🚨 NEW BOMBSHELL DROPS — NOTHING ADDS UP IN THE LILLY & JACK SULLIVAN CASE ANYMORE! 😱🌑

Leaked police dispatch audio just exposed the REAL person who found Lilly’s pink blanket… but stepdad Daniel Martell is NOW claiming it was NEVER hers?! What changed his story? Family found it in a tree and trash… or was it planted to throw everyone off?

Whispers of hidden abandoned mineshafts waiting to be explored. That eerily “silent” sliding door the kids supposedly slipped through without a sound. And RCMP finally addressing Daniel’s polygraph results — but one chilling question hangs over everything: If the tests say he’s truthful… then WHY does every new detail scream something darker?

9 months gone. Searches dead. Stepdad’s shock arrest (unrelated, they say). This isn’t wandering kids anymore — this is a puzzle falling apart piece by bloody piece.

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Nine months after siblings Lilly Sullivan, 6, and Jack Sullivan, 4, vanished from their rural home, social media claims of “leaked police audio” contradicting stepfather Daniel Martell’s statements about a key piece of evidence—the pink blanket—have intensified public scrutiny. While no verified audio has surfaced from official sources, the narrative ties into documented investigative elements, unsealed court records, and family accounts that continue to generate debate.

Lilly and Jack were reported missing at 10:01 a.m. on May 2, 2025, via a 911 call from their mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, at the Gairloch Road property. She stated the children—possibly autistic and prone to wandering—had likely exited the home while she, Martell, and their infant daughter slept. Initial response focused on dense woods surrounding the isolated Pictou County location.

Early searches uncovered limited clues: a child-sized boot print near the home and pieces of a pink blanket confirmed by family as Lilly’s. Court documents and RCMP statements detail the blanket’s discovery: family members located one piece hanging in a tree along Lansdowne Station Road, about 1 km away, on May 2. Police seized it for forensic examination. In August 2025 warrant releases, a second piece was noted in a trash bag at the driveway’s end, found by police on May 4. RCMP announced DNA and fiber testing in July 2025, with family confirmation of ownership.

Martell initially told media outlets (including CBC and The Globe and Mail) around May 5 that the blanket found in the woods did not belong to Lilly. Later statements aligned with police/family verification that it was hers. In January 2026 interviews, Martell reiterated cooperation, including voluntary DNA submission for blanket analysis, emphasizing no warrant was required.

Online posts and YouTube videos in late January 2026 claim “leaked dispatch audio” shows family (not search teams) discovered the blanket, contradicting Martell’s early denial. These remain unverified; no RCMP release or mainstream confirmation exists. Speculation suggests staging or inconsistencies, but official records describe family involvement in the initial find as standard in missing persons cases.

Other circulating details include abandoned mineshafts in the historic mining area. Searches checked several shafts, drawing parallels to a 2002 discovery of remains in one. No relevant findings reported. The “silent sliding door” originates from family descriptions: Martell and Brooks-Murray said the back patio door was typically quiet when opened/closed, unlike the front door (secured with a wrench undisturbed that morning). Step-grandmother Janie MacKenzie (Martell’s mother, living nearby) recounted hearing children’s voices then silence, assuming exit via the sliding door. Martell referenced learning details from news reports in some accounts.

Polygraph examinations factor prominently. Unsealed documents (June-August 2025) show tests on May 12 at Bible Hill detachment: Martell and Brooks-Murray deemed truthful on questions about harm/involvement (specifics redacted). Additional tests followed for others, including biological father Cody Sullivan (truthful). Martell publicly stated passing tests focused on presumptive murder/accessory scenarios. RCMP has not issued new statements “addressing” results amid recent developments but maintains the case under the Missing Persons Act—no criminal classification.

January 2026 brought unrelated charges against Martell: arrested January 27 on sexual assault, assault, and forcible confinement involving an adult female from December 2024 incidents at the address. Released with conditions; Pictou court appearance March 2, 2026. RCMP stresses no link to the disappearance.

The investigation reviewed over 1,000 tips, 8,000+ video files, 75+ interviews, and multiple operations (including October 2025 cadaver dog searches). No abduction evidence, vehicle involvement, or struggle signs found. Nova Scotia’s $150,000 reward persists.

Brooks-Murray alleged in interviews Martell was occasionally physically forceful (pushing/restraining during arguments); he denied as misleading. Family dynamics detailed in unsealed filings show tensions but no direct ties to the vanishing.

RCMP urges tips to Northeast Nova Major Crime Unit (902-896-5060) or Crime Stoppers (1-800-222-TIPS). As speculation swirls online—driven by blanket discrepancies, door/mineshaft mentions, and polygraph context—the official probe continues methodically, with authorities emphasizing all scenarios open amid one of Canada’s most perplexing unsolved missing children cases.