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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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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.
I never caught it was her sister's apartment. Can you point me to which post/link that is in?
 
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.
We still don't know it wasn't his account and I don't think we are going to hear more on this case or get any real answers. I'm not trying to argue on the Uber thing, just not sold on it, and have no interest in continuing about Uber.

I wonder about a lot of things in this one and it actually ticks me off that I don't think we are going to find out more. Maybe we will but I doubt it.
 
We still don't know it wasn't his account and I don't think we are going to hear more on this case or get any real answers. I'm not trying to argue on the Uber thing, just not sold on it, and have no interest in continuing about Uber.

I wonder about a lot of things in this one and it actually ticks me off that I don't think we are going to find out more. Maybe we will but I doubt it.
Again, I am taking BOTH of those things into consideration on this. Not just one or the other, as I have stated all along
 
I went back to the first post and it doesn't say it was her sister's apartment. I went into the link which is now updated to her being found and that doesn't say that either. Also her sister said she had not heard from her since she sent her a pic of the Uber.
 
I went back to the first post and it doesn't say it was her sister's apartment. I went into the link which is now updated to her being found and that doesn't say that either. Also her sister said she had not heard from her since she sent her a pic of the Uber.
It's the same name as her sister from the article you were commenting on at the time.
 
That part was in the article I commented on that you posted about. One article has that name as the resident and one has that same name as her sister. Therefore the person that lives there is her sister.
Well now I'm totally lost. I thought you told me the very first post of the thread which is where I went. I have no idea if not that one which post you mean or what it says.
 

A pregnant woman’s disappearance after taking an Uber ride in Nashville has exposed alarming gaps in ride-share safety protocols, leaving families vulnerable to corporate negligence and law enforcement scrambling for answers. The case of 37-year-old Tiffany Moore, who vanished on November 16, 2025, underscores critical flaws in accountability that prioritize corporate convenience over passenger protection, demanding immediate scrutiny of the ride-share industry’s safety measures.
Story Highlights

  • Tiffany Moore, 37 and pregnant, vanished after taking Uber to West Nashville apartment complex on November 16, 2025.​
  • Metro Nashville Police investigating after husband Scott Bach searched Twin Oaks Drive complex where she was last seen.​
  • Uber’s cooperation with law enforcement under scrutiny as ride-share safety concerns mount.​
  • Case highlights dangerous vulnerabilities in passenger tracking systems that protect corporate interests over individual safety.​
Missing Mother Triggers Urgent Investigation
Tiffany Moore disappeared Sunday evening, November 16, 2025, after allegedly taking an Uber ride to a West Nashville apartment complex. The 37-year-old pregnant woman failed to return home, prompting her husband Scott Bach to search the Twin Oaks Drive area before contacting authorities. Metro Nashville Police responded to the scene on November 18, launching an active investigation into her whereabouts with no confirmed sightings reported.
Ride-Share Safety Protocols Under Fire
Moore’s disappearance exposes critical flaws in ride-share accountability that prioritize corporate convenience over passenger protection. Uber’s role remains under intense scrutiny as investigators work to piece together her final movements through company records. The incident underscores how ride-share services operate with minimal oversight, leaving passengers—especially vulnerable individuals like pregnant women—exposed to potential dangers without adequate tracking or safety measures.
Corporate Accountability Questions Mount
Uber’s cooperation with law enforcement will determine how quickly authorities can establish Moore’s timeline and identify potential leads. The company’s response highlights broader concerns about ride-share industry practices that often shield corporate liability while leaving families desperate for answers. Previous incidents involving ride-share disappearances have demonstrated how these platforms can obstruct investigations through complex data policies and limited real-time passenger monitoring.
Law enforcement agencies increasingly face challenges when ride-share companies control critical evidence through proprietary systems designed to protect business interests rather than passenger safety. This case demands immediate answers about why basic safety protocols failed to prevent or quickly resolve Moore’s disappearance, especially given her vulnerable condition as an expectant mother.
Family Fights for Justice
Scott Bach’s immediate search efforts and public appeals demonstrate how families must take matters into their own hands when corporate systems fail. His proactive response contrasts sharply with potential bureaucratic delays from ride-share companies that may hinder timely investigations. The case exemplifies how American families cannot rely on corporate good faith when loved ones face danger, requiring strong law enforcement partnerships and community support to overcome institutional obstacles.
Moore’s disappearance serves as a stark reminder that ride-share convenience comes with hidden costs to personal safety and family security. Every minute counts in missing person cases, yet corporate red tape and inadequate safety measures continue threatening the wellbeing of innocent Americans who simply want safe transportation home to their families.
Watch the report: Pregnant Mom Mysteriously Vanishes | Who Saw Her Last?| Searching For Elizabeth Hernandez | Part 1
Sources:
Nashville woman catches an Uber near Target – the last signs of her were ‘noises’ from inside her apartment
Pregnant woman located after search of multiple locations around Nashville
Where is Tiffany? Woman Uber passenger missing in Nashville, police investigating
 

A pregnant woman’s disappearance after taking an Uber ride in Nashville has exposed alarming gaps in ride-share safety protocols, leaving families vulnerable to corporate negligence and law enforcement scrambling for answers. The case of 37-year-old Tiffany Moore, who vanished on November 16, 2025, underscores critical flaws in accountability that prioritize corporate convenience over passenger protection, demanding immediate scrutiny of the ride-share industry’s safety measures.
Story Highlights


  • Tiffany Moore, 37 and pregnant, vanished after taking Uber to West Nashville apartment complex on November 16, 2025.​
  • Metro Nashville Police investigating after husband Scott Bach searched Twin Oaks Drive complex where she was last seen.​
  • Uber’s cooperation with law enforcement under scrutiny as ride-share safety concerns mount.​
  • Case highlights dangerous vulnerabilities in passenger tracking systems that protect corporate interests over individual safety.​
Missing Mother Triggers Urgent Investigation
Tiffany Moore disappeared Sunday evening, November 16, 2025, after allegedly taking an Uber ride to a West Nashville apartment complex. The 37-year-old pregnant woman failed to return home, prompting her husband Scott Bach to search the Twin Oaks Drive area before contacting authorities. Metro Nashville Police responded to the scene on November 18, launching an active investigation into her whereabouts with no confirmed sightings reported.
Ride-Share Safety Protocols Under Fire
Moore’s disappearance exposes critical flaws in ride-share accountability that prioritize corporate convenience over passenger protection. Uber’s role remains under intense scrutiny as investigators work to piece together her final movements through company records. The incident underscores how ride-share services operate with minimal oversight, leaving passengers—especially vulnerable individuals like pregnant women—exposed to potential dangers without adequate tracking or safety measures.
Corporate Accountability Questions Mount
Uber’s cooperation with law enforcement will determine how quickly authorities can establish Moore’s timeline and identify potential leads. The company’s response highlights broader concerns about ride-share industry practices that often shield corporate liability while leaving families desperate for answers. Previous incidents involving ride-share disappearances have demonstrated how these platforms can obstruct investigations through complex data policies and limited real-time passenger monitoring.
Law enforcement agencies increasingly face challenges when ride-share companies control critical evidence through proprietary systems designed to protect business interests rather than passenger safety. This case demands immediate answers about why basic safety protocols failed to prevent or quickly resolve Moore’s disappearance, especially given her vulnerable condition as an expectant mother.
Family Fights for Justice
Scott Bach’s immediate search efforts and public appeals demonstrate how families must take matters into their own hands when corporate systems fail. His proactive response contrasts sharply with potential bureaucratic delays from ride-share companies that may hinder timely investigations. The case exemplifies how American families cannot rely on corporate good faith when loved ones face danger, requiring strong law enforcement partnerships and community support to overcome institutional obstacles.
Moore’s disappearance serves as a stark reminder that ride-share convenience comes with hidden costs to personal safety and family security. Every minute counts in missing person cases, yet corporate red tape and inadequate safety measures continue threatening the wellbeing of innocent Americans who simply want safe transportation home to their families.
Watch the report: Pregnant Mom Mysteriously Vanishes | Who Saw Her Last?| Searching For Elizabeth Hernandez | Part 1
Sources:
Nashville woman catches an Uber near Target – the last signs of her were ‘noises’ from inside her apartment
Pregnant woman located after search of multiple locations around Nashville
Where is Tiffany? Woman Uber passenger missing in Nashville, police investigating
Except Uber did nothing wrong in this particular case.
The dude that identified himself as her husband already knew where she got dropped off at and knew who lived there. He admitted to knowing all that because he checked "his" Uber account.
 

A pregnant woman’s disappearance after taking an Uber ride in Nashville has exposed alarming gaps in ride-share safety protocols, leaving families vulnerable to corporate negligence and law enforcement scrambling for answers. The case of 37-year-old Tiffany Moore, who vanished on November 16, 2025, underscores critical flaws in accountability that prioritize corporate convenience over passenger protection, demanding immediate scrutiny of the ride-share industry’s safety measures.
Story Highlights


  • Tiffany Moore, 37 and pregnant, vanished after taking Uber to West Nashville apartment complex on November 16, 2025.​
  • Metro Nashville Police investigating after husband Scott Bach searched Twin Oaks Drive complex where she was last seen.​
  • Uber’s cooperation with law enforcement under scrutiny as ride-share safety concerns mount.​
  • Case highlights dangerous vulnerabilities in passenger tracking systems that protect corporate interests over individual safety.​
Missing Mother Triggers Urgent Investigation
Tiffany Moore disappeared Sunday evening, November 16, 2025, after allegedly taking an Uber ride to a West Nashville apartment complex. The 37-year-old pregnant woman failed to return home, prompting her husband Scott Bach to search the Twin Oaks Drive area before contacting authorities. Metro Nashville Police responded to the scene on November 18, launching an active investigation into her whereabouts with no confirmed sightings reported.
Ride-Share Safety Protocols Under Fire
Moore’s disappearance exposes critical flaws in ride-share accountability that prioritize corporate convenience over passenger protection. Uber’s role remains under intense scrutiny as investigators work to piece together her final movements through company records. The incident underscores how ride-share services operate with minimal oversight, leaving passengers—especially vulnerable individuals like pregnant women—exposed to potential dangers without adequate tracking or safety measures.
Corporate Accountability Questions Mount
Uber’s cooperation with law enforcement will determine how quickly authorities can establish Moore’s timeline and identify potential leads. The company’s response highlights broader concerns about ride-share industry practices that often shield corporate liability while leaving families desperate for answers. Previous incidents involving ride-share disappearances have demonstrated how these platforms can obstruct investigations through complex data policies and limited real-time passenger monitoring.
Law enforcement agencies increasingly face challenges when ride-share companies control critical evidence through proprietary systems designed to protect business interests rather than passenger safety. This case demands immediate answers about why basic safety protocols failed to prevent or quickly resolve Moore’s disappearance, especially given her vulnerable condition as an expectant mother.
Family Fights for Justice
Scott Bach’s immediate search efforts and public appeals demonstrate how families must take matters into their own hands when corporate systems fail. His proactive response contrasts sharply with potential bureaucratic delays from ride-share companies that may hinder timely investigations. The case exemplifies how American families cannot rely on corporate good faith when loved ones face danger, requiring strong law enforcement partnerships and community support to overcome institutional obstacles.
Moore’s disappearance serves as a stark reminder that ride-share convenience comes with hidden costs to personal safety and family security. Every minute counts in missing person cases, yet corporate red tape and inadequate safety measures continue threatening the wellbeing of innocent Americans who simply want safe transportation home to their families.
Watch the report: Pregnant Mom Mysteriously Vanishes | Who Saw Her Last?| Searching For Elizabeth Hernandez | Part 1
Sources:
Nashville woman catches an Uber near Target – the last signs of her were ‘noises’ from inside her apartment
Pregnant woman located after search of multiple locations around Nashville
Where is Tiffany? Woman Uber passenger missing in Nashville, police investigating
This reeks of the "husband" crying to the media and seems like he thinks he's important. I'm not sure what the issue is that this case is supposedly highlighting.
 
Unless we are missing something or there is more to this story that we don't know, I don't see why Uber is under fire here...

Also, she took more than one Uber ride or had other transport at some point as she ended up in a hotel didn't she...?

What exactly is he complaining about?

It says more than once that being pregnant makes her vulnerable. I totally disagree. Also, if she wanted him to know where she was, she could have told him and if she didn't want him to know, she is an adult and that's her right.

We definitely don't know all in this one by a long shot. Did we even know she was pregnant? I can't recall.

What makes her vulnerable, is she mentally unstable, on drugs or what? Pregnancy does not necessarily make someone a vulnerable member of society, what a load of hogwash. Was she trying to leave him?

Will we ever know?
 
I sure hope she's somewhere safe. She seems to fit the criteria of a person being in the most danger when leaving a relationship.

Run, girl, run!
 
We don't know that. It seems just as likely that she was the one up to something.

And she apparently liked her husband well enough when she became pregnant by (one would think) him.
 
We don't know that. It seems just as likely that she was the one up to something.

And she apparently liked her husband well enough when she became pregnant by (one would think) him.
Can't we say you evidently liked your ex's well enough, until you didn't?

Even if she was up to something, these two need to not be together anymore. She wasn't the one stalking him though, with what we do know about this case.
 

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