The Missing Daughter's Scooter: The Death of Luna
Body Bags with Joseph Scott Morgan
CrimeOnline and iHeartPodcasts
4.7 • 2.1K Ratings
🗓️ 9 October 2024
⏱️ 43 minutes
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Summary
Shortly before 11 pm on a Sunday night, Annette Jackson calls the Calhoun County Sheriff's office to report her daughter missing. Living in the town of Farnhamville with a population of just 400 people, Annette Jackson and another daughter set out on foot to see if they can find Luna. As they are walking, calling out for Luna, they come upon a man, Nathaniel Bevers-McGivney, who appears to be covered in blood and he is in possession of Luna's scooter and other personal effects. When Police find Bevers-McGiveney, they read him his Miranda Rights and he immediately asks for a lawyer. Questioning ends before finding out where Luna is. Joseph Scott Morgan will dig into the forensic evidence to identify what could have happened to the teen as well as where it happened.
Transcript Highlights
00:00:00.00 Introduction
00:04:03.54 Mom reports daughter, 17, missing, starts looking
00:08:04.52 Mom sees a man, appearing to be covered in blood, with Luna's scooter
00:12:19.82 Description of passive action, preventing finding of body
00:17:45.25 Location of body
00:22:15.61 Is there an attempt to obscure who Luna was?
00:27:01.48 How did perpetrator know about location to hide body
00:32:18.54 Was this a sexual assault gone "bad"?
00:36:40.66 Very Personal, cutting of a throat is intimate
00:40:20.04 Prosecutor possibly seeking oversight due to size of community
00:42:43.14 Conclusion, will continue to update
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| 0:00.0 | Body Facts with Joseph Scott Moore. |
| 0:05.0 | You know, over the last few years, it seems as though that Kevin Kostner has popped on to both my news feed and my social media feed, more than I care to remember. |
| 0:20.7 | It's not that I necessarily have anything against him. It's just like |
| 0:25.2 | super saturation dude. It's everywhere. And don't get me wrong, I am a Kevin Kostner fan. |
| 0:34.0 | Probably out of all of his movies, my favorite one is Field of Dreams. |
| 0:41.0 | It always gets me, you know, that last scene I think that those of us that |
| 0:48.7 | may have long to have had a father when we're growing up and he meets up with his dad at the end and he merely |
| 0:55.4 | looks at him and says hey dad can we have a catch and inevitably I cry. I cry every time I see that scene. But for us today on body bags. There are tears being shed right now in Iowa and they're not |
| 1:20.4 | fiction. They're real because found in a field were the remains of its 17 year old girl who has been brutally murdered to make it all the more horrific her mother had gone out looking for because |
| 1:48.4 | she hadn't come home that girl's name is Michelle Luna Jackson. |
| 1:57.0 | And today we're going to talk about her homicide. |
| 2:01.0 | I'm Joseph Scott Morgan and this is body backs. |
| 2:09.0 | Dave you know as far as I can see around this area that I live in up in the northern part of Calhoun County |
| 2:17.0 | Alabama, not Calhoun County, Iowa, where our case today takes place, not too dissimilar. Of course, the land rolls a bit more |
| 2:27.6 | than it does in Iowa, but man, there are cornfields and cotton fields and alfalfa and all kind of other things that grow. |
| 2:37.2 | It's a farming community and that's really all there is up here. |
| 2:42.1 | We have university but be you start to get away from the town that I live in in Jacksonville, Alabama and you come after you come across farm after farm after farm and how many these little locations have |
| 2:54.0 | you and I both driven through over the years it'll be like a little crossroads and |
| 2:58.3 | it'll be called a town it might have one one stop light or maybe a flashing yellow light if you're lucky, but you can look on a map and it's identified there. |
| 3:08.0 | This location where this took place is, I don't know, it looks to be roughly 120 miles northwest of Des Moines. |
| 3:19.1 | And you know, you get out there and people have described that area as just being like a sea of corn as far as |
| 3:25.5 | the eye can see and I don't know if that's the case here but it kind of sounds like a town of fewer than 400 people and |
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