🚨 CHILLING COURT BOMBSHELL IN LILLY & JACK CASE — One Was SEEN… The Other Was ONLY HEARD 😱👀 Picture this: It’s a quiet morning in rural Nova Scotia. Six-year-old Lilly walks in and out of the bedroom—parents SEE her multiple times.
But little 4-year-old Jack? They only HEAR him in the kitchen. No eyes on him. Just sounds.
Then… total silence. Both gone. Vanished. Never seen again.
Newly unsealed RCMP documents lay it bare: Lilly was visually confirmed moving around the house. Jack? Only auditory. No sighting after that last noise.
Coincidence? Or the clue that cracks everything open?
The timeline just got a lot scarier. Click to dive into the full unsealed docs and why this “seen vs. heard” twist has everyone talking 💔👇

Nearly nine months after 6-year-old Lilly Sullivan and her 4-year-old brother Jack vanished from their family home on May 2, 2025, newly released court documents continue to provide piecemeal insights into the morning of their disappearance. Among the most striking details from affidavits tied to RCMP search warrant applications: Lilly was reportedly seen moving through the house multiple times, while Jack was only heard—no visual confirmation of his presence that morning.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) maintains the investigation remains active, with no plans to classify it as a cold case. A provincial reward of up to $150,000 stands for information leading to resolution, yet no breakthrough has emerged despite extensive searches and public appeals.
According to statements from the children’s mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, and her then-common-law partner, Daniel Martell, detailed in unsealed filings from mid-2025, the couple was in their bedroom with their infant daughter between approximately 8:00 a.m. and 9:40 a.m. on May 2. Brooks-Murray and Martell told investigators that Lilly entered and exited the bedroom several times during this window. Jack, however, was only audible—reportedly heard in the adjacent kitchen area. Shortly after, both children went quiet, and the adults stated they never saw or heard them again.
By 10:01 a.m., Brooks-Murray dialed 911, reporting the siblings missing and expressing belief they had wandered into the surrounding dense forest. The home on Gairloch Road sits in a remote, heavily wooded part of Pictou County, about 70 miles northeast of Halifax, complicating any search.
The official timeline begins the previous day. Surveillance video from May 1, 2025, captured the family—Lilly, Jack, Brooks-Murray, Martell, and the infant—at a Dollarama store in nearby New Glasgow. The children were put to bed around 9-10 p.m. that night, according to the parents. At 6:15 a.m. on May 2, Brooks-Murray called the school to report both absent due to illness.
The “seen vs. heard” distinction has drawn attention in media coverage and online discussions. Sources including Wikipedia summaries of the case, CBC News reports on unsealed documents, and the Nova Scotia government’s reward page note that family members last observed Lilly inside the home and could hear Jack that morning. No public evidence has contradicted this account, though the lack of visual confirmation for Jack has fueled speculation about inconsistencies in the household narrative.
The initial response was massive. Over 1,700 search personnel devoted more than 12,000 hours to combing 8.5 square kilometers of thick terrain using helicopters, drones, divers, and detection dogs. Items recovered included a pink blanket belonging to Lilly found hanging in a tree and a small boot print on a trail. No additional clothing, footprints, or signs of the children appeared. Authorities scaled back the ground search on May 7, 2025, citing doubts the young siblings could have survived extended exposure without further evidence. Police have consistently stated there is no indication of abduction, though foul play or suspicious circumstances have not been ruled out.
Court documents, released in stages starting in August 2025 following media requests from outlets like The Globe and Mail, CBC News, and The Canadian Press, stem from early search warrant applications. They outline police efforts to review bank records, phone data, GPS locations, and family dynamics. Affidavits include Brooks-Murray’s allegations of physical abuse by Martell during arguments—claims he has denied in January 2026 media interviews, describing the relationship as “good” overall despite financial and other stresses.
Financial pressures were evident. Child support from the biological father, Cody Sullivan, had ceased after he lost his job around August 2024. Additional cash withdrawals totaling over $2,300 from Brooks-Murray’s account in the weeks prior were noted in some reports, though no direct link to the disappearance has been confirmed publicly.
Martell voluntarily provided DNA for forensic testing on items like Lilly’s blanket. In separate developments, he faced unrelated charges in late January 2026 for assault, forcible confinement, and sexual assault involving an adult victim; he was released on conditions pending a March court date.
RCMP officials, including Staff Sgt. Rob McCamon, have expressed confidence in the investigation’s progress. Updates emphasize ongoing tip follow-ups, polygraph examinations of individuals close to the family, and analysis of neighbor reports—including accounts of a vehicle moving near the property in the early hours before the 911 call.
Community involvement has included volunteer searches in the months following the official wind-down, but no significant finds resulted. Online forums and true-crime groups have dissected the documents, with some highlighting the auditory-only account of Jack as potentially significant. Police have cautioned against unverified speculation, noting in October 2025 statements that certain witness claims circulating online remain unconfirmed.
For the family, the toll is ongoing. Friends of Brooks-Murray describe her as grieving privately, “taking it day by day” under public scrutiny. Extended relatives, including grandparents, have spoken of missing the children’s presence. The biological father has had limited recent involvement but expressed concern through intermediaries.
The rural isolation of Lansdowne Station—surrounded by steep embankments, thick brush, and logging trails—has posed persistent challenges. Officials maintain the children were with family the afternoon before vanishing, supported by store footage.
Nine months later, the disappearance of Lilly and Jack Sullivan endures as a haunting unsolved mystery in Canada. The detail that Lilly was visually observed while Jack was merely heard adds another layer to the unanswered questions: Did the children wander off together? Was there an incident inside the home? Or does the timeline hold a clue yet to be fully understood?
The RCMP Major Crimes unit continues to seek information. Tips can be submitted directly to police or through Crime Stoppers. The $150,000 reward remains available for credible leads. Until concrete answers surface, a family waits amid grief, and public attention remains fixed on this rural Nova Scotia tragedy.
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