UT SUSAN COX POWELL: Missing from West Valley City, UT - 7 Dec 2009 - Age 28

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(Much longer write-up on the Charley Project link above. Snipped here for brevity.)

The next day [Monday, December 7, 2009], both Susan and Josh didn't show up for work or call their employers to say they would be absent, and they also failed to drop their children off at day care. Authorities issued a missing persons bulletin for Susan, Josh and their two sons, two-year-old Charlie and four-year-old Braden.

Josh and the children returned home at 5:00 p.m., but Susan has never been heard from again. Josh said he had taken his sons camping in the desert at Simpson Springs, along the Pony Express Trail, late on Sunday night. He returned home to find Susan missing.

He said he last saw Susan at their home at 12:30 a.m. on December 7, as he was setting out on the camping trip. Susan didn't go with them because she felt sick. Josh said he didn't go to work on Monday because he got confused about what day of the week it was.

Authorities quickly classified Susan's disappearance as suspicious and executed a search warrant on her home. Her family described her as a devoted mother who would not have abandoned her children, and she left her purse, keys and cellular phone behind at home.

Investigators stated on the day Susan was reported missing, they noticed a large wet spot in her home and fans blowing on it to dry it. They questioned Josh's story, stating they didn't know why he would have taken two toddlers camping in the cold weather. The temperatures during the time of the purported camping trip were well below freezing, with mixed rain and snow.

Police searched the site where Josh said he had set up camp, but they were unable to determine whether anyone had camped there recently. Braden did confirm that the trip had taken place, however.

A week after Susan's disappearance, Josh hired an attorney. Authorities named him as a person of interest in her case, and stated he hadn't cooperated with the investigation. The police briefly impounded the family's minivan and searched it. During the day that the van was in police custody, Josh rented a car to drive. Investigators later determined he'd driven it hundreds of miles before he returned it, but the car didn't have any stored GPS data to indicate where it had been driven.

A neighbor said Josh appeared at his home when it was time to return the rented car and get his van back from the police. The neighbor stated he was acting oddly, his hands were badly windburned and he kept putting lotion on them.

In January 2010, a month after Susan's disappearance, Josh packed his family's belongings, put their house up for rent and moved Puyallup, Washington with the children. Both he and Susan are originally from Washington and have relatives there.


For about two months after her disappearance, Susan's family stood by Josh and said they didn't believe he would have harmed her. In February 2010, however, a family friend appointed as spokesperson for Susan's family told the media they'd learned that Josh had been emotionally abusing Susan for years and there was at least one episode of physical abuse as well.

Susan had reportedly said she planned to leave Josh on April 6, 2010, the couple's wedding anniversary, if their marriage didn't improve before then. In the aftermath of her disappearance, relations between Josh and her parents became so heated that a judge ordered him and Chuck Cox to keep at least 500 feet apart.


In late March 2012, newly unsealed documents revealed additional evidence police had that tied Josh to Susan's disappearance. Her blood had been found on the tile floor next to the couch in the family home and her cellular phone was in Josh's car, something he couldn't explain.

When Josh turned Susan's phone over to the police, it was turned off and missing its SIM card, the portable memory chip that stores information about the device. He later gave his own phone over to authorities and it too was missing the SIM card.

Susan had $1.5 million in insurance on her life. A short time after her disappearance, Josh began drawing on her retirement account, and he canceled all her upcoming chiropractic appointments.

Susan left a will in a safe deposit box registered in her name only, along with a handwritten letter addressed to her family and friends, saying Josh had threatened to "destroy" her and told her the children "will not have a mother and father" if she divorced him. The letter stated if she died, it "may not be an accident, even if it looks like one."

Charlie told the police that Susan accompanied them on the camping trip the night of her disappearance, but she didn't come back with them and he didn't know why. Weeks after his mother's disappearance, after he had moved to Washington, Charlie told a teacher that his mother was dead.

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MEDIA - SUSAN COX POWELL: Missing from West Valley City, UT since 7 Dec 2009 - Age 28
 
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1. Susan Powell Disappeared While Her Husband Claims He Was Camping With Their Children

Court records in a wrongful death lawsuit Susan’s parents filed against the state in the death of her children say that, in December 2009, “Susan Powell disappeared from the Utah home she shared with her husband, Joshua Powell and their two boys. Joshua, the lead suspect in Susan’s disappearance, subsequently moved with the two boys to his father Stephen Powell’s home in Washington.”

According to the Charley Project, which is a missing persons’ website, Susan Powell’s friend had lunch with Susan and her husband Josh Powell at the Powell home on December 6, 2009. At the time, Susan and Josh had been married for eight years. The friend didn’t notice anything amiss.

However, the next day, neither Susan nor Josh showed up for work. They also didn’t let their employers know what was going on or drop their two children – Charlie, 2, and Braden, 4 – off at daycare, according to Charley Project. At first, authorities put out a missing person’s bulletin for Susan, Josh and both children.

That evening, though, Josh returned home with the children. He claimed that he had taken the children camping and didn’t know where his wife was. No one has ever seen Susan Powell again.

2. Susan Powell Wrote Emails & Recorded a Video About Her Husband’s Disturbing Behavior

In emails, according to the Salt Lake Tribune, Susan told friends that Josh “had changed into a surly, moody, controlling person she feared could harm her.”

“I want him in counseling, on meds, I want my husband, friend, lover BACK no more crazy, outrageous, outlandish beliefs/opinions,” she wrote. Adding to this concern, Susan even recorded a video and secret will the year before she died. “I want it documented that there is extreme turmoil in our marriage” and “If I die, it may not be an accident, even if it looks like one,” she said, according to Investigation Discovery Channel.

Court records from Washington State say that Susan Powell “disappeared from her home in Utah in December 2009 under suspicious circumstances. Joshua was a person of interest in Susan’s disappearance.” The family’s minivan was searched, the camping site investigated, and Josh soon hired an attorney and then moved from Utah to Washington State, according to Charley Project.

3. Susan’s Father-in-Law Steve Powell Was Sent to Prison on Child Pornography Charges

According to a State of Washington court decision, Susan Powell’s father-in-law Steve Powell was convicted of “second degree possession of depictions of a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct. The conviction was based on the seizure during the execution of a search warrant of images of children who were his former neighbors.”

In 2018, Steve Powell died of a heart attack at a hospital, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. He was only 68 years old. Powell went to prison but not for Susan Powell’s disappearance, and he was already behind bars when his son, Josh, killed himself and Josh’s two sons.

4. Josh Powell Tried to Murder His Sons With a Hatchet Before Blowing Them Up


The grisly deaths of Josh Powell and his two sons were horrific. It was 2012, three years since his wife’s disappearance, and Josh Powell was 36 years old. Charles was now 7 and Braden was 6 when the boys died.

According to ABC News, Josh Powell took a hatchet to the boys, wounding them but not killing them initially. Then, he set off a “gas-fueled explosion” that killed Powell and the children.

It was supposed to be a supervised visit, ABC reported, and Josh had recently given away the children’s toys. According to ABC News, a social worker was at the scene but Josh “shut and locked the door before the social worker could enter. Moments later, the house smelled of gas and erupted in a ball of flames.” He had lost custody of the boys after his father’s arrest. Images of concern were also found on Josh’s computer, ABC reported.

The oldest boy had started verbalizing details of the camping trip, claiming he saw Susan in the trunk of the car, according to ABC. Court records say that on September 28, 2011, the Superior Court of Washington, County of Pierce, Juvenile Court “issued orders placing the two boys in the custody of DSHS; authorizing placement with the Coxes (Susan’s parents); allowing Joshua weekly visits with the two boys under supervision by a DSHS-approved provider; and prohibiting Joshua from either discussing pending litigation with the boys or making disparaging remarks about the Coxes.”

5. Blood & Life Insurance Policies Add to the Evidence Against Josh Powell

Is Susan Powell dead? Who killed her? Was it Josh Powell? There’s evidence pointing at him as a key suspect. According to KUTV, “authorities found Susan Powell’s blood on a floor next to a sofa that appeared to have been recently cleaned, with two fans set up to blow on it.”

In addition, the television station reported, there were life insurance policies taken out on Susan Powell and Josh Powell “had filed paperwork to withdraw her retirement account money about 10 days after her disappearance.”

According to Investigation Discovery Channel, “Steven and Josh allegedly made a website outlining a theory that Susan ran away to Brazil with a missing Utah journalist named Steven Koecher.” However, that theory was discounted. Josh had a gambling problem and had filed for bankruptcy but Susan’s life insurance totaled more than $2 million, Investigation Discovery Channel reported.
 
TIMELINE:

 
Jury finds state DSHS negligent in violent deaths of Susan Powell's sons

A Pierce County jury on Friday ruled that the state Department of Social and Health Services was negligent in the deaths of two young boys who were attacked and killed in 2012 by their father who was under suspicion at the time for the disappearance of the boys' mother.

As part of the verdict, the jurors awarded $98 million to the estates of the two boys, Charlie and Braden.

A spokesperson for the Department of Children, Youth and Families, which broke off from DSHS about two years ago, said the agency's next moves are still up in the air.

"Following the tragic 2012 murder-suicide of Josh Powell and his two sons, Charlie and Braden, DCYF plans to review the jury’s decision and determine next steps," the agent said in a written statement.


Police say when the two boys were brought to Powell's Pierce County home by a DSHS caseworker for a supervised visit, he locked out the caseworker, killed the boys with a hatchet and then killed himself in an explosive fire that destroyed the home.

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Judge reduces damages over murder of missing woman Susan Powell's sons

A judge in Washington state has reduced the damages in a wrongful death case brought by Susan Cox Powell’s parents on behalf of her sons.

Jurors found the state Department of Social and Health Services negligent in July and awarded $98.5 million to the Cox family for the pain and suffering of Charlie and Braden Powell.

Pierce County Superior Court Judge Stanley Rumbaugh on Tuesday reduced that by two-thirds Tuesday, to about $32.8 million
 
‘Cold’: Newly released wiretap conversations depict Powell family on the brink

Josh Powell loaded up his sons, Charlie and Braden, into his minivan late at night and headed off for a campout.

This was not, however, the night of Powell’s infamous December 2009 trip on Utah’s Pony Express Trail, on the same night his wife, Susan Powell, disappeared. Instead it occurred on Aug. 26, 2011, the night after West Valley police and Pierce County, Washington, sheriff’s deputies raided the home of Josh Powell’s father, Steve Powell, with a search warrant.

Josh Powell did not inform his family that he was leaving with the boys, headed south toward Mount St. Helens. When Steve Powell learned of it the following day, he phoned Josh’s younger brother, Michael Powell, and informed him of his brother’s impromptu outing.

“You’re kidding me,” Michael Powell said.

In another phone call as Josh Powell was returning home with his boys on Aug. 28, 2011, Steve Powell told his eldest son he had something to confess: personal journals police had seized belonging to Steve Powell during the raid included potentially incriminating information about his sexual obsession with his son’s missing wife.

“I can’t believe what I’m hearing,” Josh Powell said.

These and hundreds of other conversations between members of the Powell family were captured on a wiretap in August and September of 2011, part of a sprawling law enforcement effort to crack the case of the Susan Powell disappearance.

KSL Newsradio’s “Cold” podcast has gained access to thousands of pages of notes and transcripts made by police who monitored those phone calls. The records, which have never been disclosed by police or released to the public, reveal a family on the brink. They paint the Powells as being in the grips of extreme paranoia and in a state of constant bickering as they attempted to steer media coverage and deflect public criticism.


MORE AT LINK, INCLUDING PODCAST
 

Where is Susan Powell? Her disappearance, young sons' horrific death haunts family​

Chuck and Judy Cox have spent the past eight years in agony while trying to find some semblance of justice after their son-in-law, Josh Powell, murdered their two young grandsons.

When it finally seemed like they were on the verge of finding some closure earlier this year, the coronavirus pandemic brought everything to a halt.


Chuck Cox said he is going to use the reward money to honor his late grandchildren.

“I intend to ... use the award to try and help other people, [so] that we can save more children,” said Chuck Cox.

The judge presiding over the case has since reduced the reward to $32 million -- $16 million for Charlie and $16 million for their other grandson Braden. The Cox family will appeal the court’s decision to reduce the jury’s verdict, their attorney said.

Graves said Susan Powell's story "will continue to live on and inspire others to move in the right direction. To move towards good relationships and get out of bad situations -- abusive situations."


Watch the full story on "20/20" FRIDAY at 9 p.m. ET on ABC
 

12th anniversary of Susan Powell disappearance​

Monday, Dec. 6, 2021 marks twelve years since the disappearance of Susan Cox Powell.

Loved ones share memories of Susan on a shared Facebook page called, “Friends and Family of Susan Powell,” and often commemorate the day by sharing photos and experiences, or donating to the “Susan Cox Powell Foundation.”

Susan Powell, 28, went missing on Dec. 6 in 2009 and is considered to be a victim of domestic violence.

She was last seen publicly attending church in West Valley and was reported missing the following day. A massive, nation-wide search for Susan lasted many years but was unsuccessful. Her body has never been found and she was declared legally dead in 2019.
 

Because of Susan Powell and Her Slain Sons' Stories, Women and Children 'Are Safe Today,' Best Friend Says​

The social worker was frantic as she dialed 911. The smell of gasoline was sickening.

Inside a house in Washington state, two little boys were about to die.

Horrified, Elizabeth Griffin-Hall pounded on the front door. She banged on a window. She could hear one of the children crying. The gas smell was so overwhelming, she backed her car out of the driveway and parked it across the street.

"He's got the kids in the house and he won't let me in," she told the emergency operator. "But I think I need help right away. And this is the craziest thing. He looked right at me, and closed the door. I smell gasoline, and he won't let me in."

Saturday marks the 10th anniversary of the horrific murders of Charlie, 7, and his 5-year-old brother, Braden. The killer was their own father, Joshua Powell, the prime suspect in the disappearance of their mother, Susan Powell, who had vanished three years before.

Susan has never been found and is presumed dead. The bizarre and stupefying saga of what happened to a devout Mormon mother living with her husband and two young sons in suburban Salt Lake City has captivated and appalled people around the world.
 

Utahns still searching for Susan Cox Powell 10 years after death of sons​

Saturday marked 10 years since Josh Powell killed his two sons in a house fire in Washington state, two years after his wife Susan Cox Powell went missing.

Susan's disappearance captivated the nation, but it was Josh killing himself and their boys, Charlie and Braden, that was the most shocking of all.

A renewed effort to find Susan’s final resting place was underway Saturday in a remote area of Utah.

At an abandoned mine in the West Desert, Dave “Heavy D” Sparks of the show "Diesel Brothers" is digging to see if he can find her. He's posted his account of the search on YouTube:

Search efforts intensify to find Susan Powell on 10-year anniversary of her sons' deaths
New efforts to find Susan Powell have spurred on the 10th anniversary of the death of her young boys.

A friend of Susan told 2News there's been a search happening for her in the West Desert for the past six days.

The group’s focus is a deep, dark mine. Debbie Caldwell, Susan’s friend, and the boys' caretaker went to the West Desert Saturday to meet volunteers at the site.

Caldwell said the team has a theory that Susan is at the bottom of that particular mine.

“Their goal is to get to the bottom of the mine," Caldwell said. "I believe that Josh maybe put Susan in the mine and lit her on fire, and sent her down the mine, and may have come back, maybe a number of times to push soil and debris on top of her so it would discourage people from finding her."

Susan’s best friend Kiirsi Hellewell said she is heartened by the undying efforts to find her remains.

“Susan should be here. She should be here to hear Charlie talk about the dates he’s going on. She should be here to teach Braden how to drive. They would’ve been 15 and 17,” Hellewell said.
 
Unknown clothes, bones found in search for Susan Powell in West Desert mine
Crews searching in the West Desertfor clues about Susan Powell’s disappearance have pulled up torn pants and additional bones from underground.

The team, led by Utah native Dave Sparks, has spent the past eight days at the site, pulling up debris from a mine where they believe Susan Powell’s remains could be.

“I sent some pictures of the bones to Chuck Cox," Sparks said, referring to Susan's father. "He took them to a bone expert they know — actually, two. The first expert, based off information, said that it was animal bones; the second expert said that they are human bones. So we don’t know."
 

Because of Susan Powell and Her Slain Sons' Stories, Women and Children 'Are Safe Today,' Best Friend Says​

The social worker was frantic as she dialed 911. The smell of gasoline was sickening.

Inside a house in Washington state, two little boys were about to die.

Horrified, Elizabeth Griffin-Hall pounded on the front door. She banged on a window. She could hear one of the children crying. The gas smell was so overwhelming, she backed her car out of the driveway and parked it across the street.

"He's got the kids in the house and he won't let me in," she told the emergency operator. "But I think I need help right away. And this is the craziest thing. He looked right at me, and closed the door. I smell gasoline, and he won't let me in."

Saturday marks the 10th anniversary of the horrific murders of Charlie, 7, and his 5-year-old brother, Braden. The killer was their own father, Joshua Powell, the prime suspect in the disappearance of their mother, Susan Powell, who had vanished three years before.

Susan has never been found and is presumed dead. The bizarre and stupefying saga of what happened to a devout Mormon mother living with her husband and two young sons in suburban Salt Lake City has captivated and appalled people around the world.
This still upsets me so much...that monster should never have had visitation in his residence. I HOPE some serious lessons have been learned from this horrific tragedy.
 
This still upsets me so much...that monster should never have had visitation in his residence. I HOPE some serious lessons have been learned from this horrific tragedy.
This case is one that stands out. I agree. He was a monster and then his dad quite the creep on top of it. And he had these kids... After what we know he did to her... And then... Awful all of the way around.
 
Never heard of him. Would love to check him out. Wish I had time. Going to try like heck to remember.
I posted that link before I watch the whole video. There is a second part to it. He shows how difficult it is trying to find people that may have been thrown in a mine!
 
On Wednesday, there was a special visitor in the desert who is looking for any sign of Susan — her father, Chuck Cox.

"I wish there was more," said Cox. "I'm glad for what they've got, and I'm wanting to get back down and bring up more stuff. It wasn't gonna get searched any other way. And I'll just be glad to find out, is she here, is she not, who was here?"

After 12 years, Cox has never given up looking for his daughter.

"The likelihood is pretty low that we're going to find something, but on the other hand, she's still out there somewhere," Cox said.

The search process has not been easy, especially as they turned their attention to an abandoned mine.

"We've seen the good, bad and the ugly, and this mine was ugly," Sparks explained.
The mine had been perfectly intact for almost 100 years, and then in January 2010 it burned down and collapsed. But those searching believe the mine could be Powell's final resting spot.

"This seems to fit everything we would want and I'm disappointed it was not checked earlier," said Cox.

During their search, the team has found some evidence, including bones and a pair of pants that appear to be either from a small man or woman.

"We found other articles of clothing; found a little piece of tree wrap material which, according to the podcast about Josh Powell, there was an opportunity where he may have gone out and bought this exact same material," said Sparks.

All of the evidence will be given to Cox and then analyzed, but this dig is also about a bigger idea

"We wanted to raise awareness of this whole case make sure that people don't forget about what happened to Susan," Sparks said. "I never knew Susan, but I feel connected to her in ways that I can't explain."

"I was very fascinated with the idea of maybe helping find Susan," said Sparks on the ninth day of the search. "I've kind of just been following along ever since, and then we got a tip that there's a chance she's out here."

The team is armed with the best equipment in the effort to find any trace of Susan's body.

"We pride ourselves on being able to extract recover or rescue items, people, whatever it is that nobody else has ever been able to get to," added Sparks.


On Wednesday, there was a special visitor in the desert who is looking for any sign of Susan — her father, Chuck Cox.

"I wish there was more," said Cox. "I'm glad for what they've got, and I'm wanting to get back down and bring up more stuff. It wasn't gonna get searched any other way. And I'll just be glad to find out, is she here, is she not, who was here?"

After 12 years, Cox has never given up looking for his daughter.

"The likelihood is pretty low that we're going to find something, but on the other hand, she's still out there somewhere," Cox said.

The search process has not been easy, especially as they turned their attention to an abandoned mine.

"We've seen the good, bad and the ugly, and this mine was ugly," Sparks explained.


The mine had been perfectly intact for almost 100 years, and then in January 2010 it burned down and collapsed. But those searching believe the mine could be Powell's final resting spot.

"This seems to fit everything we would want and I'm disappointed it was not checked earlier," said Cox.

During their search, the team has found some evidence, including bones and a pair of pants that appear to be either from a small man or woman.

"We found other articles of clothing; found a little piece of tree wrap material which, according to the podcast about Josh Powell, there was an opportunity where he may have gone out and bought this exact same material," said Sparks.

All of the evidence will be given to Cox and then analyzed, but this dig is also about a bigger idea

"We wanted to raise awareness of this whole case make sure that people don't forget about what happened to Susan," Sparks said. "I never knew Susan, but I feel connected to her in ways that I can't explain."


For Chuck Cox, it's one step closer to finding his daughter and finding peace.

"It's a blessing and I'm so thankful that they are they're doing it and just grateful that people are still looking for Susan."

 

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