Canada LILY & JACK SULLIVAN: Missing from Pictou County, Nova Scotia since 2 May 2025 - Ages 6 & 4 (1 Viewer)

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Lily Sullivan, 6, and Jack Sullivan, 4, were reported missing around 10 a.m. Friday. They were last seen on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station.

Police believe the siblings wandered away from their home and say there is no information to suggest they were abducted.
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Martell says he and Malehya Brooks-Murray asked Lily and Jack to quiet down on Friday morning to let the baby sleep.

He estimates it took up to 20 minutes to notice the two children were gone.

“A few minutes went by, I heard nothing. Got up, went out in the kitchen, checked everything, I seen they weren’t there. Checked their bedrooms and they weren’t there. So I looked out the backyard, that’s the only other place they would go, and their boots were gone. The door, the sliding door, was closed. Usually they don’t close the door, I usually have to remind them, remind them to close the door over and over,” he says.

Martell says he then jumped in his vehicle and started looking for them.


media link: LILY & JACK SULLIVAN wandered off from their Pictou County, NOVA SCOTIA home on May 2, 2025 and are still MISSING!
 
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Lily Sullivan, 6, and Jack Sullivan, 4, were reported missing around 10 a.m. Friday. They were last seen on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station.

Police believe the siblings wandered away from their home and say there is no information to suggest they were abducted.
<snip>
Martell says he and Malehya Brooks-Murray asked Lily and Jack to quiet down on Friday morning to let the baby sleep.

He estimates it took up to 20 minutes to notice the two children were gone.

“A few minutes went by, I heard nothing. Got up, went out in the kitchen, checked everything, I seen they weren’t there. Checked their bedrooms and they weren’t there. So I looked out the backyard, that’s the only other place they would go, and their boots were gone. The door, the sliding door, was closed. Usually they don’t close the door, I usually have to remind them, remind them to close the door over and over,” he says.

Martell says he then jumped in his vehicle and started looking for them.


media link: LILY & JACK SULLIVAN wandered off from their Pictou County, NOVA SCOTIA home on May 2, 2025 and are still MISSING!
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I'm hoping for a miracle here! I don't know how cold it's been in that area since the kids went missing.
 

'Nobody is giving up yet': N.S. crews spend 5th day searching for missing children​

Helicopters were back in the sky Tuesday as upward of 150 searchers scoured the wooded areas below for two children who are believed to have wandered away from their home in Nova Scotia's Pictou County five days ago.

The search started last Friday morning, when it's believed six-year-old Lily Sullivan and four-year-old Jack Sullivan strayed from their home on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station, about 25 kilometres southwest of New Glasgow.

"Police are pursuing all investigative avenues and there's a variety of teams involved who are applying the tools and the skills and the expertise needed to locate and and bring Lily and Jack home," RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Carlie McCann told reporters Tuesday afternoon.

"This does remain a missing person investigation."

McCann would not say if there's been any sign of the children, but she stressed that police were "following up on all information as it comes in."

Staff Sgt. Josh Wiese, the incident commander at the site, said searchers — including people who've been on the scene since Day 1 — are exhausted but "optimistic."

"We want to bring these two children home to their parents," Wiese told reporters. "This is all search and rescue does, is they try to bring people home safely. So they're trying to stay on focus, they're trying to stay on mission."

RCMP said drones were in the air late Monday and into Tuesday in the rural community in the province's northeast.

McCann said drones are effective at night because they use "forward-looking infrared technology" to spot differences in temperature, which can point people toward specific areas for ground searches.

As the drones zipped overhead in the night sky, roughly 60 specially trained ground search and rescue members were combing the area below. The number of searchers swells to roughly 150 during the daytime hours.

Police dogs have been assisting in the search, and it's also the first time the Nova Scotia Guard — a provincially organized volunteer group — has been deployed. The public has been asked to stay away as crews conduct their work.

Daniel Martell, the stepfather of the children, has said the last time he saw the children was Friday morning when he and their mother were in their bedroom with their one-year-old baby.

The 33-year-old man said Lily came into the bedroom several times and he could hear Jack in the kitchen. The children must have opened the sliding back door, which is almost silent, and left, he said.

The home borders a heavily wooded area with steep banks and thick brush.

Martell said investigators with the RCMP's major crimes unit spoke with him a few days ago, and spoke with members of his family on Monday. Martell has said he believes the children were abducted.

"[The RCMP were] taking statements from the very start. They just want to rule everything out before they switch … concerns from being, you know, search and rescue to abduction," he said in an interview Tuesday.

Police said on Friday there is no evidence the children were abducted, so no Amber Alert was issued. But the RCMP issued a vulnerable missing persons alert for Antigonish, Colchester and Pictou counties late Saturday afternoon.

When asked on Tuesday if the major crimes unit is involved, an RCMP spokesperson said a "variety of teams" are working on the missing persons investigation "in order to provide tools, skills and resources as necessary."

Martell said that after the disappearance, the children's mother left the area to be with her family in another part of the province and has blocked him on social media.

He said there was an argument between the two families out in the yard of the home that day.

"My mother had to kick … some people off the property 'cause they were saying that I did it, I had something to do with it, and I'm the only one here fighting for them, which is sad," he said.

The children's mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, spoke to CTV News on Saturday, saying that she was trying to stay hopeful.

"I want to hold them and I want them home," she told CTV.

Robert Parker, the warden of the Municipality of Pictou County, said everyone is hoping and praying for good news, but as the days pass, "we're wondering what's going to happen next."

He described the mood in the region of roughly 43,000 people as "tense."

"Nobody is giving up yet," Parker told CBC's Information Morning Nova Scotia on Tuesday morning. "These children have almost become everybody's children in this county."

Parker noted that it's human nature to jump to conclusions, but he urged the public to temper their comments, especially on social media.

"There's always people who want to say something that's hurtful," he said. "We have to remember kindness."

Martell has said Jack is in pre-primary and Lily is in primary. He said they were not at school on Friday because Lily had a cough, and they were also home sick from school on Thursday.
 
Almost the minute I started with the first post, I didn't know he was a stepdad but figured due to names, guessed baby was his. Didn't like the vibe of it from the very first post, doesn't mean he did it of course, but several things bothered me right from the get go. Read through the rest and tons of red flags imo all the way to families fighting, the thinks they were abducted, LE sees no reason so far to think so... Just a lot. While parents can be stressed he was fairly gripey about them, the two that are not his.

Doesn't mean he did anything to them but my meter has moved off the zero mark. Not ready to go full yet but it's off of it. Will await more, not reading links right now, tired.

I hope they are found safe and so far though, one can hope and pray.

I see another new child case but not going to look at that one. Just can't. I really believe all need attn but just the headline, nope, not doing it.
 
(CNN) — A desperate search for two children missing in a rural part of Canada’s Nova Scotia province has stretched into its fourth day, with dozens of rescuers combing the dense woods in search of the siblings.

Six-year-old Lily Sullivan and her brother Jack, 4, were last seen Friday morning at their home in Pictou County, about 70 miles from the province’s capital city of Halifax, according to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Police said on Saturday they believe the pair wandered away from their home.

In the days since, more than one hundred searchers as well as helicopters, drones and dogs have been scouring the heavily wooded area near their home for any clues about the siblings’ whereabouts.



“It has been a few days, but that has not dampened the hopes of the (search) teams and the police who are here trying to get these kids home,” Corporal Carlie McCann, a spokesperson for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) told reporters Monday, according to CNN affiliate CBC News.

The search continued overnight Monday despite challenging rainy conditions. Police said searchers spotted a footprint on Saturday and have expanded their search effort in that area, CBC reported.



The children’s mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, told CNN affiliate CTV News that she woke up Friday morning and heard the kids playing in the next room before drifting back to sleep. When she woke up and noticed they were gone, she immediately called 911.

Brooks-Murray told CTV Jack and Lily are not the type of kids to go outside alone.

“We always make sure that we’re out there with them, watching them, and they happen to just get out that sliding door, and we can’t hear it when it opens, and they were outside playing, but we weren’t aware of it at the time, and the next thing we knew it was quiet,” Brooks-Murray told CTV.



The children are members of the Sipekne’katik First Nation, according to chief Michelle Glasgow.

“Please help bring Lily and Jack back home,” Glasgow said on social media.

Daniel Martell, the children’s stepfather, told CBC Lily and Jack are “awesome kids.”

“Jack just absolutely loves bugs, dinosaurs,” Martell said. “Lily loves girly things but she also loves doing everything with Jack.”

“They’re like best friends, not just brother and sister,” he added.

Martell said he is pushing for police to monitor the borders and the airports to search for the children. The RCMP are not currently treating the case as a possible kidnapping, according to the CBC.

The RCMP said search and rescue volunteers and officers have “meticulously searched” the area around Jack and Lily’s home and asked the public to avoid the search area in a post to social media Monday.

“Searchers are diligently keeping track of which specific sections of the ground have been covered and are applying their specialized skills to allow the searchers on scene to stay safe,” the RCMP said.



Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston said people “across Nova Scotia are praying for a positive outcome” for Jack and Lily in a post to social media Saturday.

 
The foot print is hopeful if one of theirs and if from this time period and so on.

I don't know what I think yet but definitely praying for them...
 

'Nobody is giving up yet': N.S. crews spend 5th day searching for missing children​

Helicopters were back in the sky Tuesday as upward of 150 searchers scoured the wooded areas below for two children who are believed to have wandered away from their home in Nova Scotia's Pictou County five days ago.

The search started last Friday morning, when it's believed six-year-old Lily Sullivan and four-year-old Jack Sullivan strayed from their home on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station, about 25 kilometres southwest of New Glasgow.

"Police are pursuing all investigative avenues and there's a variety of teams involved who are applying the tools and the skills and the expertise needed to locate and and bring Lily and Jack home," RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Carlie McCann told reporters Tuesday afternoon.

"This does remain a missing person investigation."

McCann would not say if there's been any sign of the children, but she stressed that police were "following up on all information as it comes in."

Staff Sgt. Josh Wiese, the incident commander at the site, said searchers — including people who've been on the scene since Day 1 — are exhausted but "optimistic."

"We want to bring these two children home to their parents," Wiese told reporters. "This is all search and rescue does, is they try to bring people home safely. So they're trying to stay on focus, they're trying to stay on mission."

RCMP said drones were in the air late Monday and into Tuesday in the rural community in the province's northeast.

McCann said drones are effective at night because they use "forward-looking infrared technology" to spot differences in temperature, which can point people toward specific areas for ground searches.

As the drones zipped overhead in the night sky, roughly 60 specially trained ground search and rescue members were combing the area below. The number of searchers swells to roughly 150 during the daytime hours.

Police dogs have been assisting in the search, and it's also the first time the Nova Scotia Guard — a provincially organized volunteer group — has been deployed. The public has been asked to stay away as crews conduct their work.

Daniel Martell, the stepfather of the children, has said the last time he saw the children was Friday morning when he and their mother were in their bedroom with their one-year-old baby.

The 33-year-old man said Lily came into the bedroom several times and he could hear Jack in the kitchen. The children must have opened the sliding back door, which is almost silent, and left, he said.

The home borders a heavily wooded area with steep banks and thick brush.

Martell said investigators with the RCMP's major crimes unit spoke with him a few days ago, and spoke with members of his family on Monday. Martell has said he believes the children were abducted.

"[The RCMP were] taking statements from the very start. They just want to rule everything out before they switch … concerns from being, you know, search and rescue to abduction," he said in an interview Tuesday.

Police said on Friday there is no evidence the children were abducted, so no Amber Alert was issued. But the RCMP issued a vulnerable missing persons alert for Antigonish, Colchester and Pictou counties late Saturday afternoon.

When asked on Tuesday if the major crimes unit is involved, an RCMP spokesperson said a "variety of teams" are working on the missing persons investigation "in order to provide tools, skills and resources as necessary."

Martell said that after the disappearance, the children's mother left the area to be with her family in another part of the province and has blocked him on social media.

He said there was an argument between the two families out in the yard of the home that day.

"My mother had to kick … some people off the property 'cause they were saying that I did it, I had something to do with it, and I'm the only one here fighting for them, which is sad," he said.

The children's mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, spoke to CTV News on Saturday, saying that she was trying to stay hopeful.

"I want to hold them and I want them home," she told CTV.

Robert Parker, the warden of the Municipality of Pictou County, said everyone is hoping and praying for good news, but as the days pass, "we're wondering what's going to happen next."

He described the mood in the region of roughly 43,000 people as "tense."

"Nobody is giving up yet," Parker told CBC's Information Morning Nova Scotia on Tuesday morning. "These children have almost become everybody's children in this county."

Parker noted that it's human nature to jump to conclusions, but he urged the public to temper their comments, especially on social media.

"There's always people who want to say something that's hurtful," he said. "We have to remember kindness."

Martell has said Jack is in pre-primary and Lily is in primary. He said they were not at school on Friday because Lily had a cough, and they were also home sick from school on Thursday.
Oh dear…..
 

'Nobody is giving up yet': N.S. crews spend 5th day searching for missing children​

Helicopters were back in the sky Tuesday as upward of 150 searchers scoured the wooded areas below for two children who are believed to have wandered away from their home in Nova Scotia's Pictou County five days ago.

The search started last Friday morning, when it's believed six-year-old Lily Sullivan and four-year-old Jack Sullivan strayed from their home on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station, about 25 kilometres southwest of New Glasgow.

"Police are pursuing all investigative avenues and there's a variety of teams involved who are applying the tools and the skills and the expertise needed to locate and and bring Lily and Jack home," RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Carlie McCann told reporters Tuesday afternoon.

"This does remain a missing person investigation."

McCann would not say if there's been any sign of the children, but she stressed that police were "following up on all information as it comes in."

Staff Sgt. Josh Wiese, the incident commander at the site, said searchers — including people who've been on the scene since Day 1 — are exhausted but "optimistic."

"We want to bring these two children home to their parents," Wiese told reporters. "This is all search and rescue does, is they try to bring people home safely. So they're trying to stay on focus, they're trying to stay on mission."

RCMP said drones were in the air late Monday and into Tuesday in the rural community in the province's northeast.

McCann said drones are effective at night because they use "forward-looking infrared technology" to spot differences in temperature, which can point people toward specific areas for ground searches.

As the drones zipped overhead in the night sky, roughly 60 specially trained ground search and rescue members were combing the area below. The number of searchers swells to roughly 150 during the daytime hours.

Police dogs have been assisting in the search, and it's also the first time the Nova Scotia Guard — a provincially organized volunteer group — has been deployed. The public has been asked to stay away as crews conduct their work.

Daniel Martell, the stepfather of the children, has said the last time he saw the children was Friday morning when he and their mother were in their bedroom with their one-year-old baby.

The 33-year-old man said Lily came into the bedroom several times and he could hear Jack in the kitchen. The children must have opened the sliding back door, which is almost silent, and left, he said.

The home borders a heavily wooded area with steep banks and thick brush.

Martell said investigators with the RCMP's major crimes unit spoke with him a few days ago, and spoke with members of his family on Monday. Martell has said he believes the children were abducted.

"[The RCMP were] taking statements from the very start. They just want to rule everything out before they switch … concerns from being, you know, search and rescue to abduction," he said in an interview Tuesday.

Police said on Friday there is no evidence the children were abducted, so no Amber Alert was issued. But the RCMP issued a vulnerable missing persons alert for Antigonish, Colchester and Pictou counties late Saturday afternoon.

When asked on Tuesday if the major crimes unit is involved, an RCMP spokesperson said a "variety of teams" are working on the missing persons investigation "in order to provide tools, skills and resources as necessary."

Martell said that after the disappearance, the children's mother left the area to be with her family in another part of the province and has blocked him on social media.

He said there was an argument between the two families out in the yard of the home that day.

"My mother had to kick … some people off the property 'cause they were saying that I did it, I had something to do with it, and I'm the only one here fighting for them, which is sad," he said.

The children's mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, spoke to CTV News on Saturday, saying that she was trying to stay hopeful.

"I want to hold them and I want them home," she told CTV.

Robert Parker, the warden of the Municipality of Pictou County, said everyone is hoping and praying for good news, but as the days pass, "we're wondering what's going to happen next."

He described the mood in the region of roughly 43,000 people as "tense."

"Nobody is giving up yet," Parker told CBC's Information Morning Nova Scotia on Tuesday morning. "These children have almost become everybody's children in this county."

Parker noted that it's human nature to jump to conclusions, but he urged the public to temper their comments, especially on social media.

"There's always people who want to say something that's hurtful," he said. "We have to remember kindness."

Martell has said Jack is in pre-primary and Lily is in primary. He said they were not at school on Friday because Lily had a cough, and they were also home sick from school on Thursday.
Getting more and more alarming now
 

RCMP to provide update Wednesday afternoon on missing children in rural N.S.​

The Nova Scotia RCMP says it will provide an update Wednesday afternoon on the two young children missing for several days in Pictou County.

The force will hold the update at 2 p.m. on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station. CTV Atlantic will livestream the update on its website.

Police believe Lily Sullivan, 6, and Jack Sullivan, 4, wandered away from their home in the same area around 10 a.m. Friday.

Their stepfather Daniel Martell thinks they may have been abducted, but police have said there is no information to suggest they were.

Martell spoke with CTV Atlantic on Tuesday and said the only concrete clue found during the search so far is a boot print on the edge of their property.

He added he spends every evening conducting his own search.

“Hardly any evidence at all since the first day. It’s mind-boggling that nothing else was found,” he said.

The RCMP has not said if any additional evidence has been found.

Martell has been in a relationship with the children’s mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, for three years.

He estimates it took them up to 20 minutes to notice the two children were gone Friday morning.

According to Martell, Brooks-Murray is now staying with family outside of the county. He says she hasn’t spoken to him since leaving.

Crews focused their search on a 3.5-kilometre radius of a wooded area over the weekend. The search has since expanded.

“The search expands as we exclude areas. We continue expanding the search into other areas. The search has expanded every single day as we exclude one area. And there’s times we go back and we research an area because children do wander,” said RCMP incident commander Josh Wiese.

Hundreds of people have been taking part in the search, including ground search and rescue teams, the Civil Air Search and Rescue Association, the Department of Natural Resources’ Air Services, the Nova Scotia Guard and several RCMP units, including dogs and drones.

The RCMP would not confirm Tuesday if its major crime unit is involved in the investigation.

“I can’t comment on what any of the specific teams are beyond what’s involved in the search on the ground here,” said Cpl. Carlie McCann.

Police say they are still treating it as a missing person case.

CTV Atlantic has reached out to the RCMP for an update on Wednesday’s search efforts as they enter a sixth day.
 
So mum is not helping with the search at all and has left the area with their one year old baby. Is there a reason she gave for that?

When did anyone other than Mum and stepdad actually see the kids? They had not been at school for the previous two days the parents said, so it seems like last Wednesday they were last at school.
 
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Day 6: RCMP say search for missing Nova Scotia children to be ‘scaled back’​

The massive search for two missing children in Nova Scotia has been “scaled back” after six straight days of searching in a rural area of Pictou County.
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RCMP said Wednesday that it has been an “all hands on deck effort” and that while they are scaling back the full search to look at more “specific spaces,” they are not ending their efforts.

“We’re not packing up and we’re not giving up,” said Staff Sgt. Curtis MacKinnon.

“We want to circle back to increase the probability that all clues have been found. And when transitioning from an active search to a scaled back search, the probability of survival is taken into consideration,” MacKinnon said.

“Our investigation is broad, and it won’t end until we know where Lily and Jack are and can bring them home.”

He added that the children’s family has been kept updated on the search and the investigation. As part of that investigation, family and community members have been interviewed to gather tips, he said.

Amy Hansen with Colchester County Ground Search and Rescue said the terrain and conditions have been difficult for searchers – many of whom have been on site for days.

“It’s time to scale back,” she said. “We’re exhausting people and we’re starting to see more injuries coming back.”

“Police are pursuing all investigative avenues, and there are a variety of teams involved who are applying the tools and the skills and the expertise that are needed to bring Lily and Jack home,” said Nova Scotia RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Carlie McCann on Tuesday.
 
If it works, here's a map that shows how rural the area is. There looks to be what looks like a single track railway line parallel with the road. The house looks to be one of four in a very rural forested area.

I did a screenshot too.





Screenshot_20250507-191034_Samsung Internet.jpg



Here's another pic of them from one of the articles upthread.

For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page

Jack and Lily Sullivan who went missing near their home in Pictou County Friday are pictured.

Jack and Lily Sullivan who went missing near their home in Pictou County Friday are pictured.
 
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Search to be scaled back? Why?

Amy Hansen with Colchester County Ground Search and Rescue said the terrain and conditions have been difficult for searchers – many of whom have been on site for days.

“It’s time to scale back,” she said. “We’re exhausting people and we’re starting to see more injuries coming back.”
 

Link​

Update: Multi-agency search for missing children in Pictou County scales back


May 7, 2025

Lansdowne Station, Nova Scotia
News release

As of today, a multi-agency search for two missing children, six-year-old Lily Sullivan and four-year-old Jack Sullivan, will be scaled back.
Lily and Jack were reported missing on May 2, at approximately 10 a.m. It's believed they wandered away from their home on Gairloch Rd. in Lansdown Station, Pictou County.
This search has included many agencies, including volunteer ground search and rescue teams from all surrounding areas and New Brunswick, the Civil Air Search and Rescue Association, the Nova Scotia Guard, the Salvation Army, the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre, Department of Natural Resources Air Services, Nova Scotia Public Safety and Field Communications, Canada Heavy Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 5, and several RCMP units, including Police Dog Services, drone operators, and our Major Crime Unit.
"It has been an all-hands-on-deck effort, using every available resource and tool," says Staff Sergeant Curtis MacKinnon, District Commander for Pictou County District RCMP. "We're transitioning from a full-scale search to searches in smaller, more specific areas; we'll be retracing our steps to ensure all clues have been found."
Since the search began on May 2, it has been concentrated in the Gairloch Rd. area and has covered four square kilometres of heavily wooded, rural terrain. Up to 160 trained volunteer searchers, along with many others, have been involved in the search each day. Tens of thousands of search hours have been dedicated to scouring the area, and GSAR has confirmed that over 100 tracks have been laid using GPS and grid searches.
Efforts to locate Lily and Jack have also included two vulnerable missing persons alerts. One was issued in Pictou County on May 2. And on May 3, a broadcast intrusive alert was issued to Antigonish, Colchester, and Pictou counties.
"I want to assure Nova Scotians that our missing persons investigation continues," says Staff Sergeant MacKinnon. "Our focus remains on finding Lily and Jack. Our best investigators are working every aspect of this file, and our work won't stop until we know where Lily and Jack are and can bring them home."
Anyone with information is asked to contact Pictou County District RCMP at 902-485-4333. To remain anonymous, call Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers, toll-free, at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), submit a secure web tip at www.crimestoppers.ns.ca, or use the P3 Tips app.

Our thoughts are with the children's loved ones and the community at this difficult time.
 
So mum is not helping with the search at all and has left the area with their one year old baby. Is there a reason she gave for that?

When did anyone other than Mum and stepdad actually see the kids? They had not been at school for the previous two days the parents said, so it seems like last Wednesday they were last at school.
I must have missed the part about them not being in school... Not liking the sound of this one at all...

All I know is the families I believe it said got in a fight I think in the yard and she left at some point around then I thought.
 

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