The Boston Globe

Montgomery denied harming daughter

Harmony’s father made claim after his arrest in Jan.

- By Travis Andersen GLOBE STAFF Travis Andersen can be reached at travis.andersen@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @TAGlobe.

The father of Harmony Montgomery, the 5-year-old girl who authoritie­s believe was killed in Manchester, N.H., in December 2019, denied harming his daughter after he was arrested in January on a charge of assaulting her and lashed out at a detective for his treatment when he was taken into custody.

“Nobody comes out there like that for a second-degree assault charge,” Adam Montgomery told Detective John Dunleavy in an interrogat­ion room at the Manchester police station, referring to the SWAT team that converged on him and his girlfriend on Jan. 4.

The recording was played Wednesday in a New Hampshire courtroom during a pretrial hearing in the case against Montgomery, who is charged with multiple crimes, including allegedly injuring his daughter.

Dunleavy at one point asked Montgomery during the interview if he could “promise” that Harmony was alive.

“You’re going to play the same word games that they played with me the other day,” Montgomery responded, referring to an interactio­n he had with police days earlier.

“It’s not word games,” Dunleavy said. “We want to know. This isn’t going to go anywhere. Like, this isn’t going to stop. So, either get on the bus now or get run over.”

Montgomery replied that he had nothing to say. “I want a lawyer with me,” he said.

Harmony’s body remains missing. No one has been charged with her murder.

Montgomery told Dunleavy that he’d been “arrested for worse charges, they don’t come out and throw [expletive] flashbangs at my girlfriend’s car, and ram us into the [expletive] guardrail. They don’t do that.”

Dunleavy later told Montgomery “your daughter had some injuries, that you know about when you lived on Guilford Street” in Manchester.

“No I do not,” Montgomery replied. “What are you referring to?”

“I’m referring to her having some good marks,” Dunleavy said. “Marks that were left on her by you.”

“Absolutely not,” Montgomery said. “I have nothing else to say.”

He later asked Dunleavy, “Who’s telling you these things?” The detective said people close to Montgomery had provided informatio­n.

“Obviously not,” Montgomery said.

“Well, maybe at the time, maybe not anymore,” Dunleavy replied.

He also said he wanted to give Montgomery a chance to defend himself and didn’t want him “to be painted as a monster.”

“Well, that’s what you guys are already doing,” Montgomery replied. “It’s just the way you guys are going about it.” The hearing is ongoing. Another Manchester police detective, Scott Riley, took the stand after Dunleavy and testified about an interactio­n he had with Montgomery on the afternoon of Dec. 31, days before his arrest. Riley handed Montgomery a court order advising him that child protection officials had taken formal custody of Harmony, who at that point was still considered missing.

“I just explained to him that the order compels him to help the Manchester Police Department with locating his daughter Harmony,” Riley testified. “He asked me again, ‘Am I under arrest? Can I leave? I’m not answering any questions.’ I stated to him, you know, him being her father, ‘You owe it to her to tell us where she is and follow this order.’ And he said ‘I’m not answering any questions.’”

Law enforcemen­t officials said last month that they believe Harmony, whose case had drawn intense public scrutiny since her biological mother Crystal Sorey reported her missing in November, had been killed nearly two years earlier.

Montgomery is currently jailed on the assault charge, interferin­g with custody, and endangerin­g the welfare of a child.

In February 2019, a Massachuse­tts juvenile court judge placed Harmony in her father’s care although he had pleaded guilty five years earlier to shooting a man in the head during a drug deal in Haverhill.

Child welfare agencies in New Hampshire and Massachuse­tts, where Harmony was born in 2014 and lived in foster care for a time, came under scrutiny after authoritie­s announced she was missing.

In May, the Massachuse­tts Office of the Child Advocate released an unsparing report that documented failures by the state’s child welfare agency and the juvenile court to safeguard Harmony’s well-being.

 ?? KATHY MCCORMACK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Adam Montgomery (second from right), with his attorneys, listened during a hearing on Wednesday in Manchester, N.H.
KATHY MCCORMACK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Adam Montgomery (second from right), with his attorneys, listened during a hearing on Wednesday in Manchester, N.H.

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