🚨 SHOCK REVEAL🚨 RCMP Make Search Results Public After 8 Weeks 🧠🕵️♂️Lily và Jack Sullivan.
Nova Scotia Offers $150,000 Reward in Disappearance of Lily and Jack Sullivan
Pictou County, NS — The province of Nova Scotia has announced a reward of up to $150,000 for any information that could lead to the whereabouts of six-year-old Lily Sullivan and her four-year-old brother, Jack. The siblings were reported missing on May 2 from their rural home in Lanstown Station, Pictou County. The case, which began as a standard missing persons investigation, has since evolved into one of national concern, now classified as an unsolved major crime by the RCMP.
Authorities initially treated the disappearance as a possible case of two young children wandering off. Search efforts included scent-tracking dogs, ground crews, and public appeals. However, with no sign of the children and no physical evidence pointing to an abduction, investigators quietly reclassified the case.
"This reward is not offered lightly," said a provincial spokesperson. "A sum of this size is rare, especially in cases where no crime has been confirmed. But the reclassification signals that we are deeply concerned about the nature of this disappearance."
The RCMP’s operational response has raised questions among the public and crime analysts alike. Michelle, a true crime commentator, pointed to subtle but critical shifts in the investigation timeline, including a request for surveillance footage dating back to April 28—days before the children were last seen on May 1.
"You don't request video from before the disappearance unless you're trying to verify someone's movements or detect premeditation," she noted.
Adding to the complexity is the absence of specific details from police. They have declined to disclose the last known location of the children and have not confirmed whether their mother, Mallea Brooks Murray, or stepfather, Daniel Martell, remain persons of interest. Yet both have reportedly been re-interviewed in recent weeks following public statements from a family member, Derwood Grady, who claims to have knowledge of what happened.
Grady alleges the children were picked up at the end of the road on May 2 and suggests he knows who was driving the vehicle. While police have not verified his claims, his public pleas coincided with a renewed investigative push.
Meanwhile, criticism of the RCMP's initial response continues to grow. Neighbor Melissa Scott revealed that police did not request her surveillance footage until more than two weeks after the children vanished. By then, key footage had already been overwritten.
"That delay may have cost us critical evidence," Michelle said. "In cases like this, timing is everything."
Despite official assurances that all investigative avenues are being pursued, RCMP spokespeople have remained deliberately vague in public interviews. In a national CBC broadcast, they declined to confirm whether they believe Lily and Jack are still alive, stating only: "We want to locate them. We are exploring every avenue."
This ambiguity has left families, communities, and followers of the case grasping for clarity. Legal experts note that Canadian investigators often avoid speculation in public to preserve the integrity of the case and avoid false hope. Still, the lack of reassurance has generated public unease.
"Hope lives in tone and body language," Michelle said. "And when the people closest to the case can no longer say the word 'alive,' it changes everything."
As the investigation enters its second month, the public is left to interpret the RCMP’s silence. Is it a shield for institutional caution, or is it a quiet admission that the case has entered darker territory?
Anyone with information about the disappearance of Lily and Jack Sullivan is urged to contact the RCMP or Crime Stoppers. The $150,000 reward remains active.
This story will be updated as more information becomes available.
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