Dark Downeast - The Disappearance of Michael Madore (Maine)
Episode Date: August 21, 2025When Michael Madore vanished almost 30 years ago, the first theories of his disappearance were pulled from letters found at his house: he was supposedly leaving behind his home and belongings and dogs... to start a new life in Alaska. That’s the story police in Milo, Maine, first heard when Mike was reported missing.But now, without any sign of life for nearly three decades and no indication that Mike made it to the Last Frontier for a fresh start, his sister and brother-in-law want answers. They want the truth. More than anything, they want to bring Mike home where he can finally rest. If you have information relating to the disappearance of Michael Madore, please contact Maine State Police Major Crimes Unit - North at (207) 973-3750, toll-free 1-800-432-7381, or leave a tip.View source material and photos for this episode at: darkdowneast.com/michaelmadore.Dark Downeast is an audiochuck and Kylie Media production hosted by Kylie Low.Follow @darkdowneast on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTokTo suggest a case visit darkdowneast.com/submit-case
Transcript
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When Michael Mador vanished almost 30 years ago, the first theories of his disappearance
were pulled from letters found at his house.
He was supposedly leaving behind his home and belongings and dogs to start a new life in
Alaska.
That's the story police in Milo-Maine first heard when Mike was reported missing.
But now, without any sign of life for nearly three decades and no indication that Mike made
to the last frontier for a fresh start,
his sister and brother-in-law want answers.
They want the truth.
More than anything, they want to bring Mike home,
where he can finally rest.
I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is the case of Michael Madur,
on Dark Down East.
The first call raising concern about,
the well-being and whereabouts of 32-year-old Michael Madore came into the main department of
inland fisheries and wildlife on April 8, 1996. A handwritten report later faxed to the Piscataquist
County Sheriff's Office by the Fish and Wildlife Warden Service details the call made by a friend of
Michael's named Matt. According to Matt, Mike was last seen that previous Saturday morning, April
6th, when he left his home in the village of Derby in Milo, Maine, without a coat, but wearing hip-waiter.
and possibly carrying a 357 firearm as he took off on his 10-speed bike.
Matt said that Mike apparently left a note behind, signing everything over to his girlfriend.
Matt wasn't sure of the girlfriend's name.
Two words are underlined in the middle of the page, possible suicide.
Matt requested a warden to escort him to a camp located two miles back into the woods in Lakeview
plantation.
It was an abandoned cabin that Matt's family had fixed.
up and claimed as their own, many people used it for hunting or fishing or just hanging out,
Mike knew it well. Matt said he found one set of bike tracks leading down the camp trail.
Two days after Matt's initial call, the warden service faxed the report to the Piscataquist
County Sheriff's Office. An incident report completed by Chief Todd Leiford contains further
summary of Matt's concerns. Mike reportedly left a note, giving all of his belongings to friends,
saying that he was leaving for Alaska.
However, according to Matt,
there was a handgun missing from Mike's house,
and at the time,
Mike was believed to be experiencing, quote,
personal problems, end quote.
By then, the warden service had identified
the name of the person Matt referred to
as Mike's girlfriend.
Other documents, however,
do not use that same label
to describe her relationship to Mike.
For privacy purposes,
we'll use only her first name, Peggy.
It turns out that the same day Matt contacted the warden service about Mike,
Peggy and her husband, David, had contacted the Milo Police Department, also concerned for Mike's
well-being.
The incident report was filed at 11.05 p.m. on April 8, 1996 by Officer Paul McManus of
the Milo Police Department.
According to the report, Peggy and David told Officer McManus that they last talked to
Mike around 1230 p.m. on the previous Saturday, April 6th.
and Mike said he wanted to see them at his house at 2.30 p.m. that same day. David reportedly thought
it was an odd request because Mike never wanted to see him, only his wife Peggy, quote, as they
have a very close relationship, end quote. Peggy and David explained to the officer that when
they arrived at Mike's house at 9 Railroad Avenue in Milo, they were surprised to find that Mike
wasn't there, but there were some handwritten letters along with a little bit of cash and a hatchet.
the letters all appeared to be written by Mike himself.
According to the Milo Police Incident report,
the shorter of the letters asked Peggy and David
to give the hatchet to Mike's brother.
A second handwritten letter was longer.
There are a few grammatical errors and missing words in the original.
Here's a voice actor reading the contents of that letter as written.
Hi, babe.
I'll be in Bangor slash Brewer till next Saturday, April 13, 96.
To get a feel of how it's going to be away from everyone and everything,
that's why I don't want to be contacted,
to see if I can do it and more so to prepare myself for going away.
Everything I'm leaving behind is your, Davids, and your kids after Saturday,
April 13, 96, including the money I left you,
a portion of what I had saved in the droolier box on desk by TV,
to use as you like and to feed dogs, etc.
I need you to be strong for me, and at peace with this, like I saw this morning.
You know how I feel about you, and I'm happy knowing you're in good hands.
P.S. I will have a good life in Alaska. I know you will have a good life here.
I left you most of the CDs. Make good use of them. We have the same taste in music.
Love always, Michael Joseph Madore.
Another handwritten letter gave Peggy and David instructions for his two dogs.
Dear David and Peggy, everything is yours.
I'll be making enough money to replace it all.
I only want my family, cupcake and thunder, to be cared for.
That's all I ask.
They're the only family I've ever had of my own.
Please don't separate them.
Love always, Mike.
As of April 13, 96, I, Mike Mador, leave my red Ford truck, black Toyota, 1987, Formula plus
snowmobile, my Honda 350X, three-wheeler, my LG blue boat and trailer, my kayak, and all miscellaneous
items to David and Peggy, signed Michael J. Madore.
Peggy told the officer that she realized several items were missing from Mike's house.
a pair of waiters, a 357 handgun, some CDs, a small portable radio, and a 10-speed bicycle.
In Peggy's opinion, and as is noted in the incident report,
the fact that these items were missing meant Mike wasn't really heading for Bangor,
but instead was more likely on his way to a camp in the woods that she knew well.
As far as I can tell, the report by Peggy and David,
and the earlier call to the warden service by Mike's friend Matt,
all refer to the same camp.
The report continues, quote.
Contact was made with Mike's brother Dick,
and he checked the camp, and sure enough,
bike prints slash footprints one way led out to the camp, end quote.
Dick reported that the camp was locked up from the outside,
and there was no indication that Mike was there.
The incident report states that multiple people had been to that camp over the weekend
looking for Mike, but hadn't found him out there at any point.
Though it doesn't mention exactly when in the report,
Peggy and David said they'd already brought Mike's photo around to hotels, motels, other businesses,
and even showed it to an officer in the Bangor Brewer area to see if anyone there had seen Mike,
but the effort turned up nothing.
As investigators checked Mike's house for themselves, they noticed something in the trash.
It was another handwritten letter, but this one was incomplete.
Here's the voice actor again.
Dear Peg, hi, babe, I'll be in Bangor until next Wednesday, April 10.
10th, 1996, to get a feel of how it's going, to be away from everyone and everything.
That's why I don't want to be contacted, to see if I can do it.
Everything I'm leaving behind is yours.
David's and the kids after next Wednesday, April 10th, 1996.
I'll be making enough money to replace it all.
I left you a portion of what I had saved, in jewelry box on desk by TV,
to use as you like, and to cover feeding the dogs that.
etc. After Wednesday, April 10th, 1996, the money's all yours. Keep the phone and electric going
as long as you like. Then, when you're done, just cancel them and don't pay any bills except.
It trails off mid-sentence like that, and there are a few words scribbled out before pay any bills
that can't be deciphered. Officer McManus wrote in the report that Peggy was concerned about
taking possession of Mike's belongings on April 13th as the completed letter instructed
them to do. The officer finally told Peggy after several mentions of the items that she could
take care of Mike's dogs, but she and David were not to take or dispose of anything inside or
outside of Mike's house until further notice. According to the report, Peggy had a key to the
residence. Peggy and David explained to Officer McManus that they believed Mike wanted to, quote,
get away from it all, and that he didn't want to deal with the possible death of his elderly
parents. The report also states, quote, and especially did not want to come between David and Peggy
anymore, end quote. Before Officer McManus cleared the scene and left Mike's house, David pulled the
officer aside to speak with him outside of the presence of his wife. According to the report,
he was concerned that Mike, quote, might have drowned in a bog that must be crossed to reach the remote
camp by one of the two main trails to the area."
After getting directions to the camp in question, Officer McManus contacted the sheriff's
department.
A plan was already in the works for an aerial search of the area around the camp to begin
at first daylight on April 9th.
In one of the only media mentions of Mike's disappearance from 1996 that I was able to
obtain, Beverly Wright reports for the Piscataquist observer that investigators conducted
a thorough air and ground search of the camp and surrounding woods,
which was located between the Devils Sletters Snowmobile Club
on Outer Pleasant Street in Milo and Lakeview Plantation.
A scent dog from the Charleston Correctional Facility sniffed the ground
while aircraft circled overhead.
Neither human nor dog found any sign of Mike that day.
At the time, the case was classified as an attempt to locate
and a well-being check.
But in the 29 years since that search, Mike has never been found.
It took years, but now his name and case has landed on the main state police unsolved missing persons list,
thanks to his younger sister, Terry Krause.
Mike's sister, Terry Krause.
Mike's sister Terry and her husband, John, have become Mike's voice and fiercest advocates in recent years.
It was Terry and John who reached out to me earlier this year and asked for help bringing awareness to Mike's case.
Terry remembers Mike as a typical Big Brother.
He picked on her in all the ways Big Brothers are programmed to do, but he was there when she needed him too.
He was always there. He was always, he cared. He's the one that, he was just,
my big brother, we grew up together. The others were grown. He was the only one allowed to torture
me. And I just remember him just, I remember him tying me to a chair. It was a game. He tied my arms
behind my back and then would go eat the cake that mom had just made or eat the brownies or stick his
hand up from under the bed and grab my leg. Things like that. He was good nature. He had a good personality,
a good sense of humor, but we lived in the kind of small town, the kind of neighborhood where
you went out until the streetlights came on, you gathered at somebody's house and played
epic games of hide and seek and things like that. We kickball. That was our childhood. It's what I
remember. They grew up in Brownville Junction. The small town exists in part because of the
railroad and the paper mills. Like so many of Maine's rural towns, the rail yards and mills were
a hub of employment and kept the local economy thriving.
One of the joys and maybe downsides of living in a small town like Brownville Junction,
there was always somebody keeping an eye on you.
Everybody knew you.
You couldn't get away with anything.
Somebody would call your parents.
But everybody knew you.
Everybody looked out for you.
Like other members of his family, Mike entered military service after graduating high school,
but that abruptly ended.
And he joined the Navy out of high school.
school. So I probably, he was 17, I would have been 14. He was discharged, and I don't know the
details. When we foiled the Navy, the Department of the Navy, we got some medical records,
but we didn't get reasons. We don't know what kind of a discharge he received or why. I know he did
get hurt while he was there, but I don't know why he was discharged. I spoke to Mike's former wife
as part of my reporting for this story. As far as she remembers, Mike's discharge may have
have been related to his mental health.
Mike returned to Maine after that
and decided to pursue a trade.
He went into, at the time it was called
EMVTI, Eastern Maine Vocational Technical Institute
in Bang, where he became a welder.
And he went down to Rhode Island.
He worked at a company that made submarines,
but like Mike's military career,
that job didn't last very long either.
And he came home, I don't know,
know if he was there two, two years, maybe a year or two. And then he came home, and I don't know
why he gave that up. And there was always a lot of secrecy, so I don't think he would have
told me if there was a reason. Mike struggled to hold down stable employment. After Rhode Island,
he was a security guard at a hospital for a little while, but other than that, he scrounged
for money and borrowed from family and did what he could to get by.
It just kind of went from job to job, a little bit listless.
though it seemed he hadn't yet found the right career path
as far as his personal interests go
Mike was passionate about his physical fitness
and being out in the wilderness
his former wife told me that she remembered Mike
and his friend Matt and Matt's brother
talking about being mountain men
and living off the grid, things like that
Mike had a very active lifestyle
but that lifestyle also appeared to morph
into what Terry and John described as an obsession
I think Mike had, he was trying to self-medicate through exercise and vitamins.
He was a bodybuilder.
He didn't drink.
He didn't use drugs that I've ever heard of.
And I think that was a form of self-medicating.
Again, those weren't, I don't think he had anybody to talk to about it.
So he overused vitamins and exercise.
Yeah.
To try to write himself.
Yeah, obsessively.
I would beg him, big him.
to ask for help at this time to go see a counselor or somebody.
And I begged him to go see a doctor, and he just, he never would.
But yeah, I was concerned, very concerned.
The root cause of Mike's internal battles might never be fully understood.
He rarely spoke about his struggles with his sister.
I think he was masking.
And I think once you put up that defense or that wall of denial,
it's hard to take it down maybe.
As I mentioned, Mike was married for a short time.
He and his former wife dated for about four years
and then got engaged while she was still in high school.
She told me stories about their tumultuous relationship
and the different side of him she saw once they got married.
Mike's moods were volatile and he could be violent around her.
She was honest about her feelings towards him at the end of their relationship.
She did not like him, but she was not unkind to his memory.
She has since reconnected with Terry and John to help their cause.
She wants to know what happened to Mike, too.
After Mike's divorce in 1990, Terry believes that Mike dated several people here and there.
She did not approve of his dating choices.
As is mentioned in some of the case file documents, Terry believes that Mike and Peggy
were in a romantic relationship at the time of his disappearance, while Peggy was married to David.
As of this episode's release, I haven't heard back.
from Peggy or David to ask them about this or anything else.
In the years before his disappearance, Mike had some run-ins with the law.
In 1991, he was found guilty of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.
In June of 1993, he was arrested for violating a protective order, but that charge was
dismissed when he pled to a different charge.
About a week after that arrest, Mike was arrested again, this time for another theft
by unauthorized taking or transfer charge, and he was convicted.
Mike was convicted of assault in 1994.
Records show that he was fined, but not sentenced to any jail time for these convictions.
Now the details of her brother's criminal history surprised Terry.
She only recently became aware of his charges and convictions.
Despite the secrecy and the private topics that didn't get discussed at family get-togethers,
it's not like Mike ever totally dropped out of contact with his siblings or parents before.
Mike was always, there was never a loss of
contact. It wasn't necessarily weekly or daily, but there was never a loss of contact.
There was no social media. There were no cell phones, but people were around. So he was always
around. He might show up on Sunday. He might show up in two weeks. He might call. At the very
least, he would ask for money. When Terry was getting ready to move to California in January of
1996, her big brother was there to help. So it was January of 96. He came and helped dad.
He was right there. He just called him up, and he showed up and helped her pack up her stuff to move to California. So he was always around. There was never a point where he's like, well, has anyone seen Mike lately? That was never a thing.
So when Terry heard that Mike had supposedly left on his bike to test out living on his own in preparation for a potential move to Alaska, and then he dropped out of contact completely, that didn't align with what she knew to be true about her brother.
But there were a few things about the details from the notes that were kind of sort of believable.
For example, Mike did like to bike places and often chose that method of transportation over the two vehicles parked in his driveway.
He rode his bicycle everywhere, even though he had, in the police report it said there were two trucks that he owned.
First, he would ride his bike to visit my parents, which involved two towns over, a huge hill.
So I know he was still, or I, my belief, he was still health conscious.
Mike was also fairly savvy in the woods.
Yeah, he was very knowledgeable in the woods and very comfortable in the wilderness.
To a point, in that area, there was.
were a lot of hunting camps that anybody went to. So I think he was comfortable in the wilderness
in that context. Could he go out in the middle of nowhere and survive? No, I don't think so.
I don't know about that, but there were camps and stuff he would go to and hunting camps with
friends. He knew his way around, though. Yeah. Yeah, he did. The details of her brothers
reported departure from his home to start a new life in Alaska doesn't make any sense.
to Terry now. But back in 1996, she was living out of state and not fully up to speed on what was
happening to track Mike down after that initial search of the area surrounding the camp.
According to the article from the Piscataquist Observer, Mike's brother Dick was pretty
confident Mike did go to Alaska at the time. It was Mike's dream to live there and he talked
about job opportunities being plentiful in America's last frontier. Dick believed that
Mike would turn up somewhere in the near future. He was just breaking
away for a bit to live on his own terms and would probably make contact with his family
soon. Nine years later when Mike and Terry's father passed away and his estate was moving through
probate, Mike was listed as an heir in the will with a specific instruction. Should four months
pass and Mike's whereabouts could not be established, he would not receive any portion of his father's
estate. On June 1st and June 8, 2005, probate notices were published in the Piscataquist Observer. Four
months passed and Mike's whereabouts could not be established. Mike hasn't contacted Terry
or any of his other family members in the last 29 plus years. As Terry learned in 2014, when
she requested Milo Police review his case, there's been absolutely no other activity to serve
as a sign of life since that April in 1996. Not one. No. Nothing. Nothing. No fingerprints, no ID,
no social security, no criminal activity.
Nothing.
On July 18th, 2014, Terry contacted Milo police officer Michael Larson
and asked him if he could look into Mike's disappearance.
According to the 2014 incident report,
Terry told Officer Larson she'd previously spoken with then-chief of police Todd Leiford,
who told her that Mike walked off and he'd probably turn up.
Mike had been missing for more than 18 years at that point.
On August 8th of that year, Officer Larson ran a triple-I search
which checks a national fingerprint-based index maintained by the FBI
and facilitates the exchange of criminal history records
between federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.
Officer Larson also checked NCIC and surfaced a brief criminal history prior to his disappearance,
but Mike had no criminal history after August 22, 1994.
Mike's fingerprints didn't show up in the system any time after that.
In all the years since he disappeared, Mike hasn't opened a bank account or touched any
assets, and he apparently abandoned the home that he owned in Milo.
Deed records show that liens were placed on the home for unpaid property tax and utility bills
throughout the years, both before and after Mike was last seen alive.
A claim for foreclosure was filed in Maine District Court in October of 1997.
Sometime in the last 29 years, an unrelated individual started paying the property taxes
on Mike's house, and correspondence from the town of Milo regarding the property was sent to
Michael Mador, care of this individual. As far as Terry understands it, after the house sat vacant
for a certain period of time, ownership was transferred to the person paying the bills. From what I've
been able to suss out, this is unrelated to Mike's disappearance. The man's name was on other
properties around the state of Maine, and he was a landlord. He may have acquired the property
through a process known as a tax lien sale, but I don't know for sure.
The individual died in 2022, so I can't ask.
Since she reached out to Milo PD in 2014 for an update,
both Terry and her husband John have shouldered the heavy burden of reinvigorating Mike's case.
They've had recent meetings with Maine State Police Detective Sergeant Greg Mitchell
and Detective Jacob Furland, who is currently assigned to his case,
but have also chosen to pursue answers on their own.
They reach out to possible witnesses, they comb through records and turn over every stone they can find,
trying to answer their biggest questions.
What really happened to Mike?
And where is he now?
Is it possible that Mike left home that Mike left home on his bike that day and began?
a journey to Alaska by way of Bangor, Maine?
Well, anything is possible, but based on the circumstances,
Terry and John feel it is highly improbable.
He had no money.
He wasn't prepared.
He hadn't packed.
He hadn't sold his things.
He hadn't, you know, he didn't have money.
How are you going to do that?
You're going to get to Bangor a little on Alaska.
Yeah, on a 10 speed.
Mike may have been known to bike to any destination,
but Alaska, or even Bangor,
seems like a stretch if you asked Harry and John.
Not to mention, historic weather data indicates that the temperature was between
zero and 37 degrees Fahrenheit before noon on April 6th, 1996, with 12 to 14 mile per hour
winds.
Translation, it was kind of cold for a bike ride.
We all daydream.
We all, oh, what if this, what if that, especially when you're young and you think
you have choices.
Yeah, and I'm sure it would have been a cool thing to do to go to Alaska.
done. So just because he voiced it doesn't mean he's going to jump on his 10 speed on April 6 and start
heading that way. Not even a mountain bike with decent tires on a 10 speed. You know, yeah. Terry takes issue
with the letters that were turned over to police reportedly written by Mike, particularly the fact
that two of the letters start out similarly, but one is unfinished, almost like a draft. Some of the
language changes between the two notes too. I find it odd there was a draft. If you're going to scribble a note
to a girlfriend, why, just to say, hey, here's a couple things for you.
Why do you need to make a practice note?
That doesn't make sense.
Let's dissect the letters a little more.
Both the unfinished version found in the trash and the completed letter appear to be written
by the same person, and they communicate the same basic message.
But when you really compare them, there's a noticeable tone shift and some details change, too.
The unfinished note feels like a rough draft.
We've said that.
It's focused on logistics.
It's kind of abrupt and emotionally distant.
The completed note, on the other hand, is more thoughtful and reads like a goodbye.
In the unfinished note, the author says he'll be gone until...
Next Wednesday, April 10th, 1996.
But in the completed note, he extends that to...
Next Saturday, April 13th, 96.
From a few days later, to a full week.
They both say he doesn't want to be contact.
during this time. In the unfinished note, it's simply
To see if I can do it. But in the completed note, he expands on that.
To see if I can do it and more so to prepare myself for going away.
In terms of what he's leaving behind, both notes mention that everything will be
Pegs, Davids, and the kids after he's gone. And they both reference some money he left.
The unfinished note focuses a lot on instructions.
Keep the phone and electric going as long as you like. Then when you're done, just canceled.
them and don't pay any bills except it kind of reads like a to-do list the completed note doesn't include any of that
instead he shifts towards more emotional and personal content he writes i need you to be strong for me
and at peace with this like i saw this morning referencing some kind of moment they shared before he left
he even reassures the recipient saying you know how i feel about you and i'm happy no
knowing you're in good hands.
The completed note goes a step further and talks about the future.
I will have a good life in Alaska.
I know you will have a good life here.
He even throws in a personal touch about music, saying he left her most of the CDs because
they have the same taste.
Then he signs it.
Love always, Michael Joseph Madore.
So to summarize, the unfinished note looks like a first attempt.
It's focused on logistics, kind of emotionally detached.
The completed note is much more intentional.
It adds emotional weight.
It offers reassurance.
And it reads like someone saying goodbye on their own terms.
Terry has scrutinized the handwriting on all the letters found at his house
and the signature on the completed letter.
And it does look like Mike's.
Somewhere along the way, a handwriting expert reviewed these notes.
And Terry told me the expert also believed it was Mike's handwriting.
If that's true, were the notes written by his own free will?
Under duress, add those to the list of questions.
If Mike did write those letters, it remains a possibility that he was planning to go away,
but perhaps not to Alaska.
The initial request for assistance by his friend Matt raised the concern that Mike might intend to harm himself.
Or maybe he was going to give life in the wilderness a chance,
but some sort of accident happened on Mike.
Mike's journey out there. David initially suggested to police that maybe Mike drowned in
a bog on his way to the camp. I reached out to Peggy and David as part of my reporting for this
episode, as the last people to see Mike back in 1996, whom Mike apparently left all his worldly
belongings and beloved dogs too, and who contacted Milo Police with their concern for his well-being.
I really hope to have a conversation with each of them. They did not respond to me, but
social media accounts that appear to belong to them have left public comments online in recent months.
A Facebook account appearing to belong to David has posted public comments on threads about Mike's case on that social media platform.
One of those comments reads, quote,
He wanted nothing to do with his family and probably changed his identity, end quote.
The account appearing to belong to David also referred to himself as only an, a quote,
of Mike.
Terry and John participated in an interview about Mike's case
live streamed on YouTube and Facebook earlier this year.
A user appearing to be Peggy, commented during the stream,
saying that Mike's older sister read the letters he reportedly left behind
and helped clean out his house after he disappeared.
Terry's not sure if that happened.
I also contacted the first person that, according to reports,
sounded the alarm about Mike, his friend Matt.
Matt was transparent with me that he struggles with his memory
and he had a hard time remembering specifics about that time in April of 1996.
He was surprised when I asked about calling the warden service out of concern for Mike
because he doesn't remember doing that.
However, Terry spoke with Matt's brother who said he remembers calling the warden service.
So maybe he and Matt were together when he made the report
but only Matt's name made it into the multiple documents?
Maybe everyone is misremembering?
Not sure.
Matt told me a second-hand story that he heard about two people getting stuck in the woods with Mike's truck around the time Mike disappeared.
Someone saw the two people, asked if they needed help, and they said no.
Matt doesn't know who told him the story, or who the two people might have been, but they were seen in the woods off Alderbrook Road in Lakeview Plantation.
Without being able to trace the origins of that story, it's hard to make anything of it.
But let's say Mike's truck was out in the woods after he disappeared.
Was his truck later searched or processed for evidence?
He signed both of his trucks over to Peggy and David in those letters he supposedly wrote
before he disappeared, but what actually happened to the trucks?
Because Mike's case was treated as an attempt to locate and well-being check at the beginning,
that means it wasn't treated as a criminal investigation, and so I'm inclined to believe that no
evidence was collected.
There was no sign of foul play.
The letters made it seem like Mike left on his own accord
and no one has proven that true or false
with any degree of certainty since.
One more thing about Matt.
Interestingly, he actually moved to Alaska
sometime after Mike disappeared,
possibly the very next year, 1997.
I asked Matt if he ever saw Mike in Alaska
or if Mike ever called him
or caught up with him there
since that's where he was supposedly heading when he vanished.
But Matt never saw Mike in Alaska
and hasn't heard from him since 1996.
With no sign of life from Mike in almost 30 years,
the only possible explanation that makes sense to Terry and John
is that Mike is deceased and not living in Alaska or elsewhere.
If he took his own life or died in an accident on his way to a camp in the woods,
where is his bike he reportedly rode that day?
Where are his remains?
Would he have been found already if either scenario was true?
Would his body have been recovered during the initial aerial and ground search around the camp back in April of 1996?
There's a lot that we don't know about the initial investigation or contemporary efforts by local authorities and Maine State Police.
I contacted Maine State Police Detective Sergeant Greg Mitchell of Major Crimes Unit North to ask about Mike's case.
I received this in response.
quote. Thank you for the message. It is the longstanding policy of the main state police not to comment on active criminal investigations beyond formal press releases. So we are declining your current interview request. End quote. Mike's case is an active criminal investigation according to Sergeant Mitchell's response. That said, no one has been charged with any crimes as it relates to Mike Madore's disappearance. Police have not publicly identified any sense. Police have not publicly identified any sense.
suspects. Terry and John are of the opinion that someone, or multiple someone's, caused Mike's death
and disposed of or concealed his remains in some yet-to-be-uncovered location. Their priority now is
to find him, and they'll continue to work independently to make that happen. Based in part on
a rumor they've heard about Mike's whereabouts in recent years, they arranged for a search of
private property by an out-of-state cadaver dog and the dog's handler.
In mid-July of 2025, after receiving consent from the current property owners to conduct the search, the dog was on site.
According to information I received from a source close to the family's search effort,
the dog showed interest in a specific area of the property.
Plans are in the works to return to the location with ground-penetrating radar.
At minimum, the search effort could eliminate a location and refine the effort to find Mike.
but it is Terry's greatest hope that it leads them to her brother once and for all.
I want his remains.
I want to get a plot and I want to have a headstone.
I'm not asking anybody else to pay for that.
We're going to pay for that.
I want to have him buried because when I die, who's going to remember him?
Mike was not a perfect person.
His sister and brother-in-law never tried to present him as such.
However imperfect he may have been, he had a right to his own life.
was full of life. He was full of life. He had a right to try to turn things around. Somebody else's
life is not yours to take away. And yeah, just because he was having issues as an early adult.
He still had a family that loved him and cared about him. He had family that loved him and cared
about him. And he was a fun loving guy. And he was full of life, full of potential. I would like to
think he was going to turn his life around. But he will never know. He never had the chance. And they
didn't have the right to take it away.
He's still a brother.
He's someone's brother.
He's someone's uncle.
He's someone's son.
My parents died.
My poor little old parents didn't deserve that.
They were nice people.
They were good people.
They didn't deserve that.
They died not knowing.
Until Mike has found, his disappearance lingers like a question mark on the family tree.
It is a missing limb that reshapes the entire structure, where there should be stories,
roots, connections, there is only silence and speculation.
Mike's name hangs in the branches, not with the certainty of dates and descendants,
but with ellipsies.
His is a life paused mid-sentence, and that uncertainty can echo for generations,
leaving future family members to wonder not just where he went,
but who they might have been if he had stayed.
We have, you know, kids that never got to know their uncle.
Now, he would have been the uncle that pulled my finger uncle.
I mean, he would have been the fun one.
And I've talked to my kids about carrying on.
I hope it doesn't go that long.
It's something we've got to put in our will if it's not resolved.
Because I want to have, he has a right to be remembered.
He was loved.
He was loved and he's remembered and he's missed.
And he deserves peace and the family deserves peace.
If you have information relating to the disappearance of Michael Madore,
please contact Main State Police Major Crimes Unit North at 207-973-3750 or toll-free 1-800-432-7381.
You can also leave a tip using the form linked in the description of this episode.
Thank you for listening to Dark Down East.
You can find all source material for this case at Darkdowneast.com.
Be sure to follow the show on Instagram at Darkdowneast.
This platform is for the families and friends who have lost their loved ones
and for those who are still searching for answers.
I'm not about to let those names or their stories get lost with time.
I'm Kylie Lowe, and this is Dark Down East.
Dark Down East is a production of Kylie Media and Audio Check.
I think Chuck would approve.