Dateline: Missing In America - MISSING: Alexis Ware
Episode Date: August 16, 202229-year-old Alexis Ware was last seen around 7:30 p.m. at a 7-Eleven off Highway 29 in Anderson, South Carolina on January 30, 2022. Calls to her phone went directly to voicemail after that. On Feb...ruary 1, Alexis was officially reported missing. Alexis’s mother, Alberta-Gray Simpkins, and half-brother, Travis Ware, speak with Dateline’s Andrea Canning about the disappearance. Alexis was last seen wearing a black bonnet, a black jacket with a purple shirt, blue jeans, and black Crocs. Alexis has multiple tattoos and dimple piercings. She has long black hair and brown eyes, is about 5’6” and weighs around 215 lbs. If you have information, please contact the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office at (864) 260-4405 or CrimeStoppers at 1-888-CRIME-SC.More photos and information can be found at DatelineMissingInAmerica.com
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Cool Chris Bear was settling in across South Carolina.
Inside her Greenville apartment, 29-year-old Alexis were snuggled into bed.
It was Sunday, January 30, 2022.
After a three-day visit at her mom's house, the exhausted mother of two laid her head down
on the pillow for an afternoon nap.
The weekend had been filled with family, food, and lots of love and hugs,
but was winding down, and a fresh start to a new week was on the horizon.
But before Alexis closed her eyes, her phone rang. It was her mom.
Her exus closed her eyes, her phone rang. It was her mom.
As usual, she was checking in on Alexis
to make sure she made it home safe and sound
after her 80 mile drive home.
When she left, she told me that she was just exhausted
and when I felt like she should be home, I called her.
So that was around three o'clock.
And she answered the phone right away. We were on video so I could see that she was in her bed.
That's Alexis's mother, Alberta.
She said, Mom, I'm just so tired.
She said, I'm laying down, taking a nap.
And I call you when I get up.
That never happened.
Alberta Gray Simkins hasn't spoken to her daughter
since that video call hasn't laid eyes on Alexis's smile
and pierced impulse.
Alberta is haunted because while Alexis spent
quality time with family that weekend,
it hadn't exactly been the peaceful getaway she'd hoped for.
She just wasn't herself, her mom remembered.
Alexis had told her she was afraid, afraid of something, or someone.
And maybe she had good reason.
After that, Alexis were vanished.
It's all very confusing to her family, but one thing her mom knows for sure, without
a doubt, Alexis didn't leave on her own.
She would never leave her kids.
That's how I knew something was wrong.
She would have just never left her kids like that.
And this is the longest her children
has been without her.
Now, her family has questions.
I feel that he knows more than what he's telling us, yes.
As investigators follow a trail of clues,
did it suggest possible foul play?
Maybe it is uncommon that you would leave something
left behind in a vehicle.
I'm Andrea Canning, and this is Missing in America,
a podcast from Dateline.
The Missing Persons case of Alexis Ware,
a devoted mother of two
is a mystery. But you might hold the final puzzle piece in the picture of what happened
to her. Maybe you can help crack a case that has left her family in an agonizing limbo.
I'm still confused. There's a lot of questions that I want answered. It just don't make sense.
It does not make sense to me.
Alberta says Alexis was bubbly, cheerful, and outgoing. Her brother, Travis Ware, says that's the way she always was.
My big sister, Alexis, she's the life of the party.
I love to say that.
Anywhere she goes, she just lights up the room.
First and foremost, before she's the makeup artist,
hair stylist, before any of that, she's a mother.
When she loves her two kids, my niece is my nephew.
Those are proud and joy.
So she's a mother before anything.
But she truly was just a light that could shine
anywhere she went.
Alberta describes her daughter as compassionate and ambitious. Lexus is a wonderful girl, very outspoken.
She's a go-getter, whatever she strives to do, she makes it happen.
Being a mom to a nine-year-old daughter and her two-year-old son with her ex-boyfriend,
TJ Patterson, was her number one priority.
It's because of her children that she was determined
to build a life for herself and for them.
Alexis had big plans to take the social media world
by storm with her own personal brand,
as she told her mother.
My, I'm just gonna go hard.
You know, I'm gonna go ahead and open up my platforms
on Facebook, YouTube, TikTok.
I gotta make some changes in my life
because I want better for my kids.
Her kids was her driving force.
She was also about to make a big change.
She had just gotten approved to break her lease
and move to Atlanta.
Her goal was to open up a boutique
because she was into fashion.
She was gonna open up a boutique because she was into fashion.
She was going to open up a boutique.
She wanted to open up her own salon.
And let's just have a business license.
She has a whole bunch of stuff that you would put in a boutique as far as the clothing racks
and she even started stacking up on the shoes and the merchandise that she was going to
place in the boutique.
A move to Atlanta would also bring her geographically closer to her little brother, Travis.
That weekend at her mom's house, she told Alberta about her dreams and goals and a better life for her kids.
It seemed like it was all finally coming together for Alexis, especially on the social media front.
Alexis knew her way around Facebook and Instagram. She regularly appeared in photos on the platforms,
but her online presence had a downside
that was bothering her.
Men were using social media
to send her unsolicited messages.
She labored a man's creepy man.
That was one of the reasons why even though she loved fashion
and wanted to do the modeling with
Instagram, that was her biggest fear. She was scared to do photo shoots. She talked about if she
went on these different photo shoots not being able to defend herself if someone tried something.
But her fears went beyond social media. That weekend, Alberta says
Alexis was getting phone call after phone call from the same number. That particular
Saturday she kept getting a phone call all day. She didn't know who it was. And she was
like, look, look, how is this number getting through? I have it in block. And she would
go to her block list and actually show me this number being through? I have it in block and she would go to her block list
and actually show me this number being in our block list.
When I asked her who it was, she called in the devil.
And even worse, she told her mom, someone was following her.
She had gotten to the Zodiac signs.
She read so much about her Zodiac sign.
And she kept saying that she could see different things
that was going to happen.
She would tell us to pay attention to the roads.
She would tell us to pay attention to certain colors.
She even said that it was a black truck following her.
Then, Alexis shared a grim prediction with Alberta, something that she felt in her
bones about her own fate.
She got here that Friday evening, and I fed her in the kids, and she just laid down and
went to sleep, and then that Saturday, she was telling me that she didn't feel like she would see her 30th birthday.
And I'm like, why do you feel that way?
She wouldn't tell her mom more than that, but Alberta prodded and persisted.
And I asked her to tell me why she felt that way.
She just kept saying that she knew that she wouldn't see her 30th birthday.
That birthday was just two months away.
Alberta feared for her daughter so much
that she urged her to stay.
She had agreed to stay, but then when she decided to go,
she was like, I'm okay.
She really fooled me because she did her hair.
She did her makeup. She put lashes on, she got herself
showered and dressed, she was looking really nice.
She was, I guess, trying to make me believe that she was okay.
And in my mind, I'm like, I can't really force her to stay.
Against Alberta's wishes, Alexis made the trek back to her home in Greenville.
Sunday turned to Monday, with no further word from Alexis.
Her increasingly concerned family couldn't locate her.
But they remembered that she told them
she had some lottery tickets
and planned to go to the state lottery office
in Augusta, Georgia on that Monday.
She was going to the main corporate office.
I don't know if she had one of the tickets or not,
but she had several tickets.
And she had an appointment that she had me
to go to the pet quarters.
She never showed.
It was also strange.
One day, she's getting calls from someone
and she's calling the devil and she's saying
she might not make it to her 30th birthday.
The next day, she vanishes.
Right.
She knew that something, I mean day, she vanishes. Right.
She knew that something, I mean, she was scared for a reason.
I didn't know.
I've been trying to figure it out.
Like, what is it that she didn't tell us?
On Tuesday, the Panicked Family reported Alexis missing.
Alexis, where is a 29-year-old female that was reported missing to us back on February
1st of this year, by relative of hers? That's Sergeant Jeff Finley with the Anderson County Sheriff's
Criminal Investigation Division. He says after the family made that report, his department got to
work. And soon, investigators would find a big clue, caught on camera.
As investigators began looking into the disappearance of Alexis Ware, they discovered that once
she got home from her weekend at her mom's, she had not stayed at home. Investigators found surveillance video showing Alexis at a gas station, just four hours
after chatting from her bed, on that video call with her mom.
Deputy's determined that at about 7.30 pm, Alexis pulled into the 7.11 gas station on
Highway 29 in Anderson, South Carolina, which borders the Georgia State line.
The station is about 40 minutes from her home.
She was wearing a black jacket, grey jogging pants, black bandana,
and she was in her red 2019 Honda cord.
Sergeant Finley says there was someone else who could be seen in the gas station video.
Alexis's ex-boyfriend and the father of her son, TJ Patterson. Investigators believed
they were at the station so Alexis could hand the kids off to him, but the video didn't
tell the whole story.
Unfortunately, a lot of the video is actually blocked by a trailer that comes into view,
but you can't see that they're both there, separate vehicles, and doesn't appear any
struggle or anything or anything that's going on this bad.
Do you see her putting the kids in the X's car?
That's all blocked by the track track that shows up to drop off deliveries.
Were there any witnesses who saw her putting the kids in the car?
Are we basing this on the X's account of what happened?
How do we know that that's what happened at that gas station? Or do we not know? We do from the X's account of what happened, how do we know that that's what happened at that gas station?
Or do we not know?
We do from the X's account of things going on.
According to Sergeant Finley, the X told investigators that Alexis planned on following him to his mom's house.
If they were going to the same location, why would these two meet at the gas station
and he puts the kids in his car if she's following him there anyway?
Well, she was low on gas. She had texted him earlier in the day asking to meet so she could
gas money from him because she didn't have enough gas money to get anywhere.
Still though, I understand then why they might meet but why put the kids in his car if they're
both going to the same location. That I can't answer you. Do you find that suspicious?
Could be.
Were there any witnesses who saw her behavior,
anything that can help the investigation?
None that have come forward.
TJ told police that the gas station
visit ended with him and Alexis heading off
in the same direction.
Essentially, they both pull out the gas station,
they take a left, and she speeds away, away from him.
And just like that, Alexis vanished.
Alberta finds it strange that she never told her
about any plans to meet up with TJ
to drop the children off.
She says it was TJ who told her about it.
I didn't even know anything about her,
even leaving her apartment until he called me.
What did he say?
That have I talked to Lex and I said no.
Last time I talked to Lex, she was there home in her bed.
That's when he told me about, she called him when she got to Anderson and it told him that
she was running out of gas. So he said that he asked her if she could
make it to 7-Eleven gas station and he put gas in her car. She gave him the kids. He said he asked
her what she was going. He said that she told him that she was coming to my house. It didn't make
sense but that's what he told me. She had just left me. I never heard from her.
I never talked to her for her to tell me
that she was on her way down here.
She never made it here.
Lexus' brother Travis has a lot of questions
about the gas station meetup.
The only story we have really to go off of
is her child's father.
And I don't feel that he physically did any harm to her,
but I do feel that he knows more than when he has said.
And at this point, I have not spoken to him
because I don't feel comfortable speaking to him quite yet.
And I don't want to accuse him of anything.
But if you know something more, please say something
at this point, because not her kids have been affected.
Your son has been affected by this now.
Did she have a good relationship with him?
Was there any concern that maybe he might have done something after they left?
The 7-Eleven?
That part honestly we don't have once they left the gas station.
Only thing we have is what he said.
And that's, they got to to the red light she went around.
You see the cars leaving and that's it.
That's it.
This is all about she vanished and then yeah.
I feel that he knows more than what he's telling us.
We called TJ and requested an interview.
He declined.
But he did shed light on what he believed Alexis's plan was for that evening.
He says Alexis was supposed to follow him to his mom's house after the gas station,
and then had plans to return to her mom's house, but he says Alberta didn't know about
that.
Then came another lead in the case.
Investigators discovered that after Alexis left the 7-11 around 7-30 and allegedly
sped past TJ's car, her car was seen somewhere else. This time at an apartment
complex in Anderson, which is nowhere near her mom's house.
We do know her vehicle was spotted on that same night, a couple times, in that
complex, but that's really all I can speak on about it. Is this because it's an ongoing investigation,
you can't provide more details about her,
whereabouts after she disappeared?
Did someone see her at the apartment complex in Anderson?
I can't speak on that.
Alberta heard about the sighting and went to the apartment complex
with a stack of flyers, with her daughter's photo printed on them.
Everybody that we talked to said that they didn't know her,
and they didn't know why she would be there.
Alberta says Alexis had never mentioned this apartment complex,
or anyone she might have known there.
Nevertheless, her car was seen there about an hour and a half
after leaving the gas station, leaving Alberta trying to piece together
what happened that night.
after leaving the gas station, leaving Alberta, trying to piece together what happened that night.
Whatever happened to my child happened,
immediately after that gas station stop.
The only thing she kept telling us is she felt like she was
being followed, that she was being watched.
And I do believe that for this to happen right after
separating herself from her children
That someone saw that someone saw her separate herself from her children at that gas station
For Alberta, it's all just mind-boggling. I
Been racking my brain trying to figure out what could have happened to my child You know, it's a lot of rooms and speculations going on. But I'm just wondering if it was a stalker.
She was scared of something. She was scared of somebody. She just didn't tell me who.
But investigators were about to get another break in the case. Something was found in yet another town, something that would change everything.
I want to take you on a road trip, about 50 miles south of Anderson, South Carolina.
That's where the quaint, small town of McCormick sits.
It was once known for its prosperous gold mines.
But on Groundhog Day of this year, there were no shiny gold nuggets to be found.
Still, something else, perhaps more valuable was unearthed.
A 2019 Red Honda Accord.
Well, in February 2nd, her vehicle was located in McCormick County, which is a good way
away from our location here.
There's no signs of foul play at the vehicle.
A property owner had spotted Alexis's car on a dirt road about an hour's drive from
where it had last been seen at that apartment complex.
And it was in an unlikely spot.
Police say it had been there for a couple of days.
Because it was logging season in the area,
the property owner assumed that it was a logging worker's vehicle.
It was a heavily wooded area with some trails cut by construction equipment.
But mostly wooded area.
Is it the kind of area that a car would normally just be sitting in?
No.
This was odd that her car was in this wooded area,
I would imagine.
Yes, it was.
What's also abnormal was what was left behind.
Inside Alexis's car, her cell phone,
her purse, and a bag of clothes in the trunk.
Also inside the car, police found those lottery tickets
she told her mom about.
Generally, I mean, it suggests she wasn't robbed.
There was not a motive of any kind of robbery going on there.
So, we can eliminate that.
Did it suggest possible foul play?
Maybe. It is uncommon that you would leave something left behind in a vehicle.
You instantly go gravitate towards
that maybe some fire play was involved,
but as if yet nothing has been found.
No theories are off limits.
And the black hair bonnet referred to as a bandana
by Sergeant Finley, that she was last seen wearing
at the 7-11 was laying on the ground just outside her car.
Was that suspicious to you the fact that a woman's
hair bonnet would be outside of an abandoned car?
Yes, it could be. What they didn't find inside her car was blood or any fingerprints other than
Alexis's to help point to any leads. And Alexis, she was nowhere to be found in this small rural
community. We're according to her family, she had zero ties. So on February 8th, a little more than a week after she vanished,
ten law enforcement agencies, including more than 30 personnel,
manned a grid search, covering more than 200 acres near where her car was found.
It was essentially all hands-on deck,
scouring nearly four square miles on the ground and from the air.
An aerial map was produced, and and we actually divided it off into teams with a
canine and their handler to be sure that every area amongst that we had drawn
out was covered. But as the Anderson County Sheriff told Dateline earlier this
year, it was like trying to find a needle in a haystack. Despite all of their
searches, authorities never located any further evidence.
Alexis' family also conducted some of their own searches
in McCormick.
We went to McCormick.
My daughter didn't know anything about McCormick.
So I feel like for her car to be left in McCormick,
someone that knew that area, they said car there.
What do you make of that when there's just so little
to go on?
I mean, we're not uncommon.
We have cases all the time that we don't have any evidence,
and then we just have to do our work and develop them.
At the family's request, the FBI joined the investigative
efforts two months after Alexis
went missing.
Is that normal for, you know, if the family requests something like that, is that normal
for the FBI to get involved?
It's the case by case basis.
Sergeant Finley says the investigation remains open and ongoing.
Are you looking at the X?
Do you think that he might have had something to do with this?
Uh, we're pursuing all possibilities. Nothing has been ruled out.
No suspects have been named.
For her part, Alberta doesn't think TJ had anything to do with her daughter's disappearance.
She's more troubled by what was on her daughter's mind that weekend.
The reason why I feel that he has nothing to do with it because I know the conversations that
me and my daughter had as far as she would call them creepy men and her
inbox and her messaging her. The fact that she felt like she was being
followed, I don't think TJ did any of that. At this point, Sargent Finley says his
department doesn't have a leading theory about what happened. They tell us
they're working hard as they can to solve this mystery because it's like
she just vanished.
I knew something was wrong from the beginning because she would never have walked away
from her vehicle in the middle of nowhere.
You would have to know that area.
No one walked away from the area.
Not a female anyway.
Her keys, her phone, her purse, everything was in the car.
That's very unlikely.
One way the family is showing how desperately they want
and need Alexis home is the new billboard they recently erected in Greenville
along one of the busiest roads in the city.
Large, bold white letters on a red and black background
read, Missing, Alexis Ware, last scene,
1 30, 2022 in Anderson, South Carolina.
The words are boarded by two photos of Alexis
and also include the hashtag in red letters,
help us find Alexis.
We're still fighting, we're still bringing awareness,
we're still praying, and we're still going to spread their awareness until my sister's found.
In March, Alexis's 30th birthday arrived We just tried to make the best of it.
We had shirts made with her 30th birthday
and a picture of her own it.
And had a cake with edge-to-edge white and burgundy buttercream
roses, framing a portrait of Alexis.
But Alexis wasn't there to blow out her candles and make a wish.
It's hard for her whole family, but perhaps even harder for her children who can't understand
where their mom is or why she hasn't come home to them.
Alexis' daughter, who lives with Alberta, remains steadfast in her belief that she'll see
her mom again.
I owe this granddaughter.
She believes that her mom is coming home
and we stay with that.
She doesn't want to hear anything different.
She said to me, when she come back, Gigi,
you can't let her leave here.
She said, just lock her up and make her stay here
for about a year.
Alberta often thinks back to that last weekend and those conversations she had with her daughter.
She thinks about Alexis' decision to drop the kids off with her acts,
and she shared a theory with us that Alexis made the handoff for a very good reason.
That Sunday, when she was getting dressed, she was talking about her kids and she said,
Mom, I have to put my kids first. Lord forbid something to happen to me with my
kids in the car with me. And I said, why do you say that? She didn't tell me why
she felt that way. So when I found out that she had gave the kids to TJ, the first
that that came to my mind was that she did what mothers do, protect their children.
She felt like there was something wrong.
She felt like she was being followed.
I felt like when he said she hit the gas
and spread away from him,
I felt like she created a separation
between her children and herself.
She wanted her children out of harm's way.
And I said she did what moms do, protect their children.
For Alberta, the not knowing is excruciating.
Lord, I miss my child every day.
I keep asking God to send me a clue, help me.
Sometimes I sit in the car by myself
away from the kids and I just have my moments.
Just rackin' my brains trying to figure out what happened.
What do I need to do?
Show me, guide me.
Sergeant Finley is holding out hope
that they will find her alive.
We don't have any leading either one way or the other.
We just have the hope that she's still alive somewhere.
This is where you can help bring Alexis home to her family,
to her two children.
Alexis has multiple tattoos, including a feather on one hand and a rose on the other.
She has dimple piercings, long black hair, and brown eyes.
If you know something about her disappearance,
call the Anderson County Sheriff's Office
at 864-260-4405.
Or you can submit information through Crime Stoppers
at 1-888-Crime-SC.
For now, Alberta's message to her daughter is simple.
I love you.
I miss you, your children need you,
and we want you home.
To see pictures of Alexis and learn more
about other people we've covered
in our Missing in America series,
go to DatelineMissingInAmerica.com.
There, you'll be able to submit cases
you think we should cover in the future.
Thanks for listening.
Missing in America is a production of Dateline and NBC News.
Jessica Noll is the producer of this episode.
Jonathan Moser is the audio editor.
Logan Johnson is associate producer, additional reporting by Veronica Mosaica.
Susan Null is senior producer, Adam Gorfain is co-executive producer, Liz Cole is executive
producer, and David Corain as co-executive producer, Liz Cole as executive producer, and David
Corvo is senior executive producer.
From NBC News Audio, Bryson Barnes is technical director, sound mixing by Bob Mallory, Nina
Bisbano is associate producer.
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