.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Larry maintains that Maya voluntarily left him, left the children to start her own new life. Do you believe that?
Claudia Julao: No.
Allison Alexander: Nope.
Claudia Julao: Not at all.
Allison Alexander: I would never believe that. Never.
Claudia Julao: Maya loved her kids. There’s no way she would have … up and left.
Aleida Wahn: The best argument for the defense here is Maya is not dead. They don’t have a body. She’s alive and well.
Attorney Aleida Wahn says a “no body” defense has worked before in other cases. She says without a body, the prosecution may be at a disadvantage.
Aleida Wahn: They need strong evidence … And the question is what do they have? Do they have something that they’re going to bring out in a courtroom that definitely ties Larry to murder?
Those loud bangs recorded on the neighboring security camera may not be proof of anything. An FBI analysis was inconclusive.
Aleida Wahn: They couldn’t definitively say those were gunshots because the sound quality was not good enough.
In November 2021, Larry’s attorney filed documents with the San Diego Superior Court with more allegations about Maya.
Aleida Wahn: They believe that she had this wild lifestyle, that she was out there having affairs, she’s dating different men off the internet … that she’s drinking excessively, that she’s become this completely different person. And so, they’re pointing to third party culpability. If she’s harmed, it was somebody else.
Jonathan Vigliotti: Larry and his parents claim in court documents that Maya was essentially a party girl.
Claudia Julao: Definitely not. … the Maya that I know … was a devoted mother.
Not long after Maya’s disappearance, Maricris and Richard say Larry cut off contact between the children and Maya’s side of the family.
RichardDrouaillet: We’re just trying to see them. … Going from hangin’ out, hugging ’em, jumping on my back … seein’ them at least once or twice a month — at least, to not seein’ them at all for nine months.
The Millete children are still living at home in the care of Larry’s parents. But after months of not seeing them, Maya’s family was granted visitation rights in November 2021. But the fight is not over. Maricris has filed a petition for guardianship of her sister’s children.
Maricris Drouaillet: … just show them that the whole entire family are waiting for them. And, you know, are eager to be with them again.
Allison Alexander: What those children will go through, all those moments in life when they need their mom and she’s not going to be there. … It breaks my heart.
In January 2022, Maya’s family and friends held a vigil to mark the one-year anniversary of her disappearance.
Claudia Julao (cries): There’s somebody out there that knows something, that’s seen something … They should come forward. … Have it in your heart to help us bring her home.
Maya Millete
Maricris Drouaillet
Claudia Julao: She will forever be my hero. that’s what I’m going to take with me, is a bright, shining star of a woman that gave every other woman, regardless of what she was going through an inspiration to be whoever they wanted. … That’s who Maya is.
If you have information on the case, contact the Chula Vista Police Department at 619-691-5139.
Produced by Asena Basak. Cindy Cesare is the development producer. Hannah Vair is a producer, and Lauren Turner Dunn is the associate producer. Ken Blum, Jud Johnston, Atticus Brady and Gary Winter are the editors. Lourdes Aguiar is the senior producer. Nancy Kramer is the executive story editor. Judy Tygard is the executive producer.
Carlee Russell posted multiple tweets in the hour leading up to her 911 call and subsequent disappearance in Alabama last week, the New York Post and People reported on Friday.
The news comes two days after officials in Hoover said that they were “unable to verify” Russell’s and her family’s accounts regarding her high-profile disappearance.
A Twitter account reportedly linked to the 25-year-old nursing student shows one tweet — shared roughly 40 minutes prior to Russell’s 911 call on July 13 — saying that “today was a GREAT day.”
Another, posted a minute later, reads “someone to tell you ‘i love you’ and don’t got a reason.”
The account’s most recent tweet, posted 15 minutes prior to the 911 call, reads “yeah i want a family now 😭.”
HuffPost was unable to independently verify the owner of the account. However, it shares a similar username with, and uses a picture from, an Instagram account linked to Russell.
Social media users have also pointed out that in the days leading up to the woman’s disappearance, the account posted tweets about work complaints and about feeling “wanted.”
Russell allegedly stole a bathrobe, toilet paper and other items from her employer, Woodhouse Spa, before leaving work on July 13.
Stuart Rome, who owns Woodhouse Spa, told the New York Post that Russell has since been fired.
“It was really devastating for them thinking a co-worker was abducted,” Rome said, referring to staff members at the spa.
“As the information came out that there were some questionable things [surrounding the purported disappearance], we’ve been a little pissed off, mainly because so many people took so much time out to search.”
Russell went missing July 13 after calling 911 to report a toddler walking along a busy highway at night. Grainy traffic video shows Russell’s car stopping on the side of the road, with officials later discovering her phone and other belongings inside her unattended vehicle. Officials said no one else reported a missing child and they did not see a child in the area.
Russell showed up at her home on July 15, telling detectives that she had been abducted on the night of her disappearance.
During a press conference Wednesday, the chief of Hoover police said the investigation into Russell’s disappearance remains active.
“We’re still working this case and will be working this case until we uncover every piece of evidence that helps us account for the 49 hours that Carlee Russell was missing,” the chief, Nick Derzis, said.
Four young children have been found alive after more than a month wandering the Amazon where they survived like “children of the jungle,” according to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro.
“Their learning from indigenous families and their learning of living in the jungle has saved them,” Petro told reporters on Friday, after announcing on Twitter that they had been found 40 days after they went missing following a plane crash that killed their mother.
Petro said the children were all together when they were found, adding they had demonstrated an example of “total survival that will be remembered in history.”
“They are children of the jungle and now they are children of Colombia,” he added.
Revealing their discovery earlier in the day, the Colombian president had tweeted an image that seems to show search crews treating the children in a forest clearing, along with the words: “A joy for the whole country!”
Their grandmother, María Fátima Valencia, said she was “going to hug all of them” and “thank everyone” as soon as they were reunited in their home city of Villavicencio, where they live.
“I’m going to encourage them, I’m going to push them forward, I need them here,” she said.
The children, who appear gaunt in the photos, are being evaluated by doctors and will be taken to the town of San Jose del Guaviare. They are expected to receive further treatment in Bogota, the capital, according to Defense Minister Ivan Velasquez.
“We hope that tomorrow they will be treated at the military hospital,” he said, while praising the Colombian military and indigenous communities for helping find them.
Petro said the children were weak, needed food and would have their mental status assessed. “Let the doctors make their assessment and we will know,” he added.
Lesly Jacobombaire Mucutuy, age 13, Soleiny Jacobombaire Mucutuy, 9, Tien Ranoque Mucutuy, 4, and infant Cristin Ranoque Mucutuy were stranded in the jungle on May 1, the only survivors of a deadly plane crash.
Their mother, Magdalena Mucutuy Valencia, was killed in the crash along with two other adult passengers: pilot Hernando Murcia Morales and Yarupari indigenous leader Herman Mendoza Hernández.
The children’s subsequent disappearance into the deep forest galvanized a massive military-led search operation involving over a hundred Colombian special forces troops and over 70 indigenous scouts combing the area.
For weeks, the search turned up only tantalizing clues, including footprints, a dirty diaper and a bottle. Family members said the oldest child had some experience in the forest, but hopes waned as the weeks went on.
At some point during their ordeal, they’d had to defend themselves from a dog, Petro said.
He called the children’s survival a “gift to life” and an indication that they were “cared for by the jungle.”
The Colombian president said he had spoken with the grandfather of the children who said that their survival was in the hands of the jungle which ultimately chose to return them.
The grandfather, Fidencio Valencia, said he and his wife had endured many sleepless nights worrying about the children.
“For us this situation was like being in the dark, we walked for the sake of walking. Living for the sake of living because the hope of finding them kept us alive. When we found the children we felt joy, we don’t know what to do, but we are grateful to God,” he said.
The children’s other grandfather, Narcizo Mucutuy, said he wants his grandchildren to be brought back home soon.
“I beg the president of Colombia to bring our grandchildren to Villavicencio, here where the grandparents are, where their uncles and aunts are, and then take them to Bogota,” he said.
Indigenous leader Lucho Acosta, the coordinator of indigenous scouts, credited the “extra effort” of search and rescue teams and local authorities to find the children in a statement on Friday.
“They all added a little effort so that this Operation Hope could be successful, and we can hope the kids will emerge alive and stronger than before. We have been hoping together with the strength of our ancestors, and our strength prevailed,” he said.
“We never stopped looking for them until the miracle came,” the Colombian Defense Ministry tweeted.
During a press conference Friday evening, Petro said he hoped to speak with the children on Saturday.
“The most important thing now is what the doctors say, they have been lost for 40 days, their health condition must have been stressed. We need to check their mental state too,” he said.
Petro, who was previously forced to backtrack after mistakenly tweeting that they had been found last month, described the children’s 40-day saga as “a remarkable testament of survival.”
The son and 8-year-old grandson of a former Boston Red Sox player were found dead in an apparent murder-suicide in their Massachusetts home Friday as authorities searched for clues about the boy’s mother – who was reported missing more than four years ago, according to local officials.
Police found the bodies of George Scott III and his son, Dante Hazard, at their New Bedford home after a relative couldn’t reach Scott and asked authorities to do a welfare check Friday morning, according to a news release from the Bristol County District Attorney’s Office.
Scott is the son of the former Boston Red Sox player George “Boomer” Scott, according to Gregg Miliote, a spokesperson for the Bristol County District Attorney’s Office.
Scott played first base for the Red Sox from 1966 to 1971 then again from 1977 to 1979, winning three of his eight career Gold Glove Awards with the team, according to the MLB. He died in 2013 at age 69.
The discovery of his son and grandson comes only weeks after a search warrant was executed at the same home in connection to Dante’s mother, who remains missing.
Scott “appears to have killed the boy with a sharp object before taking his own life,” according to the district attorneys office. Officials are waiting for more details from the medical examiner’s office on the deaths, the release said.
In March 2019, Hazard, who was 28 at the time, went missing after leaving Scott’s home. She was supposed to leave to go to a drug rehabilitation center, according to the district attorney’s office. She hasn’t been seen since.
Detectives investigating her disappearance executed a search warrant at Scott’s residence – the same home where he and his son were found dead – last month, the release states. Her missing persons case is ongoing and the search warrant has been sealed by the court, according to the release.
CNN has reached out to the New Bedford Police Department for more information.
The U.S. Coast Guard and the Mexican Navy are searching for three American sailors who haven’t been seen or heard from in nearly two weeks. Elise Preston spoke with the mother of one of the sailors, who still holds out hope they’ll be found.
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The U.S. Coast Guard and the Mexican Navy are searching for three American sailors who were last heard from on April 4 near Mazatlán, Mexico.
Kerry O’Brien, Frank O’Brien and William Gross were aboard the sailing vessel “Ocean Bound,” a 44-foot La Fitte that left Mazatlán en route to San Diego, according to a news release Friday from the U.S. Coast Guard. The sailors planned to stop in Cabo San Lucas on April 6 for provisions and then report in before continuing on to San Diego.
But there has been no record of them arriving in Cabo San Lucas or a report in regarding their location, according to the release.
On Saturday, the U.S. Coast Guard’s Northern California division posted information and photos regarding the missing trio and their vessel.
The Mexican Navy, with the assistance of the #USCG, is searching for three American sailors, last heard from April 4, near Mazatlan, MX. en route to San Diego. Kerry and Frank O’Brien and William Gross were sailing aboard the 44-foot S/V Ocean Bound.https://t.co/0bzFQVsYC3pic.twitter.com/GCcbGBvkQH
“Search and rescue coordinators contacted marinas throughout Baja, Mexico, with negative sightings of the vessel,” according to the U.S. Coast Guard’s release. “Urgent marine broadcasts have been issued over VHF radio requesting all mariners to keep a look out for the missing persons and the vessel.”
Anyone with information should call the U.S. Coast Guard search and rescue coordination center at (510) 437-3701.
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