Oct 9, 2025
#news #novascotia #cbcnews
Nova Scotia RCMP say two teams with cadaver dogs searched a total area of 40 square kilometres but did not locate human remains in the search for missing children Lilly and Jack Sullivan.
Oct 9, 2025
#search #missing #novascotia
In an interview on Wednesday, Oct. 8, Daniel Martell detailed how the dog teams searched around the property and inside the home during the week of Sept. 22.
Whoa.
A lot to unpack in that second video.
I have been
really wrong before (another thread) so I don't state or pretend to know what's right here...
But... how can he say all the searchers should have understood they're "not t/here"? They haven't been found so
no one knows where they are. Unless
someone does.
Then a long paragraph about summer ending and school starting, the community, the world, the students who will miss Lilly and Jack. (What about what
Jack and Lilly are missing???) But then THIS: "[infant child] doesn't understand ... but some day she will." Understand what???? We don't even know the outcome. I mean, sadly, we can expect or assume they aren't conning home... but since they haven't been located, there's still that glimmer that maybe there's a miracle to be had, right? The sort of glimmer parents hang onto desperately, sometimes for decades, but he's forecasting that someday [infant child] will have to contend with "this".
My main question: if he doesn't know where they are, how can he know where they're not?
If he doesn't know what happened to them (lost, foul play, accident, abduction, dingoes), how can he be certain that nothing that occurred the night before isn't relevant? Why no new details to fill out the night before that was so "normal"? Why no repetition of the morning?
Lotta hand gestures (as well, arms folded across his chest). Chris Watts nervous energy? Or grief?
I still don't know what happened to Lilly and Jack.
But this interview left me with more questions than answers.
JMO