VELEZ-MITCHELL: So reports say Cassie`s mother`s boyfriend, the gentleman you just heard from, called you, Tracey, the night that Cassie vanished.
What did he have to say? I mean, what -- what was the conversation that night?
SNYDER: Well, there was three phone calls. They started about 9:14 that night. And he first asked if Cassie was still at our house. And coming
through the conversation and getting Hunter`s input during the first phone call, the first phone call...
VELEZ-MITCHELL: That`s your son.
SNYDER: Cassie`s mom boyfriend actually saw Cassie get out of his truck, walk up the driveway. She did not speak to the mom`s boyfriend at all when
she was walking up the driveway and she went into the house. So I brought that up to him and told him that he seen him get out of my son`s -- seen
Cassie get out of my son`s vehicle, so he knew she was no longer with him or with us.
And I kept repeating to him through these three phone calls to go to the police department, go to the police department, or call the police and
report her missing. In the third -- third phone call, he said that he did. He went to the police department, and they told him that it would be a 72-hour wait. That morning, Monday morning when I got to work, I called and spoke with a detective. And he said there was actually no report filed. And he come
and spoke to me, and we filed the missing report on Monday.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: So wait. I just want to clarify. By the way, missing mom -- the missing child`s mother, her boyfriend, invited on our show any time.
Again, we reached out and spoke to the mom, and we offered to have her on the show. If she`s watching, call in. We`d love to have you. We`d love
to hear what you have to say about this, because I know you`re trying to find your daughter.
And but essentially, what you`re saying, Tracey, is that you said call to report her missing. And the boyfriend said that he did, but then you`re
saying when you talked to police, they said it hadn`t been reported. But that could be a paperwork mix-up. That could be any number of things.
Look, let`s -- sometimes children don`t like the new love interest of the mom or the parent, and that could cause them to run away. Do you think
that she ran away, because we know she has family in the neighboring state of Oklahoma? And I checked the distance between where you guys live in
Kingston, Oklahoma, where her other family lives. That`s about 375 miles away. Do you think she tried to run there?
I know police and the FBI have visited her family in Kingston. And obviously, if they had found something, we would know by now.
SNYDER: The police have done a very thorough job in searching for Cassie. And no lead has been left unturned. By every lead they get called into the
police department, the FBI, or the Arkansas State Police. They are investigating each and every lead.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Yes, but I wanted to ask you, Tracey, do you think she ran away or do you think something untoward happened to her? What do you
think? It`s been a month.
SNYDER: Well, my heart wants to tell me she ran away and that she`s safe and she`s not hurt. But my head is telling me, after almost 30 days, that
something is very wrong. I just -- I just want to know that she`s OK and that she`s safe and that she`s being cared for and loved.
VELEZ-MITCHELL: Let me ask you this question. She left, apparently, just with her cell phone and no charger. Do you think if she took her purse?