UPDATE: NOW A $150,000 REWARD FOR INFORMATION REGARDING DISAPPEARANCE.
Lilly Sullivan (6) and Jack Sullivan (4) disappeared from their home on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne, Pictou County, Nova Scotia in Canada. While it is still unclear how the disappearance occurred, the children were reported missing on Friday May 2nd, 2025 at around 10am by their mother.

Siblings, Lilly and Jack live with their mother Malehya Brooks-Murray, step father Daniel Martell and younger sibling of roughly 1 years old.

It is claimed that on the morning of May 2nd, Lilly and Jack were in their property playing while Malehya and Daniel tended to their younger sibling in the bedroom. Lilly has been in and out of the bedroom and Jack could be heard playing in kitchen nearby. Shortly after, the children could no longer be heard, it is suspected that the children had went outside to play. Lilly is said to have likely been wearing a pink sweater, pink pants, and pink boots and Jack likely in blue dinosaur boots.

The home is based in a rural area surrounded by heavy woods, steep banks and bushes.

A confirmed sighting of the children was documented and they were seen in public last on Thursday May 1st, 2025 in New Glasgow.

A large search effort was immediately undertaken, and was scaled back on May 7. Several further organized search efforts have taken place in the weeks since, the latest of which being the weekend of May 31–June 1, 2025. Authorities have stated that there is no evidence that the children were abducted. #FindLillyandJack

Share their photograph, share their story and say their name. They are Lilly Sullivan, aged 6 and Jack Sullivan, aged 4 and they are still missing, still missed and we are still looking.
May be an image of 2 people, child and people smiling

Still Missing, Still Missed: $150,000 Reward Now Offered in Disappearance of Lilly and Jack Sullivan

It’s been more than two months since six-year-old Lilly Sullivan and her four-year-old brother Jack vanished without a trace from their rural home on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne, Pictou County, Nova Scotia. In that time, their faces have become symbols of heartbreak, uncertainty, and a growing determination from a nation—and beyond—to find them.

Now, a $150,000 reward has been announced for information that leads to their safe return or answers regarding their disappearance.

The children were reported missing by their mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, at approximately 10 a.m. on Friday, May 2, 2025. What began as a typical quiet morning in the family’s rural home has since become the epicenter of one of the most urgent and baffling missing persons cases in recent Canadian history.

Lilly and Jack lived with their mother Malehya, stepfather Daniel Martell, and their younger sibling, a baby not yet two years old. According to the initial account, Malehya and Daniel were in the bedroom tending to the baby while Lilly and Jack were playing in other parts of the home. Lilly was described as being in and out of the bedroom, while Jack could be heard nearby in the kitchen.

Then, suddenly, silence.

When Malehya and Daniel realized they could no longer hear the children, they assumed they had stepped outside to play. What they did next—and the precise timeline of those crucial early moments—has not been fully clarified to the public. What is known is that the children were gone. And they haven’t been seen since.

Their last confirmed sighting was the day before, Thursday, May 1, in nearby New Glasgow. That sighting remains a key point in the investigation, offering a vital timestamp in what is otherwise a case shrouded in uncertainty.

The terrain around the home presents real challenges. The family’s residence is surrounded by dense forest, steep banks, overgrown trails, and heavy underbrush. In the initial days following the disappearance, search crews scoured the area with every available resource—helicopters, drones, scent-tracking dogs, ground teams, thermal imaging, and volunteer searchers.

Despite the massive efforts, which continued intensively until May 7 before being scaled back, no trace of the children has been found. There was no scent trail leading deep into the woods. No clothing. No boots. No physical sign that two small children wandered off and succumbed to the elements.

That’s a fact that troubles many.

L'enquête sur la disparition de Lilly et Jack Sullivan se poursuit -  Fréquence

While authorities have publicly stated that there is currently no evidence the children were abducted, the circumstances raise difficult questions. Two small children going missing from a property with adults present—and in a remote location with limited access—would typically leave behind some trace. Yet weeks have passed, and still there is no physical evidence to support any single theory, whether it be wandering off, abduction, or something else entirely.

The public’s frustration and heartbreak continue to grow. Vigils have been held. Posters have gone up in communities across Canada. Online forums and social media groups have united under the banner #FindLillyandJack, pressing for more information, more visibility, and more action.

Much of the public discussion has focused on the family dynamic. Observers have raised concerns about inconsistent details from early accounts. Why was there no immediate public plea from the parents? Why was the community not mobilized directly by the family? Why has so little been said by those closest to the children?

The lack of transparency has only deepened the mystery.

What we do know are the last descriptions of what the children were believed to be wearing. Lilly was reportedly dressed in a pink sweater, pink pants, and pink boots. Jack was said to be wearing blue dinosaur boots—no shirt was mentioned in the original report. These details are crucial, as they could help identify them if they were seen by someone on the road or in a vehicle. Yet, even these details have reportedly shifted in private conversations and text messages related to the case.

Despite the unclear narrative and lack of new updates, the $150,000 reward is a major development. It offers renewed hope that someone—somewhere—knows something and may now be willing to come forward. Whether it’s a passerby who saw something that didn’t seem important at the time, a neighbor with surveillance footage, or someone closer to the family who’s been too afraid to speak—this reward may be the motivation needed to break the silence.

As the investigation continues, one thing remains painfully clear: these children are still missing. They are still loved. And they are still being looked for.

Lilly is six years old, with long brown hair and a quiet smile. Jack is four, full of energy and innocence. They are not just faces on a poster. They are siblings. They are someone’s babies. They should be home right now—laughing, playing, dreaming.

Instead, they are the center of a mystery that has shaken a community, a province, and a country.

This is a plea—not just for information, but for action. If you saw something, say something. If you suspect something, report it. If you know anything—no matter how small—step forward. The silence that surrounds their disappearance cannot be allowed to continue.

To those in positions of authority: remain transparent. Provide updates. Continue the search until every possible lead is exhausted. The public has not forgotten Jack and Lilly—and neither should the institutions responsible for finding them.

To the public: keep sharing their faces. Keep telling their story. Say their names. Let their images live not in fading news cycles, but in the hearts and voices of everyone who refuses to let them be forgotten.

They are Lilly Sullivan, aged six.
They are Jack Sullivan, aged four.
They are still missing.
They are still missed.
And we are still looking.

If you have any information, please contact your local authorities or Crime Stoppers. Let your voice be the one that brings them home.