Lily & Jack Sullivan: The Footage That Changes Everything
Picture this.

A quiet morning in rural Nova Scotia. Two children—Lily Sullivan (6) and Jack Sullivan (4)—playing in their trailer home. Then, silence. No footsteps. No laughter. No trace.

Three weeks later, after 160 searchers, K9 units, drones, and helicopters combed 5.5 km² of brutal terrain—they’re still missing.

Vanished.

But now, hidden trail cameras on a remote dirt road may hold the key. Footage from days before the 911 call could reveal a stranger lurking, a car that doesn’t belong—or a truth someone is desperate to hide.

A retired RCMP K9 handler calls it “strange” that nothing has been found. So, what did those cameras see? And why is the RCMP suddenly digging into old crimes and personal affairs?

We’re chasing the truth behind one of the darkest cases we’ve ever covered. Tonight, a heart-pounding update on the disappearance of Lily and Jack Sullivan could blow this case wide open.

Hit subscribe, share their story, and stay with us—because what’s on that footage could either bring them home or expose a devastating lie.

Landsdown Station, Nova Scotia. A tiny town of 100 people. No cell service. Swallowed by woods.

On May 2nd, 2025, Lily and Jack Sullivan vanished from their modular home on Gerlock Road.
Search for missing N.S. children goes through fifth day - YouTube
Their mother, Maleia Brooks Murray, says she heard them playing around 8:00 a.m., drifted back to sleep, and woke again to silence. Her partner, Daniel Martell, said Lily popped into their bedroom while Jack played nearby.

By 10:00 a.m.—they were gone.

Boots left by the sliding door. No footprints. No screams.

A weak backyard fence led into the woods—dense, dangerous, and littered with fallen trees from past storms. The last confirmed sighting was April 29th, when their school bus driver dropped them off at Salt Springs Elementary, 11 miles away.

Maleia kept them home on May 1st and 2nd, citing Lily’s cough. Daniel was home too—off work from a sawmill slowdown.

When they realized the kids were gone, Daniel drove the backroads for as long as two hours, depending on the account. Then searched on foot. Still—nothing.

The RCMP launched a massive search. 160 ground searchers. K9 units. Helicopters. Drones.

They covered two square miles of rugged, unforgiving forest.

No scent. No clothing. No signs.

How do two children vanish without a trace?

On May 7th, the search was scaled back. RCMP stated there was no evidence of abduction, leaning into the theory that Lily and Jack wandered off.

But now, there’s a shift.

And it starts with Melissa Scott’s trail cameras.

On May 20th, RCMP’s major crime unit showed up at her property—5 km from the Sullivans’ home. They wanted all footage from her seven trail cameras, covering April 27th through May 2nd.

Scott says the officers were focused and serious. Two of her neighbors were also asked for camera footage and vehicle logs.

So, why go back to April 27th—five days before the 911 call?

RCMP told Scott they were trying to identify and eliminate local vehicles, but one officer reportedly said, “We should’ve been here sooner.”

Did they miss something big?

Melissa’s cameras sit just three miles through the woods from the Sullivans’ trailer. An 18-minute drive if you take the dirt roads—or quicker by old railway lines.

These cameras may have captured:

A stranger scoping the area

An unfamiliar vehicle

Or someone from inside the trailer—moving around before the call for help ever came.

Is the RCMP revising the timeline?

They confirmed the children were at school on April 28th and 29th. Maleia says they were home May 1st and 2nd. But now they’re investigating footage as far back as April 27th.

Is it possible the children weren’t seen after the weekend?

The RCMP’s silence is loud.

But these cameras may soon scream the truth.
May be an image of 2 people, child and text that says '참 GEE TAKING A DARK TURN'
Glenn Brown, a retired RCMP K9 handler with 26 years’ experience, says:

“It’s hard to believe a 6- and 4-year-old can just disappear like that.”

Robert Koester, an expert on lost person behavior, backs him up:

95% of kids aged 4–6 are found within 6.6 km if they wander.

98% are alive within 24 hours.

After 48 hours, that drops to just 33%.

Lily and Jack have been gone three weeks. If they were in those woods—why no trace?

Dogs lose scent on roads and in wind. Gerlock Road is right there.
Drones are nearly useless under dense canopy—no thermal imaging if the children were hypothermic or worse.

But here’s what’s chilling:
Young children don’t vanish into the wilderness. They follow animals, hide near landmarks, or stay close.

Lily and Jack knew their yard, their fence, their woods.

So why would they wander deeper—unless they didn’t?

On May 17th, RCMP called back search teams—focusing on specific zones.
Was it because of a tip, new evidence, or something caught on camera?

The major crime unit has been involved since day two. Now, they’re turning their gaze closer to home.

Maleia and Daniel gave a simple story: the kids slipped out through the broken fence.

But now, that picture is cracking.

Trail camera footage might be their undoing.

Key questions:

Why are RCMP digging back to April 27th?

What if the timeline Maleia and Daniel gave is off?

What if one of them—or someone else—was seen on those cameras before the 911 call?

Daniel has been cooperative. He gave up his phone. He even offered a polygraph.

But some details don’t sit right.

His clean boots, despite searching dirt roads for hours?

And then there’s the RV.

His mother lives in it, with a dog and cats. What did she see?

Now things get darker.

Reports say Maleia has left town to stay with family—and has blocked Daniel on social media.

Why run?
Why cut him off?
Is she blaming him? Or hiding from what’s coming?

Landsdown Station is a small town.
Secrets don’t stay buried here.

Neighbors whisper about a party house.
But the school bus stopped there every day.
Someone is lying.

RCMP isn’t just looking for missing kids anymore.

They’re hunting the truth—and maybe, a perpetrator.

Those trail cameras are silent witnesses.

A car. A figure. A shadow. A timestamp.

Something is on that footage.

When it surfaces—will it bring Lily and Jack home?
Or tear a family apart?

It’s been three weeks.
Landsdown Station is holding its breath.
The RCMP’s silence is a wall between us and the truth.
But those cameras?
They might just blow it open.