Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Son Disappears into Idaho Wilderness During TV Shoot, Remains Missing Years Later
Episode Date: June 8, 2026Nancy Grace investigates the baffling disappearance of Terrence Woods Jr., a talented young television producer with a double master's degree who vanished while filming near an abandoned mine in the r...emote Idaho wilderness. According to the crew on set, Terrence suddenly bolted down a steep hill at full speed and vanished without a trace—a narrative many doubt. As the investigation unfolds, a mountain of unsettling red flags emerges: a local sheriff's department treating the case as a simple runaway, international crew members quickly fleeing back to London, conflicting eyewitness accounts, and highly suspicious physical evidence. From missing pants and muddy shoes packaged in plastic bags to tampered camera photos and pages ripped directly out of Terrence's diary, Nancy and her expert panel dissect the jaw-dropping revelations uncovered by Terrence’s father. Was it a sudden psychological break, or something more sinister? Joining Nancy Grace today: Brian Fitzgibbons - (Plymouth, MA) Director of Operations for USPA Nationwide Security, Leads a team of investigators specializing in locating missing persons, former Marine and Iraq war veteran, Instagram: @uspa_nationwide_security Mehul Anjaria - (Los Angeles) Cohost of Podcast: "Crime Redefined" and Forensic DNA Expert Dion Mitchell - (Los Angeles) Cohost and Executive Producer of Podcast "Crime Redefined", X/Instagram: @crimeredefined, Tik Tok: @crime.redefined, Facebook: crimeredefined Dave Mack - (AL) Investigative Reporter, 'Crime Stories' See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
A father is fighting for answers after his son vanishes into thin air in Idaho.
Good evening. I'm Nancy Grace. This is Crime Stories. I want to thank you for being with us.
Terrence Woods is a member of a TV production crew filming near an abandoned mine in the remote Idaho wilderness.
As their crew wraps a long day, something suddenly chefs.
Bolts running full speed into the woods alone and never seen again.
That makes absolutely no sense.
He bolts and runs full speed into the woods and he's never seen again.
I smell a rat.
This is a guy with a double master's degree.
How does he just vanish into the woods and what everybody walks away and leaves him?
There he is in London where he got a double master's degree.
and just when it seems like all of his dreams were coming true,
he vanishes into thin air.
Watch this.
I want a gold mine.
Highway and on my term.
Veteran miner Dave Turin is an expert gold hunter.
What in the world?
And after two years out of the game,
he's searching for a way back in.
This could be my future of mining right here.
Dave will cross the country from north.
To South, to prospect multiple, lost, and abandoned mines.
Gold's right there.
Hoping to find the one that will make him a fortune.
I'm not walking away from it.
Out of his damn mind.
Now that is from Gold Rush.
And what it is is from the trailer of Gold Rush, Dave Turin's Lost Mine.
Is that what led to his disappearance?
How does that fit in with this?
I want him to come home.
I want him to know that we love him.
Your family miss you, your sisters, your brothers.
They want you to come home safe.
He was living his dream.
He was doing what he wanted to do.
And he did everything to get to this point.
And just for it to be, for us to even be here, it's unbelievable.
I got a call on October 6 at 7.45 a.m. in the morning.
And I was told you, my son allegedly in Elk City, Idaho,
while I working with a company, fell off a cliff or went off a cliff,
without being seen since then.
I remember friends at K-L-E-W, how do you go off a cliff,
and then your body is never found?
Did he run into the woods? Did you run off a cliff?
And what is everyone standing by, just twiddling their thumbs?
This is a beautiful,
bright young man who's making his dreams come true. And tonight, no answers? I don't get it.
Joining us an all-star panel, but first, straight out to Dion Mitchell, executive producer,
Crime Redefined podcast. Deion, thank you, Mahal, for being with us. Deion, what is your
understanding of what happened? Exactly that. If you believe the eyewitness, you know,
he dropped his radio and ran down the hill. So if you take her eyewitness at face value,
in my opinion, he's probably still on the mountain. But I do find the whole take odd.
Crew members just don't disappear off a set, especially where it's remote when there's only one way in and one way out.
And your point is, of course, you're right. But what is your point there, Dionne Mitchell?
My point is that if everything's taken at face value, that he's still on the mountain somewhere.
So if he's still on the mountain, why isn't there a search and rescue team finding his body?
That's the question. You know, why isn't there a search and rescue team finding his body?
search and rescue, and that's what we're trying to do is actually get a proper team out there,
you know, use all the latest tech and see if we can bring them home.
Mahul and Jaria is joining us, co-host along with Dionne Mitchell, of Crime Redefined Podcast.
They first found out about this missing person case, and it has totally blown my mind.
Mahal, Dionne Mitchell, is correct. After every shoot I've ever been on, it takes hours
to break it down.
All that equipment, the video, the people, the cars,
and they're getting off of a remote shoot
in the middle of rugged terrain,
and they all just, poof, vanish,
like I dream of Jenny,
they're all just gone.
That didn't happen.
So did no one call 911 immediately?
Did no one try to save him?
What is your understanding,
Meil, about what happened?
There were at least two witnesses
who allegedly saw him run down the cliff,
if that's even possible.
Supposedly, a few of the crew member went after him.
And then when they came back up,
their clothes were all ripped and they were all bloody.
So they did call 911.
They found like a cabin on the mountain and made the 911 call.
The 911 call is sort of mysterious, though,
because they start talking about,
gee, Terrence was having a tough time.
He possibly had a mental breakdown.
All of this is news to his father.
There's no history of any kind of mental problems.
So it's very curious, number one, why would you run down a hill?
And then this thing about this mental issue,
and what further complicates it, Nancy, is that this crew was international.
They were from the UK.
So very quickly, all of the crew member went back to London,
except for one individual who stayed back to talk to the Sheriff's Department
and to Terrence and to Terrence Wood Sr.
So let me understand.
There was no crime scene.
the witnesses were not detained by law enforcement.
Everybody just went on their merry way
after he allegedly falls off a cliff amidst claims of mental problems.
Nobody ever mentioned a mental problem before.
They didn't have a problem with him on the shoot.
How can a guy with mental problems get to master's degree in London
and come back and live his dream?
What mental problem?
Well, that's just it.
I mean, there were some reports that he grabbed
a drone out of the air, that he was complaining about his family.
And what was really appalling is when the one crew member who stayed behind first met Terence
Wood Sr. He started talking about how he was disappointed with Terrence's the work that he did.
I mean, rather than being empathetic.
And you know, to your point about the investigation, Nancy, the Sheriff's Department very quickly
said, oh, we don't suspect foul play.
Well, how would you know you didn't do a thorough investigation?
You didn't talk to the 12 people who had spent a good week with him.
So I don't know how you can conclude there's no foul play.
And what's worse is it seems like the Sheriff's Department is thinking that this is a runaway
case, not a missing person's not foul play.
So while on the front end, they did a wonderful job searching for him for six, seven days,
it just went cold.
And the Sheriff's Department is saying it's an open case.
And as a result, they will not release any reports or paperwork to us.
Meanwhile, they're not doing anything further to find him.
So let me understand.
Nothing is being done to find him.
And they allegedly, the crew, see him fall off a cliff or run off a cliff, which I find very difficult to believe.
But they see him run off a cliff.
They see where it happened.
And after seven days, nobody was found.
How can that be, Mahal?
Well, yeah, exactly.
I mean, the sensitivity of the search, I mean, they had forward-looking IR cameras.
They had bloodhounds.
You know, they had some of Terrence's clothing to use.
That's a whole other story about how his clothing was found.
But the fact that there was no trace of him, you know, Terrence Wood Sr. has some question
as to whether or not he actually made it to Idaho because the crew was first in Montana and
then went to Idaho.
There's a lot of eyewitness statements that he was in Idaho, but I don't know that we have
any video or photos or anything like that. And, you know, I'm a physical evidence guy,
and this is one thing we need to get. We need to start ruling things out here, at least.
Agree. Agree about the physical evidence. Joining us right now, Brian Fitzgibbens,
he is the director of operations at USPA nationwide security. He leads a team of missing
person investigators around the world, finding and extracting missing people. He is a former
Marine. He is an Iraqi war vet. Fitzgibbons, I find it really hard.
to believe that the crew can identify where this young man jumps headlong off a cliff in front
of God and everybody, and they search seven days and can't find him. It's almost as if it
didn't happen that way. You see where he jumped, but you can't find him? Yeah, and it sounds like
there was a pretty intense search over the course of just about a week that was done to locate
Terrence Woods Jr. And what's immediately concerning to me, Nancy, and with this story from the
production crew, they're going to these remote areas. This is not their first rodeo. And you're
telling me that they don't have any ability to communicate via satellite phone that they have to
trek through the woods to encounter, you know, somebody in a cabin that has access to a satellite
phone, that they're, you know, seasoned producers out in these remote areas with no ability
to communicate, that does not add up to me. That immediately is a red flag. Well, they could call
911. So they do have the ability to communicate. Listen to this, Fitz. At 834, my son texts me back.
Said, Dad, I'm coming home on Wednesday, the 10th. Between that little time, something went wrong.
Then the next call I get is from the company saying my son disappeared.
I can't find a trace of him.
From our friends at Fox 5, back to you, Dionne Mitchell.
Not a trace? Nothing?
Did authorities find anything to corroborate the story that he suddenly just ran.
He ran for it.
He took off his belt and his equipment and ran for it and jumped.
Anything?
Was the belt there?
Was the equipment there?
any shoe, any article of clothing, any anything to corroborate this story.
No, just the one eyewitness.
And that's what makes this really wild.
You have one eyewitness says he ran down this cliff.
And that was the first kind of red flag for me.
If you're familiar with this area at all, it's not really cliffy.
It's more like a rolling hill.
You can't mine on cliffs.
So you pick areas that you can get your equipment into, trek it into.
And so for him to have jumped off a cliff was like the first thing.
It's just it's a 4,000 feet.
It's more kind of like rolling hills that's heavily forested.
So that was like the first thing.
It said like, yeah, did it really happen that way?
And then let's face it, you know, Terrence is from Maryland.
He lived in London.
And guys like that don't go running into the forest.
He had to actually buy shoes, boots for this.
So this is an area that he's not familiar with.
So you're going to stay close to the rest of the queues, rest of the crew.
And the other red flag for me is probably something happened between the fourth and the fifth.
Hey, dad, I made it to, hey, dad, I'm coming home to follow.
day. So what happened in that in that time period? And I think that's where we should focus.
This is what the sheriff says. He went over to the edge and there were several people watching
him, including one of the local guys. And they said he just decided to take off and he shot down
that hill. And he would not stop. He would not return. And he just kept going. And they lost
him at the, there's a road down below where he dropped straight down the hill, almost straight down.
He couldn't find any clothes. The tracks are the best that we could follow and they're not dead
positive they were his, but they
believed they were, but that's not an
absolute. There's been no sign,
there's been no information, there's been
no sighting, there's been nothing.
And that
definitely is unusual. And it
sounds like there's been no investigation.
That's from our friends at K-B-O-I
and K-T-V-B.
Let me understand something, Deion
Mitchell. I immediately see
a discrepancy. You are saying
there was one witness, but to hear the sheriff
tell it, there were lots of
witnesses. What's the truth? As far as every, but all the interviews that have been done,
there was only one clear witness. The main part of the crew was actually on the set,
where they were actually doing the filming at the mine. So there was only one eyewitness that saw
him take off down the hill. And he dropped his radio and just apparently sprinted. I don't
know how you sprint down a cliff, but that's what they're telling us. I don't think there was a
number of, at least as far as the interviews that we've seen and that we've done on our
podcast, other than the one eyewitness, the female transportation person, I don't think anybody
else saw them because it was a skeleton crew, and they're either going to be at a base camp
or they're going to be where the filming is actually taking place for the promo.
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Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Went over to the edge, and there were several people watching him, including one.
one of the local guys and they said he just decided to take off and he shot down that hill
and he would not stop he would not return and he just kept going and they lost them at the
there's a road down below where he dropped straight down the hill almost straight down he
he couldn't find any clothes uh the tracks are the best that we could follow and they're not
dead poses they were his but they believed they were but that's not an absolute there's been
no sign there's been no information there's been no sighting there's been nothing
and that definitely is unusual.
Mahul and Geria joining us.
He's the co-host along with Dionne Mitchell on Crime Redefined podcast.
That was from our friends at KBOI and KTVB.
Let's analyze what the sheriff just said.
Okay, he went over the edge.
There were several people watching.
No.
According to you, one person was there when he went over the edge.
The others may have been on the crew,
but they're not eyewitnesses.
Number one.
He would not stop.
He took off.
He kept going.
They lost him at a road.
Where,
mayhole, does the road fit in?
I thought he went over a cliff.
What are they talking about a road?
Once, supposedly once he got to the bottom of the cliff area, there is a road there.
So there's some thought that, you know, there was some elaborate scheme for him to disappear
and that a car picked him up.
But that is just pure speculation.
I've got to see Mahal as he's actually saying this because this is crazy talk.
Okay, so let me understand this.
This is not like wily coyote and the roadrunner where they get smashed and killed
and then they jump up again and start running.
Am I supposed to believe?
And this is told me from the sheriff that he, our victim,
jumps over a cliff, falls down to a road,
and there's a clandestine meet up with a car that takes him away,
or he gets up and runs, like the roadrunner.
Are you saying that with a straight face?
I don't know how you say that with a straight face.
It makes no sense.
And you know, the sheriff's department sometimes out there has this attitude
that people go missing out there all of the time,
and eventually they'll turn up.
So again, there's this sort of this attitude that he was just a runaway,
and they're not going to look into it.
I'm sure we'll talk about this,
but there is a lot of physical evidence right now
that could be looked at
to try to see if this story makes any sense whatsoever.
Like what?
Well, number one,
Terrence Woods Jr.'s laptop is available.
His dad has it.
Now, the sheriff's department,
who's probably not that sophisticated
in advanced investigation,
they said we couldn't get into the laptop
and we were afraid basically
we would get locked out of it.
So Terrence Wood Sr. has Terrence Jr.'s'
laptop.
There's going to be a wealth of information on that.
On top of that, they have his camera.
And to hear Terrence Wood Sr. talk about it,
the order of the pictures on the camera doesn't make sense.
So we have digital evidence here.
In terms of the cell phone, Terrence Jr.'s cell phone,
that wasn't recovered.
We hope that there's records.
But my understanding is that if those records were not frozen,
that they go away after about a year.
So we don't know if we even have the option of looking at the cell phone record.
You know what?
I don't think that's yes, yes, some evidence will go away.
But Brian Fitzgibbons, you and I have worked on a lot of missing people cases, a lot of homicide cases.
And digital evidence, such as cell phone records, they live forever in the cloud.
We're not going to lose that.
Yeah, there will be some degree.
of evidence remaining from that cell phone,
maybe not location data, maybe not app data
that could help pinpoint a last location,
but there will be some about his last communications.
The other piece with this laptop,
that absolutely should and can be investigated.
That laptop may have connected to his phone.
That laptop may have messages,
SMS text messages on there.
on there. You know, if it's an Apple laptop, his phone may be connected directly to it.
So it seems like fingers are not being lifted here. That's an easy, easy task to be done.
Okay. I'm very curious about what evidence has been obtained, what evidence has been saved
and curated. But let's look at what else the sheriff said.
Viz Gibbons, listen to this. We couldn't find any clothes.
The tracks were the best we could follow.
We're not sure those are his.
So is he on the side of the cliff?
Is he on the road?
The sheriff is the one that said they lost him at a road down below.
So am I supposed to believe that he vanished into thin air?
None of this makes sense.
Were scent dogs brought out, were cadaver dogs brought out,
where drones brought out?
Or was it all just chalked off to some crazy plot where he jumps off a cliff and then gets
into a getaway car?
Yeah, that's something that doesn't add up.
There was a fairly extensive search done with dogs, with aerial assets, infrared.
So you would think, you know, Terrence Woods Jr. was not an experienced mountaineer.
This was not an experienced outdoorsman that could trek, you know, it would probably take him
close to a full day to navigate back to any type of civilization.
So you would have to imagine, after an extensive search was done with those assets,
they would have found him had he died in the elements out there.
So, you know, that adds a layer to this and a layer of validation to Terrence Wood's
question was, was he ever at that site?
I talked to him before he went out there and he seemed fine.
It was nothing abnormal.
He wasn't acting different.
And, you know, I talked to him all the time and it didn't seem like he was depressed.
He's not the type of person that would just run off or do anything like that.
So it seems unusual to me.
But, you know, I wasn't there.
From our friends at K-B-O-I to Dion Mitchell joining us along with Mahul and Jiria.
they are co-hosts and produce crime redefined podcast, and they are the ones that found this case,
and that's how we at Crime Stories learned about it.
So thank you.
I guess if others would have their way, nobody would ever know about this case.
I don't believe you can suddenly get a bout of depression and your family not know anything about you've ever been depressed,
you've ever had suicidal ideation, you're on some kind of medication, nothing.
And what the sheriff is saying doesn't make sense.
I mean, you've got the sister stating, I taught him just before this, and he was fine.
He was not depressed.
And here is what we call routine evidence.
And I do not mean Dionne Mitchell, routine isn't typical evidence.
It's routine evidence.
I mean evidence of someone's routine.
For instance, I get up at five.
I make my mother's breakfast. I make my son's breakfast. I make the granny nanny. Each one of them has their own special
unique coffee. I make for them. I feed the cat. I feed the dog. I feed the guinea pig. And when
everybody's gone to school, then I start work. That is my routine. And that is not going to change.
Heaven help me. This is not his routine. He would never disappear from work, never leave without
talking to his parents, and certainly never jump off a cliff. No, absolutely.
And everything in his background, he was an absolute pro.
That's why Rae hired him in the first place.
And there's all his professors going at University of Maryland,
the journalism school, anybody that's worked from him,
from Maryland to London, had nothing
but great things to say about him.
And so all of a sudden, he's just gonna,
you know, have a meltdown on the side of a mountain
go taking off.
It's so out of character for him, it's unbelievable.
And we just don't believe it.
My son, 130 pounds soaking wet.
These guys are big like me, and you're going to say, you watch this little guy go to kill itself or whatever you're trying to put out there.
Come on, man.
They said when all of them came back up the cliff, their clothes was ripped.
Some of them were bleeding.
Well, they had dogs.
You didn't even find a trace of my son's blood nor any ripped clothes.
I mean, let's come on.
Private's Gibbons.
That is BS, technical legal term.
Scent dogs would have immediately picked up on blood.
Did you hear what the day?
Dad said, oh, from our friends at Fox 5.
The dad says the friends, friends, come up with ripped clothes bleeding.
But the dogs found no trace of Terrence's blood nor any ripped clothes, nothing.
Why were their clothes ripped?
Where did that blood come from?
That's also from our friend, Dr. Field.
So this is not fitting together forensically.
They're saying there was blood, there were ripped clothes, but the dogs don't pick
up on any of that? I believe the dog over the people. Yeah, the logic doesn't add up, right? If
Terrence Woods Jr. was going through the same terrain that these folks from the crew set off to
search for him, you would be safe to assume that that same terrain would produce the same
results. Scratches on those branches, there's absolutely something that these scent dogs would
pick up. As you and I both know, a number of cases we've worked on together.
the talent of these scent dogs is, it's not comprehensible how easily they can pick up a scent
in that thick brush, that Woods terrain.
So it's not believable that this wouldn't have happened to Terrence Woods Jr. as well.
He was there for four days and kept on the same pair of socks, same shirt, same underwear.
But they also had a pair of shoes in his luggage inside of a plastic bag, which had mudd
all over them. Mudd everywhere. At least there should be a pair of pants where the bottom of the
pants should have some type of mud or something on them. That's not even in a bag.
Everything had frozen in time because up to this date, nothing can have happening and everything
is still the same. The sheriff department out there, they're not doing anything. They said
that they were not closed the case, nobody give me any information pertaining to the case.
From Dr. Phil and Fox 5. Okay, straight back out to you. May Huel and Geria co-host
along with Dionne Mitchell of Crime Redefined,
the significance of what we just heard,
that you've got the muddy shoes in a plastic bag
in the suitcase.
But there are no pants to go with them.
Where are his clothes?
What are you picking up from what Terrence Wood Sr. is saying?
What's probative?
What does it prove?
Well, to me, it may prove that somebody
contaminated the scene in the hotel room
where they got Terrence's flow.
So it seems like if you were doing a proper investigation, you would close off that hotel room.
But it seems that the crew had access to it.
And you just start to wonder if the contents of the suitcase were manipulated as if somebody's trying to hide something.
Because one pair of muddy shoes and the rest of the nice, clean clothing makes absolutely no sense.
My son saw something, heard something that he should have seen or shouldn't have heard and didn't like it.
My son's not in the woods.
From our friends at Fox 5, what does he mean by that?
What does he mean?
He thinks his son saw something or knew something he wasn't supposed to know, Dionne Mitchell.
Great question.
And, you know, because I mentioned earlier that there something happened between the fourth and the fifth,
it kind of, I could see where Terrence Wood's senior could make that kind of assumption.
And we haven't seen anything, but that's why we want to do an investigation.
I also want to go back to something else is that a lot of people that are not familiar
with this location was at 4,400 feet. And the road, the access road to get in from where Terrence
went missing to there is a trek. It's a distance and you'd probably need a compass. Otherwise,
you're just walking blindly until you just stumble across the road. And then the distance from the
hotel to get to the location on a good day is over two hours. So that means that Terrence would
have had to run down the hill, luckily find the road, and then have a car waiting and then
drive back two hours out without anybody else seeing him. So Terrence Sr. He's got a point.
This is total BS. Now, I want you to hear what the father, Terrance Wood, Senior says about what
happened when he gets to Idaho. When he took the 911 call and I spoke, he said, Mr. Woods,
something's not right about this. Something is not right. He said, when you get to Idaho,
make sure you see me. When I got to Idaho, went to the sheriff's department. I've seen this person.
this person gave me an envelope.
He said, whatever you do,
don't tell anybody I gave this to you
and don't show it to anybody, no problem.
I go back to the hotel room,
I open an envelope up.
It's the original police report.
It was called in.
And this police report is saying detail for detail
what quote unquote was said
when they called this in.
One, they said my son was a dark complexion person,
not dark at all.
Okay, moving along.
Then you all said,
that morning he had,
anxiety attack.
Okay, well, if he had anxiety attack,
did you all call professional medical assistance?
And no report did you were here or read or anything.
No one never wants up to this second
that they call for professional medical assistance.
That's right.
If he was having all of these problems and anxieties,
why didn't anyone call his family, call 911,
do anything to help him?
it is not corroborated by a single person
that Terrence Jr. had any type of anxiety.
You know, that that you just heard, that was his father,
Terence Wood, Sr., desperate for answers about his son.
Can you imagine your child just disappears and nobody will help you?
He was speaking to our new friends, Dion Mitchell, and Mahal, Angeria.
Dion, question, I got a problem whenever I hear
a cop, any LA law enforcement state, hey, don't tell anybody, but something's wrong here.
Here's the police report. I've had a big problem with that.
Yeah, that's not a good look. And it seems like everything just seems like too clean and too
perfect. And then what's being told and what actually happened just aren't coming together.
And I mean, there's, I can completely understand Terrence Wood's seniors just questioning
everything, especially when you get handed an envelope and say, hey, here's the real police report.
But somebody was trying to project a simple story to this that I think is a lot more complicated
than we know.
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Okay, wait till you hear this, Fitzgibbons. Wait to you hear this.
You told me, oh, we had to detain him. If you had an anxiety attack, why would you?
have to detain him somewhere.
No, but everything worked out.
You still didn't answer that question.
Well, everything worked out, and then we went on out, and the day was going along well.
They detain him?
He's one having anxiety, and they detain him?
Terrence Jr.?
This is, none of this makes sense.
When it doesn't make sense, somebody's lying, Fitzgibbon.
Yeah, I don't like that his personal belief.
belongings seem to be sanitized.
I don't like the delayed communication to family.
I don't like the fact that no one from the crew use their device to call law enforcement.
I still don't believe that they had no means to communicate out from that job site.
And now we're hearing, you know, they're telling the family member that there was a pretty significant issue,
that you had to physically detain somebody.
this is not adding up.
I don't get it either.
Mayhul, why would they detain him if he's having the anxiety issue?
To wonder if they're painting a picture that somehow Terence was a danger to them or something
because we had some claims about his incompetence,
and now he's having some sort of mental breakdown,
and they're potentially having to detain him.
What about calling for help?
What about caring for your coworker above the project?
It's not adding up.
And again, if we could interview the crew, which should have been done on day one,
we would have better answers to this because we have one representative for the crew,
which means that we don't have to look at are there different stories that aren't adding up?
So the narrative here is just not really reliable.
And this is why D.N. and I are involved in this case.
And this is why we want to initiate a proper investigation,
even though this has gone quite cold.
as we've discussed, there's a lot of evidence that can be looked at.
And let's cut through some of this hearsay stories.
Let's cut through eyewitness stuff.
And let's look for some physical evidence that we can really sink our teeth into.
Now you say, y'all out on the shoe.
And he's acting strange.
He tries to grab a drone out of the sky.
Still, no one sat him down, put him in a car, truck, whatever,
and got professional medical assistance.
But you all determined that this young man,
who've been all over the world,
never had an issue nowhere before.
He's with you all for this one trip.
And it's one morning,
although he was with you four days prior in Montana,
which you speak nothing of,
but that this one morning in Idaho,
he wakes up that morning,
have a mental breakdown starting the morning off,
and just lose it in the evening
and leap off a cliff and run like a head.
They have pictures on a Facebook page
with all of them in Montana,
My son is in none of the pictures.
They have pictures of them in Idaho.
My son is in none of the pictures.
Well, when I had the private investigator, he claimed, which I never got, that he had the footage from the hotel.
If I'm a sheriff, whatever, why don't they have the footage from the hotel?
So show me some pictures of my son walking in a hotel, walking out the hotel.
I have not seen any of that yet, no one, you know what I'm saying?
So where's that at?
Dave Mack, joining us, Crime Stories Investigator Reporter.
Why don't they have the video of the hotel, of him in the hotel?
to prove to me when he was last alive.
You know, Nancy, that is a shocking truism here
that we don't have a lot of basic information
that is readily available to everyone.
You know there's camera actions showing
what was taking place at the hotel.
You've got the front desk.
You've got computer records that would all back up
whether or not he was at the hotel
when he was there and when he left.
And as was mentioned, the shoot site is two hours away from the hotel, Nancy.
see, there's a lot of opportunity to find the, to actually build a correct timetable of what took place with this man before these stories that just don't make any sense.
One thing, Nancy, that you need to take in mind here, the area where they were working out in the woods, they claim that he took off like a hair.
Remember, he went over the cliff and he ran so fast, nobody could catch up with him.
Well, the one thing that the searchers came back was, is this area has not been touched by human hands.
hands for a long time. There's fallen trees on top of fallen trees on top of fallen trees.
You can't run in this area. It's an almost impossible task because it just isn't an area that's
cleared out regularly. So from the very beginning, the story fails with the facts presented on the
scene. I was supposed to speak to the whole crew. By the time I got there, it was only one person there.
They said that there's no reason for me to speak to anyone else. If you go to work today, I go to work
then I'm with coworkers. God forbid something happened. The first thing your family's going to say,
who was he with? Who was she with? Who are they with? If nothing's funny, nothing's out of line.
He's with Joe Blow, Mike, Sally, Pam. Because your family want to ask the people, hey, what took
place? But when you say, no, you cannot speak to nobody. And you get everyone out of the country,
really. So when I'm in the sheriff department that morning, now mind you, they don't know I have this
paperwork. So I said, why did you all say my son had?
a mental breakdown and leaped off a cliff. The dude Simon said, no one ever said that. I said,
well, why did you all say? My son was dark complexion. No one said that. The sheriff looks down.
He said, Mr. Woods. I have the 911 report right here in front of it. No, no one said anything like
that. When he blot lied to me and looked down at the paper, no one said that. No one said anything like
that, Mr. Woods. Where would you get something like that from? Mahal and Jerry are with us,
along with Dionne Mitchell, both of them,
stars of crime-redefined podcast.
Mayhul, who is Simon?
Simon G. was the lead producer on this shoot,
and he's the one who stayed behind
and talked to Terrence and the Idaho Sheriff
when the other crew members beat it back to the UK.
So Simon, the producer, is saying,
nobody ever has had a mental breakdown.
Nobody ever said that.
Nobody ever said he was dark-compleaded.
and the sheriff, according to Terrence's father,
looks down at the police report and goes, yeah, nobody ever said that.
But the father got the police report, and that is what it said.
Am I correct?
100%.
And this just throws in the shadow the fact that they're not turning over any reports.
And it makes you wonder, because look at the discrepancy in the actual report
versus what Simon and the sheriff are saying.
I mean, by God's good grace, Mr. Woods got that report from the individual at the Sheriff's Department.
Otherwise, we wouldn't even know about these inconsistencies.
And we learn about pages being ripped out of his diary.
What about it, Dionne Mitchell? Is that true? Pages ripped out of Terrence's diary?
Let me guess the pages leading up to him running off a cliff.
You know, that's the story. And once again, I'll say it's like the Sheriff's Department took everything that the
showrunner set at face value and really didn't do any extensive, you know, investigating or work
or trying to retrace Terrence's steps or anything like that. And it seems like, you know,
the room being spotless and everything packed up, no dirty clothes. It just seems like they're
trying to project that there's nothing to see here. And, you know, Mehal and I, we're just not buying
it. I'm not buying the fact that diary pages were ripped out. And there's more.
Anywhere my son go, he's going to take pictures. He's going to make it. He's going to take pictures of
itself in his camera.
He is no, nothing,
not nothing in it with my son
physical body. You would think
as soon as I opened up, you'd think all the pictures
that I would see would be the first pictures
of whatever he took while he was in Idaho
and Montana. You had pictures when he was
in Rome. I had a Rome pictures show up
before the Idaho pictures.
I couldn't find some of the pictures
into midway flicking new pictures.
The pictures that you just took
should not be, it shouldn't be
200 pictures in front of them.
50 pictures in front of them.
That means somebody went through them
and, you know what I'm saying?
Scattered them around or whatever.
Someone went through that.
That's Terrence's father speaking to our new friends,
Mahal and Jurya and Dion Mitchell.
Brian Fitzgibbon's,
that stinks to high heaven.
Look at your phone.
Look at your phone at the pictures you've taken.
They're in reverse chronological order.
That's how it goes.
I see the photo I took of my son last night.
That's the first photo I would see.
then it would go back in time to his fishing trip to my daughter dressed up to go to a grad party
I'm reeling it off in my mind about the photos that would appear in reverse chronological order
and the dad I just don't think he would make up this fact that he looked at his son's camera
his son is a photo bug he takes photos of everything and the Rome pictures from a Rome trip are
there and then scattered way back in the pictures the I don't know
a ho-trip? No, someone has tampered with a camera, Brian. Yes, tampered with the camera,
tampered with the clothes, tampered with the diary, inconsistent statements about his mental
state in those last days. You know, any one of these things, if it were associated with this case,
you might be able to explain it away. When you now have three, four, five things like this,
that jumps off the page. This doesn't make any sense.
You know, this is someone who's documenting moment to moment with, you know, high-end cameras, not only his phone, but his own personal equipment, that there's no photos or videos from him from this time.
Come on.
It's 32 degrees.
He runs down his hill.
What did he have on?
Oh, he had on, we believe, a light jacket and some pants.
His snowsuit, did I bought him before he left?
That's home with me.
He didn't have a snow suit on.
His secondary coat, heavy coat, I bought home with me.
So he's out in the woods.
Y'all all got on, winter coats everything.
But he's out there with a little jacket on.
No, no.
Dionne Mitchell, I have analyzed similar situations in the past
and I was trying cases and putting them together.
If the victim is wearing something inappropriate,
that's a big red flag, right?
Here he is on the side of a mountain
and he's not wearing a heavy coat.
No.
I completely agree. It just doesn't add up, and it kind of goes to what senior saying that he wasn't on the side of the mountain, but yet we have that eyewitness saying that he was. So you would think that someone from the city would be properly dressed about all this new gear. You'd be wearing it. And once again, the elevation of the shoot was at 4,400 feet. Sun goes over the hill. It gets cold in a hurry. So he would have brought it up. It would have been in the van, the transportation van. He would have went and got it. He should have been properly dressed.
for the shoot if you're going to be out there for, you know, to make your day, you know,
eight, nine, ten hours.
So we've got the pages leading up to his disappearance ripped from his diary.
We have no photos of him up on that mountaintop shoot.
We have claims of a sudden onset of mental illness,
a suicide but no body.
And let me guess, no cell phone?
I believe, yeah, there's no cell phone.
and we're going to try to see if once we get hold of the other information off the laptop,
if there's stuff on the cloud.
Because Terrence did document everywhere that he went.
And that's part of our goal is to kind of retrace the steps from landing in Missoula, Montana,
the drive-in and see if we can find witnesses along the way that can say,
okay, we can factually say he made it to this point before we move forward.
So, Mahul and Jiria, joining us from Crime Redefined Podcast,
it seems as if the last known sighting of him,
other than what the crew was saying,
was back at the hotel,
and then something went horribly wrong.
Correct.
There are some other eyewitness accounts.
For example, the night before he went missing,
supposedly he was seen at a restaurant chatting up a young lady
and getting her phone number.
So why wouldn't the police talk to that person
or try to find them to confirm that that actually happened and that he was in Idaho.
Well, he certainly doesn't sound depressed.
He is talking to a young lady and getting her phone number and then suddenly he jumps off a cliff,
but his body wasn't found, his clothing wasn't found, the scent dogs didn't pick up on it,
was he ever even there?
If you know or think you know anything about the disappearance of Terrence Woods,
Jr. Even if you think it is inconsequential, please contact crimeredefined.com.
Repeat, crimeredefined.com. Thank you to our guests, especially our new friends from
Crime Redefined, but especially to you for being with us in our search for Terrence.
Nancy Grace signing off. Goodbye, friend. This is an I-heart podcast. Guarant. Guarant. Guarant.
Tide human.
