4.4 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 28 June 2023
⏱️ 35 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
On July 7, 2013, 17-year-old Molly Miller and 22-year-old Colt Haynes disappear in Love County after a car chase with police.
The car was driven by a friend, James Con Nipp. Police lost the vehicle somewhere in the area of Long Hollow Rd. and Oswalt Rd in Love County, Oklahoma. Miller and Haynes disappear after the pursuit. Nipp was prosecuted for the car chase in 2014, but no one has been charged in the disappearances of Colt and Molly.
In this episode of Zone 7, Crime Scene Investigator, Sheryl McCollum, talks with Paula Fielder, Molly’s cousin. Together, they explore the role of law enforcement and the Chickasaw Nation, emphasizing the need for increased attention to the case
. A chilling find in a ravine and a call to check DNA evidence build suspense, leading to an anticipation-filled conclusion with Paula's announcement of a 10-year remembrance event at Love County Courthouse.
If you have any information about this case call 800-522-8017 or submit a tip online at [email protected]
There will be a candlelight vigil for Molly and Colt held at the Love County courthouse on July 8, 2023, from 6-9 pm. Anyone who is interested in celebrating the memory of Molly and Colt is welcome.
Show Notes:
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Sheryl “Mac” McCollum is an Emmy Award winning CSI, a writer for CrimeOnLine, Forensic and Crime Scene Expert for Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, and a CSI for a metro Atlanta Police Department. She is the co-author of the textbook., Cold Case: Pathways to Justice. Sheryl is also the founder and director of the Cold Case Investigative Research Institute, a collaboration between universities and colleges that brings researchers, practitioners, students and the criminal justice community together to advance techniques in solving cold cases and assist families and law enforcement with solvability factors for unsolved homicides, missing persons, and kidnapping cases.
You can connect and learn more about Sheryl’s work by visiting the CCIRI website https://coldcasecrimes.org
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0:00.0 | It was the early 60s, and my parents had taken us to Jekyll Island to tour the mansions. |
0:15.0 | As the seven of us went through, my mother at one point noticed my sister Sharon was no longer with us, |
0:23.0 | thinking that she was probably just in another room or maybe the restroom, or perhaps she had |
0:28.5 | even gone outside to wait on us. But every second that went by that my mother did not see her, |
0:35.8 | she became more anxious. Slowly, my mother became frantic to find her. |
0:43.8 | I remember vividly there was an elderly couple that saw my mom searching and said, can we help you? |
0:51.8 | And she said, I can't find my daughter. And they asked, what was she wearing? |
0:56.7 | What does she look like? My mom gave a description. At that point, some of the tour guides got involved. |
1:04.1 | The state patrol was called on the island. And then a young group of about four friends, we would have called them hippies, |
1:12.5 | jumped in and also offered to spread out to look for her. |
1:17.2 | My dad, with my other two older sisters, Sheila and Charlene, |
1:22.2 | they walked back toward our car to see if she thought, |
1:25.9 | hey, I'll just go there to meet up with them. |
1:28.5 | Me and Shelly, being the babies, stayed with her mom at the last place she was known to be. |
1:36.1 | Well, the state patrol found her sitting in a chair with the back of the chair facing the door, |
1:43.8 | so if you looked in the room, |
1:45.9 | you wouldn't see her. |
1:47.8 | And Sharon had found a rare book in the library of that mansion and just lost track of time reading. |
1:55.8 | But again, even as a little, little girl, what I remember is all of these people from different backgrounds at different stages of their life stopped everything they were doing to help. |
2:11.7 | It made me feel great that strangers who we had never seen before immediately jumped into action to look for my sister. |
2:22.4 | And as my mother used to always say, love wins. Now y'all know I like to start a case, |
2:31.5 | especially a cold case investigation where it ended. But in the missing persons case |
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