From last night's JVM:
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Well that -- that could be significant to the disappearance of Kristy Kelley. We are talking to now exclusively, Kathy Scales, the mother of this missing woman, Kristy Kelley, who is a mother two of children. I am so sorry that you`re going through this hellish experience. Your beautiful daughter is missing.
She was in this bar with her friends. She went with a couple, VFW Bar. The couple left, she was talking to the bartender and the manager. They were the only ones there except for an older man who cleans up at the end of the evening.
Tell us the order in which people left because that was the last place she was seen.
KATHY SCALES, MOTHER OF KRISTY KELLEY: From what I`ve been told, you know, I`m not definite on everything, but from what I understand, the couple had left maybe like an hour before she had left. She was just sitting there at the bar chitchatting with the -- her friend the bartender. The bartender had to go back and kind of learn how to fill out deposit slips, so when she come back in, she noticed Kristy wasn`t at the bar -- didn`t really think much of it. And then I believe when she come back after she finished up, Kristy was still gone. She went out in the parking lot, checked in, her vehicle was also gone.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Well, you`ve given us one important piece of information, the bartender is a female. So right there, statistically anyway that pretty much eliminates that person, at least in my mind.
Now you`re looking at this video of surveillance footage that could show your daughter`s car driving away from the bar the night she disappeared.
The video was captured by restaurant surveillance camera -- the footage is dark, it`s impossible to see the driver. So this could be Kristy in her silver Nissan SUV, or it could be somebody else driving it with her inside.
Now I understand, ma`am, that your daughter left her cell phone in the bathroom of the bar, so there`s no pings. Do you think that`s odd that she left her cell phone there?
SCALES: You know, my mind has wondered both ways thinking, well maybe she was just using the restroom, didn`t want it to fall out of her pocket, laid it up on the shelf. But it`s very, very unlike her not to notice it, you know, like immediately not being in her pocket. Because you know, young girls, their phones are like attached to their hip anymore it seems like. And I just can`t imagine her not walking back in there.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Let me ask you this question because we`re short on time. Did she have a love interest? Did she have any kind of a boyfriend or ex-boyfriend, no names please, but somebody that obviously cops would want to the talk to?
SCALES: No. Not really. I mean she had guy friends, you know, but no, there was nothing like a love relationship going on at the time.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And she had never said to you that she`d had a fight with anybody or that she felt in any way -- she was headed back to your house, is that correct?
SCALES: That`s what I believe because of the camera showing it was coming towards, you know, our street where she would have been turning, and she was supposed to be at work at 7:00 the next morning. And I cannot imagine her going anywhere else because it was getting late and she needed to get home and get to bed.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: You live, less than two miles away from the bar that she was last seen at. So what are authorities doing?
I want to go, let me go to Marc Harrold, former police officer for a second. What are your thoughts? You`ve heard some of the facts here.
HARROLD: Well it looks like other than the proximity, authorities haven`t been able to tie these together but it does seem like fairly similar crimes or at least fairly similar victims. Yes, what are they doing? They`re basically searching what looks to be like large amounts of wooded area and towns between the two circumstances and try to get a chronology in the direction that she went.
But at this point it doesn`t look like they have a great deal of information after she left the bar to go on.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And her vehicle is missing. That`s what I don`t get. Miss Kathy Scales -- first of all I`m so sorry you`re going through this.
I know your daughter has two children, I believe their ages three and six, those are your grand kids. What are you telling them right now?
SCALES: Actually, they have been with their daddy. He decided that last night would probably, you know, need to tell them eventually because Ava needs to go back to school. She`s wanting to go back to school.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: And she`s divorced from the children`s father, is that correct?
SCALES: Yes.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: But they`re staying with him.
SCALES: They are staying with him. My granddaughter told me today, because I had to go see my grand babies, I hadn`t seen them for five days.
My grand baby told me, she said, "Nene, you need to take me back to my daddy`s because you need to go look for my mommy." She said, "I don`t want you to have to stay here and play with me, I want you to go look for my mommy."
VELEZ-MITCHELL: That`s so heart breaking. That is so hard breaking.
SCALES: Yes. And she said, search, we went on vacation to Florida over the summer, I guess she remember Alabama. She said, "You need to go to Alabama. You need to go to Tennessee." And I said "Honey, we will find mommy. We will find her. We will bring her home."
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1408/19/ijvm.01.html