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The case ... by Timothy Charles Holmseth

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Post by FystyAngel Sun Apr 11, 2010 3:32 pm

The case
April 10, 2010
http://writeintoaction.com/The%20Case.html

In October, 2009, Misty Croslin told Maggie Rodriguez on The Early Show she believed HaLeigh's disappearance was a family abduction - and whe she did, her days became numbered

By Timothy Charles Holmseth


HaLeigh Cummings, 5, Satsuma, FL, was reported missing on February 10, 2009, by her father’s live-in girlfriend, Misty Croslin, 17, who was babysitting the two children of Ronald Cummings while he worked the late shift.

Because cooperation level of the people who are closest to a missing child is a huge investigative factor in all child abduction investigations, law enforcement assessed that dynamic very closely when the child first vanished.

No-one was reported as being un-willing to talk to the police.

On February 12, News4Jax reported Putnam County Sheriff (PCSO) Jeff Hardy was very pleased with the cooperation his department was receiving. "Everybody, including the family -- and I want that for the record -- has been extremely cooperative with us," Hardy said.

Croslin’s recollections of what happened after she woke up and found HaLeigh gone were also reported. "I didn't make it to the bathroom. I seen the kitchen light on and I walked in the kitchen and the back door is wide open," New4Jax reported. "I go in the room and she's gone. And that's all I know. When I went to bed she was there and then when I got up and she was gone."

Croslin spoke to law enforcement immediately upon their request and did not ask for an attorney. In the fullness of time, the PCSO would log some 30 hours of interrogation time with the teenager who possesses a meager elementary school education and can barely write.

Whatever was said in those 30 hours of questioning, it has become the ultra secret basis of a phrase that would be devised and used consistently by spokespersons of the PCSO to explain why HaLeigh Cummings has not been found.

“Misty holds the key,” was the catch-phrase that replaced the question; “Where is HaLeigh Cummings?”

“Investigators believe they know who holds the key piece of the puzzle that could solve her disappearance,” reported 13 News, an entire year after HaLeigh disappeared.

“She definitely holds some key information that she hasn't come forward on," PCSO Lt. Johnny Greenwood said, one year later. “With the approval of her attorney, we will talk to her if we are afforded the opportunity to."

Because very important words sometimes slide right by without being scrutinized, Greenwood’s statement to the media will be looked at a little closer here.

“[Misty Croslin] definitely holds some key information that she hasn't come forward on."

“Definitely.”

The PCSO is stating they know for a fact that Croslin holds “key” information.

Those are strong words from the PCSO that will hold much meaning as you continue to assess what is actually going on.

Now, apparently, the first 30 hours of interrogation Croslin willingly submitted herself to without an attorney was not enough? In addition, the PCSO apparently believed they needed to punish Croslin for finally obtaining some legal counsel, by suggesting she had lawyered-up on them, which she had not until wracking up some some 30 hours of questioning alone with law enforcement.

The PCSO has consistently stated to the media that Croslin holds some kind of magical ‘key’ that will throw a thousand puzzle pieces together for them at once, and they have relentlessly postured to the press that the young girl is the barrier between them and locating HaLeigh Cummings.

It is a point of interest to many that during the long months that HaLeigh has remained missing, law enforcement has never stated there is anyone else who they believe may hold a ‘key.’

That is a significant fact for many reasons.

When HaLeigh’s paternal grandmother, Teresa Neves, arrived at the scene of the abduction shortly after the child was reported missing, Croslin was barely dressed in boxer short underwear and a tank top – sleeping clothes.

Even if the PCSO could create some fantastic hypothetical situation that has Croslin deeply involved and knowledgeable in the disappearance of the child, she certainly could not have pulled off some wildly elaborate crime without at least some other person or persons being involved.

So who else holds a key? The PCSO and FDLE have no others to speak of.

There is no investigative logic that exists, which would support a sheriff’s offices’ internal decision to issue a drum-beat media catch-phrase against one single person for an entire year, while exploring absolutely nothing else, and, no-one else.

The PCSO and FDLE have never even given the slightest little hint at what makes them believe Croslin privately harbors some bomb-shell type of information that would solve the whole case – only that that’s what they think inside their heads and therefore everyone in the world should just trust them.

It is important to carefully examine the subtleties and dynamics of the so-called investigation into HaLeigh’s disappearance, which has clearly focused on one single person.

Law enforcement does not discuss the details of anything that was said during the 30 hours of interrogation Croslin under-went, although they constantly infer that there are all kinds of huge discrepancies and timeline problems – whatever that means coming from a bunch of 'just trust me Johnnies.'

Essentially, there is no real way of knowing whether or not the young lady has actually ever really said anything that would give birth to a drum-beat catch-phrase such as ‘Misty holds the key.’

It is important to think about how powerful that catch-phrase really is.

That catch-phrase says, un-equivocally, that HaLeigh Cummings is still missing because of a girl named Misty Croslin – and Misty Croslin only.

According to the PCSO and FDLE, there is no other work to be done.

Absolute blind faith and trust in those two law enforcement agencies is required for one to believe Croslin holds some kind of magical key, because there is simply no evidence whatsoever that suggests that it is true.

“We release everything we possibly can to the media when the time is appropriate,” PCSO Major Gary Bowling told Write Into Action. “It could damage the case!” he said, passionately, explaining why his agency can not reveal any information about anything.

Again, because words can sometime fly right by, the average reader may not realize what they just heard, so it will be repeated again here.

“It could damage the case.”

“The case.”

The case?

What case?

Has the building of a “case” ever been reported by the mainstream media?

The answer is no.

We have now learned there has actually been a “case” being built.

Major Bowling’s reference to a “case” is going to explain many, many things that have transpired behind the scenes, up and through the specific targeting of Croslin for arrest and prosecution in a rather hinky drug sting operation, which now has her imprisoned.

Targeting means, a person is selected for investigation, arrest, and prosecution, under circumstances wherein they would not otherwise have been, were it not for the hidden and improper motivations of law enforcement.

With Croslin behind bars, videos are now regularly released to the public of her talking to her family - the girl who holds the ‘key’ is now locked up in a cage – to the public’s voyeuristic delight.

But Croslin did something while she was still free that was the wisest move she ever made.

Possibly succumbing to the bashing and trashing she was taking in the media at the hands of the PCSO and their catch-phrase persecution campaign against her, Croslin apparently tried to get out to the public what she may have been telling the PCSO in private.

In October of 2009, Croslin, who had been consistently pounded by both the Florida mainstream media as well as tabloid TV, for not revealing the ‘key,’ granted an interview with a reputable media outlet – she spoke to Maggie Rodriguez, co-anchor, The Early Show, CBS.

The beauty of the Croslin interview on CBS was everybody heard what the young lady said – it was not filtered characterizations of what she said carefully put out by Major Bowling, Capt. Dominic Piscitello, Lt. Johnny Greenwood, or Undersheriff Rick Ryan about why it would be inappropriate to discuss the things she said.

Croslin appears to have attempted to hand America, and law enforcement, the “key.”

"Someone came in and got her, obviously," Croslin told Rodriguez, on air. "I feel like it's on the other side of the family that has her."

Is that what Croslin has been telling law enforcement behind closed doors?

If that was the key, it definitely was not the one law enforcement was hoping to find.

Croslin was clearly suggesting HaLeigh’s disappearance was a family abduction and HaLeigh was alive somewhere.

It might be considered unfortunate, at the very least, that law enforcement did not like the key Croslin tried to hand them, because all the statistics support what she said.

According to United States Department of Justice, in 1999, 203,900 children were victims of family abduction.

The bad blood that existed between the paternal and maternal families of HaLeigh Cummings is nationally reported common knowledge. The child’s mother, Crystal Sheffield, was headed to court in regards to some $11,000 in un-paid child support at the time the child disappeared.

It is also important to note that the phrase 'parental abduction' was changed over the years to 'family abduction,' as it is often a member of extended family that actually carries out the kidnapping.

Shortly after his daughter disappeared, it seemed Ronald Cummings may have also been under the impression his daughter was taken by family. "Somebody has her, they have her hid. I just want my daughter back, that's it," he said.

Ronald Cummings’ belief that someone had his daughter hidden was not just something he and Croslin believed.

When HaLeigh Cummings first disappeared, her maternal grandmother, Marie Griffis, spoke to FOX News. She said she believed HaLeigh was “fine” but no one was going to see her for awhile.

One has to wonder if Major Bowling has ever even viewed that news clip.

“I have no idea why, but I know HaLeigh is fine,” Griffis continued.

“I know HaLeigh is fine.”

Marie Griffis did not stop at saying she believed HaLeigh was fine; she elaborated.

“But I don’t feel HaLeigh’s… I don’t feel HaLeigh here in this area – she’s not here – she’s, she’s somewhere else - someone has got her and has transported her out of Florida and something just keeps - it stays in my mind constantly, Georgia - Alabama - Georgia Alabama.”

Griffis actually said she believed HaLeigh was “transported,” provided a possible location as to the child’s whereabouts, and said she was “fine.”

As stunning and provocative as that statement is, apparently the PCSO does not believe Griffis could possibly hold the key – only Misty Croslin is allowed to hold the key.

In the spring of 2009, after the maternal family of HaLeigh Cummings brought in a private attorney for no reason, a private investigator, and a private CNN/HLN media team, another ‘key’ was found.

For real.

The key was found on a gravel road near San Mateo, FL, during a private search for HaLeigh Cummings.

The search team consisted of HaLeigh’s grandma, Marie Griffis; Johnny Sheffield, HaLeigh Grandpa; Connie Sheffield; HaLeigh’s step-grandma; and her step-grandma’s mother, Ruby Kanger.

Accompanying the family at the search was John and Jeremiah Regan, Hastings, FL, William ‘COBRA’ Staubs, family private investigator, Ft. Lauderdale, and Judy Lucia, volunteer citizen and crisis response dog-handler, Interlachen, FL.


The case  ...   by Timothy Charles Holmseth 1120ha10

While walking alongside Lucia, whose dog had been given HaLeigh’s scent on a purse by Marie Griffis, John Regan found a key on the ground.

It was vehicle key.

According to Staubs, John Regan handed him the key, which he subsequently tried to turn in to the PCSO as evidence.

Staubs said he spoke to the head of the major crimes unit, PCSO Captain Dominic Piscitello about the items that were found at the search, which were (1) glove (with red stains that both Jeremiah Regan and Johnny Sheffield insisted looked like blood) (2) suitcase (3) men’s socks (4) nebulizer (HaLeigh Cummings uses a nebulizer because of Turner’s syndrome) (5) bus schedule (6) children’s toys (7) car key.

Staubs said he asked PCSO Captain Piscitello if he wanted the key. “He didn’t want it,” Staubs said. When asked if he would like to take the car key into evidence, Captain Piscitello replied, “Nope.”

The head of the major crimes unit at the PCSO didn’t want that key.

Although the PCSO did not want the vehicle key that was found at the maternal family’s search, it may have been time well spent for law enforcement to talk to John Regan, the person who actually found the key.

Lucia said she did not know John Regan when the search commenced, and when she asked him his name, he said he could not tell her because he was undercover with the FBI.

John Regan’s claim to be a federal agent is not something to be taken lightly.

Staubs told Write Into Action that when he (Staubs) pulled up to the site of the search after being telephoned by John Regan to come and look at some evidence they found, John Regan’s son, Jeremiah Regan, announced Staubs’ arrival out loud by saying, “It’s the FBI.”

As you can see, this is becoming a concern.

Write Into Action possesses email evidence, exchanged between PCSO Captain Piscitello and Staubs, which absolutely proves Piscitello knew about John Regan’s claims to be an FBI agent at a search for HaLeigh Cummings.


The case  ...   by Timothy Charles Holmseth Screen10

Lucia reported the entire event to Special Agent Dominic Pape, FDLE. She says she has “never once” been questioned about the man who impersonated a federal agent at a search for HaLeigh Cummings.

The activities underway involving a phony FBI agent at a fake search become even more convoluted when the attorney for the maternal family began harassing Lucia, the one person who was attempting to alert law enforcement that something very wrong was going on.

Disgraced Ft. Lauderdale attorney, Kim Picazio, who was eventually terminted from her pro bono position of providing legal counsel to Crystal Sheffield, began blogging and sending harassing emails to Lucia, telling her to change her story - even finding strangers on the internet to help her harass Lucia.


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Picazio's amatuerish attempts to conceal the events of the fake search actually included the shame-faced act of sending messages via Twitter to another witness, demanding she retract her statements about John Regan, calling it her "final warning."

Picazio's horrendously embrassing performance as an attorney, John Regan's laughable attempt to impersonate an FBI agent, and the ridiculously un-original idea of planting a bloody glove, demonstrates the sophmoric mind-set of a group of simpletons who would attempt to plant evidence in the HaLeigh Cummings investigation. Such activties by these narcisstic criminals are far too many to mention.

The item below was created and posted on the world wide web by Picazio's private investigator, William COBRA Staubs.

KLP stands for Kim Lowry Picazio - Staubs is sharing his latest good idea in life with his like-minded colleague - communicating about their sick illusions of granduer on a pathetic underground message board.


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If the behavior of Staubs, Picazio, the Regans, and Johnny Sheffield isn't disturbing enough for you, below is an email between the songwriter Staubs and the head of the major crimes unit at the PCSO. Here, Staubs is fantasizing about being some kind of television star and inviting Capt. Piscitello to be his co-star. In addition, Piscitello is making fun of a search for HaLeigh's bones that only rendered a horse skeleton.

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So why is the key that was found at the family’s search so significant?

It is significant because, according to statements Johnny Sheffield made to Write Into Action, the vehicle key linked none other than Misty Croslin, to the scene where all the items were found that made HaLeigh Cummings appear dead or taken far away.

“We found a set of car keys that matched up with the car that [Kristina] Nay Nay [Prevatt] and Amber [Brooks] was riding around in that night with Misty,” Johnny Sheffield told Write Into Action.

It is at this point that the behavior of a sheriff’s office that claims to be desperately seeking some key, albeit literal or figurative, becomes downright suspicious.

“You just made a statement about that search,” said PCSO Major Bowling in an interview with Write Into Action. “It doesn’t advance our case, obviously they had, you know, a person like that would maybe have some sort of a personal agenda.” Bowling said.

Bowling suggests some kind of a personal agenda was in play and the planted items of evidence are not relevant.

Because the PCSO and FDLE do not want to investigate or discuss the fake family search at San Mateo, one is left to arrive at their own conclusion of what that personal agenda actually was.

Here is what it was.

A very calculated attempt was made by, at the very least, Johnny Sheffield, William COBRA Staubs, John Regan, and Jeremiah Regan, to frame Misty Croslin in the disappearance of HaLeigh Cummings.

There is no escaping that un-impeachable fact, as all the evidence that proves it is true exists on digital audio interviews conducted by Write Into Action.

So we know the PCSO and FDLE will not investigate evidence that was planted by HaLeigh’s grandfather and his Team, for the purpose of implicating Misty Croslin, nor will they investigate the impersonation of a federal agent at a search that used the scent of a missing and endangered child who is the subject of an active Amber Alert.

So why is Florida law enforcement so afraid to investigate the people they know for a fact planted evidence in the HaLeigh Cummings investigation?

The answer is simple.

It proves Misty Croslin does not hold the key.

And that proves somebody else holds the key.

And that could damage “the case.”

The case against an innocent person that has gone too far to stop.

tholmseth@wiktel.com


Last edited by FystyAngel on Sun Apr 25, 2010 1:37 pm; edited 1 time in total
FystyAngel
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Post by LottieM Sun Apr 25, 2010 10:32 am

Wowwee. So this person is saying Misty is innocent? And the framing of her was promoted by Haleigh's natural mother and her side of the family to draw away from their own guilt? Whatever.

I do think cops screw up though. And they do often get started on the wrong track early on, but that's to be expected since in the beginning they don't know family dynamics or anything really except what they are being told.

I was reading the first police report on this case.

http://i.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/02/13/putnam.pdf

They talk about using a tracking dog and tracking Haleigh's scent out the back door to a pond and back, then finally to a railroad track where the scent ends.

Seems kind of odd to me that apparently Haleigh was on foot (there was a child's barefoot print found along the way) and without shoes for that trek if this trek were one she made that night. It was February so it got dark about 5 ish, right? Who would take Haleigh out walking on that route in the dark? So this adventure probably didn't take place that night, but it did take place; so who walked her to the railroad tracks and then did what? Picked her up and carried her home?

Too bad the cops didn't let the dogs see who else's scent tracked that way with Haleigh's. They could have tried Misty or Ron just to find out what this barefoot walk was all about. It's weird.
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Post by FystyAngel Sun Apr 25, 2010 1:40 pm

[i]Newest by Tim.....

Florida’s dirty little secret
by Timothy Charles Holmseth



What occurred on March 22, 2009, is the nightmare Sheriff Jeff Hardy can not wake up from

April 24, 2010

HaLeigh Cummings, 5, was reported missing from her Satsuma, Florida home on February 10, 2009.

On February 11, 2009, Major Gary Bowling, spokesman, Putnam County Sheriff’s Office, issued the following statement to the media. “All the world’s a suspect right now,” he said. “We’re going to treat every family member, every neighbor as a suspect until we eliminate them.”

Speaking to the media with strong words in confident tone, ranking members of the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office enjoyed the respect that is naturally offered to those with the badge, and when they told America they were looking for HaLeigh Cummings, people simply believed them.

But things are changing.

A cursory look at a general time-line of major events begins to create very serious questions about the true motives of the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office.

HALEIGH APPEARS DEAD
NO BODY FOUND

February 10, 2009: HaLeigh Cummings is reported missing from her home.

February 13, 2009: Texas Equusearch has arrived in Satsuma and volunteer search teams are scouring the area in search of HaLeigh Cummings.

February 16, 2009: Texas Equusearch is suddenly asked to leave by local law enforcement.

February 27, 2009: The Putnam County Sheriff’s Office suddenly decides to have cadaver dogs sniff a dumpster near the home of Ronald Cummings and three dogs hit positively. No body is found.

June 26, 2009: Resources from four Florida counties are brought in to search a farm in Baker County, Florida. Cadaver dogs and divers and other resources are used. No body is found.

September 19, 2009: A large mondex is drained in connection with the HaLeigh Cummings investigation. No body is found.

April 13, 2010: The family of HaLeigh Cummings is asked to meet with the PCSO. They are told that the investigation is now a homicide investigation and suggest a funeral be planned. They allude to the family they have something they can bury. They really don’t.

April 13, 2010: A large scale search is conducted on the St. Johns River using divers. No body is found.

Intelligent Americans are beginning to ask serious questions, which the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office has steadfastly refused to answer.

Some of those questions are:

(Q) Why did the PCSO ask a well-known search firm to leave and abandon their search after just a few short days?

(Q) Why did the PCSO decide to introduce three cadaver dogs to a dumpster near the missing child’s home a full 17 days after she disappeared?

(Q) Why did the PCSO refuse to immediately release tracking dogs that were just sitting in a vehicle the night HaLeigh Cummings vanished, as HaLeigh’s grandmother, Teresa Neves, repeatedly asked the deputies why they would not let the dogs search?

(Q) Why didn’t law enforcement immediately take the house doors into evidence? After leaving the doors at the scene for weeks, they then came back and took the screen door, but left the main door going into the house behind.

(Q) Why did law enforcement officials drag bedding from the house outside and hang it on a railing – contaminating any forensic evidence that may have been on it.

(Q) Why didn’t law enforcement contact the Goodwill Emporium, North Augusta, Georgia, to inquire about surveillance videos, after receiving a detailed credible report from a woman named Teresa Knight, who witnessed three individuals on the afternoon of February 10, 2009, purchasing clothing for a little girl named HaLeigh who (1) was being adopted (2) had special needs (3) had a sibling who could not come with (4) wore the same clothing size as HaLeigh Cummings. Note: Write Into Action spoke with a corporate manager at the Goodwill Emporium who said they had never been contacted by any law enforcement about their videos, adding that their local law enforcement had also never been contacted.

(Q) Why didn’t law enforcement contact the Tiger Express gas station in Brunson, South Carolina after receiving a report of a sighting of HaLeigh Cummings at their gas station on April 26, 2009? Note: Write Into Action contacted the Tiger Express and spoke with a supervisor who said they had never been contacted by any law enforcement and their videos had never been requested.

(Q) Why did the PCSO issue bogus press releases wherein they claimed to have checked out these leads - finding them to be nothing.

(Q) Why did Putnam County investigators scream at HaLeigh Cummings’ grandma, Teresa Neves, at a private meeting, threatening to have her “arrested” and telling her to “Shut the fuck up?”

The mounting questions being heaped upon the office of Sheriff Jeff Hardy by the public have gone un-answered.

Although Hardy and other ranking officers at the PCSO refuse to answer questions about the disturbing patterns that are emerging in their so-called search for HaLeigh Cummings, it is a fact that the answer has actually existed since as early as March 22, 2009.

What occurred on March 22, 2009, is the nightmare Sheriff Jeff Hardy can not wake up from.

Over a hundred hours of interviews conducted by Write Into Action over one year’s time will tell you the story the PCSO is determined to hide from the American public at all costs.

It began with a phone call from HaLeigh Cummings’ grandpa, Johnny Sheffield, to his daughter’s private investigator, William ‘Cobra’ Staubs. Sheffield was at a search site in rural San Mateo, Florida. “Cobra, we found a fucking bloody glove,” Sheffield said, adding that other items were also being found at the location that “belonged” to “HaLeigh.”

Then Staubs received another telephone call.

“You got to get somebody down here quick – got to get somebody down here – there’s something here,” the voice rang out in his cell-phone.

The caller was John Regan, Hastings, Florida. He was accompanying Johnny Sheffield and his family on the search, and was clearly experiencing the same dire emotions as Sheffield.

Or were they?

Walking alongside John Regan as he spoke on the phone was Judy Lucia, Interlachen, Florida, a non-family volunteer searcher who had been asked to bring her Newfoundland crisis response dog, Gunny, to the site, because although not formally trained, the dog had the capacity to track human scent – HaLeigh’s grandma, Marie Griffis, who was also present at the search, had given the dog HaLeigh’s scent on a purse that she said belonged to HaLeigh.

Lucia did not know John Regan’s name at the time of the search, and the reason she didn’t know it is a federal offense. “John Regan was walking down the road with me,” she explains. “He said to me ‘I can’t tell you who I am because I am working undercover with the FBI.”

Lucia says she believed John Regan at the time although it seemed strange to her.

It was about to get stranger.

John Regan’s son, Jeremiah Regan, was holding a glove up on a stick, Lucia recalls. “Jeremiah Regan held up the glove and said ‘look what I found - a glove with blood on it,’” she says.

Jeremiah Regan, who had just re-located from Long Island, New York to Hastings, Florida in late January, 2009, shortly before HaLeigh Cummings disappeared, was with HaLeigh’s maternal family on March 22, 2009 and it was not because he was bored. Having appeared virtually out of nowhere, he was the founder and administrator of the HaLeigh Bug Center in Satsuma, which he had spear-headed, along with a web domain he purchased called haleighbug.com – both outfits encouraged and accepted donations in the name of HaLeigh Cummings.

Jeremiah Regan intially told media he ws a 'close friend' of the family, but later changed his story, claiming he became involved because he felt sorry for HaLeigh's mother -it was later revealed he was intimately involved with Crystal Sheffield before HaLeigh Cummings disappeared.

Lucia talked about the behavior of the man she thought was an FBI agent, and how it seemed odd that he believed he knew where HaLeigh could and could not be. As she walked along with her dog, Lucia suggested to John Regan some places they might search, such as the woods and near some water. “I said how about in the woods? No, she can’t be in the woods, because people would be alerted by seeing a flashlight in the woods,” Lucia recalls him saying.

“I said, do you think HaLeigh could be in the water? And John Regan said, no, absolutely not,” she says.

“How come this guy knows everything? Why would he say that? How does he know she wasn’t thrown in the water or that she wasn’t put in the woods?” Lucia says, rhetorically.

Lucia said John Regan opined, “If anything, somebody would throw her body at the side of the road.”

Because the PCSO would not do it, Write Into Action believed it might be time well spent to ask the son of an FBI agent impersonator some questions about what ever became of the glove he found at a search for HaLeigh Cummings, but it was not exactly a subject Jeremiah Regan was super excited to talk about. “I don’t know. I’m not a fucking police officer, Regan said. “It went in a fucking bag – I told Cobra – Cobra was supposed to call the fucking police – I don’t know what happened to it. I don’t care what happened to it.”

But the glove that was found was only the beginning of many miraculous evidence finds on March 22, 2009, at San Mateo.

Lucia said her dog tracked the scent of HaLeigh Cummings straight to some toys that were lying in the weeds. John Regan found an inhaler (HaLeigh Cumming required an inhaler because of Turner’s syndrome) and moved it from its original location. Men’s socks were found.

Lucia recalls the moment a suitcase appeared. “The suitcase was found when Cobra came,” she explains. “The suitcase was not there when we searched that area because I was by that fence and there was no suitcase,” she said, adding that it suddenly appeared after Staubs arrived.

Commenting on the ridiculous antics of Crystal Sheffield’s private investigator, Cobra Staubs, Lucia noted that he told everyone to stand back from the suitcase and be careful because it might be wired with a “bomb.”

“I opened it with a stick,” Staubs told Write Into Action, noting it contained a bus schedule to Volusia County, Florida.

As she was recalling the moment Staubs arrived at the search site, Lucia remembered something Staubs said as he dismounted from his vehicle. “I got something in my vehicle that’s going to break this case wide open,” she recalls him saying.

A short time later the suitcase appeared.

With a red-stained glove, a breathing inhaler, some men’s socks, suitcase containing a map, and some toys with HaLeigh’s scent on them, the gullible among us might just start to believe something awful happened at this rural location in Florida.

But the terrible suspense of a lingering mystery as to who had been at that ominous location was not something anyone would have to suffer for too long.

A set of car keys were also found at the San Mateo search, and were going to provide a huge clue as to the identity of one of the culprits who had been there.

“The keys were found when Cobra came,” Lucia explains. “All of a sudden Cobra says, ‘Oh look what I found,’” she recalls, describing the moment Staubs found the car keys in the dirt. “It was always, ‘look what I found,’ that’s what these people were saying all the time, oh look what we found,” she notes.

Staubs told Write Into Action that following the search, he attempted to turn the keys into PCSO Captain Dominic Piscitello, but the sheriff’s office did not want them.

Piscitello also asked Staubs if there was any truth to the rumors that he had “tampered” with “evidence.” Possible translation: “Tampered with” = Planted”

Staubs assured him he had not – scout’s honor.

At the time Staubs was attempting to turn the keys into the PCSO, nobody knew what car they belonged to or who owned it.

Not able to get the keys admitted into evidence, Staubs left with them.

Then another miracle of serendipity occurred a few weeks later.

While Staubs was in Palatka at the home of someone he knew, he saw a parked car and decided he would try the keys in the ignition. “They started the car,” Staubs says, recalling how ‘surprised’ he was.

Accompanying Staubs at the moment he tried the keys in the ignition was a camera-man from Miami named Gary Widom – camera rolling.

Who did the car belong to?

Her name is Kristina ‘Nay Nay’ Prevatt.

Who was her best friend at the time?

Misty Croslin.

With the remarkable investigative work of the private investigator that was working for Crystal Sheffield and her attorney, Kim Picazio, as well as contracting his services with Johnny Sheffield and Ruby Kanger, the world was beginning to learn that a young lady named Misty Croslin might have been at San Mateo where some ominous items of evidence were found in the search for HaLeigh Cummings.

In an interview with an individual whose name Write Into Action will provide only to the FBI, it is learned that something was found in the trunk of Prevatt’s vehicle that was very suspicious. A blue oily substance had been dumped all over inside the trunk.

Of course, the oily fluid strongly suggests that something incriminating had been in that trunk, and any trace evidence from it, such as blood, had been destroyed by someone who had something to hide.

One might say things were beginning to look grim for Misty Croslin.

The Putnam County Sheriff’s Office had long since proclaimed that Misty Croslin held the key to the HaLeigh Cummings investigation and used the phrase to the media constantly.

But just because Croslin was the best friend of Kristina ‘Nay Nay’ Prevatt, that still does not place her in the vehicle at San Mateo the night HaLeigh Cummings disappeared.

But the wheels of a diligent and determined ‘investigation’ were hard at work within the family of Crystal Sheffield, and another revelation would soon be made.

It came from HaLeigh’s grandpa, Johnny Sheffield, in an interview with Write Into Action. “We found a set of car keys that matched up with the car that Nay Nay and Amber was riding around in that night with Misty [Croslin],” he says. “We got it all on film,” he adds.

And so it is.

The diligent ‘investigative work’ of Johnny Sheffield, William ‘Cobra’ Staubs, John Regan, Jeremiah Regan, Connie Sheffield, and Ruby Kanger, un-covered a bloody trail that began on a gravel road in San Mateo, Florida, passed through the trunk of Kristina "Nay Nay' Prevatt’s car, and ultimately led to a girl named Misty Croslin.

On September 23, 2009, a letter surfaced in the media that had been written by Kristina ‘Nay Nay’ Prevatt who at the time was a prisoner in the Putnam County Jail. The letter was to her boyfriend.

Prevatt’s letter read in part: “I got interrogated by the detectives again about the HaLeigh case. You are not going to believe what they told me. They said your friend Joe Pytko went to the detectives and wrote a sworn affidavit that I was with Misty, White Boy Greg, and HaLeigh the night HaLeigh disappeared which you know I was at your house. Well anyways, he said that we were all over at a party at Chad’s house and HaLeigh got a hold of some Oxycontin and died. We supposedly freaked out and Greg put her in a black bag in my car and we took her to a pond by the Mondex. The detectives got my car from the junkyard yesterday to do some DNA CSI shit.”

Wow.

“You are not going to believe what [the detectives] told me,” Prevatt says.

Wow.

Indeed, detectives at the PCSO do seem to enjoy interrogating prisoners and apparently like to provide detailed little stories to those prisoners about events they say they know are true – but turn out to not be true.

Yes indeed. Prisoners tend to change their minds about things after doing a little time in the Putnam County Jail, developing sudden memories that typically place blame on others.

It is somewhat interesting how HaLeigh Cummings has always seemed destined for certain things – such as having a body that was dropped in a watery grave that would never be found.

In April, 2010, Sheriff Jeff Hardy declared that his department is convinced that HaLeigh Cummings is no longer alive and it has become a homicide investigation – make funeral plans – she isn’t coming back.

Apparently Sheriff Hardy doesn’t need any skeletal remains to make a homicide determination to a family, and as far as cause of death, well, hell, rape, overdose, someone with an anger problem, you know, whatever; something, you know; yeah that.

As far as who is responsible for the child’s assumed and presumed death, well, Hardy has plenty to choose from; Misty Croslin, Gregory Page, Amber Brooks, Joe Pytko, Chad (somebody or another) Kristina ‘Nay Nay’ Prevatt, Joe Overstreet, Tommy Croslin, Timmy Croslin.

You know; whoever.

And as far as the evidence collected by HaLeigh’s maternal family and their fake FBI agent on March 22, 2009, the PCSO has no desire to know where that stuff came from, where it went, who put it there, or why.

"It doesn't advance our investigation any," Major Gary Bowling told Write Into Action. He said whoever did it must have had a "personal agenda."

The PCSO did not question any of the San Mateo search participants.

On February 11, 2009, Major Gary Bowling, made the following statement to the media. “All the world’s a suspect right now,” he said. “We’re going to treat every family member, every neighbor as a suspect until we eliminate them.”

Apparently, “every family member” did not include Johnny Sheffield, Marie Griffis, Ruby Kanger, or Connie Sheffield.

Apparently, “every neighbor” did not include John Regan or Jeremiah Regan or the family’s private investigator.

Actually, “all the world” appears to be, well, basically, Misty Croslin, and maybe some other poor slob.

Oh by the way, remember the reported sighting of HaLeigh Cummings at the Tiger Express gas station on April 26, 2009, that the PCSO never checked out or requested surveillance videos for?

The woman who made the report identified a photograph of Jeremiah Regan (the fake FBI agent’ son who found the bloody glove) as being the man she saw in the company of HaLeigh Cummings by a gas pump – trying to cover the child's face and making her lie down on the floor boards of a car.

In the winter of 2009, Write Into Action published that written report authored by Knight, which was composed as a letter she had sent to Florida Attorney Mark NeJame.

Immediately after it was published, Write Into Action received a telephone call from Crystal Sheffield’s former attorney, Kim Picazio. She said Jeremiah Regan was with her all day in Putnam County on April 26, 2009. She said her and Jeremiah Regan went over their notes and figured out where they were that day. She said she provided all kinds of proof to the PCSO that Jeremiah Regan was with her all day in Putnam County on April 26, 2009.

Well, guess what?

Jeremiah Regan also telephoned Write Into Action. However, his story did not match Picazio’s. He didn’t quite get it right. He too said he and Picazio spoke and exchanged notes as they tried to determine where he was on April 26, 2009. However, he said that he traveled to Daytona Beach that day with Kim Picazio, Crystal Sheffield, and Ronald Cummings Jr. He also said he was questioned by the PCSO and said he told them he was in Daytona Beach all day.

They screwed up their story.

So, how is it, that the PCSO was able to clear Teresa Knight’s tip to law enforcement without ever checking the videos, and receiving diametrically opposed stories from two people who were using each other as mutual alibis?

On January 18, 2010, Timothy Charles Holmseth, owner, Write Into Action, filed a formal public corruption complaint to the United States Attorney General against the legal infrastructure of Putnam County, Florida.

Florida’s dirty little secret.

tholmseth@wiktel.com

http://www.writeintoaction.com


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Post by LottieM Sun Apr 25, 2010 2:02 pm

Misty has always come across to me that she was telling a story she was told to tell. And she's failing lie detector tests because she is lying about everything because it's simply a made up story she was told to tell.

I do, however, think she knows what really happened to Haleigh (in terms of, that she died) and went along with the story she was told to tell because she was the one supposed to be watching Haleigh and in her 'young' mind, she felt responsible.

I don't think Haleigh was murdered by anyone. I really don't. I don't think she was molested either. I think this entire bunch are just stupid and probably disposed of Haleigh for some stupid reason like>>

Haleigh had an asthma-type condition (she had a nebulizer). and maybe she was upset (Misty saying how Haleigh was crying/and the story of Misty calling Ron about Haleigh not going to bed like a good girl and Ron saying to whip her Rolling Eyes )and needed it and Misty either wasn't home to help her, was in the other room and didn't hear her gasping for breath, or she couldn't find it in time (maybe couldn't even think straight if she was doing drugs that night). Rather than tell Ron what she let happen to Haleigh, she gets up with Timmy and/or Tommy and/or Joe and they convince her to let them ditch the body and claim to Ron that someone took Haleigh. Misty would know this was not going to fly, but being the youngest she'd probably defer to her other relatives and go along with it.

Misty called Ron at work, it is said to be fact. Ron called Misty multiple times from work and didn't get any response, it is said to be fact. Could be Misty wasn't answering the phone because Haleigh was dead and her brother(s)/cousin were out there ditching the body. Then she keeps putting off telling Ron anything is wrong until he walks in the door from work and HAS to since Haleigh is gone.

Now we just have 'snowballed out of control' because even if remains are found no one would ever believe Haleigh died of something like an asthma-type attack that Misty missed or ignored or was too drugged up to help her. It's too late! But the only reason we wouldn't be inclined to believe it is if we think in terms of what normal people would so, such as call 911 if a child needs help. It IS believable though with this lot, that they would indeed not call for help (especially if drugs were an issue or if Misty had left the kids home alone) and would make up a kidnap and dispose of the body.

Can you just see a drugged up, messed up Misty (and whoever else may have been there) trying to find Haleigh's nebulizer?

Here's my crystal ball. I think Tommy told LE recently what happened - that being that something (like the above) happened and they all helped Misty. And he told them to check the river because Joe had made comments before about it being a good place to dump a body to where it would never be found. Joe and Timmy (Joe was staying at Timmy's place that night) actually took Haleigh's body somewhere. Tommy stayed with Misty and really doesn't know where Joe and Timmy dumped Haleigh. And like Junior said, someone came in dressed in black and took Haleigh from her bed! I believe that kid! Joe or Timmy probably was the man dressed in black - or maybe not dressed in black but just it being so dark Junior didn't recognize colors.

Now Timmy moves to Massachusetts, Joe lives out of state as well...both have to be extradited back to Florida so LE really needs to have concrete evidence against them before they can manage that. So what does LE do? They work on Misty and Tommy! And Misty keeps on failing her polygraphs because (as I suggested above) she is telling a story told to her, none of which is true. Tommy, I would guess, failed anything to do with NOT knowing what happened, but passed anything to do with being there when it happened, so his lawyer probably advised him that he should tell what he knows...and he probably has.
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Post by Snaz Sun Apr 25, 2010 2:16 pm

All I can say is ....... WOW!

This sounds to me like there is a chance HaLeigh is still alive. I sooooo pray she is... and that she comes home alive.

I am also curious as to what will happen with the corruption complaint filed by TH. Has anything further been mentioned about that since it has been over three months now since it was filed?

I haven't followed this case as closely as most of you.... and maybe I should have been..... but I'm not sure my brain could handle it, what with all the shadiness in this case going on. And on top of the Anthony case.....
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Post by FystyAngel Sun Apr 25, 2010 2:24 pm

Tim has filed numerous complaints to numerous agengies, against LE in this case. I'm pretty sure he has copies of them all on his web site.
Here is a link....

http://www.writeintoaction.com/Documents.html

Tim is the only one that I have been associated with in this case, whose story & opinion has NOT changed. He is very good at his investigative work. Everything that he prints, he has PROOF of.


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Post by Estee Sun Apr 25, 2010 2:25 pm

Lottie...That sounds like a good scenario...I wonder if we will ever know, just like with Caylee...
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