BREAKING: RCMP Launches Urgent Operation After Discovering Shocking Truth About Lily and Jack Sullivan’s Whereabouts — What We Now Know Will Change Everything

It’s been eight agonizing weeks since two young children vanished from their Nova Scotia home, sending shockwaves through communities across the country. Today, the mystery takes a dramatic turn. After 48 hours of intense investigation, a major breakthrough has finally emerged — one that completely rewrites everything we thought we knew about the Lily and Jack Sullivan case.

Authorities have now confirmed disturbing new details about the children’s biological father, Cody Sullivan. Despite being previously portrayed as a struggling parent, court records reveal a darker reality. Sullivan has a significant criminal history, including multiple court appearances spanning from 2021 through 2025, with yet another hearing scheduled for October 10, 2025 — a detail his own mother, Belinda Gray, never publicly acknowledged.

But that’s just the beginning.

In a shocking revelation, Daniel Martell, the children’s stepfather, disclosed details from his polygraph test. According to Martell, the very first question investigators asked was not “Where are the children?” but “Did you kill Lily and Jack?” Every subsequent question during the polygraph was framed under the assumption that the children were dead — not kidnapped, not lost. This reveals one chilling fact: from day one, the RCMP were operating under the belief that this was a homicide investigation.

Why were they so sure?

Part of the answer comes from Belinda Gray herself. In a heartbreaking interview, she admitted: “My heart tells me these babies are gone.” Police arrived at her home at 3:00 AM the day after the children vanished — searching for the children at their biological father’s residence. Clearly, the authorities had reasons to suspect something far more sinister was unfolding.

We now know that Child Protective Services (CPS) had already been involved with Lily and Jack before their disappearance. Minister Scott Armstrong confirmed an active CPS file on the family, though he declined to release details. This context is critical — the authorities weren’t just guessing. They were responding to a growing web of red flags surrounding the children’s living conditions. That’s why when the children disappeared, the police escalated the case immediately to a major crimes investigation.

By June, it had become one of the largest investigations in Nova Scotia’s history. Over 11 RCMP divisions have been involved, including forensics, dog services, and digital crimes. Over 500 public tips, dozens of interviews, and hundreds of hours of footage have been collected. They’ve even searched septic tanks, wells, and abandoned mines.

The Nova Scotia government has now offered a $150,000 reward for information, placing the Sullivan case under a program typically reserved for unsolved murders. The case has officially shifted from a missing persons report to an active major crime investigation.

And now we reach the most crucial development.

A man named Darren Gets — a second cousin of the children’s mother, Maleia Brooks Murray — has come forward. He says he knows exactly what happened to the children. According to Darren, the children are alive and were deliberately hidden to protect them. He insists they were taken by people close to Maleia, possibly her Indigenous community, and may no longer be in Nova Scotia at all.

Darren claims the plan was orchestrated by a group of young women trying to help Maleia escape what she described as an unsafe environment. On the morning of May 2, he believes Maleia brought the children to the roadside and handed them off to someone in a car. However, the plan hit a snag when a neighbor unexpectedly witnessed the exchange. “Janie saw her, and asked, ‘What have you done?’” Darren recalls.

This could explain Maleia’s sudden disappearance the day after the children went missing — and her violation of CPS orders when she fled to the Sipekne’katik reservation with baby Meadow, only to have the baby swiftly removed from her care. Daniel, in an emotional online post, accused Maleia of running from the RCMP and hiding the truth: “She couldn’t be around me because she would break down,” he wrote. “I would find out the truth.”

Search dogs followed the children’s scent to a nearby road — where the trail abruptly stopped, suggesting they were taken away by vehicle. If Darren’s version is true, the children are alive — but possibly in grave danger as the net tightens around everyone involved.

Darren’s final warning is chilling: “If these children are being hidden, and the people involved are panicking, something tragic could happen. Bring them into the light. Don’t wait until it’s too late.”

Authorities are urging anyone with information to come forward immediately. Every hour matters. And if Darren is right, then we are now in a race against time.

So what do you believe? Was this an attempt to protect children from a dangerous environment? Or the most elaborate cover-up in Canadian history?

Let us know in the comments. Your voice could help bring clarity to a case that has captured the world’s attention — and may still have a chance for a happy ending.