CA MAYA "MAY" MILLETE: Missing from Chula Vista, CA - 7 Jan 2021 - Age 39 *TRIAL IN PROGRESS*

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Maya “May” Millete, 39, was last seen Thursday evening in her Chula Vista home near the San Miguel Ranch area, according to her loved ones. Family and friends said her car is still at her home and her phone has been going to voicemail since her disappearance.

Hospitals, jails and morgues have been contacted by the woman’s kin, but they said she has not been found at any of those locations.


Maya and Larry Millete are high school sweethearts married for 21 years with three children — ages 4, 9, and 11.

Maya has been missing from her Chula Vista home since last week. Millete says they had argued the night before.

"We had problems this year, up and downs," Millete told ABC 10News.

He said his wife has left before for the night to blow off steam, but he became worried when she didn't show up for their daughter's birthday on Sunday.

"If she didn't have her car, a friend would have to pick her up. That's the only reason I was like, 'maybe she's wine tasting or hiking with a friend,'" says Millete.

Maya works as a defense contractor at Naval Base San Diego and didn't show up for work on Monday.

"I called her boss, she didn't even log in. And that's the other alarming part, because work for her is like a party ... that's her outlet," Millete says.

Millete says he will continue to search, anxiously waiting.


 
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From a little bit I’ve gotten to see about the trial and catch up with about the trial, I think they’ve got a pretty good case against him. I’m feeling good about the jury.
 

Larry Millete murder trial: Week 5 recap​

More of Larry and Maya’s online activity leading up to her disappearance was discussed during day 19 of the trial.

While Grindley was on the stand, photos showing searches tied to Larry’s Google account were shown to the jury. They included searches for “Flunitrazepam” and “Rohypnol” which are more commonly known as “roofies,” as well as directions to Arizona. Larry also searched for Maya’s email address several times in the weeks after her disappearance.
 

The man Maya Millete had an affair with testifies: “…it became a deeper love.”​

Day 20 in the murder trial of Larry Millete saw some of the most anticipated testimony yet, as his missing wife Maya’s paramour testified inside a packed Chula Vista courtroom.

Jurors have heard previous testimony detailing Maya’s affair with a subordinate co-worker named Jamey Laird. The pair met in late 2019, when Laird was hired to work as a Navy contract specialist at the Southwest Regional Maintenance Center (SWRMC).

Laird testified that their relationship blossomed quickly from a work relationship into a romantic one.

“It became physical in early January,” Laird said. “Kind of like a newlywed feeling…but over time it became a deeper love.”

Like Maya, Jamey was also married. During their relationship in 2020, Laird testified that both Maya and his wife became pregnant.

Laird’s wife went into labor the same day Maya was last seen alive on January 7, 2021. Other evidence, including paperwork at the Millete home, indicated that Maya chose to terminate her pregnancy. Laird also confirmed that during questioning, saying he feared knowledge of her abortion would become public.

Due to the hidden nature of their relationship, Laird said he and Maya coordinated the denials they told their spouses, family, friends, and co-workers. Much of that communication was online, via Maya’s secret Instagram account.

“Nothing was off limits,” Laird said. “ We were always working together to cover up the affair…there was no topic off limits…even things to repair my relationship.”

Laird said they even used nicknames for their significant others. He said he referred to his wife as “E,” as in esposa, the Spanish word for wife. He said Maya referred to Larry as “V,” in relation to the villainous wizard Voldemort from the Harry Potter series.

Laird said Maya confided in him about Larry’s controlling behaviors, which included refusing to let her drive herself to work. He said that took place in late 2020, which was after previous testimony revealed that Larry caught the two of them together in the SWRMC parking lot.

Laird said Maya also told him that Larry planted a tracking device in her car and hid a subliminal message device under her bed.

“I’d not seen that level of desperation to save a marriage, and I told her to be careful,” Laird said.

Laird testified that the first time he believes he met Larry was after allegations of the affair were reported to their superiors at work, by his own mother-in-law. He said he, Maya, and Larry were called for a meeting with Maya’s supervisor.

Before that meeting, Laird said he and Maya coordinated their stories. He said they denied the affair and called the entire thing a misunderstanding. Laird even said he signed a statement under penalty of perjury denying the affair.

Laird testified that he communicated with Maya in the week leading up to her disappearance and the birth of his child. He described her mood as defeated as Larry fought her attempts to leave him, which included threatening to bring up affair allegations again at work.

However, he said Maya was determined to leave Larry, and said she would be filing for divorce after celebrating her daughter’s birthday in Big Bear. That trip never happened due to her disappearance.

Laird also testified that Maya even finally confided in her eldest daughter about the divorce. She said her daughter was receptive.

Laird said he was at the hospital for his wife’s labor and delivery on January 7 and stayed at the hospital until January 10. He said he didn’t even know Maya was missing until Maya’s sister-in-law, Genesis Tabalanza, and her friend Jasmin Rooker reached out with concerns that she was missing.

Laird also acknowledged that he was less than truthful on several occasions when he spoke to police about Maya’s disappearance.

“No, I spun it…That I hadn’t heard from her in a work sense,” Laird said. “I was scared and didn’t want the affair coming out. I was also fearful that something happened to her, and I was trying to save my marriage.”

MORE AT LINK
 

The man Maya Millete had an affair with testifies: “…it became a deeper love.”​

Day 20 in the murder trial of Larry Millete saw some of the most anticipated testimony yet, as his missing wife Maya’s paramour testified inside a packed Chula Vista courtroom.

Jurors have heard previous testimony detailing Maya’s affair with a subordinate co-worker named Jamey Laird. The pair met in late 2019, when Laird was hired to work as a Navy contract specialist at the Southwest Regional Maintenance Center (SWRMC).

Laird testified that their relationship blossomed quickly from a work relationship into a romantic one.

“It became physical in early January,” Laird said. “Kind of like a newlywed feeling…but over time it became a deeper love.”

Like Maya, Jamey was also married. During their relationship in 2020, Laird testified that both Maya and his wife became pregnant.

Laird’s wife went into labor the same day Maya was last seen alive on January 7, 2021. Other evidence, including paperwork at the Millete home, indicated that Maya chose to terminate her pregnancy. Laird also confirmed that during questioning, saying he feared knowledge of her abortion would become public.

Due to the hidden nature of their relationship, Laird said he and Maya coordinated the denials they told their spouses, family, friends, and co-workers. Much of that communication was online, via Maya’s secret Instagram account.

“Nothing was off limits,” Laird said. “ We were always working together to cover up the affair…there was no topic off limits…even things to repair my relationship.”

Laird said they even used nicknames for their significant others. He said he referred to his wife as “E,” as in esposa, the Spanish word for wife. He said Maya referred to Larry as “V,” in relation to the villainous wizard Voldemort from the Harry Potter series.

Laird said Maya confided in him about Larry’s controlling behaviors, which included refusing to let her drive herself to work. He said that took place in late 2020, which was after previous testimony revealed that Larry caught the two of them together in the SWRMC parking lot.

Laird said Maya also told him that Larry planted a tracking device in her car and hid a subliminal message device under her bed.

“I’d not seen that level of desperation to save a marriage, and I told her to be careful,” Laird said.

Laird testified that the first time he believes he met Larry was after allegations of the affair were reported to their superiors at work, by his own mother-in-law. He said he, Maya, and Larry were called for a meeting with Maya’s supervisor.

Before that meeting, Laird said he and Maya coordinated their stories. He said they denied the affair and called the entire thing a misunderstanding. Laird even said he signed a statement under penalty of perjury denying the affair.

Laird testified that he communicated with Maya in the week leading up to her disappearance and the birth of his child. He described her mood as defeated as Larry fought her attempts to leave him, which included threatening to bring up affair allegations again at work.

However, he said Maya was determined to leave Larry, and said she would be filing for divorce after celebrating her daughter’s birthday in Big Bear. That trip never happened due to her disappearance.

Laird also testified that Maya even finally confided in her eldest daughter about the divorce. She said her daughter was receptive.

Laird said he was at the hospital for his wife’s labor and delivery on January 7 and stayed at the hospital until January 10. He said he didn’t even know Maya was missing until Maya’s sister-in-law, Genesis Tabalanza, and her friend Jasmin Rooker reached out with concerns that she was missing.

Laird also acknowledged that he was less than truthful on several occasions when he spoke to police about Maya’s disappearance.

“No, I spun it…That I hadn’t heard from her in a work sense,” Laird said. “I was scared and didn’t want the affair coming out. I was also fearful that something happened to her, and I was trying to save my marriage.”

MORE AT LINK
Sounds to me that he’s being completely honest, even at the risk of losing his marriage. Or is he still married? I hope so. I hope they were able to work it out in spite of all of this.
 
Sounds to me that he’s being completely honest, even at the risk of losing his marriage. Or is he still married? I hope so. I hope they were able to work it out in spite of all of this.
"While he didn’t remember the exact date he confessed the affair to his wife, he admits that he lied to her repeatedly during the first several months Maya was missing. He said he’s no longer married."

There's the answer. The moral of the story: Don't cheat on your spouse.
 

Millete trial: Scratches on Larry’s Lexus after Maya went missing​

One of Maya and Larry’s neighbors in Chula Vista, Kevin Linacoc, took the stand late Tuesday afternoon.

After Larry returned home on Jan. 9, 2021, around 3:20 p.m., surveillance video from Linacoc’s home showed Larry stopping to talk to a neighbor, and then to talk with Linacoc.

He said Larry told him he had some scratches on his Lexus and wanted him to check them out.

“I think he said he took it out to the desert or something like that,” Linacoc recalled while on the stand.

The video and audio were then played in the courtroom.

It showed that around 3:28 p.m. on Jan. 9, 2021, Larry went to Linacoc’s house and asked if he could repair his Lexus because he said he had taken it on a “Jeep Run” to Anza Borrego, where he got scratches on it after going through bushes.

Both witnesses who testified about the Jeep trips said that they never saw Larry or Maya bring a Lexus.

Larry and Linacoc then went back to his Lexus and looked at the scratches. Kevin said he noticed some pinstripe light scratches caused by bushes on both sides of the car.
 

Millete trial: Scratches on Larry’s Lexus after Maya went missing​

One of Maya and Larry’s neighbors in Chula Vista, Kevin Linacoc, took the stand late Tuesday afternoon.

After Larry returned home on Jan. 9, 2021, around 3:20 p.m., surveillance video from Linacoc’s home showed Larry stopping to talk to a neighbor, and then to talk with Linacoc.

He said Larry told him he had some scratches on his Lexus and wanted him to check them out.

“I think he said he took it out to the desert or something like that,” Linacoc recalled while on the stand.

The video and audio were then played in the courtroom.

It showed that around 3:28 p.m. on Jan. 9, 2021, Larry went to Linacoc’s house and asked if he could repair his Lexus because he said he had taken it on a “Jeep Run” to Anza Borrego, where he got scratches on it after going through bushes.

Both witnesses who testified about the Jeep trips said that they never saw Larry or Maya bring a Lexus.

Larry and Linacoc then went back to his Lexus and looked at the scratches. Kevin said he noticed some pinstripe light scratches caused by bushes on both sides of the car.
What a &^(&^.
 

Prosecution reveals where they think Maya Millete's body is buried​

San Diego County District Attorney’s Office investigator James Rhoades returned to the stand on Monday, and revealed where they believe Larry Millete disposed of his wife Maya’s body. Rhoades has sat next to Deputy District Attorney Christy Bowles for the duration of the trial.

Rhoades talked about the efforts by investigators to try to determine where Larry went on January 8, 2021, which was the day after Maya was last seen alive. Larry says he didn’t murder Maya, and her body has never been found.

Based on home surveillance video, investigators have testified that Larry left his house in Chula Vista’s San Miguel Ranch neighborhood after 6 a.m. and returned home about 12 hours later.

Police say they’ve been unable to verify Larry’s story that he and his son went to Torrey Pines State Beach. Throughout the trial, testimony has circled around the accusation that Larry spent that day traveling to a remote location, potentially a desert, to dispose of Maya’s body.

Rhoades then explained how investigators created a timeline of all the trips the vehicle took from December 17, 2020, when it was serviced, through January 23, 2021. That’s when it was impounded by the police.

Detectives used cell phone location records, financial transactions, and toll road transactions to calculate how much mileage was used each day, with the expectation of the gap on January 8, 2021. Rhoades said there were an estimated 444 miles the vehicle drove that day that are unaccounted for.

Rhoades also testified that the Lexus SUV recorded data about when it was turned on or when the key fob was activated, which he said allowed investigators to infer it had been turned off. These were the times for those power-on events he said were significant on January 8, 2021.
  • 6:45 a.m. & 6:46 a.m.
  • 7:00 a.m. & 7:04 a.m.
  • 10:58 a.m, 11:11a.m., 11:13 a.m.
  • 1:41 p.m.
  • 3:29 p.m.
Bowles then dove into questioning into where exactly investigators believed Larry went to dispose of Maya’s body. Up to this point, there had only been implications that had happened in one of the desert areas the Millete family was familiar with.

Rhoades identified that location as being somewhere near or inside the Colorado River Reservation. He said that area is at the intersection of several routes the family had taken before and was the approximate halfway point for the missing mileage – 222 of the 444 miles unaccounted for.

The investigator testified that the SUV power-on events coincided with stops to refuel the vehicle with gasoline. Rhoades said his analysis indicated the vehicle drove away in the morning, fueled up around 11:00 a.m., and drove out to the location where Maya’s body was dumped.

Then he said the vehicle was turned back at 1:41 p.m., driven to a gas station to refuel, and then began the journey back to Chula Vista just before 3:29 p.m. Rhoades said it would be possible for Larry to travel that distance and carry out the crime in the roughly 12 hours he was gone.

“There would be enough time to drive out in that time frame, some additional time there, and time to return with the time frame,” Rhoades said.

Rhoades said the Lexus had an older navigation system, which didn’t record GPS data of its travels or what locations are entered into it. However, it did record when addresses were inputted.

Rhoades said the vehicle had an address entered for a trip that began at 3:29 p.m. The investigator also said there were many small shrubs and bushes that could create the same kind of scratches that Larry told a neighbor on January 9, 2021 that needed to be repaired.

Rhoades said several searches were conducted across the area in the Colorado River Reservation, which was vastly empty. Nothing was found.

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