🚨 SHOCKING RCMP CONFIRMATION: Jack Sullivan Was HEARD… But NEVER SEEN That Fateful Morning! 😱
After 9 months of torment, police drop a bombshell—on May 2, 2025, Mom and stepdad Daniel Martell say Lilly popped in and out of the bedroom… but little Jack? They only HEARD him in the kitchen. No eyes on him. No goodbyes. No proof he was even there.
And then there’s Daniel’s MIDNIGHT TRIP EXPOSED: Neighbors swear they heard a loud vehicle roaring in and out of the property 3-6 TIMES from after midnight straight into the early hours—right before the kids vanished. Was it him? Where did he go in the dead of night while the family slept?
The timeline is crumbling. The screams in the woods… the pink blanket scrap… now this? Did the kids EVER make it to morning—or was something sinister already in motion hours earlier? 💔
Dare to dive into the DARK details police won’t deny (and what they’re still hiding)… scroll if you can handle the chills

Nine months after six-year-old Lilly Sullivan and four-year-old Jack Sullivan were reported missing from their rural home, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) continues an active investigation with no resolution in sight. Recent public attention has centered on specific details from unsealed court documents and police statements, including confirmation that Jack was reportedly heard but not seen by adults on the morning of May 2, 2025, and witness reports of vehicle activity in the overnight hours—elements frequently highlighted in online discussions as potentially significant.
The siblings lived with their mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, stepfather Daniel Martell, and the couple’s infant daughter in a mobile home on Gairloch Road in the sparsely populated community of Lansdowne Station, Pictou County, roughly 140 kilometers northeast of Halifax. The family was last confirmed in public together on May 1 at a Dollarama store in New Glasgow around 2:25 p.m., captured on surveillance video.
According to statements provided to police, Brooks-Murray put the children to bed around 10 p.m. on May 1 (after initially saying 9 p.m.). She reported going to bed herself while Martell stayed up later, with uncertainty about when he retired. Between approximately 8 a.m. and 9:40 a.m. on May 2, the couple said they remained in their bedroom with their baby. They described Lilly entering and exiting the room several times. Jack, they stated, was audible in the kitchen area—sounds suggesting activity—but the adults did not report visually observing him during that window. Shortly after, the noises stopped, and the children were no longer present or responsive.
At 10:01 a.m., Brooks-Murray called 911, reporting the children as likely having wandered off. Descriptions noted Lilly in pink clothing and boots, Jack in blue dinosaur boots. An extensive search followed immediately, involving ground teams, drones, helicopters, cadaver dogs, and community volunteers. A torn piece of pink blanket, thought to belong to Lilly, was found near the property, but no other physical evidence of the children emerged. Martell mentioned hearing what he believed might have been a child’s scream during an early forest search, though it was obscured by helicopter noise.
Court documents unsealed in stages—some in late 2025 and additional details in early 2026—outline police efforts, including applications for cellphone records, banking information, GPS data, and video surveillance. These filings included witness statements raising questions about activity around the home.
Two neighbors provided accounts to RCMP about sounds of a vehicle in the early morning hours of May 2. Brad Wong, living nearby, reported hearing a “loud vehicle” coming and going from the direction of the Sullivan home three or four times after midnight and into the early hours. Another resident described hearing a car turn around near railroad tracks around 1:30 a.m., pause, then depart toward another road; this individual later associated the vehicle with Martell based on community knowledge. These reports fueled speculation about possible movement by Martell—often termed a “midnight trip” in online commentary—during the overnight period before the 911 call.
However, RCMP has qualified such accounts. In one instance, a spokesperson noted a “thorough review of surveillance footage” from the Gairloch Road area found no evidence of vehicle activity matching the described times. Police have emphasized that witness statements about auditory observations (sounds of vehicles or children) remain unverified and are part of a broader evidentiary picture that includes contradictions and lack of corroboration from other sources.
Regarding the morning timeline, police have acknowledged the family’s account that Jack was heard in the kitchen but not directly observed. This detail has been discussed in media reports and true crime analyses as potentially noteworthy, given the absence of visual confirmation and the short window before the children were deemed missing. No official RCMP statement has framed this as a definitive inconsistency or breakthrough, and investigators continue to treat the case under Nova Scotia’s Missing Persons Act rather than as a criminal matter tied to the disappearance.
Martell and Brooks-Murray cooperated with early interviews, including polygraph examinations, though results have not been publicly detailed. Brooks-Murray later contacted police around 12:45 a.m. on May 3 suggesting the children’s biological father, Cody Sullivan, might have involvement; officers confirmed he had no recent contact and had not seen the children in years.
Broader context from documents includes descriptions of family dynamics, such as reported financial strains, occasional tensions, and allegations of controlling behavior in the relationship between Brooks-Murray and Martell—claims he has disputed publicly, maintaining full cooperation. In a separate development unrelated to the children’s case, Martell was arrested in late January 2026 and charged with sexual assault, assault, and forcible confinement involving an adult victim. He was released on conditions and is scheduled for court in March 2026; RCMP has stressed these charges are distinct from the missing persons investigation.
Searches scaled back after initial intensive efforts, with police noting in mid-2025 that survival prospects appeared low given the rural, wooded terrain and elapsed time. As of February 2026—around National Missing Persons Day—RCMP reiterated the file’s active status, commitment to following leads, and confidence in the major crimes unit’s work. Over 1,000 tips have been received, though few have produced verifiable breakthroughs.
Family members, including the children’s grandmother Cyndy Murray, have spoken of the ongoing grief, describing Lilly and Jack as energetic and loving. Brooks-Murray has maintained a low profile but conveyed taking matters day by day through supporters.
Experts in missing persons cases note the challenges when young children vanish from a home environment without clear signs of forced entry, abduction, or accident. The lack of definitive physical evidence, combined with timeline questions and witness reports, sustains public speculation—but authorities caution against overinterpreting unconfirmed details.
The RCMP urges anyone with information to contact the Northeast Nova major crime unit or submit tips anonymously via Crime Stoppers. As the investigation persists without charges related to the disappearance, the fate of Lilly and Jack Sullivan remains one of Nova Scotia’s most perplexing unsolved cases, leaving a community and a nation awaiting answers in the quiet woods of Pictou County.
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