“They’re very quiet people, very friendly, he works a lot,” said Lorina Warren, who lives right next door. “That’s about all I know.”
Warren said she last saw Keyes in early March.
Jamie Beardsley watched the late-night law enforcement raid from across the street.
“Tow trucks came and they loaded up both vehicles; the one she was driving, and his vehicle that had been in the driveway, and I looked at my husband and I said, ‘That’s weird,’” Beardsley said. “They sealed up all the windows so you couldn’t see what was going inside the house -- we watched this until 3 in the morning.”
Beardsley said Keyes' truck looked like it hadn’t been touched in several days, because it had a lot of snow piled on top.
No one answered the door at Anderson’s house Friday. The only vehicle in the driveway was Keyes’ construction trailer. That too was searched by police earlier in the week.
Keyes would shop for construction materials at Spenard Builders Supply. A worker, who asked not to be identified, said Keyes was always pleasant, never seemed to be having a bad day, and wasn't buying anything that would've raised eyebrows.