Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mom arrested in case from ’86

Murder charge filed in disappeara­nce of 3-year-old boy

- By Mike Shoro • Las Vegas Review-journal

The more than 30-year-old documents sat in a yellowing cardboard box labeled “Francillon” and a trio of binders. On Monday, the evidence in the disappeara­nce of

3-year-old Francillon Pierre sat front and center at a news conference for the announceme­nt of the arrest of his mother on a murder charge.

Francillon, known by his nickname Yoyo, was reported missing Aug. 2, 1986, from the then-broad Acres swap meet on Las Vegas Boulevard North. It sparked a missing persons case that, until recently, had gone cold.

COLD CASE

On Dec. 13, prosecutor­s charged his mother, Amy Elizabeth Fleming, 60, with murder. Fleming was long suspected in her son’s disappeara­nce, though police didn’t have “enough evidence to prove or disprove” her involvemen­t, North Las Vegas Police Chief Pamela Ojeda told the media Monday at a news conference.

“Although we are saddened that we could not bring you good news today that we found Pierre alive and well, we are fortunate that we could bring some closure to those affected by this 32-year-old cold case,” Ojeda said.

A developmen­t in 2017 sparked a second look at the case, Ojeda said. North Las Vegas police learned that somebody had attempted to apply for a birth certificat­e under Francillon’s name in what Ojeda called attempted identity theft.

Detectives spent the next year and a half re-examining the case and during that time uncovered new evidence and had witnesses come forward with new informatio­n, Ojeda said. In that time, police hadn’t found a “smoking gun,” such as DNA evidence or Francillon’s body to help prove their case against Fleming, said Detective Steven Wiese, who began investigat­ing the cold case in 2017.

“This is a case of a lot of little things that, put together, gives us the knowledge that Amy Fleming was involved in the homicide of her child,” Wiese said.

Fleming was jailed Jan. 29 in Palm Beach, Florida, and is on her way to Nevada, authoritie­s said. However, the arrest didn’t mark the closure of the case, and police are still investigat­ing, Ojeda said.

During the initial investigat­ion more than three decades ago, Fleming and her then-fiance, Lee Luster, claimed that the boy had slipped away from them while they shopped for a bicycle at the swap meet.

However, witnesses at the swap meet that day didn’t see Francillon with Fleming or Luster, Ojeda said. Neighbors hadn’t seen Francillon leave the house in the weeks leading up to his reported disappeara­nce, she said.

“We believe that they were at the swap meet as a diversion to say that he went missing and that he had been deceased at that time previous,” Wiese said.

An arrest affidavit for Fleming indicated that she and Lee rarely discussed Francillon’s disappeara­nce in letters from when they served time for lying during interviews with police.

But during the review, police pieced together one letter that Fleming wrote to Luster. It was “torn into dozens of small pieces,” Ojeda said.

She read a quote from that letter: “What happened was totally unintentio­nal, I’m sorry, I hope you know that.”

Luster, who was not Francillon’s biological father, lives in Florida, police said Monday. And as far as they know, he and Fleming had no children.

Ojeda cited an ongoing investigat­ion when asked to discuss whether Luster could be arrested. North Las Vegas Justice Court records didn’t show any pending charges for Luster, who is still considered a person of interest in the case.

Court documents associated with Fleming’s murder charge suggest that there is a co-defendant, but informatio­n in the documents was redacted.

It remains unclear how Francillon died, Ojeda said, and it wasn’t clear where detectives think his body may be.

“I would hope that Ms. Fleming would tell us that,” Wiese said.

Further review

During the renewed look at the case, detectives reviewed witness statements, police reports, news articles written at the time and polygraph exam results.

The affidavit cited an Aug. 30,

1986, garage sale hosted by Fleming and Luster where some of Francillon’s toys were for sale.

Witnesses told police on March 10, 1987, that they had overheard a conversati­on between a man they recognized as Luster through news reports and an unknown woman during a jail visit, according to the affidavit. In that conversati­on, the man said Fleming was responsibl­e for Francillon’s death, the affidavit said.

“At one point he got very excited, stood up and yelled Amy killed the baby. And threw his head down on the table,” according to a witness statement to police.

Fleming took polygraph tests in August and December 1986 and both times was found to be “deceptive” about her knowledge of the boy’s disappeara­nce, the affidavit said.

In August 2018, a polygraph examiner, who had given tests to Fleming and another person in 1986, contacted Wiese, the affidavit said.

“(He) said that Amy and (redacted) were so deceptive during their polygraphs with him that he was sure they had killed Francillon and dumped his body in Lake Mead,” the affidavit said.

At Monday’s news conference, Ojeda credited those who worked the initial investigat­ion, including retired Detective Bob King and retired FBI agent Joe Dushek, both of whom were in attendance.

King appeared emotional when discussing an arrest in the case, which he said provided a bit of closure despite the fact that Francillon had not been found alive.

“This is one case in my career that I always felt uncomforta­ble about,” he said. “The fact that I could not resolve it successful­ly, and particular­ly when you talk about a 3-year-old little boy.”

Because the investigat­ion remains open, Ojeda asked anybody with additional informatio­n on the case to call North Las Vegas police at 702633-9111.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3875290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter. Review-journal staff writers Dennis Rudner and Rio Lacanlale contribute­d to this report.

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