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TN TIFFANY MOORE: Missing from Nashville, TN - 16 Nov 2025 - Age 37 *Found Safe*

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Woman missing after reportedly taking rideshare to Nashville apartment, police say​

A search is underway after a woman went missing after reportedly taking a rideshare to a Nashville apartment complex, according to the Metro Nashville Police Department (MNPD).

On Nov. 18, officers with MNPD were called to Twin Oaks Drive for a man trying to find his wife.

Officers said Scott Bach is searching for his wife, 37-year-old Tiffany Moore. Upon checking his Uber account, Bach told police he believes Moore was dropped off at the Twin Oaks Drive apartment.

Bach reportedly told police he heard noises coming from inside an apartment, but no one answered the door when he knocked.

Officers then contacted a woman who identifies as Moore’s sister. She said she had not heard from her since Moore sent a screenshot to her of her Uber ride. She told police that it was “uncharacteristic” of her sister to go without communication, as they reportedly speak daily.

Officers searched the building and knocked on all apartment doors. Residents told police they had not seen anyone matching Moore’s description. Police also conducted a hospital and jail check, which turned negative. They pinged Moore’s phone, which returned to a Cross Creek Road home.

A person at the home allowed officers to enter the home. Officers didn’t find her, and the resident said she didn’t know anyone by the name of Tiffany Moore.

MEDIA - TIFFANY MOORE: Missing from Nashville, TN - 16 Nov 2025 - Age 37
 
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It's an app. With a log in like any other. Who knows what he was doing or if he means a joint account, his account, hers, etc.
Yes. An app that an account tied to a phone. ONE phone number. You dont5"share" an Uber account on multiple phones. Each phone will have it's own Uber account. You can't sign onto it from another phone. You have to do it from a computer to see with the login info.Bottom line is you dont share an Uber account. You can only look at the action on another phone by logging onto that phones account on a computer. The only way it's ""his" Uber account is of her pays for the cell phone she uses and him calling it his account shows how controlling he is.
 
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Yes. An app that an account tied to a phone. ONE phone number. You dont5"share" an Uber account on multiple phones. Each phone will have it's own Uber account. You can't sign onto it from another phone. You have to do it from a computer to see with the login info.Bottom line is you dont share an Uber account. You can only look at the action on another phone by logging onto that phones account on a computer. The only way it's ""his" Uber account is of her pays for the cell phone she uses and him calling it his account shows how controlling he is.
i am going to ask my daughter. If it were not possible, then Uber wouldn't advise against sharing. I'm not as familiar with Uber but I know about most other things. Wmart for instance I always did on my laptop. Now I've added it to my phone as I did pickup for the first time and wanted to be able to use it to pick up my groceries using my phone to tell them I am there. We do it with Netflix and Amazon Prime. And one can log in from anywhere.

Also I recently had a conversation with someone as I wasn't sure you could call Uber for a ride, I thought it might just be by app and the person told me that yes you can like with any taxi company.

Whatever the case is, the bf got the address from the Uber app.
 
A couple of things I found:

Yes, two people can use the same Uber account, but it is best to use the official "Family Profile" feature to avoid account issues. Alternatively, you can order a ride for someone else through your own account, but this has restrictions and can lead to warnings or permanent bans if used improperly.

Can I share my Uber One account with my wife?

Must be 18 years or older to sign-up for Uber One. From there, you will be able to manage your Family sharing benefit. You will be able to add one (1) additional adult account to your Family sharing benefit. As many Teen accounts as are in your family can be added to the Family sharing benefit.
 
i am going to ask my daughter. If it were not possible, then Uber wouldn't advise against sharing. I'm not as familiar with Uber but I know about most other things. Wmart for instance I always did on my laptop. Now I've added it to my phone as I did pickup for the first time and wanted to be able to use it to pick up my groceries using my phone to tell them I am there. We do it with Netflix and Amazon Prime. And one can log in from anywhere.

Also I recently had a conversation with someone as I wasn't sure you could call Uber for a ride, I thought it might just be by app and the person told me that yes you can like with any taxi company.

Whatever the case is, the bf got the address from the Uber app.
There is no comparison to how Uber and Walmart accounts work. Walmart IS portable. Uber is not. Uber is tied directly to the phone number. Walmart is not. If you try to move an account that is tied to one phone to another phone, it will not work on the original phone after that. What he obviously did was log into the account linked to her phone from a computer. If he calls this "his" Uber account, then he obviously thinks of her phone as his. It works like your texting app. You don't log into somebody else's texts from your phone. It doesn't work like that. You wouldn't be calling their texts to somebody else's your account even if you paid their bill.

I would never call anything on my other half's phone mine even though our phones are billed together.
 
Uber does have a family plan but it still works the same way and I would still consider the one on each adults phone their own Uber account, because it is. If it was for a minor, I might see it differently. Even if our household had a family Uber account, I would still not call the other's "mine" unless they were a minor.

My kids stayed on our phone plan way after moving out and I still never called anything on their phones mine. They finally got their own phone accounts after me not wanting to pay for their extra services they wanted like unlimited data.
 
From opening post


Bach reportedly told police he heard noises coming from inside an apartment, but no one answered the door when he knocked


The only way to trace her to a specific apartment, unless each apartment has it's own address, was to have a tracker on her or he already knew exactly which apartment. He is also the one that called himself her husband. If that's not overbearingly controlling, I sunny know what else would qualify. It would be considered "our" account in my world if he's going to even consider himself married to each other.
 
Ahh, in totally rereading that article, that apartment belonged to her sister, so he was familiar with it. Why would you be so concerned about your "wife" if she was just at her sister's home? And if she's showing on "his" Uber account at her sister's home, why would you be leaving wherever you were, go to her sister's home, beat on the door and when nobody answers, you call the cops.

Things were definitely not good in this relationship.
 
There is no comparison to how Uber and Walmart accounts work. Walmart IS portable. Uber is not. Uber is tied directly to the phone number. Walmart is not. If you try to move an account that is tied to one phone to another phone, it will not work on the original phone after that. What he obviously did was log into the account linked to her phone from a computer. If he calls this "his" Uber account, then he obviously thinks of her phone as his. It works like your texting app. You don't log into somebody else's texts from your phone. It doesn't work like that. You wouldn't be calling their texts to somebody else's your account even if you paid their bill.

I would never call anything on my other half's phone mine even though our phones are billed together.
I am glad to say I know nothing about either app but i don't trust any apps TBH.

I would say though, that if it was a business phone or app, maybe several can access it. Again I know nothing so this is purely a guess.

You can log in to someone else's email if they give you the password so i would not be surprised if the same can happen with apps too.
 
I am glad to say I know nothing about either app but i don't trust any apps TBH.

I would say though, that if it was a business phone or app, maybe several can access it. Again I know nothing so this is purely a guess.

You can log in to someone else's email if they give you the password so i would not be surprised if the same can happen with apps too.
That would still have absolutely nothing to do with the fact he knew exactly which apartment door to go banging on in that complex.

You can't log into another persons texting app with your phone. That's the equivalent of how an Uber ap works. Yes, on some phone plans you can log into a computer and find out what the other phone did, but not with your phone. That is my point here on this. The Uber account goes with the phone number. If you did change it to see it on your phone, the person that was using it would not be able to and they would not get their confirmations any more either or be able to use it until they went through the entire process of changing back again.
 
There is no comparison to how Uber and Walmart accounts work. Walmart IS portable. Uber is not. Uber is tied directly to the phone number. Walmart is not. If you try to move an account that is tied to one phone to another phone, it will not work on the original phone after that. What he obviously did was log into the account linked to her phone from a computer. If he calls this "his" Uber account, then he obviously thinks of her phone as his. It works like your texting app. You don't log into somebody else's texts from your phone. It doesn't work like that. You wouldn't be calling their texts to somebody else's your account even if you paid their bill.

I would never call anything on my other half's phone mine even though our phones are billed together.
I honestly don't care. And if he can log in from a computer, that is part of what I mean. He said it was "his" account didn't he?

What it comes down to though is that is how he knew where she was, I don't think that's debated is it? Regardless of whose account.
 
They do have a family plan, but it still works the same way

They have to be here. Not sure if it's a local law or an Uber policy. they have a little blue light up neon sign that they display on their windshield. Ive seen some hang it from their visors and some sit on the dashboard.
The one case a few years back, the parents I think pushed for change with Uber's policies. I think it was a girl in one of the southern states. She was at the bars and got into a car it was guessed she thought was her Uber. Ended up dead.

I don't recall what all changed or if a law passed and if it was national or state, etc. I don't think Ubers are marked here. I've never seen one I know to be an Uber so I don't think they are.
 
That would still have absolutely nothing to do with the fact he knew exactly which apartment door to go banging on in that complex.

You can't log into another persons texting app with your phone. That's the equivalent of how an Uber ap works. Yes, on some phone plans you can log into a computer and find out what the other phone did, but not with your phone. That is my point here on this. The Uber account goes with the phone number. If you did change it to see it on your phone, the person that was using it would not be able to and they would not get their confirmations any more either or be able to use it until they went through the entire process of changing back again.
Did I say it had anything to do with him banging on a door. I don't think i did.

I was just commenting in general. For example what do businesses do who use an Uber account and want to give access to some employees?

I can log into a joint email shared with someone else on my phone and so can others given the password.

You seem to be saying Uber is not like that. I don't know, but I would be surprised if it did not have a share capability, that's all.
 
I honestly don't care. And if he can log in from a computer, that is part of what I mean. He said it was "his" account didn't he?

What it comes down to though is that is how he knew where she was, I don't think that's debated is it? Regardless of whose account.
I'm just concerned about how controlling he is by his wording of "his" account and then add that he knew exactly which apartment to knock on as soon as he saw that address from "his" Uber account. That is all I stated at the start on this subject.
 
Did I say it had anything to do with him banging on a door. I don't think i did.

I was just commenting in general. For example what do businesses do who use an Uber and want to give access to some employees?

I can log into a joint email shared with someone else on my phone and so can others given the password.

You seem to be saying Uber is not like that. I don't know, but I would be surprised if it did not have a share capability, that's all.
I'm commenting about the subject of this case.
 
From opening post


Bach reportedly told police he heard noises coming from inside an apartment, but no one answered the door when he knocked

The only way to trace her to a specific apartment, unless each apartment has it's own address, was to have a tracker on her or he already knew exactly which apartment. He is also the one that called himself her husband. If that's not overbearingly controlling, I sunny know what else would qualify. It would be considered "our" account in my world if he's going to even consider himself married to each other.
We don't know though. He very well may be controlling. She may have been fleeing him. However, he may have had reason. She could be cheating, she could have drug issues, she could have mental issues. The woman and/or her phone were at three different places, what the heck was she up to?
 
We don't know though. He very well may be controlling. She may have been fleeing him. However, he may have had reason. She could be cheating, she could have drug issues, she could have mental issues. The woman and/or her phone were at three different places, what the heck was she up to?
Evading him for whatever reason. As an adult she is allowed to do that in my book. She checked in as she should in that situation. I see where she has done nothing wrong here. I'm more curious about how long he had lost track of her before he called the cops. How soon after he last saw her did he look at "his" account and see where she was going and blast over there pounding on the door? If it was a very short period of time and he was doing all this, then I 100% think she did the right thing. If we find out it was for a length of time and he had been trying to get a hold of her for hours, then I place a bit more blame on her for the fiasco happening. It's all in the timing to me and I have not found that info yet on anything.
 

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