Peoria police said Monday that their investigation into the disappearance of a 20-year-old Peoria woman in 2017 remains open and that they remain committed to finding the truth.
The Peoria Police Department said in a statement that the case into the disappearance of Alexis Scott on Sept. 23, 2017, remains open, with detectives continuing to follow leads. Chief Eric Echevarria said that he wanted to let Scott’s family, friends and the community know that they have not forgotten about her.
“Eight years is far too long for any family to be without answers,” Echevarria said. “We will not give up on Alexis Camry Scott, her family, or justice.”
Scott was last seen leaving a party at a home in the 100 block of West Richmond Street in the early morning hours of Sept. 23, 2017.
Peoria police said that they have worked with the Scott family to find answers over the past eight years. Family and friends criticized the department for not interviewing everyone at the home at the time of the party and for not getting the FBI involved in the investigation. The department’s efforts to search areas such as Banner Marsh and Copperas Creek near U.S. Route 24 also came up empty.
More: Ongoing missing person cases like Alexis Scott’s are unusual in central Illinois
The department said that they have been in ongoing communication with April Allen Scott, Alexis’ mother, and that she has always been kept in the loop on developments in the case. They praised her courage and persistence in keeping the case top of mind, inspiring detectives to continue with their investigation despite the passage of time.
They also said that they have never stopped seeking answers and that they wouldn’t stop until justice was served for her family and friends.
“Our promise is clear: we will not stop searching, and we will not stop fighting for justice,” the department said.
Dusti Moultrie, a member of the Alexis Camry Scott Campaign – a group raising awareness of her case – said that they are in the loop on the investigation still being undertaken by the police department. Even so, she says there is still a sense of frustration surrounding the lack of criminal charges being brought by the Peoria County State’s Attorney’s Office.
“I think the frustration comes from, we know there is a substantial amount of evidence that leads in one direction, but the State’s Attorney’s chosen not to try the case without a body,” Moultrie said. “It definitely leads to the last place Alexis was ever known to have any amount of life and have a visual sighting, the house party at the 100 block of Richmond.”
More: Gone since 2017, Alexis Scott is featured in new art exhibit on missing Illinois women
Moultrie said that the area around the home had been searched four to five times by police and independent groups, with some electronic devices and blood being found there. However, she noted that the passage of time, not to mention a house fire that occurred there in the intervening period, likely leads away from that area as being a place where they would find evidence leading to Scott.
“I’m not confident that area would solve this case,” Moultrie said. “There may be other areas to look into because there is enough circumstantial pieces that would lead (one) to believe she may not be in that area anymore and did not leave upon walking out of that home.”
Anyone with information on her disappearance is asked to contact the police department at (309) 673-4521 or provide an anonymous tip through their Tip411 service. They can also contact Crime Stoppers at (309) 673-9000.
More: Woman charged with aggravated domestic battery after man stabbed in Peoria
This article originally appeared on Journal Star: Peoria police say Alexis Scott investigation still open





