longtallcold
What happened to Nancy Jenkins?
Still so strange no sign or news on Zaylee
From that link:
"...One of Shauna's children died before she went missing..."
Does anyone know when or how this happened?
Does anyone know if all deaths are really listed in the SSDI? A few times I haven't been able to find mention of ppl I KNOW have died, strange.
MILLERSVILLE, TN (WSMV) - Tips have come in from across the country, but one year later, there is still no sign of a missing baby girl from Sumner County.
There is new evidence, new leads and a renewed passion to solve a cold case out of Millersville in Robertson County.
Chief David Hindman said the evidence points to Shauna Fryer being killed in the city of Millersville, perhaps near her home, then dumped in the river in Nashville.
We have solid evidence that things are of foul play and we need answers because of this report we received, he said. The report was by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.
Hindman added, We are looking at a couple of individuals as suspects.
I'm glad to see Zaylee's thread bumped, but sad that she has not been found yet. I think of her often.
On Monday, the Millersville Police Department announced they had received files from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. Those files contained evidence strong enough to cause Millersville Police to re-activate the case, and classify Shauna Fryar’s death as a homicide.
“We’re going to try to find as much of leads as possible, follow them as far as possible, and try to mandate anything we can with our discoveries, and see if we can get closure,” said Millersville Police Chief David Hindman.
A Millersville cold case centered on the death of a 28-year-old woman and the disappearance of her infant daughter has been reclassified as a homicide based on a forensic report that has been in the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation’s possession for more than three years.
Millersville Police Chief David Hindman said Tuesday that his department didn’t receive the report until two weeks ago.
Hindman took office as Millersville’s police chief in September. When he began to look through the city’s cold case files about a month ago, he noticed that the Fryar case files were missing, he said.
“The TBI had them,” he said.
When Hindman got the city’s files back two weeks ago, the TBI also sent its case files, which included the report, he said.
“There are some deep questions that need to be answered (as a result of the report),” Hindman said. “We’ve found the pieces of the puzzle. We just have to put the puzzle together now … Why this was not handled four years ago, I don’t know.”
“We were more than receptive, however, to discuss the case and the evidence when the new leadership in the department expressed an interest several weeks ago in pursuing the investigation more directly.”