HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
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TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
A man who claims he was involved in a sexual relationship with
Misty Croslin-Cummings days before Haleigh Cummings disappeared in
February, spoke with FOX 35's Jacksonville affiliate on Wednesday. "It was brief. It was one time and then she left. It was a mistake,' Gregory Page also known as 'White Boy Greg' told WAWS TV . "I wish I would have never gotten caught up with the girl because it has just been turmoil since." On Tuesday, Page was arrested on drug charges. He said during the arrest, he was questioned by police. "They just asked me where she was at. I told them, 'I don't know'." Page
said this wasn't the first time he was interviewed about the case. He
said he has been questioned several times before and even took a
polygraph. He said he passed. The Putnam County Sheriff's Office
would not comment about Page. They would not confirm whether he has
been interviewed or if he took a polygraph. "I have a daughter about the same age. If I knew anything about her, I would have told. That's not my kind of thing," Page said. "If anyone knows me they know I love kids and I don't do anything to hurt anybody."
Misty Croslin-Cummings days before Haleigh Cummings disappeared in
February, spoke with FOX 35's Jacksonville affiliate on Wednesday. "It was brief. It was one time and then she left. It was a mistake,' Gregory Page also known as 'White Boy Greg' told WAWS TV . "I wish I would have never gotten caught up with the girl because it has just been turmoil since." On Tuesday, Page was arrested on drug charges. He said during the arrest, he was questioned by police. "They just asked me where she was at. I told them, 'I don't know'." Page
said this wasn't the first time he was interviewed about the case. He
said he has been questioned several times before and even took a
polygraph. He said he passed. The Putnam County Sheriff's Office
would not comment about Page. They would not confirm whether he has
been interviewed or if he took a polygraph. "I have a daughter about the same age. If I knew anything about her, I would have told. That's not my kind of thing," Page said. "If anyone knows me they know I love kids and I don't do anything to hurt anybody."

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
Detectives involved with the Haleigh Cummings investigation have
been tight lipped about any details involving the case. On Tuesday, for
the first time, they released the details of an interview conducted
with Hank Croslin Jr., Misty Cummings brother. They say he told them he
went by Haleigh Cummings home the night she disappeared, and no one was
there. This is different from the story Misty Cummings has told
police. She has said time and time again that she was home the entire
evening on the night Haleigh disappeared. What she’s told us is
a farce…and the idea that she was doing what she says she was doing and
how she was doing it is just not believable…its totally unbelievable in
fact, said Major Gary Bowling of the Putnam County Sheriffs Office . Hank
Croslin Jr. is already in jail on an unrelated grand theft charge. On
Thursday, he was interviewed by police in regards to the Haleigh
Cummings investigation. He told officers on the night Haleigh
disappeared; he received a call from Haleighs father Ronald Cummings. In
the interview, Hank tells us something very interesting. Which is that
Ronald had attempted, the night of the ninth, the evening before
Haleigh went missing, that Ronald had made several calls to Misty that
went unanswered. So Ronald ultimately calls her brother Hank, better
known as Tommy, asking Tommy to go down the street to the residence to
see if he can make contact with Misty. Hank says he does, around 9:45
or 10 o’clock, go down the street and he says when he gets there the
lights are off in the trailer, he says its dark, and quite, said Major
Bowling. Bowling went on to say that Hank Jr. showed him how
hard he banged on the door, and told them he stayed in the area for
awhile waiting for Misty to either answer the door or come home. Hank
Jr. says after some time passed, he gave up and assumed she wasn’t home. We
believe that releasing some of the information we’ve found out advances
the investigation. And particularly the way that we think this will
advance it is that Misty’s family now knows about this information that
I’m telling you now about Hank. We hope that the family or maybe Misty
by her own conscience, if there is a discrepancy, that if she was
indeed not home or she wants to explain why Hank banged on the door,
with no response we want to hear Misty’s side of that, said Major
Bowling.
Major Bowling went on to say that on the Saturday
following the interview with Hank Jr., Misty voluntarily came into the
Sheriffs Office for questioning. But, he says she did not talk discuss
Hank Jr.s interview. Misty is the type that if you ask her a question that she doesn’t want to answer, she reminds us she has a lawyer, said Bowling. Action
News spoke with Misty’s lawyer on Tuesday. Robert Fields tells us Misty
is out of town and will be for the next few days. He says Misty is
sticking to her story that she was home the night Haleigh disappeared.
He also says he believes the story Hank Jr. is telling deputies is not
true. Fields says as soon as the Sheriffs Office contacts him to do a
formal interview with Misty, he will be glad to consider it. We’ve
said for some time now, quite unapologetically, that we think that
Misty has some information that she needs to tell us, and its
information like this just like this that she needs to clarify so we
can understand better what she was doing that evening. If Misty, who is
represented by attorney Robert Fields, if they want to come down here,
we would love to ask her some questions specifically and narrowly about
that evening, said Major Bowling. Major Bowling also talked about Misty’s cell phone. Action News
asked him if he could use GPS technology to track down exactly where
Misty was the night Haleigh disappeared. Major Bowling wouldn’t go into
details, but says they are investigating those facts. There are
some things we can do with electronics, and there were some problems
with the electronics…that’s about as far as I can go into that…there’s
some things were still working on trying to get cleared up in regards
to electronic intelligence, said Major Bowling. Action News
asked the Putnam County Sheriffs Office about possible charges it might
file against Misty if it turns out that she was lying about where she
was the night Haleigh disappeared. The Sheriffs Office said it wasn’t
at that point yet. We haven’t arrived at a place that will allow
us to articulate probable cause for arrest yet…the issue is that---we
have a lot of little things, but really coming to the point where we
can in good faith go to a judge and seek a warrant or simply make a
probably cause arrest, were simply not there, said Major Bowling.
been tight lipped about any details involving the case. On Tuesday, for
the first time, they released the details of an interview conducted
with Hank Croslin Jr., Misty Cummings brother. They say he told them he
went by Haleigh Cummings home the night she disappeared, and no one was
there. This is different from the story Misty Cummings has told
police. She has said time and time again that she was home the entire
evening on the night Haleigh disappeared. What she’s told us is
a farce…and the idea that she was doing what she says she was doing and
how she was doing it is just not believable…its totally unbelievable in
fact, said Major Gary Bowling of the Putnam County Sheriffs Office . Hank
Croslin Jr. is already in jail on an unrelated grand theft charge. On
Thursday, he was interviewed by police in regards to the Haleigh
Cummings investigation. He told officers on the night Haleigh
disappeared; he received a call from Haleighs father Ronald Cummings. In
the interview, Hank tells us something very interesting. Which is that
Ronald had attempted, the night of the ninth, the evening before
Haleigh went missing, that Ronald had made several calls to Misty that
went unanswered. So Ronald ultimately calls her brother Hank, better
known as Tommy, asking Tommy to go down the street to the residence to
see if he can make contact with Misty. Hank says he does, around 9:45
or 10 o’clock, go down the street and he says when he gets there the
lights are off in the trailer, he says its dark, and quite, said Major
Bowling. Bowling went on to say that Hank Jr. showed him how
hard he banged on the door, and told them he stayed in the area for
awhile waiting for Misty to either answer the door or come home. Hank
Jr. says after some time passed, he gave up and assumed she wasn’t home. We
believe that releasing some of the information we’ve found out advances
the investigation. And particularly the way that we think this will
advance it is that Misty’s family now knows about this information that
I’m telling you now about Hank. We hope that the family or maybe Misty
by her own conscience, if there is a discrepancy, that if she was
indeed not home or she wants to explain why Hank banged on the door,
with no response we want to hear Misty’s side of that, said Major
Bowling.
Major Bowling went on to say that on the Saturday
following the interview with Hank Jr., Misty voluntarily came into the
Sheriffs Office for questioning. But, he says she did not talk discuss
Hank Jr.s interview. Misty is the type that if you ask her a question that she doesn’t want to answer, she reminds us she has a lawyer, said Bowling. Action
News spoke with Misty’s lawyer on Tuesday. Robert Fields tells us Misty
is out of town and will be for the next few days. He says Misty is
sticking to her story that she was home the night Haleigh disappeared.
He also says he believes the story Hank Jr. is telling deputies is not
true. Fields says as soon as the Sheriffs Office contacts him to do a
formal interview with Misty, he will be glad to consider it. We’ve
said for some time now, quite unapologetically, that we think that
Misty has some information that she needs to tell us, and its
information like this just like this that she needs to clarify so we
can understand better what she was doing that evening. If Misty, who is
represented by attorney Robert Fields, if they want to come down here,
we would love to ask her some questions specifically and narrowly about
that evening, said Major Bowling. Major Bowling also talked about Misty’s cell phone. Action News
asked him if he could use GPS technology to track down exactly where
Misty was the night Haleigh disappeared. Major Bowling wouldn’t go into
details, but says they are investigating those facts. There are
some things we can do with electronics, and there were some problems
with the electronics…that’s about as far as I can go into that…there’s
some things were still working on trying to get cleared up in regards
to electronic intelligence, said Major Bowling. Action News
asked the Putnam County Sheriffs Office about possible charges it might
file against Misty if it turns out that she was lying about where she
was the night Haleigh disappeared. The Sheriffs Office said it wasn’t
at that point yet. We haven’t arrived at a place that will allow
us to articulate probable cause for arrest yet…the issue is that---we
have a lot of little things, but really coming to the point where we
can in good faith go to a judge and seek a warrant or simply make a
probably cause arrest, were simply not there, said Major Bowling.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
MISTY CUMMINGS: WHAT REALLY HAPPENED
Posted from a blogger
October 10, 2009
I’m not even going to address the accusations that have been made over the last few days. They are truly so outlandish that they don’t dignify a response. What I am going to do, is what I was planning on doing all along; tell exactly what has been going on behind the scenes for the last week in the Haleigh Cummings’ investigation. However, we all know now that the plan got foiled by a little road rage incident, that has damaged this investigation irreparably.
Back on Sept 20th, Tim Miller asked me to come to Orlando to film Misty Cummings’ hypnosis and voice analysis that SHE had requested to have done. Although I was not paid, I was permitted to report (as I did on this blog) my observations of the tapings. Tim also flew in TJ Ward, the voice analysis expert, and he needed someone to pick TJ up at the airport. Because Texas EquuSearch (TES) operates with a very small budget, they rely on volunteers. Tim called his TES member closest to the airport, and asked her to pick up TJ; that member was Donna Brock. Donna and TJ arrived in Satsuma at Ronald’s aunt’s house (where the hypnosis and voice analysis was being conducted). This is the first time I had ever met Donna. She was asked to wait with TJ until he was done with his test and to return him to the Orlando Airport (he’s from Georgia). It was a long day for all involved, and there was a lot of waiting around. Misty took a liking to Donna; they chatted causally as we got set up for the interviews. The two even slipped out to pick up food for everyone (Ronald, Teresa, Ronald’s aunt, Jr. and a few other family members were all there).
The week before this, Tim Miller had an intimate conversation with Ronald Cummings in the bedroom he shared with Misty in his grandmother’s trailer just down the road. They talked in detail about their thoughts of Misty’s involvement in the case. Tim asked Ronald why he married Misty. Ronald responded, “I have to keep her close til I find out what happened to Haleigh.” It’s what happened next that frightened Miller. Ronald pulled a gun out of the closet — an assault rifle with 2 clips — each clip holding 32 bullets. Ronald looked at Miller and said, “When I find out where Haleigh’s at, I will blow the teeth out of the back of her head, and then I’ll do this…” He then got on his knees, put the butt of the rifle on the floor, leaned over and put the barrel in his mouth. There was no “IF” she had anything to do with it, Miller knew that Ronald was serious — that he would kill Misty, and then take his own life. It was at that point he knew they had to get Misty out of there, or she would end up dead.
After LE received copies of the polygraph, the voice analysis and hypnosis, I wrote about it on my blog. The media then picked up the story and it blew up. (I cleared with Miller and LE that it was ok to release the tapes to the media.) When the story blew up, so did tempers in Satsuma, and Miller knew he had to get Misty out of there immediately. Donna seemed liked the logical choice. Misty trusted her — she is a mother and a grandmother, and most importantly, she lived close enough and was willing to take Misty in. “We may have to save Misty’s life,” Miller told Donna. And in an instant, Donna was off to get Misty and bring her to safety in Orlando.
Miller knew in the back of his mind, Donna now had an opportunity to get close to Misty and get more information that could lead to Haleigh. So did LE. Miller also knew she wasn’t an expert, just one of his volunteers going above and beyond her call of duty, and he worried about that. LE was well aware of exactly where Misty was and what was going on at all times. This is what they wanted — Misty away from Satsuma, the trailer park, her family, Ronald’s family, and most importantly — away from Ronald.
In Mark Fuhrman’s new book, “The Murder Business,” he writes in detail about the Melinda Duckett case, the young Florida mother of Trenton Duckett, who went missing in 2006. After appearing on Nancy Grace’s show, Melinda committed suicide.
“With Melinda Duckett’s suicide, investigators lost their best chance of finding Trenton,” says Fuhrman. “We have to avoid that same situation at any cost,” says Tim Miller. “If anything tragic happens to Misty now, any knowledge of what happened to Haleigh dies too.” “You can’t put a price tag on finding a child.”
Over the next month, Misty and Donna grew close. Miller wired money into Donna’s account on several occasions to cover Misty’s living expenses, right up until 4 days ago, when he wired her $300.00 dollars, all for the purpose of keeping her safe, keeping her away from Satsuma and keeping her talking.
“Donna made incredible sacrifices. She put her life on hold, stopped spending time with her own family, including her daughter and newborn grandbaby,” said Miller. “This has been very stressful for her.” Miller and Donna both made periodic reports to LE on Misty’s whereabouts and activities.
As any good journalist should, I reached out to Donna to try and get comments and information on Misty. Donna and Misty were tight-lipped at first, but they read my blog nightly, and as they watched the media bashing Misty on TV every night, they grew to trust me. When the divorce news broke, Misty wanted to respond to what was being said. So she granted me an interview on the phone and I posted it on the blog.
That night, someone from CBS’ “The Early Show” read my blog and emailed me immediately to see if I could get them an interview with Misty. I freelance for CBS, so when they called, I wanted to help them out. I knew I didn’t have the resources to fly to Orlando and conduct the interview myself, just to post it on my blog. I told Misty of CBS’ interview request and she agreed to it. CBS arranged to fly her up, not first class as rumored last night on Nancy Grace, but in coach. It is Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) in the media to fly a guest in and put them in a hotel to tape an interview. Donna came along because Misty is a minor, and she needed to be accompanied by an adult. I notified LE that she was coming to NY to appear on “The Early Show,” and I gave them her outgoing and return flight and hotel information so they knew where she was. LE requested that we not change her return ticket to any state other than Florida.
Then the road rage incident happened. Donna and Misty called me right after it happened because we had been in constant contact. A woman cut them off on the road and they (both) gave her the finger. A stupid decision on both their parts, bad judgment whatever you want to call it, in that second everything changed. Up until that point Donna and Misty had remained quiet, flying under the radar so to speak, and Misty trusted Donna. Apparently, the woman who cut them off recognized Misty and called police claiming they pointed a gun. Next thing you know, Donna and Misty are pulled over and find themselves face down on the ground with guns in their backs. The situation quickly diffused when the police realized the report was false. The media went nuts, Donna’s cover was blown, and the woman turned up on Nancy Grace. What an opportunist, she should be ashamed of herself for lying to police. Donna and Misty realized they were wrong and it was foolish. Then the armchair investigators tried to connect dots that weren’t connectable. And none of this has anything to do with finding Haleigh. Why would Nancy Grace waste an hour on this? I decided not to even right a post about it. It was irrelevant. But now Misty learned that Donna was not her friend.
The CBS interview was important because the more people talk, the more they reveal. Every time Misty tells the same story, police can look for inconsistencies, something different, perhaps a clue. That’s why it was so important to get Misty to tell “her side of the story.” And perhaps, from what I hear, it may her last interview (Part 2 will air on CBS’ “Early Show” on Monday). After the interview aired, Misty’s attorney dropped her as a client.
Tonight as I write this, Donna has dropped Misty off in Satsuma. Donna will meet again with LE to tell her the last of what she has learned. Donna has been very tight-lipped about her conversations with Misty, at least with me. At least for now. The next few days should be interesting, now that Misty is back in the lions’ den. I will write more about my observations and conversations I had with Misty while in NY with her.
I asked Tim Miller if his organization will continue to look for Haleigh. “I’m not done with this case; I’m done with these people. But any resources I have will be available to help find Haleigh. I will continue any efforts I can to end the search for Haleigh Cummings.”
I hope this begins to clear up a few things and connect the dots for everyone that has been following this case. There is a lot more coming. Please stay tuned
Posted from a blogger
October 10, 2009
I’m not even going to address the accusations that have been made over the last few days. They are truly so outlandish that they don’t dignify a response. What I am going to do, is what I was planning on doing all along; tell exactly what has been going on behind the scenes for the last week in the Haleigh Cummings’ investigation. However, we all know now that the plan got foiled by a little road rage incident, that has damaged this investigation irreparably.
Back on Sept 20th, Tim Miller asked me to come to Orlando to film Misty Cummings’ hypnosis and voice analysis that SHE had requested to have done. Although I was not paid, I was permitted to report (as I did on this blog) my observations of the tapings. Tim also flew in TJ Ward, the voice analysis expert, and he needed someone to pick TJ up at the airport. Because Texas EquuSearch (TES) operates with a very small budget, they rely on volunteers. Tim called his TES member closest to the airport, and asked her to pick up TJ; that member was Donna Brock. Donna and TJ arrived in Satsuma at Ronald’s aunt’s house (where the hypnosis and voice analysis was being conducted). This is the first time I had ever met Donna. She was asked to wait with TJ until he was done with his test and to return him to the Orlando Airport (he’s from Georgia). It was a long day for all involved, and there was a lot of waiting around. Misty took a liking to Donna; they chatted causally as we got set up for the interviews. The two even slipped out to pick up food for everyone (Ronald, Teresa, Ronald’s aunt, Jr. and a few other family members were all there).
The week before this, Tim Miller had an intimate conversation with Ronald Cummings in the bedroom he shared with Misty in his grandmother’s trailer just down the road. They talked in detail about their thoughts of Misty’s involvement in the case. Tim asked Ronald why he married Misty. Ronald responded, “I have to keep her close til I find out what happened to Haleigh.” It’s what happened next that frightened Miller. Ronald pulled a gun out of the closet — an assault rifle with 2 clips — each clip holding 32 bullets. Ronald looked at Miller and said, “When I find out where Haleigh’s at, I will blow the teeth out of the back of her head, and then I’ll do this…” He then got on his knees, put the butt of the rifle on the floor, leaned over and put the barrel in his mouth. There was no “IF” she had anything to do with it, Miller knew that Ronald was serious — that he would kill Misty, and then take his own life. It was at that point he knew they had to get Misty out of there, or she would end up dead.
After LE received copies of the polygraph, the voice analysis and hypnosis, I wrote about it on my blog. The media then picked up the story and it blew up. (I cleared with Miller and LE that it was ok to release the tapes to the media.) When the story blew up, so did tempers in Satsuma, and Miller knew he had to get Misty out of there immediately. Donna seemed liked the logical choice. Misty trusted her — she is a mother and a grandmother, and most importantly, she lived close enough and was willing to take Misty in. “We may have to save Misty’s life,” Miller told Donna. And in an instant, Donna was off to get Misty and bring her to safety in Orlando.
Miller knew in the back of his mind, Donna now had an opportunity to get close to Misty and get more information that could lead to Haleigh. So did LE. Miller also knew she wasn’t an expert, just one of his volunteers going above and beyond her call of duty, and he worried about that. LE was well aware of exactly where Misty was and what was going on at all times. This is what they wanted — Misty away from Satsuma, the trailer park, her family, Ronald’s family, and most importantly — away from Ronald.
In Mark Fuhrman’s new book, “The Murder Business,” he writes in detail about the Melinda Duckett case, the young Florida mother of Trenton Duckett, who went missing in 2006. After appearing on Nancy Grace’s show, Melinda committed suicide.
“With Melinda Duckett’s suicide, investigators lost their best chance of finding Trenton,” says Fuhrman. “We have to avoid that same situation at any cost,” says Tim Miller. “If anything tragic happens to Misty now, any knowledge of what happened to Haleigh dies too.” “You can’t put a price tag on finding a child.”
Over the next month, Misty and Donna grew close. Miller wired money into Donna’s account on several occasions to cover Misty’s living expenses, right up until 4 days ago, when he wired her $300.00 dollars, all for the purpose of keeping her safe, keeping her away from Satsuma and keeping her talking.
“Donna made incredible sacrifices. She put her life on hold, stopped spending time with her own family, including her daughter and newborn grandbaby,” said Miller. “This has been very stressful for her.” Miller and Donna both made periodic reports to LE on Misty’s whereabouts and activities.
As any good journalist should, I reached out to Donna to try and get comments and information on Misty. Donna and Misty were tight-lipped at first, but they read my blog nightly, and as they watched the media bashing Misty on TV every night, they grew to trust me. When the divorce news broke, Misty wanted to respond to what was being said. So she granted me an interview on the phone and I posted it on the blog.
That night, someone from CBS’ “The Early Show” read my blog and emailed me immediately to see if I could get them an interview with Misty. I freelance for CBS, so when they called, I wanted to help them out. I knew I didn’t have the resources to fly to Orlando and conduct the interview myself, just to post it on my blog. I told Misty of CBS’ interview request and she agreed to it. CBS arranged to fly her up, not first class as rumored last night on Nancy Grace, but in coach. It is Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) in the media to fly a guest in and put them in a hotel to tape an interview. Donna came along because Misty is a minor, and she needed to be accompanied by an adult. I notified LE that she was coming to NY to appear on “The Early Show,” and I gave them her outgoing and return flight and hotel information so they knew where she was. LE requested that we not change her return ticket to any state other than Florida.
Then the road rage incident happened. Donna and Misty called me right after it happened because we had been in constant contact. A woman cut them off on the road and they (both) gave her the finger. A stupid decision on both their parts, bad judgment whatever you want to call it, in that second everything changed. Up until that point Donna and Misty had remained quiet, flying under the radar so to speak, and Misty trusted Donna. Apparently, the woman who cut them off recognized Misty and called police claiming they pointed a gun. Next thing you know, Donna and Misty are pulled over and find themselves face down on the ground with guns in their backs. The situation quickly diffused when the police realized the report was false. The media went nuts, Donna’s cover was blown, and the woman turned up on Nancy Grace. What an opportunist, she should be ashamed of herself for lying to police. Donna and Misty realized they were wrong and it was foolish. Then the armchair investigators tried to connect dots that weren’t connectable. And none of this has anything to do with finding Haleigh. Why would Nancy Grace waste an hour on this? I decided not to even right a post about it. It was irrelevant. But now Misty learned that Donna was not her friend.
The CBS interview was important because the more people talk, the more they reveal. Every time Misty tells the same story, police can look for inconsistencies, something different, perhaps a clue. That’s why it was so important to get Misty to tell “her side of the story.” And perhaps, from what I hear, it may her last interview (Part 2 will air on CBS’ “Early Show” on Monday). After the interview aired, Misty’s attorney dropped her as a client.
Tonight as I write this, Donna has dropped Misty off in Satsuma. Donna will meet again with LE to tell her the last of what she has learned. Donna has been very tight-lipped about her conversations with Misty, at least with me. At least for now. The next few days should be interesting, now that Misty is back in the lions’ den. I will write more about my observations and conversations I had with Misty while in NY with her.
I asked Tim Miller if his organization will continue to look for Haleigh. “I’m not done with this case; I’m done with these people. But any resources I have will be available to help find Haleigh. I will continue any efforts I can to end the search for Haleigh Cummings.”
I hope this begins to clear up a few things and connect the dots for everyone that has been following this case. There is a lot more coming. Please stay tuned

mom_from_STL- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
The mother of the woman who put Haleigh to bed before she disappeared is behind bars in Putnam County.
The sheriff's office arrested 40-year-old Lisa Carmen Croslin on two felonies and a misdemeanor Wednesday afternoon.
According to the Putnam County Sheriff's Office web site, Croslin
faces charges of fraud utter false instrument, forgery of alter public
record certificate, and larceny petit theft.
The arrest stems from warrants that led to her arrest in Nashville last month.
Croslin is the mother of Misty Croslin-Cummings, the teenaged stepmother of Haleigh Cummings.
The 5-year-old girl vanished on the night of February 9 at her home
in Satsuma. Misty Croslin-Cummings said she put Haleigh to bed.
Call Crime Stoppers at 1-888-277-TIPS if you have any information to help investigators.
There is a $35,000 reward for Haleigh's safe return.
The sheriff's office arrested 40-year-old Lisa Carmen Croslin on two felonies and a misdemeanor Wednesday afternoon.
According to the Putnam County Sheriff's Office web site, Croslin
faces charges of fraud utter false instrument, forgery of alter public
record certificate, and larceny petit theft.
The arrest stems from warrants that led to her arrest in Nashville last month.
Croslin is the mother of Misty Croslin-Cummings, the teenaged stepmother of Haleigh Cummings.
The 5-year-old girl vanished on the night of February 9 at her home
in Satsuma. Misty Croslin-Cummings said she put Haleigh to bed.
Call Crime Stoppers at 1-888-277-TIPS if you have any information to help investigators.
There is a $35,000 reward for Haleigh's safe return.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
A volunteer in the search for Haleigh Cummings was a mother-like
figure to Misty Cummings and recently accompanied the 17-year-old to
New York to obtain information about the missing child.
EquuSearch founder Tim Miller said Donna Brock met Misty Cummings the day the teen
reportedly took polygraph tests in Orlando, and Misty befriended the
woman immediately.
Little did she know Brock was passing information along to investigators.
"This is all about Haleigh," Miller said. "It's all about one little child,
and we will do anything in our power to get that child located."
Miller added he was concerned about Misty Cummings' well-being after
witnessing fights between her and her former husband, Ronald Cummings.
"It was an opportunity to get Misty out of the house into a safe place," Miller said.
"She certainly wasn't set up, she reached out to Donna. It felt as though
Misty may say something valuable and take this investigation forward."
Equusearch provided funding for Brock to take Cummings to get her hair and nails
done, and other leisure activities, Miller said.
"Equusearch spent a lot of money, but how do you put a price tag on Haleigh? You can't do it," Miller said.
"I have a lot of compassion for Misty. She had a terrible, terrible life
growing up. She lived in a house that was extremely dysfunctional, full
of drugs and alcohol," Miller added. "If Misty was involved with
Haleigh's case it's halfway understandable, but by no means justified."
On Wed-nesday, Cummings' mother, Lisa Croslin, was booked into the Putnam
County Jail on two felony charges and a misdemeanor stemming from her
arrest in Tennessee last month.
The 40-year-old was charged with fraud utter false instrument, forgery or alter of public record certificate and larceny.
Any information Brock learned was reported directly to investigators, Miller said.
Meanwhile, divorce papers for the Cummings' were signed by a judge Thursday,
finalizing the couple's split, Brandon Beardsley, attorney for Ronald
Cummings, said.
An Amber Alert for Haleigh was issued Feb. 10 after she was reported missing by Misty Cummings at 3:27 a.m.
A massive search ensued, involving helicopters, boats, canines and horseback units. No sign of the child was found.
Misty Cummings previously said she put Haleigh to bed about 8 p.m. on Feb. 9
and went to sleep herself two hours later. She said the child was gone
when she awoke the next day at 3 a.m. to use the restroom.
Investigators believe that Haleigh was abducted.
Meanwhile, reports of people spotting the missing 6-year-old continue to come forward, but all have been unfounded.
"There have been sightings since the beginning of the case," Lt. Johnny
Greenwood, spokesman for the Putnam County Sheriff's Office, said.
"She's been spotted all over the country and Canada. She's been spotted
everywhere."
The sheriff's office has now received more than 5,000 tips.
To report any information on Haleigh's whereabouts, call 329-0808.
figure to Misty Cummings and recently accompanied the 17-year-old to
New York to obtain information about the missing child.
EquuSearch founder Tim Miller said Donna Brock met Misty Cummings the day the teen
reportedly took polygraph tests in Orlando, and Misty befriended the
woman immediately.
Little did she know Brock was passing information along to investigators.
"This is all about Haleigh," Miller said. "It's all about one little child,
and we will do anything in our power to get that child located."
Miller added he was concerned about Misty Cummings' well-being after
witnessing fights between her and her former husband, Ronald Cummings.
"It was an opportunity to get Misty out of the house into a safe place," Miller said.
"She certainly wasn't set up, she reached out to Donna. It felt as though
Misty may say something valuable and take this investigation forward."
Equusearch provided funding for Brock to take Cummings to get her hair and nails
done, and other leisure activities, Miller said.
"Equusearch spent a lot of money, but how do you put a price tag on Haleigh? You can't do it," Miller said.
"I have a lot of compassion for Misty. She had a terrible, terrible life
growing up. She lived in a house that was extremely dysfunctional, full
of drugs and alcohol," Miller added. "If Misty was involved with
Haleigh's case it's halfway understandable, but by no means justified."
On Wed-nesday, Cummings' mother, Lisa Croslin, was booked into the Putnam
County Jail on two felony charges and a misdemeanor stemming from her
arrest in Tennessee last month.
The 40-year-old was charged with fraud utter false instrument, forgery or alter of public record certificate and larceny.
Any information Brock learned was reported directly to investigators, Miller said.
Meanwhile, divorce papers for the Cummings' were signed by a judge Thursday,
finalizing the couple's split, Brandon Beardsley, attorney for Ronald
Cummings, said.
An Amber Alert for Haleigh was issued Feb. 10 after she was reported missing by Misty Cummings at 3:27 a.m.
A massive search ensued, involving helicopters, boats, canines and horseback units. No sign of the child was found.
Misty Cummings previously said she put Haleigh to bed about 8 p.m. on Feb. 9
and went to sleep herself two hours later. She said the child was gone
when she awoke the next day at 3 a.m. to use the restroom.
Investigators believe that Haleigh was abducted.
Meanwhile, reports of people spotting the missing 6-year-old continue to come forward, but all have been unfounded.
"There have been sightings since the beginning of the case," Lt. Johnny
Greenwood, spokesman for the Putnam County Sheriff's Office, said.
"She's been spotted all over the country and Canada. She's been spotted
everywhere."
The sheriff's office has now received more than 5,000 tips.
To report any information on Haleigh's whereabouts, call 329-0808.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
The marriage between Misty Croslin and Ronald Cummings, father of missing Putnam County girl Haleigh Cummings , is officially over.
St
Johns County court documents show Misty and Ronald are officially
divorced just 2 days after Ronald filed the papers. Both waived the 20
day waiting period. They got married just over 7 months ago, about a month after Haleigh vanished. Putnam County Sheriff’s Office
investigators say Haleigh was kidnapped early on February 10 and the
last person to see the five-year-old was Misty Croslin, who placed the
911 call alerting police to Haliegh's disappearance.
St
Johns County court documents show Misty and Ronald are officially
divorced just 2 days after Ronald filed the papers. Both waived the 20
day waiting period. They got married just over 7 months ago, about a month after Haleigh vanished. Putnam County Sheriff’s Office
investigators say Haleigh was kidnapped early on February 10 and the
last person to see the five-year-old was Misty Croslin, who placed the
911 call alerting police to Haliegh's disappearance.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
The disappearance of 5-year-old Haleigh Cummings eight months ago
occurred about the time Ellen Johnson got Internet access at home in
east Texas. "I didn't even have a computer in my house until just before this," she said. Now,
the 46-year-old petroleum engineer has a Twitter account called
haleighnewz dedicated to the case and at summer's end, was in Putnam
County to help with a school supply drive for Haleigh's classmates.
Johnson met Haleigh's mother, Crystal Sheffield, and grandmother Marie
Griffis there. She spends hours sharing her thoughts online and probing
for information about the ongoing investigation. It is as if the Internet has removed a wall. Johnson
is not alone. In the eight months since the kindergartner disappeared
from the Satsuma mobile home where she was living with a younger
brother, their father and his 17-year-old girlfriend, Misty Croslin,
Haleigh has touched legions of hearts and spawned international
attention in an online community. Johnson says her attraction to
the case is not something she understands completely. She had never
posted on an online forum but is now immersed in Haleigh's story. "You are interacting with the people themselves," she said. "There is not that distance between them and you." Johnson said she is not married and has no children but was struck by the plight of a mother without her child. "On some level I felt compassion for them," she said. Steph
Watts, a broadcast producer and journalist who has worked for Court TV,
CNN and Fox and followed crime and justice stories, said there is a
danger in becoming too close to a case. "We feel like we have
permission and a right to be in their lives and we don't," he said. Watts has a blog, Watts Up With This??? at stephww.wordpress.com that follows the Haleigh story. "What the Internet has done is taken those local stories and made them national stories," he said. Watts said he began writing about Haleigh in August. "I think people are feeling they can become part of the story by weighing in," he said. What
has happened is not necessarily new, he said, and reactions from online
observers are equivalent to earlier generations yelling opinions at the
television. "This is like a high-speed letter to the editor," he said. Kathy Schmidt, 42, a mother of three in Madison, Wis., calls the case a "scattered puzzle." Schmidt,
who has a Twitter account, camille_2010, is scheduled to launch the
Justice 4 Haleigh blog today with a friend she met online. It will be
at justice4haleigh.wordpress.com. Passion ebbs and flows in the forums, she said. "Nobody is really in charge of anything," she said. "They just get a following." Like Johnson, Schmidt said she had never been compelled by a case before Haleigh's. "She didn't get treated right and she didn't deserve this," Schmidt said of the still-missing youngster. She
has an answer for her children, aged 10 to 14, when they ask her why
she is so absorbed by a girl so far away that she never knew. "I
don't really see anybody fighting for Haleigh on either side," she
tells them. "If it was you, I'd want someone fighting for you. Haleigh
didn't just walk out of that trailer for the rest of her life." It
is as if these people can reach through their computer screens to ease
the pain of Haleigh's family or nudge a detective's shoulder to prod
them forward. They e-mail the cops and politicians when
investigations seem to sputter and urge state child safety workers to
check the welfare of Haleigh's younger brother, said Chantell Wofter,
44, of Southern Ohio. She created her crwofter1 Twitter account because
of the case. "I feel close to the investigation," she said, one
time even calling the FBI. "If there is a search or something is going
on, I hear about it first." Since Feb. 10, detectives and
analysts have tried to crack the mysterious disappearance. They remain
unconvinced that Croslin, who became Haleigh's stepmother after
marrying 25-year-old Ronald Cummings in March, is telling all she knows. But
while searches, the Cummings' already dissolved marriage, standoffs by
both Haleigh's parents and unrelated arrests of family members and
others are strong fodder, they are not all that drives the story, said
Art Harris, whose blog The Bald Truth at artharris.com gives her
prominent coverage. "There is something about Haleigh's
picture," he said of the girl whose often-used image shows her with a
bright smile and a pink bow in her hair. "She is so winning," he
said. "Just by looking at the pictures regardless of how you feel about
her parents, she is an innocent." Harris' posts are often biting
and most likely focus on Ronald or Misty Cummings. Harris describes his
coverage as "calling it the way you see it." He is regularly
interviewed by cable television's Nancy Grace. "My challenge is how do you get behind the motives and the reasons behind it," he said. Lt.
Johnny Greenwood of the Putnam County Sheriff's Office said bloggers
Harris and Watts check information and have not caused heartburn for
investigators. "The only thing that is really discouraging is those bloggers who have bad information," he said. Some hide behind online anonymity, he said. "We don't know who they are. People take what these people say as gospel." The
Internet can offer a measure of secrecy but is still within the reach
of the law, said Rick Karcher, a torts law professor at Florida Coastal
School of Law. Opinions are not illegal but the First Amendment does not protect against false, defamatory statements, he said. "It's from the perspective of the reader," he said. "Would they think it is true?" While
the case has gripped a divided online following that casts public
accusations about such troubled families, to Haleigh's relatives, much
of the attention is a bombardment that puts them on the defensive. "It
just consumes too much of your time to continue to sit and try to keep
up with who is saying what," said Griffis, who lives in Baker County.
"I think they're irrelevant. Half of their information isn't true." Now,
she said, she limits her involvement to posting Scripture. Those who
think they have a lead in the case need to contact detectives, she said. "If it is someone I've become familiar with, I'll answer them, but nine out of 10 times I don't," she said. Ronald
Cummings' grandmother, Annette Sykes, lives in southern Putnam County
and said her family has found support but also suffers sharply from the
commentary. "There's not much you can do," she said. "They are going to believe what they want to believe or say what they want to say."
occurred about the time Ellen Johnson got Internet access at home in
east Texas. "I didn't even have a computer in my house until just before this," she said. Now,
the 46-year-old petroleum engineer has a Twitter account called
haleighnewz dedicated to the case and at summer's end, was in Putnam
County to help with a school supply drive for Haleigh's classmates.
Johnson met Haleigh's mother, Crystal Sheffield, and grandmother Marie
Griffis there. She spends hours sharing her thoughts online and probing
for information about the ongoing investigation. It is as if the Internet has removed a wall. Johnson
is not alone. In the eight months since the kindergartner disappeared
from the Satsuma mobile home where she was living with a younger
brother, their father and his 17-year-old girlfriend, Misty Croslin,
Haleigh has touched legions of hearts and spawned international
attention in an online community. Johnson says her attraction to
the case is not something she understands completely. She had never
posted on an online forum but is now immersed in Haleigh's story. "You are interacting with the people themselves," she said. "There is not that distance between them and you." Johnson said she is not married and has no children but was struck by the plight of a mother without her child. "On some level I felt compassion for them," she said. Steph
Watts, a broadcast producer and journalist who has worked for Court TV,
CNN and Fox and followed crime and justice stories, said there is a
danger in becoming too close to a case. "We feel like we have
permission and a right to be in their lives and we don't," he said. Watts has a blog, Watts Up With This??? at stephww.wordpress.com that follows the Haleigh story. "What the Internet has done is taken those local stories and made them national stories," he said. Watts said he began writing about Haleigh in August. "I think people are feeling they can become part of the story by weighing in," he said. What
has happened is not necessarily new, he said, and reactions from online
observers are equivalent to earlier generations yelling opinions at the
television. "This is like a high-speed letter to the editor," he said. Kathy Schmidt, 42, a mother of three in Madison, Wis., calls the case a "scattered puzzle." Schmidt,
who has a Twitter account, camille_2010, is scheduled to launch the
Justice 4 Haleigh blog today with a friend she met online. It will be
at justice4haleigh.wordpress.com. Passion ebbs and flows in the forums, she said. "Nobody is really in charge of anything," she said. "They just get a following." Like Johnson, Schmidt said she had never been compelled by a case before Haleigh's. "She didn't get treated right and she didn't deserve this," Schmidt said of the still-missing youngster. She
has an answer for her children, aged 10 to 14, when they ask her why
she is so absorbed by a girl so far away that she never knew. "I
don't really see anybody fighting for Haleigh on either side," she
tells them. "If it was you, I'd want someone fighting for you. Haleigh
didn't just walk out of that trailer for the rest of her life." It
is as if these people can reach through their computer screens to ease
the pain of Haleigh's family or nudge a detective's shoulder to prod
them forward. They e-mail the cops and politicians when
investigations seem to sputter and urge state child safety workers to
check the welfare of Haleigh's younger brother, said Chantell Wofter,
44, of Southern Ohio. She created her crwofter1 Twitter account because
of the case. "I feel close to the investigation," she said, one
time even calling the FBI. "If there is a search or something is going
on, I hear about it first." Since Feb. 10, detectives and
analysts have tried to crack the mysterious disappearance. They remain
unconvinced that Croslin, who became Haleigh's stepmother after
marrying 25-year-old Ronald Cummings in March, is telling all she knows. But
while searches, the Cummings' already dissolved marriage, standoffs by
both Haleigh's parents and unrelated arrests of family members and
others are strong fodder, they are not all that drives the story, said
Art Harris, whose blog The Bald Truth at artharris.com gives her
prominent coverage. "There is something about Haleigh's
picture," he said of the girl whose often-used image shows her with a
bright smile and a pink bow in her hair. "She is so winning," he
said. "Just by looking at the pictures regardless of how you feel about
her parents, she is an innocent." Harris' posts are often biting
and most likely focus on Ronald or Misty Cummings. Harris describes his
coverage as "calling it the way you see it." He is regularly
interviewed by cable television's Nancy Grace. "My challenge is how do you get behind the motives and the reasons behind it," he said. Lt.
Johnny Greenwood of the Putnam County Sheriff's Office said bloggers
Harris and Watts check information and have not caused heartburn for
investigators. "The only thing that is really discouraging is those bloggers who have bad information," he said. Some hide behind online anonymity, he said. "We don't know who they are. People take what these people say as gospel." The
Internet can offer a measure of secrecy but is still within the reach
of the law, said Rick Karcher, a torts law professor at Florida Coastal
School of Law. Opinions are not illegal but the First Amendment does not protect against false, defamatory statements, he said. "It's from the perspective of the reader," he said. "Would they think it is true?" While
the case has gripped a divided online following that casts public
accusations about such troubled families, to Haleigh's relatives, much
of the attention is a bombardment that puts them on the defensive. "It
just consumes too much of your time to continue to sit and try to keep
up with who is saying what," said Griffis, who lives in Baker County.
"I think they're irrelevant. Half of their information isn't true." Now,
she said, she limits her involvement to posting Scripture. Those who
think they have a lead in the case need to contact detectives, she said. "If it is someone I've become familiar with, I'll answer them, but nine out of 10 times I don't," she said. Ronald
Cummings' grandmother, Annette Sykes, lives in southern Putnam County
and said her family has found support but also suffers sharply from the
commentary. "There's not much you can do," she said. "They are going to believe what they want to believe or say what they want to say."

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Misty robbed at apartment complex; Woman says buying drugs
On Monday evening, the ex-stepmother of missing Florida girl HaLeigh Cummings, was robbed at an apartment complex in Palatka. One of the women with her told police they were there to buy drugs.
The police report says Misty, 17, was with two friends in the Ragsdale Apartments parking lot when one friend exited the car they were driving to speak to someone. When the woman returned, she said “two or three black males jumped on Cummings [Misty] taking her purse and pulling her out of the vehicle.”
Misty got back into the car and the driver drove off, while the third woman chased the men. Misty was treated for minor injuries at Putnam County Medical Center.
The report indicates that at the scene, police found a purse strap and a “crushed pill bottle with unknown pills inside,”
After the incident, one of the women told police that she and Misty had gone to the apartment complex to purchase drugs. First Coast reports that during their interview with the woman, police were called to another scene, so no one was arrested.
Misty was recently divorced from HaLeigh’s father, Ronald Cummings, and is believed to be the last person to see the little girl the night she disappeared in February. She has been the primary focus of the investigation into HaLeigh’s disappearance, after giving authorities inconsistent stories about what happened the night the girl went missing.
The police report says Misty, 17, was with two friends in the Ragsdale Apartments parking lot when one friend exited the car they were driving to speak to someone. When the woman returned, she said “two or three black males jumped on Cummings [Misty] taking her purse and pulling her out of the vehicle.”
Misty got back into the car and the driver drove off, while the third woman chased the men. Misty was treated for minor injuries at Putnam County Medical Center.
The report indicates that at the scene, police found a purse strap and a “crushed pill bottle with unknown pills inside,”
After the incident, one of the women told police that she and Misty had gone to the apartment complex to purchase drugs. First Coast reports that during their interview with the woman, police were called to another scene, so no one was arrested.
Misty was recently divorced from HaLeigh’s father, Ronald Cummings, and is believed to be the last person to see the little girl the night she disappeared in February. She has been the primary focus of the investigation into HaLeigh’s disappearance, after giving authorities inconsistent stories about what happened the night the girl went missing.

tears4caylee- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
The trouble-plagued teenager who was the last known
person to see HaLeigh Cummings alive was robbed and injured Monday
night during a drug deal gone bad, according to the Palatka Police
Department.
Misty Croslin, whose seven-month marriage to the missing girl's
father ended Thursday, was named as one of three young women who tried,
and failed, to buy drugs at the Ragsdale Apartment Complex, police
reported.
Croslin, 17, accompanied by Brandy Steedley, 18, and Melinda
Santmyer, 22, went to the apartments on Moody Road in Palatka around
8:15 p.m. Monday, according to the report.Two or three unidentified black males approached their car and reportedly grabbed Croslin and stole her purse.
She managed to get into the car, and Steedley drove away -- leaving Santmyer behind to flee on foot, police said.
Investigating officers reportedly interviewed Santmyer at an apartment in the complex.
"She told officers that they came to the apartment complex
attempting to buy drugs," according to the police department report.
"She stated that she got out of the car to look for an unidentified man
they gave money to for drugs.
"As she was going back to the vehicle the unidentified suspects came up to them" and stole Croslin's purse.
Croslin's attorney, Robert Fields, with the Palatka firm of Dowda
& Fields, said he believes his client's cell phone also was taken.
Fields said he only talked briefly with Croslin on Tuesday
afternoon, and she had little information to give him about the
incident.
Croslin, for a short time, was the stepmother of HaLeigh Cummings,
who was 5 years old when she disappeared from her father's Satsuma
mobile home the night of Feb. 9.
The teenager, who was Ronald Cummings' live-in girlfriend at the
time, was babysitting HaLeigh and her younger brother while their
father worked a night shift as a crane operator.
The two were married March 12, one month after the child disappeared.
A St. Johns County judge reportedly finalized their divorce on Thursday.
Croslin was a passenger in a car driven by Donna Brock, 43, on Oct.
7 when it was pulled over on Interstate 4 near Lake Mary, because
another driver said Brock had threatened her with a handgun.
Croslin and Brock were handcuffed and the car searched. They were released when no weapon was found. Croslin then decided to go against Fields' advice and appear two days later on a nationally televised show from New York.
At that point, he dropped her as a client because she repeatedly had gone against his advice.
He said Tuesday that he reconsidered when he learned that Brock was telling Croslin to ignore him.
"She was counseling Misty to go against my advice," Fields said. "I
didn't like that sort of interference with my representation."
Brock was identified as a current or, perhaps, former volunteer with
EquuSearch, a Texas-based search and recovery group that the missing
girl's family called on just after her disappearance.
Tim Miller, owner of EquuSearch, later became openly critical of
Croslin, insisting she knows more than she's telling investigators.
Anyone with information about the reported Monday night attack in Palatka is asked to call the police department at 329-0115.
person to see HaLeigh Cummings alive was robbed and injured Monday
night during a drug deal gone bad, according to the Palatka Police
Department.
Misty Croslin, whose seven-month marriage to the missing girl's
father ended Thursday, was named as one of three young women who tried,
and failed, to buy drugs at the Ragsdale Apartment Complex, police
reported.
Croslin, 17, accompanied by Brandy Steedley, 18, and Melinda
Santmyer, 22, went to the apartments on Moody Road in Palatka around
8:15 p.m. Monday, according to the report.Two or three unidentified black males approached their car and reportedly grabbed Croslin and stole her purse.
She managed to get into the car, and Steedley drove away -- leaving Santmyer behind to flee on foot, police said.
Investigating officers reportedly interviewed Santmyer at an apartment in the complex.
"She told officers that they came to the apartment complex
attempting to buy drugs," according to the police department report.
"She stated that she got out of the car to look for an unidentified man
they gave money to for drugs.
"As she was going back to the vehicle the unidentified suspects came up to them" and stole Croslin's purse.
Croslin's attorney, Robert Fields, with the Palatka firm of Dowda
& Fields, said he believes his client's cell phone also was taken.
Fields said he only talked briefly with Croslin on Tuesday
afternoon, and she had little information to give him about the
incident.
Croslin, for a short time, was the stepmother of HaLeigh Cummings,
who was 5 years old when she disappeared from her father's Satsuma
mobile home the night of Feb. 9.
The teenager, who was Ronald Cummings' live-in girlfriend at the
time, was babysitting HaLeigh and her younger brother while their
father worked a night shift as a crane operator.
The two were married March 12, one month after the child disappeared.
A St. Johns County judge reportedly finalized their divorce on Thursday.
Croslin was a passenger in a car driven by Donna Brock, 43, on Oct.
7 when it was pulled over on Interstate 4 near Lake Mary, because
another driver said Brock had threatened her with a handgun.
Croslin and Brock were handcuffed and the car searched. They were released when no weapon was found. Croslin then decided to go against Fields' advice and appear two days later on a nationally televised show from New York.
At that point, he dropped her as a client because she repeatedly had gone against his advice.
He said Tuesday that he reconsidered when he learned that Brock was telling Croslin to ignore him.
"She was counseling Misty to go against my advice," Fields said. "I
didn't like that sort of interference with my representation."
Brock was identified as a current or, perhaps, former volunteer with
EquuSearch, a Texas-based search and recovery group that the missing
girl's family called on just after her disappearance.
Tim Miller, owner of EquuSearch, later became openly critical of
Croslin, insisting she knows more than she's telling investigators.
Anyone with information about the reported Monday night attack in Palatka is asked to call the police department at 329-0115.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
Thank you, TomT! What a sad mess this case has become!

kygirl09- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
kygirl09 wrote:Thank you, TomT! What a sad mess this case has become!
---I so agree!
Misty knows what happened. She's afraid to admit it but the girl's gonna crack one of these days. Unfortunately we cannot administer any "treatments" to expedite the process. 

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
This case burns me to no end. Ron should be charged with child neglect for leaving his children with Misty to begin with, knowing what she is. Misty needs to be charged with something, she was in charge of those children and don't tell me she doesn't know what happened-I'm sure there is something they could pick her up on. The little beotch would'nt last long in jail, she needs her "fix" every day so, she should've been picked up the other nite when LE learned she was buying drugs. LE is gonna/or has, screwed this one up big time, but that's ok-it seems these days our children are "disposable"!!!


alwaysbelieve- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

An editorial from Tom T
Tonight on the Nancy Grace Show on HLN they "bombshelling-ly" proclaimed that Haleigh Cummings is dead. Their source? Tim Miller, founder and CEO of the highly-regarded Texas Equusearch organization.
I have no problem with Tim Miller having drawn his own "personal" conclusions, he is entitled to his opinion, as I am mine. He has invested much time, money and energy on this case. I do, however, have a problem with Mr. Miller stating those conclusions in a public media arena where many viewers will take his message as being the "verified" truth. Without convincing physical evidence, it is wrong to tell the public to stop searching, to stop keeping their eyes open.
He even was quoted as saying, "They'll be lucky if they ever find a body".
It occurs to me that perhaps Mr. Miller is trying to force Misty's hand by making this pronouncement. She did, after all, high-tail it out of Florida to stay at her Granny's in Tennessee. (Her welcome mat from the two druggie friends was allegedly withdrawn after she shined the media spotlight on them).
If Mr. Miller wants Misty to "fess up", there must be a better way to go about this. Telling the public that the child is dead defeats the purpose of a Rescue organization. So, with a "dead" child there's no point in Texas Eq to stay around. So, they too have pulled up stakes and left the scene.
I will continue to report the facts, not my opinions, unless I give fair and honest notice that it is strictly an opinion.
That's the way I see it from here.
I have no problem with Tim Miller having drawn his own "personal" conclusions, he is entitled to his opinion, as I am mine. He has invested much time, money and energy on this case. I do, however, have a problem with Mr. Miller stating those conclusions in a public media arena where many viewers will take his message as being the "verified" truth. Without convincing physical evidence, it is wrong to tell the public to stop searching, to stop keeping their eyes open.
He even was quoted as saying, "They'll be lucky if they ever find a body".
It occurs to me that perhaps Mr. Miller is trying to force Misty's hand by making this pronouncement. She did, after all, high-tail it out of Florida to stay at her Granny's in Tennessee. (Her welcome mat from the two druggie friends was allegedly withdrawn after she shined the media spotlight on them).
If Mr. Miller wants Misty to "fess up", there must be a better way to go about this. Telling the public that the child is dead defeats the purpose of a Rescue organization. So, with a "dead" child there's no point in Texas Eq to stay around. So, they too have pulled up stakes and left the scene.
I will continue to report the facts, not my opinions, unless I give fair and honest notice that it is strictly an opinion.
That's the way I see it from here.

TomTerrific0420- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

Re: HALEIGH CUMMINGS - 5 yo - Satsuma FL
TomTerrific0420 wrote:Tonight on the Nancy Grace Show on HLN they "bombshelling-ly" proclaimed that Haleigh Cummings is dead. Their source? Tim Miller, founder and CEO of the highly-regarded Texas Equusearch organization.
I have no problem with Tim Miller having drawn his own "personal" conclusions, he is entitled to his opinion, as I am mine. He has invested much time, money and energy on this case. I do, however, have a problem with Mr. Miller stating those conclusions in a public media arena where many viewers will take his message as being the "verified" truth. Without convincing physical evidence, it is wrong to tell the public to stop searching, to stop keeping their eyes open.
He even was quoted as saying, "They'll be lucky if they ever find a body".
It occurs to me that perhaps Mr. Miller is trying to force Misty's hand by making this pronouncement. She did, after all, high-tail it out of Florida to stay at her Granny's in Tennessee. (Her welcome mat from the two druggie friends was allegedly withdrawn after she shined the media spotlight on them).
If Mr. Miller wants Misty to "fess up", there must be a better way to go about this. Telling the public that the child is dead defeats the purpose of a Rescue organization. So, with a "dead" child there's no point in Texas Eq to stay around. So, they too have pulled up stakes and left the scene.
I will continue to report the facts, not my opinions, unless I give fair and honest notice that it is strictly an opinion.
That's the way I see it from here.
Amen Tom


RedHead- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear

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