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Paula Fielder kneels at the altar, praying to see her cousin Molly Miller again.
“It’s a nightmare you can’t wake up from,” Fielder said.
The last time anyone saw Miller, she was inside a car with three other people.
“This has taken a toll on our entire family,” Fielder said.
“She was real feisty, you know. She just liked to play around. She was kind of a goofball, you know,” Fielder said. “She was very active in softball. And, and I really think that she could have been somebody someday with her career.”
“On July the 7th, it was on a Sunday. She had been picked up. Her and Colt had been picked up by Con Nipp,” Fielder said.
Miller and her friend Colt Haynes were passengers. The driver, Conn Nipp, led police on a high-speed chase. Police records show the car reached speeds over 100 miles per hour before the officers lost sight of it in the woods. That’s where things take a strange turn.
“At 12:57 a.m. Molly made a 911 call. It was five seconds, according to dispatch. All they heard on the other end was buttons being pushed,” Fielder said. “She made that last phone call at 9:33 a.m. and then 9:39 was the last phone call made from her phone.”
Police arrested Nipp, and he went to prison for fleeing from police. He gave no indications of Miller or Haynes whereabouts.
She was declared deceased on January 13th of this year,” Fielder said. “Molly’s grandpa, who she was very, very close to, died of COVID. I’m heartbroken that he did not get to see justice on this earth. But I’m also at peace with it because I know that he’s with her now.”
“I wish I could just turn back time and bring her back and just tell her that I love her,” Fielder said.
If you have any information about Miller's disappearance on July 7, 2013, please call the OSBI tip line at 1-800-522-8017
https://www.kjrh.com/news/local-news/oklahomas-cold-case-files-the-mysterious-case-of-molly-miller
“It’s a nightmare you can’t wake up from,” Fielder said.
The last time anyone saw Miller, she was inside a car with three other people.
“This has taken a toll on our entire family,” Fielder said.
“She was real feisty, you know. She just liked to play around. She was kind of a goofball, you know,” Fielder said. “She was very active in softball. And, and I really think that she could have been somebody someday with her career.”
“On July the 7th, it was on a Sunday. She had been picked up. Her and Colt had been picked up by Con Nipp,” Fielder said.
Miller and her friend Colt Haynes were passengers. The driver, Conn Nipp, led police on a high-speed chase. Police records show the car reached speeds over 100 miles per hour before the officers lost sight of it in the woods. That’s where things take a strange turn.
“At 12:57 a.m. Molly made a 911 call. It was five seconds, according to dispatch. All they heard on the other end was buttons being pushed,” Fielder said. “She made that last phone call at 9:33 a.m. and then 9:39 was the last phone call made from her phone.”
Police arrested Nipp, and he went to prison for fleeing from police. He gave no indications of Miller or Haynes whereabouts.
She was declared deceased on January 13th of this year,” Fielder said. “Molly’s grandpa, who she was very, very close to, died of COVID. I’m heartbroken that he did not get to see justice on this earth. But I’m also at peace with it because I know that he’s with her now.”
“I wish I could just turn back time and bring her back and just tell her that I love her,” Fielder said.
If you have any information about Miller's disappearance on July 7, 2013, please call the OSBI tip line at 1-800-522-8017
https://www.kjrh.com/news/local-news/oklahomas-cold-case-files-the-mysterious-case-of-molly-miller
