Season 2 Update - 10 Years Later - podcast episode cover

Season 2 Update - 10 Years Later

Dec 16, 20218 min
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Episode description

18-month-old Ayla Reynolds disappeared from Waterville, Maine 10 years ago today.

With the anniversary, there's also a renewed hope for answers.

If you have any information about what happened to Ayla, please contact Maine State Police Major Crimes Unit – Central at 36 Hospital Street, Augusta, ME 04330; or you may call them at 207-624-7143.

Email Scott: sfuller84713@gmail.com

Transcript

Welcome back to the Frozen Truth podcast. This is an update episode of our season two case, the disappearance of Aila Reynolds from Waterville, Maine. There is a procedural updates in that case, and we'll get to that coming up next. This is an update about our season two case of Frozen Truth, the disappearance of Aila Reynolds, who was a year and a half old baby girl who disappeared from her father's care in Waterville, Maine. As we record

this update. As I released this update December sixteenth, two twenty one. Aila disappeared ten years ago today on December sixteenth, two eleven. There were three adults in Justin's mother's home that night, Justin along with his girlfriend at

the time, and Justin's sister. The story of the people who were in that house that night goes that Aila was asleep, She was checked on later on in the evening, had gone to bed about eight pm, and when they woke up the next morning, Aila was gone, and Justin called the police. Obviously, for coverage to that case, you can go back to

our season two when we commenced coverage to that case. It had reached a certain point the police investigation had reached a certain point where it seems outwardly like all avenues of investigation had kind of gone as far as they could with the leads that they had. The Main State Police investigates all homicide cases ian Maine outside of Augusta and Portland, and they're even involved in those from time to time, So the jurisdiction of Alis case falls under the Main State Police and

always has. We interviewed Detective Love of the Main State Police, who was as forthcoming as he would be about an active and ongoing investigation, but stop short of giving too many details about the case. In a couple of years since our coverage of Alis case, we've received meaning I have received a few leads, a couple of tips which have been forwarded onto the Main State Police. You never know what might move the needle in something like this. You

never know what police have and what nation might mean to them. The information that has been generated by our coverage of the case so far has been underwhelming to me. Nothing having deep dived into the case, nothing I thought that stood out. But again, you never know. So we forwarded that information onto the Main State Police and they acknowledged receiving it. When last I spoke

with Trista's side of the family. They had initiated a civil lawsuit against Justin Depietro, and the purpose of that civil suit was not so much to seek damages or any kind of monetary outcome, but to get Justin de Pietro on the record in court under oath as to his account of what exactly happened that night inside the home. That's an extremely important part of the investigative process and

could potentially be very significant in the case. Whatever Justin Depietro says when he's interviewed now for this civil lawsuit, when he's deposed under oath, can be compared to any other past statements he's made in public, or any other statements he's made to police evidentiarily that could lead to something. It could catch him in some sort of an untruth if in fact he had something to do with ALA's disappearance. And that deposition has been delayed I know, very frustratingly from

the family side four months. I think it's been over a year as a matter of fact, that that lawsuit has not gone forward in the court, mostly from what I've heard, because of COVID issues, the backlog of the court system there that prevented this action from coming to the front of the line. But that day is here, and in fact, tomorrow, December seventeenth, twenty twenty one, tomorrow is the day that Justin Depetro is scheduled to

be deposed in that civil lawsuit against him. If you want to read the latest on that. Over the last week, Amy Calder has always been my go to reporter. She's a local there in central Maine, and she's covered this story from the beginning. I spoke to Amy off the record just by phone when I was in Waterville and we talked about the case, and I got a pretty good idea of where she stood and what her report has told

her over her years of covering the case. The police with the news of Justin de petro civil lawsuit and his deposition this week moving forward, the police have come out in the media this week Lieutenant Love, I think I referred to him as Detective Love previously, he's a lieutenant for the main State Police. Now he has given local media quote saying we still investigate this case. It is open, it is active. Lieutenant Love also said that in the

last year they've received thirty leads in this case. And remember, there is physical evidence. There is at least some of ALA's blood that was found inside of Justin's mother's home where he was staying in Waterville, Maine at the time. I think through the family it had become apparent that about a cup's worth or over a cup's worth of blood was found in the basement, with a

strong odor of bleach also being in the basement. I'm not sure that information was ever supposed to be made public by the family, And after the family released that detailed information to the media out of kind of frustration with lack of progress in the case, I think police stopped communicating some of those details. Right before our coverage of the case, a judge declared Ala Reynolds legally dead, and the reason for that was what is happening today. The reason for

that declaration is so that the family can proceed with the civil lawsuit. Police have also said they're not going to rush this case. They have one shot to get it right. And being that this is a nobody homicide, at least at the moment, I think it's fair to assume it's a homicide.

Aila did not, at eighteen months old, go missing on her own accord, and she was in the care of three adults that night, and police have also said that they believe that one or all three of the adults inside that home that night, no precisely or exactly, depending person to person, what happens to Aila, And they have been wanting to get the complete story from Justin to Pietro pretty much since day one, and I don't feel in

speaking with Lieutenant Love, I don't feel they think they have that full story. And while this is not a police interview that Justin de Pietro was scheduled to give tomorrow as we were, it isn't on the record account and lawyers are not police and don't question witnesses in litigation and lawsuits the same way.

But Trista's family's lawyer knows the purpose of this civil lawsuit and so his questions will, I would imagine, be artfully tailored to narrowing down specifics of Justin Depietro from him for the purposes of the criminal investigation that is ongoing in his daughter's disappearance. So this is an extremely important development in the ai La Reynolds disappearance. And this is something that Trista and her side of the family has

been angling toward for years, and that day is finally here. Regardless of Justin de Pietro's involvement or not in his daughter's disappearance, this is something that should shed some light on a very important aspect of what happened that night, and that was what did he among the other two adults in the house that

night, see or hear or remember pertaining to ALA's disappearance. Also, pretty importantly, my under standing is that as a result of the civil lawsuit the family, Trista's family and her lawyer have now become privy to forensic examination and other evidence that they probably didn't have access to before from the main state police. Eventually, all of this, I'm sure will come out one way or another, if the case is judicated, if it goes to trial, then

all of the information will eventually come out. But as we have been over the last several years, we need just to be a little bit more patience. Something happened to Ela inside that house, and I'm still of the belief that there are people inside that house that night, and also probably almost certainly outside of that house that night that no Manila Reynolds disappearance, And so as We've been patient thus far. We just need to continue to be a little

bit more patient for those answers to come out. But the most important thing, just as Trista's family is doing right now, is for the public, for all of us to keep pushing be patients, but also be aware that this case is still unsolved and that nobody has been held account for what happened to this tragic story of what happened to this innocent girl. As we receive any more updates, i'll let you know. But that is the latest on

our season two case, the a La Reynolds disappearance. Thank you for listening to Frozen Truth, and we'll talk again soon.

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