The Commercial Appeal

Dad believes new info will lead to daughter’s remains

- Kathy Mccormack ASSOCIATED PRESS

CONCORD, N.H. – Fifteen years after 21-year-old Maura Murray disappeare­d following a car crash in rural New Hampshire, her father believes newly gathered informatio­n will lead to her remains.

The University of Massachuse­ttsamherst nursing student lied to professors about a death in the family and left campus on Feb. 9, 2004, driving into New Hampshire. She was last seen on a road in Haverhill that leads to the White Mountain National Forest. She had crashed her car, which was later found.

Authoritie­s say they are aware of Fred Murray’s contention that cadaver dogs and a radar scan identified something hidden in the basement of a house near where his daughter was last seen, and they are considerin­g how to proceed. The area outside the home had previously been searched, and nothing was found.

Fred Murray believes his daughter is dead, the victim of a crime. Others theorized that Maura Murray fled, possibly to Canada, or was injured, wandered off into the woods and died of exposure. The case has been the subject of podcasts and a documentar­y.

Fred Murray and supporters organized a search of a basement near the crash site last fall after getting the homeowner’s permission. He was unable to contact a prior owner, but the property has since changed hands.

Murray said two separate visits by cadaver dogs and a radar scan last fall identified something underneath the basement floor.

“It’s been 15 years and I haven’t let up,” said Murray, now 76, said in a phone interview from Hanson, Massachuse­tts, this week. “The point is, two dog hits and a radar hit . ... That’s my daughter, I do believe.”

Murray said the informatio­n was shared with state police in December.

Jeffery Strelzin, associate attorney general, said the case remains open and active.

“We are aware of the allegation­s regarding a home’s basement in that area and have considered and are considerin­g next steps,” he said. “That area was searched by law enforcemen­t in the past, including with dogs, and nothing of significan­ce was discovered.”

Strelzin said the area outside the house was searched.

Maura Murray’s family and some investigat­ors believe she just wanted to get away for a few days. She had recently resolved a criminal matter involving use of a stolen credit card and caused extensive damage to her father’s car during a crash.

A few days before she disappeare­d, she was working her security job at Umass-amherst when the phone rang, and she burst into tears. The caller and the subject of the call remain unknown.

When Maura Murray lost control of her car and hit a tree, a couple who lived nearby called police.

A school bus driver who also lived nearby asked her if she wanted him to call police. She said no, but he called anyway.

A police report says the windshield was cracked on the driver’s side, both air bags deployed and the car was locked. There was a box of wine on the back seat and a strong odor of alcohol.

“I just want the poor kid to have her own grave,” Murray said. “I just want somebody to help her.”

 ??  ?? The family of Maura Murray has been searching 15 years for the nursing student, who disappeare­d in 2004 at 21 years old. JIM COLE/AP FILE
The family of Maura Murray has been searching 15 years for the nursing student, who disappeare­d in 2004 at 21 years old. JIM COLE/AP FILE

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