On June 17, 2002,
Beverly Tallent-Lyons got a call she would never forget. She was at her
home in Louisville, Kentucky when she received a call that her younger
sister, Nancy Lyons who was 46 at the time, missing. Her younger
sister's car had been found on a rural road in Indiana.
The car had been found
at the corner of County Road 700 west and County road 500 north in Rush
County. Idling in park, the car had been abandoned. One tire on the
vehicle was flat and the car was unlocked. Nothing in the vehicle looked
to be disturbed.
Nancy's purse, ID, and
cellphone were present. Along with her personal affects, the recent
purchases she had made from Wal-Mart were still in the car. Nancy was
the only thing missing.
The family, community,
and police began searching for Nancy immediately. Within the first two
weeks, no progress was made. Cadaver dogs were brought in to the area
where the vehicle had bee located, but they were unable to locate any
traces of Nancy.
It would be October of
2002 before the family would hear anything about where Nancy might be.
On October 2 in Bartholomew County, a farmer reported to police that he
had found skeleton remains in his soybean field. The field was
approximately 30 miles from where her car had been located months
earlier.
These remains would
later be identified as those of Nancy Lyons. Upon further examination of
the remains, it was apparent that she had succumbed to blunt force
trauma to the skull. It was not apparent as to whether or not sexual
assault had occurred. This might have been due to the advanced stages of
decomposition of the remains.
Beverly began to feel
that the investigation had been hindered. She made it known that
believed that mistakes early in the investigation led to the case not
being solved in a more timely manner. In order to draw attention to her
cause she launched a letter writing campaign. Over 500 letters were
written according to my research. The letters were sent to politicians
and people of power all over the United States. One of these letters
even was sent to Canadian authorities.
Beverly won the time of
the State Police in late 2006 or early 2007. State Police turned over
evidence to the FBI's crime lab for investigation. They had hoped that
by getting assistance with the case, the case would be solved. Upon the
return of the results, Beverly was scheduled to meet with investigators
and the prosecutor, nothing came from this meeting.
No person of interest
has been publicly named in the case and the case is still considered
active by State Police. Anyone with information is asked to contact the
Indiana State Police. They can be contacted at 1-812-689-5000
or 1-765-778-2121.
________________Sources___________________________
"6 Years Later, Family Hopes Woman's Killer Will be Caught." RTV 6. June 12, 2008. https://www.theindychannel.com/news/6-years-later-family-hopes-woman-s-killer-will-be-caught
"Cold Cases: Lyons Homicide not only unsolved investigation." Caitlin VanOverberghe. Daily Reporter. June 27, 2017. http://www.greenfieldreporter.com/2017/06/28/cold_cases/
"Family Hopes for Break in Case." Jeff Eakins. The Banner. June 27, 2007. http://thebanneronline.com/archive_news/2007/06/27/family-hopes-for-break.htm
"Family Marks Anniversary of Unsolved Slaying." Caitlin Overberghe. Greenfield Daily Reporter. June 27, 2017. http://www.greenfieldreporter.com/2017/06/28/still_searching-2/
"Nancy Lyons." Indiana State Police Database. http://www.in.gov/isp/2620.htm
"The Nancy Lyons Project." Frank Denzler. Rushville Republican. June
13,
2012. http://www.rushvillerepublican.com/news/local_news/the-nancy-lyons-project/article_a467cef1-c4f5-54ef-a540-d4548afa4992.html
See if they can still get a rapekit done. Dna from under the fingernails.. her hair. Dna from spotty blood. Unkown hair fiber. Anilyze it all.
ReplyDeleteThey should've kept the car in custody. Dust for prints everywhere on it. Spray for other DNA or blood. A thorough search! CPD and RCPD should've been very extensive on this case. But they were not. Sad that this was so sloppy done that a murderer or murderers gotten by with such crime that our own fellow officers botches the case by not doing they're job.
ReplyDelete18 years later, & still nothing. Praying for answers. So sad.
ReplyDelete