Crime Junkie - MISSING: Jennifer, Sidney, & Monique
Episode Date: June 23, 2025When a young mom and her two small daughters disappear without a trace from Topeka, Kansas, in May 2000, her family goes on a decades-long hunt for answers. But right in the middle of our reporting, t...he family gets a huge tip that could change everything.If you have any information about the disappearances of Jennifer Lancaster or Sidney and Monique Smith, please reach out to Topeka PD at 785-368-9551. You can also submit a tip to KBI directly online or by calling 1-800-572-7463. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/missing-jennifer-sidney-and-monique/Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies.Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
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Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Britt.
And the story I have for you today is the 25-year-old mystery of a young woman who walked
out of her mom's house with her two young children, never to be seen again.
But after decades of silence and literally during our reporting, the family got their
first real tip in a long time, sparking new hope for answers to what happened to the trio all
those years ago.
This is the story of Jennifer Lancaster starts thinking that something might
be wrong.
Her 20-year-old daughter Jennifer and her two little girls, Sidney and Monique, didn't
come home last night.
Jennifer's a single mom, the three of them live with Vicki, and Jennifer relies on her
mom for help, especially at night because Sidney is only 14 months old and Monique is a
newborn. Like Jennifer gave birth to her just five weeks ago. In those five weeks, she has never gone MIA.
So like I said, by noon, she knows something is up.
So she has Jennifer's younger sister Jessica called the father of her girls.
He and Jennifer are no longer together,
but they all live in Topeka, Kansas.
And while he's not super involved in their lives,
Jennifer's family thinks that,
I mean, it's worth giving him a call anyway, right?
But Monique and Sydney's dad says that he hasn't seen
or heard from Jennifer, doesn't know where she is,
doesn't know where the girls are.
And the family does believe him.
Vicki told our reporter, at this point,
she starts thinking back to her last interaction
with Jennifer the night before.
And she remembers that she had one of the girls' quilts
in a bag when they walked out of the door at 8 p.m.
Like they'd all just gotten back home from dinner
with Vicki's parents and Jennifer was headed out again.
Vicki even asked her what she was doing with the quilt
and Jennifer told her that she needed to take it to the cleaners.
Which was odd because they had a washer and dryer in the house, but at the time she didn't really question it.
She's only questioning it now. So Vicki tries calling Jennifer's cell phone,
but she doesn't answer, and as she's looking around for any clue as to where she might be, Vicki actually finds Jennifer's phone in the house.
So she left it either accidentally or on purpose.
But while the phone is there,
she starts noticing a lot of other things
that belong to Jennifer and the girls are not.
The family had recently moved into that house.
So a lot of the stuff that they had was still in boxes.
So Vicki hadn't really noticed before.
It's one of those things you have to kind of like get into the details of. But she didn't see her moving
like boxes in and out of the house, like just this quilt. No, no, no. Like if this stuff got
moved out, it would have had to have happened earlier. She doesn't know when and she doesn't
know what it means, but it probably scares her a little to realize this. So she calls the Topeka Police Department at around 6pm to report Jennifer missing.
And the police obviously have questions, right?
They want to know what is missing, what is going on with her, what could have led to
this disappearance.
Vicki says Jennifer and her children and their belongings are all missing, just like she'd
found, but she tells police that she doesn't feel like Jennifer would just run off with
the girls.
Like the girls were so little and Jennifer had never been able to handle them on her own.
I mean, Vicki and Jessica were always helping her out with them, which makes sense to me.
Like two kids under two at 20? Like, are you kidding me? I couldn't handle a newborn by myself at 33.
So it does seem off that one day she would suddenly just run off alone
with the girls. Now, Vicki says Jennifer is a bit rebellious and she has been mixed up
with the wrong crowd for a while now, but she's not involved in drugs or anything like that,
at least as far as they know, only they do know that she does drink a lot sometimes.
And the police basically tell her that while it looks more like she left on her own accord
than not, they will still take a missing persons report for her and her daughters.
But it's really here that Vicki and Jessica realize that for police, taking the report
and actually doing the things they need to do to find her are very different things.
Right.
So Vicki and Jessica start a search for Jennifer themselves.
They get flyers printed with a picture of Jennifer and the girls. They start posting them all over.
They even get people to help post them at truck stops across the US. I mean, it's 2000. There is
no Facebook. I don't even think I had a MySpace then. Like, this is just the two of them trying
their hardest to get the word out, hoping someone Anyone anywhere will come forward with a tip or a sighting and in all this time to Jessica had started calling other friends
Right. She and Jennifer are pretty close in age
They know a lot of the same people and for much of their lives
They did everything together, but everyone she is calling hasn't heard a thing
Now it's important to know that Jessica says she and Jennifer were super close most of their lives,
like I said, but Jennifer at times struggled with her mental health and she would distance herself.
Vicki tried for years to convince Jennifer to get help, but she was never receptive to it.
And her mental health declined even more when she got pregnant with Sydney.
And then by the time she had Monique,
again, five weeks before this, she was really struggling.
So after Monique was born, Jessica said that Jennifer
wasn't even showing interest in the girls.
Which sounds a lot like postpartum depression.
Right.
I mean, the family doesn't know that for sure.
But the fact that she was struggling like this,
and now that all three of them are missing,
it makes Vicky feel certain
that something terrible is happening.
She just has this dread sitting with her.
Yeah, but one thing that doesn't really add up to me
within the thinking that maybe she did something
to herself and the girls is taking their stuff.
Like to me, that says that you're going to live
somewhere else, like where you're going to need your things.
Same, like again, I don't know what it means.
There are contradictory things here,
but all in all, people are just worried.
And when weeks go by and they don't hear anything,
they don't know what to think.
So one day, like two weeks out,
Jessica decides to head out with a friend
to just drive around Topeka,
looking for any sign of Jennifer.
I mean, I mean, this is literally a long shot,
like needle in a haystack kind of thing,
but like, what are you gonna do at this point?
But they actually do find something on this drive,
and it's something big.
As they're driving by this apartment complex,
about 10 minutes from home, they spot Jennifer's car.
Jennifer's Jeep Cherokee is sitting in this parking lot
of the complex.
Jessica walks up to it to look inside and it's empty.
Now, Jennifer's car is typically pretty messy.
Like Jessica told us it usually looks like a trash can.
Her words, not mine.
Okay, as someone with a trash can car,
we do not take offense.
Right, but the weird part is here,
so again, she's got kids, whatever,
normally it's a hot mess,
but when she looks inside, it's clean.
And not just tidy, it looks like it's been cleaned out.
I mean, even the girl's car seats aren't there.
And that stands out to her as super odd.
Yeah, does this apartment complex mean anything to them?
Did she know somebody who lived there?
Not that Jessica knows of, or they probably would have checked it earlier, right?
But she does plan on finding out for sure, because she goes around the complex asking
people if they have seen anyone resembling Jennifer or Sydney or Monique, but no one
has.
Which, like, none of this is making sense.
Like we said, why take your stuff unless you're planning to start over or go somewhere
But you can't go somewhere without your vehicle, right?
And like you're clearly still going somewhere right or you wouldn't need the car seats, right?
Unless you're in another car
Who's though because Jennifer didn't have a second car hers was in fine working conditions
There's no reason to like go buy a different car. And whoever left this car there took the keys with them, clearly, because none were left
behind.
So, I don't know, at this moment, they're thinking maybe someone picked her and the
girls up, they left together, and Jennifer just left her car there, maybe temporarily,
like maybe she planned to return, that's why she took the keys.
But there's really no way of knowing. At this point, she needs to call police like maybe they'll know what to do
So they show up they check the car out, but that's like the extent of their investigation
They don't process the car. They don't collect any fingerprints on the car
Nothing. I mean, it's kind of hard to stick with the theory that she like left on her own free
will when her car is left behind and totally cleaned out.
Yet they seem to.
Like, we foiled the records for the police investigation so we could get details about
how they were thinking about this, what happened, but that request was denied.
Police wouldn't speak to us either because they said this is still an open case.
So we really only know what Vicki and Jessica discovered on their own search for Jennifer and the kids.
So because the police aren't taking the car, now the family has this to deal with.
And because there are no car keys, Vicki has to go to the dealership,
she has to get a new key made to move the car,
and she takes it back to Jennifer's grandfather's place where they just kind of leave it.
Cause I mean, they don't know what to do with it
and police are just like, here, you take it.
So I mean, best they do is they just like hold onto it,
hoping that Jennifer is gonna come back
and need that car one day.
Now at this point, Vicki decides
that the best thing she can do to figure out
Jennifer's movements or what's going on
is to get Jennifer's phone bill,
because Jennifer is still on her plan.
But what she sees is a little scary
because she finds out that there have been no calls
outside of calls to her and Jennifer's grandfather
that had been made from her phone
in the entire week leading up to her disappearance.
So this isn't really helpful.
And whether or not it was intentional, TBD,
we know the phone clearly wasn't used after she goes missing right because the phone was still in the house
Yeah, but if she did mean to go off-grid she could have gotten like a burner or a prepaid phone to use like yeah
I like when she left but even to plan her leaving
Totally and I mean it's 2000 cell phones aren't glued to everyone's hand like they are today like
Forgetting it also seems totally possible.
But I mean, you're right, like, it would have been easy to go buy a prepaid cell phone still,
even in 2000.
And it's maybe even what is most probable, because at this point, even Vicki starts thinking
that, okay, maybe Jennifer was planning on leaving, right?
We're not seeing any sign of her communicating with someone else.
Like, she's leaving with the quill.
Some of her stuff is missing that she had to have siphoned
out of the house at some point.
Like maybe she really did just decide to go
because the longer Jennifer has been missing,
the more time she's had to just go over and over and over
in her head, like what has happened before she left
the house that night.
And though at the time she told police
that Jennifer wasn't really acting differently,
like she's realizing now that she kind of was acting
a bit odd in the week leading up to her disappearance.
She told us that that whole week,
Jennifer brought the girls to have breakfast with Vicki
at the hospital that Vicki worked at,
which was out of the ordinary for sure. But like at the time, Vicki was just grateful for that time with them, right?
Like she said, in that, those breakfasts or whatever,
Jennifer was acting like, like fine,
but it was almost like she didn't want those meetups to end.
And now, looking back, she's like that super strange.
Like, was this... I don't know if she was thinking,
was this some kind of goodbye or
or whatever, but she starts thinking about what else was going on that week. What was different?
And that was the week that Jennifer had gone back to work as a dancer at a popular gentleman's club
in Topeka called Baby Dolls. And who was watching the girls? Jessica did that week. Okay. Now pre-baby,
pre-Monique, she worked the night shift at Baby Dolls, but coming back,
she was on days. So her mom's thinking, okay, maybe something happened there. And so she turns
to Baby Dolls, which reportedly was known to be a little bit shady. Our reporting team actually
got in touch with Jennifer's manager from Baby Dolls back in 2000. His name's Rich Christie,
and he gave us more insight into like the vibe of the place. He called Baby Dolls back in 2000. His name's Rich Christie, and he gave us more insight into like, the vibe of the place. He called Baby Dolls a reputable establishment with a lot of high-end
clientele. According to Rich, by the end of a good day shift, Jennifer could walk away with between
like $250 to $300, which today has the buying power of about twice that much. So like, not a
small amount of money. But also not enough to start a whole new life with.
Very true.
But in talking to Rich, he wasn't giving any goods. Just like, you know, yeah, weird
she went missing, work was work. But then our reporter like really was like drilling
in and asked the exact right question. Was there anyone at the club that week that Jennifer
returned to work that stood out?
And he says, you know what? Come to think of it, yes, there was this one man that he remembers.
Rich said that the guy he was thinking of was maybe an attorney, maybe a doctor, like he couldn't quite remember.
He just knows that this guy was, or at least seemed really successful, pretty wealthy. What he knew for sure was that this guy was from Florida, and he was there getting treatment
at a place called Menningers, which is this renowned mental health facility that used
to be located in Topeka.
Rich didn't remember the specifics of what the treatment was all these years later.
Like, how does that even come up in conversation at a gentleman's club?
And bigger question, why is this man who's there for what I assume is like inpatient
treatment even at a gentleman's club?
How it came up, it seems like maybe he was spending a lot of time there.
Again, I don't know.
And that's what I was going to say.
Like I don't know if he even would have told them exactly what the treatment was or whatever.
But I know it was like an outpatient situation where he was free to kind of come and go during
the treatment.
But Rich said, like, dude was there a lot
even during the day shift when Jennifer
was performing that week.
And he would drop hundreds of dollars on the dancers.
He made it apparent that he had a lot to offer.
Rich says that after Jennifer disappeared,
he came back to the club, this guy, a few more times,
but far less frequently.
And about a month or so after Jennifer had vanished,
he also stopped dropping by the club altogether.
And how long had he been going there
before she went missing?
He had been coming there for about like five or six months,
according to Rich.
Now, obviously nothing ties Jennifer directly to this man.
I mean, Rich doesn't remember him like singling Jennifer out
or anything, he doesn't even remember him being creepy
or off, just not part of like the usual crowd
that you got, you know what I mean?
So this guy involved or not,
what this guy represents to Jennifer's family
is the sort of people that she might be coming
into contact with and that could have led to her disappearance.
Because her family thinks that maybe Jennifer met someone in the club
that promised her and her daughters a better life.
Like, the more time that goes by, the version that they hope played out
was that Jennifer got her happily ever after,
that she just wanted to stay off the grid ever since, and the end.
But why wouldn't she have just told them that?
I don't know, like maybe it goes back to the way her headspace was in that time,
like her being distant.
Also, even though Rich told us that Jennifer was a dancer,
her mom said that she always thought that Jennifer was a waitress
and that if she was a dancer,
she could see that being something that Jennifer wouldn't have told her. So maybe Jennifer, if this is what happened, felt like her family wouldn't
understand. Or if she wanted to get them to understand her leaving, she would have to tell
them all this other stuff that she had never talked about before. Maybe she wasn't ready to open up
that can of worms. But honestly now, like that is best case scenario to her mom, that she started a new life, she's just out there with her girls, happy.
Worst-case scenario is that she was promised something great,
but was met with foul play instead.
So you can imagine how excited Jennifer's family is,
when a month or so after she and the girls vanish,
this man calls Vicki's home in the middle of the night
and says that Jennifer was in Lawrence, Kansas, like 25 miles east of Topeka.
This sighting of Jennifer was at a different gentleman's club, though it's
unclear who actually saw Jennifer there. And Vicki didn't know the man that was
calling or how he even got her number to tell her about the sighting, which is a
little odd to me.
And ultimately, it doesn't end up leading anywhere,
because when whoever, like, looks at this club,
there's no sign of Jennifer there,
at least when they go to look, if it was her at all, right?
Like, so either she left or it never was,
I don't know, and we don't know who this guy was
or how he got her number.
So without anything solid for the family to go off of,
again, they're kind of just left with zero answers,
zero leads, and just hope that Jennifer
is out there somewhere.
Then a few months after that, Vicki gets another,
I don't even know if tips the right word,
something happens that almost keeps this spark of hope going
that Jennifer is out there.
But what she gets that gives her that hope is super weird.
So Vicki is checking her mail one day and she gets
this thank you card and coupons in the mail from Steak and Shake.
Midwest classic.
Listen, no one's complaining when you get Steak and Shake coupons.
But here's the rub. Where she's getting it from, this steak and shake, she's never been to this
steak and shake that is all the way out in St. Louis, Missouri. This is like four and a half hours
from Topeka to the east. And the letter was addressed to Jennifer thanking her for the comment card that she left after dining there.
So you better believe Vicki like runs to the phone, calls that Steak and Shake asking if they
still have that comment card that Jennifer allegedly wrote. But they tell her no, like the way
their system works is that once the card information goes into the database, the card is destroyed.
And this breaks Vicki's heart because her one
hope was getting her hands on that card to see the handwriting because she knows she would have
been able to tell if it was truly Jennifer's or if it was like someone else and this was some kind of
hoax and they just like addressed it to Jennifer at Vicki's house. But that would be such a weird
hoax. I know. We've seen a lot, but I don't understand this one.
And more than that, if it is a hoax, it would have had to have been someone that the family
knew.
Like, how would they have her address?
Her address.
I know.
Like, her name.
I could spiral.
I have spiraled.
So she lived with her mom, right?
Like, does someone have her driver's license?
Is it someone that knew her?
I mean, I know back in the day,
papers would often print home addresses,
but I don't think the papers were even picking up
this case really.
Well, and like who is in St. Louis
getting a Topeka newspaper?
You know, I keep coming back to a couple of scenarios
when it comes to this comic card.
So one, it was the person who did something to Jennifer and this was
like a sick way to drop a line that wouldn't be traced back. Is this the same person that
called? I don't know. I just don't think a stranger gets anything from a hoax like this.
Right, because you can't even like follow it through. And like strangers who do hoaxes
usually like- Want to see something?
Yeah, like get something out of it. And they don't get anything out of this one.
That's not to say people aren't sick and wouldn't,
but unlikely to me.
Or two, it was Jennifer filling out the card.
Now I wonder if that is maybe the last permanent address
that she had and maybe the last one that she remembered.
So she just like wrote that down,
never thinking that they would send a thank you card
for a comment card.
Like, I don't know who does that.
People from the Midwest, but. If they don't call it, who's your hospitality for nothing. Even for a comment card. Like, I don't know who does that. We have people from the Midwest, but...
If they don't call it, who's your hospitality for nothing?
Even though it is St. Louis, whatever. But like, you get me.
The problem with this scenario, though, is she's alive and well.
She left on her own.
But what I know is that in all this time since, Jennifer and the girls,
their social security numbers have never gotten any hits since they disappeared.
Which feels like it wouldn't be the case if they were out there just like freely living
their lives and just didn't want to be contacted.
And like that's what makes her family the most nervous.
What if it's both?
But like not in the way you've laid out.
Like what if foul play is involved?
So there is someone else.
But Jennifer really did write the card and say she's with someone, like a trafficker
or a kidnapper, and she can't write, like, help me.
So she writes this comic card with her old address
to signal to her mom that she's still out there.
So this is like an option three
that I keep playing with in my mind.
And actually, that option that you laid out
is one that I think Vicky, her mom like believes most to be true
Because a huge fear for her and for her whole family is that Jennifer could have been trafficked and if that's what actually happened
There's a huge possibility that the girls I mean they could have been taken away from Jennifer given new names
Different fake socials ended up somewhere else. Not even knowing who they are.
They were so tiny when they disappeared.
They were literally babies.
I mean, my mind honestly even goes
to like adoption fraud situation.
Like has anyone looked at what the motive would be
if it were foul play?
Like who is the intended target?
We keep talking about Jennifer
because she's the one who had time
to have a story around her,
but maybe the target was actually the kids.
It's totally possible.
And like you said, I mean, the wild part is they're so young that they would have absolutely
no memory of where they came from other than like what they were told by someone.
Like the problem we have here is I don't think anyone has enough information to say what
the motive is because I don't think you can talk motive
Without knowing what really happened, right?
But I will say I mean there's been some online chatter
Like one of the things I came across that I found really interesting is
This kind of fringe theory that may be this serial killer guy named John Robinson could have something to do with Jennifer's disappearance
So according to something I read on investigation discovery this serial killer, a guy named John Robinson, could have something to do with Jennifer's disappearance.
So according to something I read on Investigation Discovery,
John was a serial killer that operated in the Midwest,
but specifically the Kansas and Missouri areas
around the time of Jennifer's disappearance.
And I mean, listen, I would love to know
if John was a patron of baby dolls,
but like everything I found about him online
is that like he tried to maintain this facade of this
super upstanding citizen. I mean, he was a Sunday school teacher. Doesn't mean he didn't, but like doesn't fit the like
persona he was trying to put off. But he ultimately got arrested on a sexual battery complaint in June of 2000.
This is just a month after Jennifer and the girls vanished. And from there, Detective discovered human remains on his property.
The thing that's wild is he was known, forget this, allegedly promising women a new life,
before murdering them, and he wasn't above selling their children in the process.
Which he did in at least one case that he is tied to, like a murder conviction.
And law enforcement has said they do think
he has more victims that just haven't been ID'd.
Okay, have they looked into him specifically for Jennifer's case?
I couldn't tell you because police stonewalled us. I mean, he's certainly someone I find
very interesting.
Well, yeah, it literally fits square into one of the first theories the family brought
up, like offered a new life and takes it.
And like to me, it's like the Kansas and Missouri connection.
But again, I don't know like when he was like locked up.
Is it, is the postcard come after he's already in jail?
Like I'm still like looking into this guy, I don't know.
And listen, those two places are right next to each other.
Like it's not a one in a zillion coincidence,
but yes, she goes missing in Kansas.
The comment card comes from Missouri.
I don't know.
What I know is that sadly,
that comment card was the last tangible lead
the family had in over a decade.
And I don't even know how seriously police took this,
or if they even looked into it at all.
I mean, they definitely didn't collect the card
as evidence or anything
because Vicki still has that card today.
Not that it would be evidence, right?
Like I know she didn't write it,
but they didn't copy it and keep it in the file, whatever.
Now, throughout this time,
the original detective assigned to this case,
Detective Terry Harris,
would check in with Vicki every so often.
It'd be the usual no updates,
but she felt like he was putting in real effort
into looking for her daughter and grandchildren.
So at some point, it kind of felt like this turned into an investigation, right?
Yeah, but did they ever check the car for evidence then?
Go back and do that?
I didn't say a good investigation.
No.
So according to Vicki, the car, she tried to keep it as long as she could in case Jennifer
came back, but it got repossessed at some point, though she can't remember exactly
when.
So whatever happened inside that car, if anything, whoever was in it or if it held any clues
as to where to look for Jennifer and the girls, that remains a mystery.
Even in spite of that, Vicki had at least an ounce of confidence in Topeka Petey until
2011.
That's when she gets a call from a new investigator
in charge of the case, asking her to submit DNA.
The investigator won't give a reason why,
and Vicki is living in Houston at the time.
So she's like, sure, you know,
the next time I'm passing through Topeka,
I'll give you guys my DNA.
But the detective is like, no,
you need to go to the nearest police station
as soon as possible and give them your DNA.
Like please hang up now.
Uh, what do the police know that we don't know?
Well, what do they know that even Vicki doesn't know?
Cause they won't even tell her why.
So she goes to the Houston Police Department to give her DNA and she asks the detective
there like, do you know what's going on?
And he tells her what police in Kansas wouldn't.
That police found female remains in Illinois that they think might be Jennifer.
Immediately Vicki goes home and Googles female remains in Illinois.
But what she finds, she's not seeing any connection to the details like on Jennifer's
case.
Like she doesn't see whatever it is police see.
But you know, like is there something police know that we don't know
right so she tries going to the police to see how they're tying them together
she calls Topeka Petey back basically everyone's saying like no one has the
details except for this one new investigator and she isn't sharing so
Vicky just gets left in the dark waiting to see if her DNA is a match to this dough.
When the results finally come back, it turns out not to be Jennifer.
And Vicki is relieved, but also upset, by how detectives handled the whole situation.
Because listen, it doesn't matter if it's been 25 years or 25 days, the pain of a missing
child never goes away.
So like a bit more empathy from police
would have gone a long way with her.
And when Vicki shares her anger with the detective's boss,
she believes that may have been the catalyst
for what happens next, or rather what doesn't happen.
Because after the DNA results are in,
Vicki says she never gets an update
on Jennifer's case ever again.
My hopeful little butt thought the boss was gonna be upset
with how the detective handled it, but no.
The blue wall is firm, like stand by your own.
This is like so disheartening.
Like I've seen this over and over,
like the more cases we've done,
the more families I've worked with.
Families really have no rights when it comes to how they're treated or what they have
access to information-wise.
But listen, if law enforcement is going to protect their own, we can do the same, right?
And people do show up for Vicki and really show up for Jennifer.
In 2015, Rich, the club manager,
takes it upon himself to start asking around
to see if anyone knew anything about Jennifer's disappearance
or if they'd heard any updates.
And his interest in Jennifer's case
rubs some people the wrong way.
I mean, police perk up when they hear
that he's asking around because they immediately call him in
and start questioning him.
Like, almost like he has something to do with that.
And he's like, listen, I didn't have anything to do with this.
I just feel like it's wrong there wasn't a bigger investigation and you guys seem to
have no interest so I'm just asking questions because no one else is.
But all the questions he was asking didn't go anywhere.
Rich says that no one at his club was ever interviewed.
The club, which is like the one place that could have held so many answers in this case. Exactly.
It shows you what he's talking about, like the lack of investigation, of not even like trying to get to the people who might have
answers. Even after Rich left Baby Dolls,
he could never shake that sad feeling he'd get for her mom who had to go all those years with no answers.
And the fact that two little girls just vanished too.
It just doesn't make sense to him.
But despite even his asking, him hitting the pavement, nobody knows anything.
Now in 2021, a cold case investigator for the Shawnee County DA's office takes over
the case.
And a local reporter, Tim Rentscher, reports again
on Jennifer's disappearance.
He had done some in the past.
It's in his update article that Vicki
sees this line that doesn't make sense to her.
She's reading about her own daughter's case.
But it says that the family didn't want to be contacted.
She's the family.
Yeah, she's like, well, I know that's not true.
Nobody called to ask me. She's the family. Yeah, she's like, well, I know that's not true.
Nobody called to ask me.
So she calls up the investigator and asks where that statement came from.
And they tell her that no one has reached out to her for the past decade because of
a note in her file.
I'm sorry, what note?
A note that says the family doesn't want to be contacted about Jennifer's case.
What?
Vicki says that the detective who kept her in the dark about the Illinois remains is
the one who put that note in there.
And she doesn't know exactly why, but Vicki thinks the detective may have done it out
of spite after she called the detective's boss and complained.
So she was like punishing her.
Mm-hmm.
So she has been in the dark,
not knowing anything for years because of this little note
sitting in Jennifer's case file, which to her is heartbreaking,
for me is rage inducing.
Yeah.
And I would like to remind everyone again
that we tried to reach out to police for records
and for an interview and record, which, by the way,
it seems like they gave other journalists
but they would not talk to us so I can't tell you why that note was put there at the detriment of
Jennifer of her girls and of their family. Add to that heartbreak are the tips that come in that
the family has little way of verifying but only adds to their terror. Jessica told us that sometime in 2022, a friend of a friend told her there was a man who was
known to traffic women out of baby dolls specifically, and he operated, wait for this, between Topeka
and St. Louis.
This man allegedly spent time in prison for trafficking women, and the tipster who
shared this information with Jessica was so scared that she wouldn't tell her what the
man's name actually was. So without more information to go off of, I can't really say if this is
a theory that could be checked out, that was checked out. And we couldn't confirm if Jessica
ever shared this information with police, so we don't know if it's something that they've looked into.
And it's not like they're sharing anything with the family either.
At the end of the day, Vicki and Jessica just want answers.
It has been 25 years and there has been very little, only a few blips of hope, including
one that came as we were writing this episode,
April, 2025.
Jessica reached out to us after we had interviewed her
to tell us that someone had contacted them.
And this woman who contacted them believes she's Monique,
Jennifer's youngest daughter who disappeared
when she was just five weeks old.
Oh my God.
And listen, her story is harrowing.
This woman who I'm gonna call Nora,
is living in Ontario, Canada.
Now, Nora heard some rumors around town
that her parents may not be who she thinks they are
and that maybe she should look into it.
And after some of her own research,
she somehow came across this missing persons case
from Kansas.
Now, even after our team talked to Nora ourselves,
it's not super clear how she specifically came across Jennifer's case.
But it could all be about timing.
You see, her date of birth is the same as Monique's,
at least with what she told April 6th, 2000.
Which is bananas.
I know. Especially because Jennifer's family says
that they have never had anyone reach
out claiming to be one of the girls before, in 25 years.
So when this was going on, I mean, Jessica and Vicki are feeling all of the emotions.
They are nervous.
They are, of course, hopeful that this could be the thing they have waited decades for.
And Nora's got her own story to tell.
She says that she had been trafficked by the man she believed to be her
father. And so even she wants answers. And when Jessica sees what Nora looks like, she
says it looks a lot like her own daughter. So there could be something there.
But so what now? Like DNA testing? Are you looking into her parents?
Okay, well, so Jessica went to the Topeka PD to try and get Nora set up for a DNA test.
You're never gonna believe this.
They weren't super helpful.
Shocker.
Her next step was to call the FBI
hoping that they could get something going.
And listen, they didn't have anything more
than recommendations to offer.
Like there's nothing they can do,
but Jessica was determined.
So she suggests that Nora go ahead,
submits her DNA to the nearest police station,
which we were able to confirm with Canadian police
that they received her sample
and are preparing to send it to Topeka PD.
But that's where their involvement ends
and it becomes up to law enforcement in Kansas
to do something with it.
And we have no idea how long that will take.
Topeka PD told Jessica initially that once the DNA comes through, it'll likely have
to be sent over to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.
They'll be charged with the actual DNA testing, and that could take weeks, it could take longer.
And you have to imagine, trust between Jennifer's family and Topeka PD is like, virtually non-existent
by this point.
Like, if it gets tested, they don't even feel confident
that they're gonna like get updates on the results.
But then we had an idea.
We know the wheels of justice move slow.
I hate moving slow.
I don't know if you've met me.
Like-
Understatement.
We're not looking to test evidence here, right?
Like when I started thinking about it,
I wanna know if person A is related to person B.
That's actually pretty easy.
If both people are, you know, readily willing to give their DNA, you just got to go to a
lab.
Private labs do this all the time.
All you need is a home kit.
So we had kits sent to Canada and to Kansas.
Vicki got the kit, sent back her sample, and we got confirmation from Nora that she received
her kit.
But then a few days passed, and it was radio silence.
We tried contacting her multiple times, and she just went dark on us.
And Jessica hasn't heard from her since either.
So now Jennifer's family is left with more questions than answers and
Processing that what reignited a bit of hope in the case is now
Shattered I I'm like floored by this story I know so was all of it any of it real like the trafficking her I don't know man
Like like she she submitted the DNA to Canadian authorities, right?
It's like it's not like she backed out then.
Like why now?
It's the timing that I think is so weird.
Like I said, not to get a single call resembling this
in 25 years and then we show up and all of a sudden this.
I mean, I could get real conspiratorial, right?
Like we're asking around, we're submitting requests,
we're ruffling feathers, but like,
what if it was just some cosmic blessing, maybe, right?
Like that we're at the right place at the right time,
not to take away any pain that this caused,
maybe just help expedite the truth, weed out any lies?
I don't know, because I don't know what is truth
and what is lies still.
Hey guys, I'm jumping in here really quick because there has been a development
over the weekend from the time that we released this episode in our fan club to
when you're hearing it why.
After the fan club episode went out, Nora did reach back out to us.
She said that she had to leave the place that she was at before,
the one that we sent the DNA test to.
And now she's in a new place and asked us to send a new test.
This is all developing as we speak,
so we are currently trying to figure out what's what,
figure out if that's possible,
and what the best next step is.
If there are more developments, we'll update you.
This is like the perfect thing to make sure
you're following us on social for,
because we'll make sure we get any updates there
and in the fan club.
Okay, back to the original story.
Vicki says that she wishes she would have shared
a little bit less about Jennifer and her behavior
with police when she first reported her daughter
and granddaughters missing.
Like maybe they would have taken it all the more seriously
from the beginning, but hindsight is 20-20.
And she still holds out hope that her granddaughters
are out there somewhere, whether they know who they are or not.
So she has submitted her DNA to law enforcement.
And her granddaughter, Jessica's child,
has submitted her DNA to Ancestry.com.
They're waiting for the day that a match pops up
and leads them to some answers once and for all.
Vicki has a message for Jennifer herself if she's still out there. I really wish that someday I would be able to hear from Jennifer and know that they're okay.
I'm not upset. I understand that things happen sometimes and you just have to get away.
I just hope and pray that they, that she and the girls are happy and healthy and together
and they have a support system together.
Jennifer would be 45 today.
She had blonde hair and blue eyes.
She had multiple piercings on her eyebrow, tongue, and ears,
plus a tattoo of lowrider on her left upper arm
in green and black,
and another green and black tattoo on her lower back.
Sydney would be 26 years old.
She had black hair and brown eyes. Her sister Monique was only a month old, and she'd be 25 today.
She also had black hair and brown eyes.
We're gonna include their photos, including age-progressed ones for
the girls in the show notes.
And if you're listening to this episode and you have any information on what
happened to Jennifer or her daughters, please reach out to Topeka PD at 785-368-9551.
You can also submit a tip to KBI directly online
or by calling 1-800-572-7463.
And if you wanna reach out to us,
you can email tips at audiochuck.com.
at audiochuck.com. You can find all the source material for this episode on our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And you can follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We'll be back next week with a brand new story. Crime Junkie is an AudioChuck production.
So, what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
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