Disappearance of Brianna Maitland
Brianna Maitland | |
---|---|
Born | Brianna Alexandra Maitland[a] October 8, 1986 |
Disappeared | March 19, 2004 (aged 17) Montgomery, Vermont, U.S. |
Status | Missing for 20 years, 8 months and 4 days |
Nationality | American |
Known for | Missing person |
Height | 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) |
Parent | Bruce Maitland
|
44°54′41″N 72°39′34″W / 44.911307°N 72.659527°W Brianna Alexandra Maitland (born October 8, 1986; disappeared March 19, 2004) is an American missing person who disappeared at the age of 17 after leaving her job at the Black Lantern Inn in Montgomery, Vermont. Her car was discovered the following day, backed into the side of an abandoned house about a mile (1.6 km) away from her workplace. Maitland has not been seen or heard from since. Due to a confluence of circumstances, several days passed before Maitland's friends and family reported her missing.
In the days and weeks following Maitland's disappearance, numerous tips were investigated by state law enforcement, including a claim that she was being held captive in a house occupied by local drug dealers of whom she was an acquaintance; however, none of the tips resulted in her discovery. An alleged 2006 sighting of Maitland at a casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, brought renewed interest to the case, but the woman seen was never properly identified. In 2012, law enforcement investigated a possible connection between Maitland's disappearance and serial killer Israel Keyes, who was active in Vermont, but he was ultimately ruled out as a suspect by the FBI.
Maitland's case was profiled across various local media, on Dateline NBC and the documentary series Disappeared. In 2017, the case was discussed in the documentary series on missing college student Maura Murray, who vanished a month prior to Maitland in Woodsville, New Hampshire. Maitland's disappearance remains unsolved.
Background
[edit]Early life
[edit]Brianna Maitland was born October 8, 1986, in Burlington, Vermont, to Bruce and Kellie Maitland (née Fisher).[2] She was raised with her older brother on their parents' farm in East Franklin, Vermont,[3] near the Canadian border.[4] In her youth, Maitland was extensively trained in jiu-jitsu.[4] She attended Missisquoi Valley Union High School before transferring to Enosburg Falls High School in nearby Enosburg Falls, during her sophomore year.[5]
Prior to disappearance
[edit]On Maitland's seventeenth birthday in October 2003, she decided she wanted to move away from her parents' farm.[4] Her mother, Kellie, stated there were no serious stresses at home, but that Maitland wanted to be more independent and to live closer to a group of friends who resided 15 miles (24 km) away and attended a different high school.[4] Maitland enrolled at her friends' high school but her living arrangements were unstable, as she moved in and out of several friends' homes.[4] By the end of February 2004, Maitland dropped out of high school and moved in with her childhood friend, Jillian Stout, in Sheldon, Vermont, approximately 20 miles (32 km) west of Montgomery.[6] To complete her education, Maitland enrolled in a GED program.[4]
Three weeks prior to her disappearance, Maitland was physically attacked at a party by a female former friend, Keallie Lacross.[7] The motive for the attack was unclear,[8] though Maitland's father, Bruce, later stated he believed it stemmed from jealousy over Maitland's interaction with a male peer at the party.[7] One of her friends at the party claimed that Maitland, despite her martial arts training, refused to fight with Lacross, who subsequently hit her in the face several times while Maitland was seated in a truck.[9] The altercation resulted in Maitland suffering a broken nose and concussion; she later filed charges against Lacross.[4] The complaint was subsequently dropped three weeks after Maitland vanished, and Lacross was cleared of any involvement in her disappearance.[4]
Disappearance
[edit]Friday, March 19, 2004
[edit]On the morning of Friday, March 19, 2004, Maitland took an exam to receive her GED.[10] After completing the test, she and her mother, Kellie, had lunch to celebrate the occasion; her father, Bruce, was out of state working in New York at the time.[4] Kellie described her daughter as being in good spirits, and recalled that Maitland had discussed plans of attending college.[4]
After lunch, Maitland and Kellie spent the afternoon shopping and running errands. While waiting in the check-out line of a store, Kellie said something outside caught Maitland's attention; she told her mother she would return shortly and left the store.[4] Kellie completed her purchase and met Maitland in the parking lot, and noticed that her daughter seemed unnerved, shaken, and agitated.[4] Maitland told her mother that she needed to go home and prepare for her upcoming work shift at the Black Lantern Inn, a restaurant in Montgomery.[4] Not wanting to pry, Kellie did not ask what had happened, and dropped Maitland off at Stout's home between 3:30 and 4:00 pm.[4] This was the last time she saw her daughter.[4][5] At some point before leaving for her work shift, Maitland left a note for Stout saying she would return after work that evening.[4] Maitland then departed for the Black Lantern Inn in a 1985 Oldsmobile sedan registered to Kellie.[4]
After completing her shift at work, Maitland clocked out and left the Black Lantern Inn at approximately 11:20 p.m.[11] She told her co-workers she needed to get home and rest before working the next day at her second job in St. Albans.[12][4] By all accounts, Maitland was alone in her vehicle when she left.[13]
Saturday, March 20, 2004
[edit]Discovery of vehicle
[edit]Early the next afternoon, on March 20, a Vermont State Police trooper was dispatched to an abandoned house on Route 118 in Richford,[14] about a mile (1.6 km) from the Black Lantern Inn. Maitland's Oldsmobile was found backed into the side of the house. Known locally as "the old Dutchburn house,"[15] the siding of the home had been breached by the rear end of the sedan. A piece of plywood that had been covering a window lay on the car's trunk. Two of Maitland's paychecks were on the front seat of the car, and outside it, law enforcement observed loose change, a water bottle and an unsmoked cigarette.[16] The trooper assumed the car had been abandoned by a drunk driver, and a towing company took the vehicle to a local garage.[4]
Maitland was not reported missing for a number of days.[4] Kellie did not learn about the discovery of Maitland's car until five days afterward.[4] Stout saw Maitland's note on Friday, March 19, spent the weekend away, and found the note undisturbed when she returned on Monday. Assuming Maitland was staying elsewhere, she did not call Kellie until the following day.[4] On Tuesday, March 23, Kellie began calling various people in order to find Maitland, including friends as well as her employers, none of whom had seen or spoken to her.[17] Failing in her efforts—and still unaware that the vehicle Maitland was driving had been recovered—she filed a missing persons report that day. On Thursday, March 25, Maitland's parents gave photos of her to the Vermont State Police in St. Albans. A trooper showed them a picture of the Oldsmobile found at the old Dutchburn house, upon which they immediately identified the car as their daughter's.[4] Kellie said in interviews that she was "instinctively revulsed" by the photo, and believed someone else, not Maitland, had left the car in such a way.[4]
Witness sightings
[edit]After Maitland's reported disappearance, several individuals came forward to law enforcement to report sightings of Maitland's vehicle at the old Dutchburn house the night she disappeared:
- A man who drove by the house between 11:30 p.m. and 12:30 a.m. on March 19–20 said the car's headlights may have been on. He said he did not see anyone in or around the car.[4]
- A second man who drove by between midnight and 12:30 a.m. on Saturday, March 20, recalled seeing a turn signal flashing on the car.[4]
- Around 4:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 20, a former boyfriend of Maitland's drove past the scene after a night of partying across the border in Canada. He thought he recognized the vehicle, but he did not see anyone in or around it.[4]
- The next morning, some passing motorists found the scene odd enough that they stopped and took pictures of it. One of the photographers reported some loose change, a water bottle and a bracelet or necklace on the ground next to the car.[4]
Investigation
[edit]Initial findings
[edit]The Vermont State Police, who led the official investigation for the first months after Maitland's disappearance, were skeptical that foul play was involved, considering the possibility that Maitland was a runaway.[18] The area surrounding the old Dutchburn house was combed on foot by police and search dogs, but nothing was found.[4] Maitland's vehicle was processed by the state crime laboratory for evidence on March 30, 2004, after the car had been impounded at a local garage for several days. Upon the car's return to the Maitland family, Bruce noted that his daughter's ATM card, glasses, contact lens case and migraine medication had all been left inside.[19]
It was later concluded by law enforcement that foul play was the probable cause of Maitland's disappearance,[20] and a 2007 flyer provided by the FBI stated that the scene at which Maitland's car was discovered may have been staged to appear as an accident. Maitland's parents publicly speculated that she may have been abducted by multiple people, stating that it would have been difficult for a single assailant to subdue her given her jiu-jitsu training.[4]
The disappearance of Maura Murray, a college student from Massachusetts, in northwest New Hampshire the month before was deemed unrelated to Maitland's disappearance by law enforcement,[11] in spite of the events occurring within 90 miles (140 km) of each other.[10] In 2004, Maitland's family organized a website, now defunct, titled bringbrihome.org, with a posted maximum reward of USD$20,000 for information leading to her whereabouts.[21] The website was active until at least 2009.[b] According to a March 2017 article published in the Burlington Free Press, the reward remained available.[22] In June 2017, however, it was reported that the reward was due to expire in early July of that year.[23]
Allegations and affidavit
[edit]In the week following Maitland's disappearance, the Vermont State Police received an anonymous tip claiming that she was being held against her will in a house in nearby Berkshire, 10 miles (16 km) from Montgomery.[4] The rented house, then occupied by Ramon L. Ryans and Nathaniel Charles Jackson, two known drug dealers from New York, was raided by police on April 15, 2004.[24] Various drug paraphernalia was discovered inside, as well as substantial amounts of cocaine and marijuana, but no sign of Maitland was found.[4] Ryans was arrested during the raid on drug charges.[19] Upon interviewing Maitland's close friends, law enforcement was informed that Maitland had allegedly experimented with hard drugs in the recent past, specifically crack cocaine,[19] and was an acquaintance of Ryans and Jackson.[4]
In late 2004, police received a statement from an anonymous "older female" who implicated both Ryans and Jackson in Maitland's disappearance and alleged murder.[4] The signed affidavit contained allegations, written in graphic detail, that Maitland had been murdered approximately a week after her disappearance.[24] The woman who provided the affidavit claimed that Ryans murdered Maitland during an argument over money she had lent him to purchase crack,[24] and that her body had been temporarily stored in the basement of a recently incarcerated local woman's home; Maitland's body was then allegedly dismembered with a table saw and disposed of on a pig farm.[4] Law enforcement was unable to corroborate the claims in the letter.[4]
The Maitland family additionally reported that they had received several uncorroborated anonymous phone calls from persons claiming Maitland was "tied to a tree in the woods," and that she had been disposed of at the bottom of a lake.[4]
Later developments
[edit]In 2006, security footage at the Caesars casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, showed a woman resembling Maitland sitting at a poker table.[25][11] The woman was never properly identified.[4]
In 2012, law enforcement investigated a potential connection between Maitland's disappearance and serial killer Israel Keyes, who committed numerous rapes and murders in Alaska, Oregon, and Washington,[26][27] as well as in Vermont and New York, where he owned property in Constable.[28] The FBI ruled out Keyes's potential connection to Maitland's disappearance in late December 2012,[28] shortly after Keyes died by suicide in Anchorage, Alaska.[29]
In March 2016, on the case's twelfth anniversary, investigators revealed to a local television station they had recovered DNA samples from Maitland's car.[16] The results of the DNA tests were not made public.[30] In July 2016 the old Dutchburn house, where Maitland's vehicle had been discovered, was destroyed in a fire.[31]
In March 2022, the Vermont State Police revealed they had found a match to the DNA sample found in Maitland's car. The identity of the person has not been released, although officials did say it belonged to one of eleven people they tested previously in connection to Maitland's disappearance and "that person has been very cooperative and spoken to us."[32]
Media depictions
[edit]Maitland's case has been profiled by Dateline NBC[33][25] and on the Investigation Discovery documentary series Disappeared in December 2011.[4] Maitland's disappearance was also mentioned in an episode of 20/20.[citation needed] In 2016, her case was profiled on the podcast The Vanished.[34] In 2017, her case was profiled in an episode of the documentary series The Disappearance of Maura Murray on the Oxygen network.[35] In 2023, a book about her disappearance was published by a private investigator who has worked for the Maitland family.[36]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The Charley Project erroneously reports Maitland's middle name as "Alexandria," which conflicts with official Vermont vital statistics, which list her middle name as "Alexandra."
- ^ According to records in the Internet Archive, bringbrihome.org was active until at least 2009; after this, archives of the website show empty domain notices. However, archives for the years of 2010–2013 do not exist, so it may have remained active until at least 2013.[21]
References
[edit]- ^ "Vermont Vital Records, 1760-2008," database with images, FamilySearch (6 December 2014), Brianna Alexandra Maitland, Birth, 08 Oct 1986, Burlington, Chittenden, Vermont, United States; from "Vermont, Birth Records, 1909-2008," "Vermont, Death Records, 1909-2008," "Vermont, Marriage Records, 1909-2008," and "Vermont, Vital Records, 1720-1908." (Ancestry 2010); citing Vital Records Office, Vermont Department of Health, Burlington and New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston.
- ^ "Kellie Fisher - Historical records and family trees". MyHeritage. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ Brianna Alexandra Maitland profile, charleyproject.org; accessed 6 February 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an "Vanished in Vermont". Disappeared. Season 4. Episode 7. 5 December 2011. Investigation Discovery.
- ^ a b Pilleri, Tim; Reenstierna, Lance; Canter, Chloé (1 February 2017). "Brianna's Disappearance". Crawlspace (Podcast). AudioBoom. Archived from the original on 9 August 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
{{cite podcast}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Corbin, Cristina (26 March 2014). "A decade later, Vermont police hope new leads solve disappearance of Brianna Maitland". Fox News. Archived from the original on 2017-10-11. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
- ^ a b Pilleri, Tim; Reenstierna, Lance; Canter, Chloé (21 February 2017). "Brianna's Dad". Crawlspace (Podcast). AudioBoom. Archived from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
{{cite podcast}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Brianna Alexandra Maitland profile". The Charley Project. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
- ^ Pilleri, Tim; Reenstierna, Lance; Canter, Chloé (26 May 2017). "Brianna's Friend Katie". Crawlspace (Podcast). AudioBoom. Archived from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
{{cite podcast}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b Renner 2016, p. 71.
- ^ a b c Mikkilineni, Rupa (9 December 2008). "Vermont teen vanishes on way home from work". CNN. Archived from the original on 2 February 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- ^ Renner 2016, p. 180.
- ^ LeBlanc, Deanna (13 June 2012). "Mystery Skull, Part 3". WCAX-TV. Archived from the original on 19 July 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
- ^ "3451 N Main St, Richford, Vermont". Google Maps. May 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- ^ Shulins, Nancy (29 January 1989). "Fear Settles on the Farm After Two Brothers Survive a Violent Robbery". The Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
- ^ a b Costa, Jennifer (17 March 2016). "WCAX Investigates: New details on Brianna Maitland's disappearance". WCAX-TV. Archived from the original on 28 June 2017. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
- ^ Renner 2016, pp. 71–2.
- ^ Bosma, Mark (15 June 2004). "No News is Bad News for Maitland Search". WCAX-TV. Archived from the original on 19 July 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
- ^ a b c Renner 2016, p. 72.
- ^ "Brianna Maitland". missingkids.org. National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
- ^ a b "Brianna Maitland: Reward $20,000". bringbrihome.org. Archived from the original on 17 December 2008.
- ^ Baird, Joel Banner (2 March 2017). "Tips sought in Vermont teen's 2004 disappearance". Burlington Free Press. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
- ^ "$20,000 Reward to Find Missing Teenager Expiring in July". U.S. News & World Report. Associated Press. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
- ^ a b c Albarelli, H.P. Jr.; Kettler, Jedd (1 February 2007). "Affidavit: Brianna Maitland Murdered". The County Courier. Enosburg Falls, Vermont. Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 – via Transmog.net. (Link to text transcript only).
- ^ a b "Missing Vermont teen". Dateline NBC. 6 May 2004. Archived from the original on May 2, 2018. Retrieved 16 June 2017 – via Wayback Machine.
- ^ Haberman, Margaret (21 March 2014). "Confessed Alaska serial killer Israel Keyes likely not connected to Olympic National Park disappearance". The Oregonian. Portland, Oregon: Associated Press. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
- ^ Locker, Melissa (1 August 2016). "American Psychos: 10 Modern Serial Killers You've Never Heard of - Israel Keyes". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 12 December 2016. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ a b "FBI: Serial killer not linked to missing Vt. teen". MyNBC5. Associated Press. 19 December 2012. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
- ^ Ng, Christina (6 February 2013). "Serial Killer Israel Keyes' Suicide Letter Is Creepy Ode to Murder". ABC News. Archived from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ Aragon, Rachel. "VSP Reveal New Evidence in Maitland Case". My Champlain Valley. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
- ^ Lamoreaux, Gregory (17 March 2017). "13 years later, troopers still work Maitland case". The County Courier. Enosburg Falls, Vermont. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ Sullivan, Adam (18 March 2022). "Police: Source of DNA in Brianna Maitland investigation identified". WCAX-TV. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
- ^ Stafford, Rob (6 May 2007). "Whereabouts of Vermont teen still a mystery". Dateline. NBC News. Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
- ^ "EPISODE 2: BRIANNA MAITLAND". The Vanished Podcast. Retrieved 2020-07-01.
- ^ "Something Bad Happened". The Disappearance of Maura Murray. Episode 5. 21 October 2016. Oxygen.
- ^ Overacker, Greg (2023). The Hunt for Brianna Maitland: The Relentless Pursuit of Answers to One of Vermont’s Biggest Mysteries. Bloated Toe Publishing. ISBN 1939216745.
Works cited
[edit]- Renner, James (2016). True Crime Addict: How I Lost Myself in the Mysterious Disappearance of Maura Murray. Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-1-250-08901-4.