AR CASSIE COMPTON: Missing from Stuttgart, Arkansas - 14 Sept 2014 - Age 15

1606966617687.png 1583355527368.png

Cassie was last seen in Stuttgart, Arkansas sometime after 6:00 p.m. of September 14, 2014, after spending the day at a demolition derby with friends.

A short time after she arrived home, she left again, telling her mother she was going to the store to pick up some things. She had a black LG smart phone with no charger. She never returned home and has never been heard from again.

It's uncharacteristic of Cassie to leave without warning; her mother said they always kept in touch. She lived with her mother and her mother's fiance at the time of her disappearance; her father lived in Oklahoma. She was home-schooled and working to obtain a GED certificate. Little evidence is available as to her fate.

NamUs The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Quite a bit more info here. I don't think I ever knew most of these details. Some of you may already know them.

When Cassie’s mother, Judy Compton, moved back to Arkansas, she was required to register as a sex offender, one of 15 in Stuttgart at the time. Her husband, Roy, Cassie’s father, had sexually assaulted Judy’s daughter from a previous relationship. His 23-year jail sentence reflected the level of the abuse suffered by that girl. Judy Compton denied knowing the abuse was happening, but the Oklahoma judicial system saw it differently.

It was not only Judy Compton’s past but her latest relationship that kept her name — and Cassie’s — on the lips of locals in Stuttgart. By the time Cassie disappeared, Judy, then 42, had been in a three-year relationship with 24-year-old Brandon Lee Rhodes. Rhodes had moved into the Compton home with no job, no car and no driver’s license, supposedly leaving behind his meth use and squatting in abandoned houses.



Hunter Snyder told police that when he dropped Cassie home around 6:30 p.m., Rhodes was standing outside. Cassie went straight into the house, but what happened to her after she walked through the door? Well, that depends on who you ask and when you ask, since both Judy and Rhodes’ subsequent accounts contradict not only each other, but even themselves.

The only constant in Judy’s stories is that having taken medication, she was laying down in the back bedroom. First she said she heard — but never saw — Cassie come in, change her clothes, then leave a little after 7 p.m. Her next version was that she slept until after 8 p.m. Inexplicably changing their stories from Hunter’s, Rhodes and Judy initially said Rhodes was in the kitchen, cooking dinner, when Cassie came in. Rhodes later said he was instead in the back bedroom with Judy at the time.

After 9 p.m., Rhodes started contacting Tracy Snyder, the first time oddly asking if Cassie was still there. During his third and final call, Rhodes told Tracy that he had gone to the Stuttgart PD, as she suggested, but was told he would have to wait 72 hours before reporting Cassie missing. In fact, there is no legal wait period, nor is there evidence that Rhodes ever contacted SPD.

Midmorning Monday, Judy went to the police department, saying she discovered Cassie missing after she woke up. That did not square with authorities because if Judy had been awake when Cassie came in or even if she slept till 8 p.m., wouldn’t she have been aware that by 9 p.m., Rhodes told Tracy that Cassie was gone? And if Rhodes had been that concerned, why would he not have woken Judy?

No Amber Alert was filed, allegedly because the SPD and Judy both felt Cassie had run away. Why that stance changed is unknown, but by the last week of September, searches by multiple agencies had begun.

On Oct. 3, police went to Compton’s home, confiscating cell phones. The question remains: Did they find Cassie’s phone as well, or did she, like Rhodes claimed, leave with it? Shortly after the SPD left, the Compton house was seen burning, but only one area was damaged.

By Oct. 11, Judy announced that she and Rhodes had split up. That was after they both failed polygraphs, which Judy blamed, for her part, on medication. Sticking to the runaway scenario, Judy said she hoped Cassie would come home now that she knew Rhodes was gone. That was in contrast to her previous assertion that the two had a good relationship.

In fact, insiders told media that after Rhodes moved in, Cassie left home several times. Whether she believed Cassie was a runaway or not, as a registered sex offender, Judy faced serious legal problems if evidence emerged that showed sexual abuse had happened to another child under her care.

Judy further distanced herself from Rhodes, saying that he left the house Sunday night, and when he came back, she could hear him in the bathroom, vomiting. Around 7 p.m., Hunter got a text, supposedly from Cassie, saying she was going to get cigarettes. If she did actually smoke, she could not legally purchase smokes, being just 15 years old.

Even though he had a bike, Rhodes was known to “borrow” Judy’s car — a blue Chevy Impala with a disabled tag — if she was sleeping. Did he leave, as Judy said, and would Cassie have gone with him, hoping to get cigarettes?

Fast forward to Oct. 16, 2018: Rhodes is pulled over for a traffic stop in Pleasant Plains, where law enforcement found it intriguing that he had an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle in the car. A subsequent investigation revealed Rhodes had been paid $200 by a married man to kill the man’s supposedly cheating wife. Rhodes’ rap sheet, lengthened since he left Stuttgart, now got a significant boost with a charge of conspiracy to commit capital murder. His next major squat would not be an abandoned house but, instead, the big house.



Townsend found a 2023 request for an order of protection filed by Rhodes’ terrified ex-girlfriend, who had learned he was about to be released. Rhodes self-describes as a “violent person, very volatile,” and a man who “did not like women.” The document shows that Rhodes had repeatedly verbally, physically, and sexually assaulted the ex-girlfriend. It is also notable that the woman described Rhodes putting her in a chokehold, a move that can quickly incapacitate or kill someone.
 
Quite a bit more info here. I don't think I ever knew most of these details. Some of you may already know them.

When Cassie’s mother, Judy Compton, moved back to Arkansas, she was required to register as a sex offender, one of 15 in Stuttgart at the time. Her husband, Roy, Cassie’s father, had sexually assaulted Judy’s daughter from a previous relationship. His 23-year jail sentence reflected the level of the abuse suffered by that girl. Judy Compton denied knowing the abuse was happening, but the Oklahoma judicial system saw it differently.

It was not only Judy Compton’s past but her latest relationship that kept her name — and Cassie’s — on the lips of locals in Stuttgart. By the time Cassie disappeared, Judy, then 42, had been in a three-year relationship with 24-year-old Brandon Lee Rhodes. Rhodes had moved into the Compton home with no job, no car and no driver’s license, supposedly leaving behind his meth use and squatting in abandoned houses.



Hunter Snyder told police that when he dropped Cassie home around 6:30 p.m., Rhodes was standing outside. Cassie went straight into the house, but what happened to her after she walked through the door? Well, that depends on who you ask and when you ask, since both Judy and Rhodes’ subsequent accounts contradict not only each other, but even themselves.

The only constant in Judy’s stories is that having taken medication, she was laying down in the back bedroom. First she said she heard — but never saw — Cassie come in, change her clothes, then leave a little after 7 p.m. Her next version was that she slept until after 8 p.m. Inexplicably changing their stories from Hunter’s, Rhodes and Judy initially said Rhodes was in the kitchen, cooking dinner, when Cassie came in. Rhodes later said he was instead in the back bedroom with Judy at the time.

After 9 p.m., Rhodes started contacting Tracy Snyder, the first time oddly asking if Cassie was still there. During his third and final call, Rhodes told Tracy that he had gone to the Stuttgart PD, as she suggested, but was told he would have to wait 72 hours before reporting Cassie missing. In fact, there is no legal wait period, nor is there evidence that Rhodes ever contacted SPD.

Midmorning Monday, Judy went to the police department, saying she discovered Cassie missing after she woke up. That did not square with authorities because if Judy had been awake when Cassie came in or even if she slept till 8 p.m., wouldn’t she have been aware that by 9 p.m., Rhodes told Tracy that Cassie was gone? And if Rhodes had been that concerned, why would he not have woken Judy?

No Amber Alert was filed, allegedly because the SPD and Judy both felt Cassie had run away. Why that stance changed is unknown, but by the last week of September, searches by multiple agencies had begun.

On Oct. 3, police went to Compton’s home, confiscating cell phones. The question remains: Did they find Cassie’s phone as well, or did she, like Rhodes claimed, leave with it? Shortly after the SPD left, the Compton house was seen burning, but only one area was damaged.

By Oct. 11, Judy announced that she and Rhodes had split up. That was after they both failed polygraphs, which Judy blamed, for her part, on medication. Sticking to the runaway scenario, Judy said she hoped Cassie would come home now that she knew Rhodes was gone. That was in contrast to her previous assertion that the two had a good relationship.

In fact, insiders told media that after Rhodes moved in, Cassie left home several times. Whether she believed Cassie was a runaway or not, as a registered sex offender, Judy faced serious legal problems if evidence emerged that showed sexual abuse had happened to another child under her care.

Judy further distanced herself from Rhodes, saying that he left the house Sunday night, and when he came back, she could hear him in the bathroom, vomiting. Around 7 p.m., Hunter got a text, supposedly from Cassie, saying she was going to get cigarettes. If she did actually smoke, she could not legally purchase smokes, being just 15 years old.

Even though he had a bike, Rhodes was known to “borrow” Judy’s car — a blue Chevy Impala with a disabled tag — if she was sleeping. Did he leave, as Judy said, and would Cassie have gone with him, hoping to get cigarettes?

Fast forward to Oct. 16, 2018: Rhodes is pulled over for a traffic stop in Pleasant Plains, where law enforcement found it intriguing that he had an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle in the car. A subsequent investigation revealed Rhodes had been paid $200 by a married man to kill the man’s supposedly cheating wife. Rhodes’ rap sheet, lengthened since he left Stuttgart, now got a significant boost with a charge of conspiracy to commit capital murder. His next major squat would not be an abandoned house but, instead, the big house.



Townsend found a 2023 request for an order of protection filed by Rhodes’ terrified ex-girlfriend, who had learned he was about to be released. Rhodes self-describes as a “violent person, very volatile,” and a man who “did not like women.” The document shows that Rhodes had repeatedly verbally, physically, and sexually assaulted the ex-girlfriend. It is also notable that the woman described Rhodes putting her in a chokehold, a move that can quickly incapacitate or kill someone.
hmmmmm...

On Oct. 3, police went to Compton’s home, confiscating cell phones. The question remains: Did they find Cassie’s phone as well, or did she, like Rhodes claimed, leave with it? Shortly after the SPD left, the Compton house was seen burning, but only one area was damaged.
 
I spoke to an insider about this case a LONG time ago. They said that the living arrangement was toxic for kids. And if you read the articles above, you'll agree.

I have to wonder if Cassie's mom didn't want to tell LE anything because she was already a RSO and figured no matter what she said, she'd be locked up.

Whatever the case, Cassie didn't stand a chance and the whole situation is horrible.
 
If there’s an RSO living in a household, they should take it seriously from the day one. I’m sorry, but I’m very very unhappy about the way they handled this case.
They should have taken it seriously, regardless, but I find that the info is so inconsistent that I'm at a loss as to what's factual.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
3,077
Messages
256,449
Members
1,017
Latest member
Nmp0
Back
Top Bottom