The Denver Post

“Person of interest” emerges in case of missing woman

- By Lindsay Whitehurst

SALT LA K E CITY» Police investigat­ing the case of a college student who went missing in Utah 10 days ago said Thursday the owner of a home they searched in connection with the disappeara­nce is a “person of interest,” and they are trying to find a mattress that had been inside his home.

The announceme­nt came shortly after authoritie­s spent about 19 hours searching the man’s home in a middle-class Salt Lake City neighborho­od, with neighbors describing officers entering the home with shovels and police dogs. Also, investigat­ors were seen taking large brown bags out of the house.

Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Brown said the homeowner spoke with investigat­ors but was not in custody and declined to name him. But authoritie­s have said that they believe the house has an unspecifie­d connection to the disappeara­nce of 23-year-old Mackenzie Lueck.

Online court and property records identify the man as being 31 years old, divorced this year and with no criminal record in Utah. The Associated Press is not naming him because authoritie­s have not done so.

Investigat­ors now want to find a mattress and box spring that they say the homeowner gave away last week, and speak with whoever took it, Brown said.

Lueck disappeare­d after taking a Lyft ride June 17 from the city’s airport to a park, where police have said she met someone at about 3 a.m. and did not seem distressed. They have said the Lyft driver had no connection with her disappeara­nce. The home that police searched is about 5 miles from that park.

Brown declined comment when asked if the homeowner met Lueck at the park, or whether police have identified the person she met there.

Police generally use the term “person of interest” for someone they believe might have informatio­n about a crime that leads to a suspect, or the person of interest may eventually become a suspect and subject to arrest.

The homeowner has lived there about two years and has rented out part of the house on Airbnb, said next-door neighbor Tom Camomile.

Camomile said the man was friendly and that they discussed landscapin­g improvemen­ts he made shortly after he moved in, but became withdrawn over the last several months. Camomile said the man in recent months stopped keeping up his yard as well as he had before.

Camomile said he never saw anyone matching Lueck’s descriptio­n at the house and last saw the homeowner last weekend on Saturday, when he brought in his trash cans.

Lueck is a part-time student at the University of Utah in her senior year majoring in kinesiolog­y and pre-nursing. She has been a student since 2014 and has an off-campus apartment.

She is from El Segundo in the Los Angeles area and flew to California on June 17 for a funeral before returning to Salt Lake City, police have said. Her family reported her missing June 20 and became more concerned after she missed a planned flight to Los Angeles last weekend.

Brown, the police chief, told reporters that he has spoken with her father, Greg Lueck, and felt “the heartache and the pain and the suffering in his voice as we spoke.”

Investigat­ors are tracking the woman’s activity on social media and whether she had another phone as they look for clues about who she met at 3 a.m. and where she is now, Brown said.

They also are looking into her romantic life — including whether she dated older men — though it’s unclear whether that might have any connection to her disappeara­nce, said police spokesman Greg Wilking.

“This is a digital forensic investigat­ion,” Brown said. “This is very complicate­d, and it has a digital footprint that our investigat­ors have been following.”

Lueck’s close friend, Ashley Fine, uploaded a new video Thursday morning onto the “Find Mackenzie Lueck” Facebook page, saying she believes her friend is still out there. Fine pleaded with people to call police with any informatio­n that could help locate Lueck.

“Everyone around the country is looking for you. We’re advocating for you, we’re fighting for you, and we’re going to bring you home safely,” Fine said.

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