Ran across this LKL transcript from 6/26/2002 where they speak a little about Kiplyn. John Walsh was a guest:
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0206/26/lkl.00.html
KING: But we have another Utah girl missing, Kiplyn Davis missing from Spanish Fork, Utah, not far from Salt Lake, under suspicious circumstances since 1995. She was 16.
What happened to her story?
WALSH: Hate this case. I hate this case.
Here's an intact family; a good family. Here's a girl that came home from school every day at 3:30. Usually if you have a runaway, they take, you know, a wallet, they take a teddy bear, they take something. There's some indication that there's problems in the family, or they got a boyfriend, et cetera.
One cop obviously said, you know what? I think this girl is a runaway. The family -- you don't know.
I watched the family the other night. They were on a show, and they were talking about, why did Elizabeth Smart get this attention in 1995? Why didn't we get any attention? We couldn't get anybody in the media involved in this.
KING: The answer is because the cop said it was...
WALSH: Cop says, hey, she's 15 years old, she probably ran away.
But you know what? You and I have talked about this. Twenty- seven of Ted Bundy's 29 victims were listed as voluntarily missing or runaways when they were women that had kids, or that they were -- you know, it's...
KING: By the way, how are the Salt Lake City, in your opinion, police and FBI handling all this?
WALSH: Well, they're working closely together. The Mormon community is very tight-lipped. And I think in the beginning that the FBI said to the Mormon police, we're here to help you. I mean, you know...
KING: Lot of Mormon policemen?
WALSH: There are a lot. I mean, you know, 800,000 people in Utah of the million-or-so people there are Mormons. I mean, et cetera. I think they're working closely together. But this Kiplyn Davis case really, really bothers me, and really disturbs me because somebody made an arbitrary decision -- one cop. I think that just because this girl didn't come home from school one afternoon, she's a runaway. I don't think any cop in this country has the arbitrary right to make that decision.
KING: How should it be handled?
WALSH: It should be handled -- do you know what they should be doing right away, is say, OK, let's look into this. She's 15 years old. She comes home every day. Mom and dad are OK. They're not divorced. There's no problems here. Let's go to school and see if she had any problems at school. Does she have a shaky boyfriend?
KING: There was no big investigation?
WALSH: None whatsoever. It was, you know, she's a runaway...
KING: And now she's still listed as a runaway?
WALSH: Now, well, I think they're relooking at this because the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has done a computer-enhanced picture of what this girl may look like. And I think they're looking back and saying, you know what, we might have made a mistake.