Going West: True Crime - Elaine Park // 469
Episode Date: January 17, 2025In January of 2017, a 20-year-old aspiring actress in Los Angeles went missing after abruptly leaving her boyfriend’s Calabasas home in the early morning hours after seemingly suffering a panic atta...ck. Days later, her car turned up on the Pacific Coast Highway in nearby Malibu, but she was nowhere to be found. Investigators are still hoping that the multiple clips of surveillance footage available and the strange happenings on her phone in those early hours will help bring much-needed resolution. This is the story of Elaine Park.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What is going on true crime fans? I'm your host T and I'm your host Daphne and you're listening to going west
Hello everybody. Hope you're doing well today
This case has been on our radar for a while.
It's local to where I grew up.
It's just one of these weird disappearance cases that is in this part of LA that we're
going to talk about a little bit later because there's a few of them.
Actually one of which we already covered on the show, but this case came to you by Kelsey,
Nahal, Matthew and Lauren.
So thank you all for showing interest in us covering this one.
Yeah, I was telling Daphne this morning that I felt like we had covered this case because
I knew all the details of it. So it's kind of funny. I must have researched it like sometime
in the past and we just never covered it. But thankfully we are covering it today.
Yeah, we have been wanting to cover this one for a while, so you probably did look into
it like a couple years ago.
I'm sure I did, yeah.
And by the way, I just want to let you guys know, all you new listeners, Going West does
not just cover West Coast cases.
We cover cases from all over the country, and on our bonus series, we do cover international
cases.
Yeah, this case today, like I said, it's local to me, it's local to us. This
is a Los Angeles case. So yeah, the last one we covered was a San Francisco case. The one before
that was another LA case. Yeah, actually, fun fact, to go west means to die or disappear. It's an old
English term. So when Heath and I started this podcast in late 2018, we were like, what's like
a unique
name we could come up with that doesn't have true crime in the title or murder or something.
So that's what that means.
We just happen to be doing a lot of California cases right now for absolutely no reason.
But anyway, without further ado, let's dive right into this one.
All right, guys.
This is episode 469 of Going West, so let's get into it. In In January of 2017, a 20-year-old aspiring actress in Los Angeles went missing after
abruptly leaving her boyfriend's Calabasas home in the early morning hours after seemingly
suffering a panic attack. Days later, her car turned up on
the Pacific Coast Highway and nearby Malibu, but she was nowhere to be found.
Investigators are still hoping that the multiple clips of surveillance footage
available and the strange happenings on her phone in those early hours will help
bring much needed resolution. Music Elaine Park was born on September 24th, 1996 to parents Susan and Ray Park, joining an
older brother named Dustin.
Her parents divorced when she was about 10, and they later claimed that young Elaine took
it really hard, suffering from intermittent depression as a result of their split.
But this definitely didn't dampen her free spirit as a whole because
she was described by those who knew her best as spunky, creative, bubbly, magnetic, and outgoing.
And she was a born performer. She loved to act, and she was a very gifted dancer.
Elaine grew up in La
Crescenta, California, which is a neighborhood in Los Angeles County, so
they really took advantage of the opportunities that this afforded her in
the entertainment world. She did background work in films like Role
Models and Crazy Stupid Love and TV shows like ER and Desperate Housewives.
She attended Crescenta Valley High School
because La Crescenta is just kind of on the outskirts
of the San Fernando Valley.
It's like at the end of the valley.
It's a bit more inland and she was a cheerleader
at this high school and she had a ton of friends.
She also loved to rap and in particular
she enjoyed writing her own raps,
even recording them and putting them out on social media.
After graduating from high school,
Elaine began studying part-time at a local college
while living with her best friend, Daisy.
But a series of unfortunate circumstances
led to her moving back home with her family,
which seemed to be one of many precursors
to her very sudden disappearance.
The first took place in the summer of 2015 when 18-year-old Elaine was sexually assaulted
at a concert.
On July 27, 2015, Elaine and her best friend Daisy, along with a few other friends, went
to a concert at the observatory in Santa Ana,
California.
Now, this is a well-known venue in nearby Orange County.
It holds about 1,200 people.
And the show Elaine and her friends were at that July featured Playboy, Cardi, and Father,
among others.
Now, Elaine and Daisy were actually invited backstage by Father's tour manager.
And according to
Daisy, Elaine was drinking and taking Xanax, and she was quite out of it by the end of
the night.
At some point, Elaine was raped by someone or perhaps even multiple people while backstage
when she was too incoherent to consent, just trying to let loose and have a fun night with
her friends amongst this monster or monsters.
In the immediate aftermath of the concert, Elaine had no memory of the assault.
But over time, though the memories were fuzzy, she started putting together the pieces and
remembered what took place that night.
So after this horrible experience, Daisy and multiple other friends, many of whom she'd
had since childhood, recall Elaine distancing herself from them in the months between her
realization and her disappearance, maybe because they reminded her too much of the trauma that
she had been through, or maybe just simply she wanted to spend some time alone.
Yeah, and I think that makes sense.
I feel like a lot of people do that when they go through trauma, you know, so this isn't too unusual.
Yeah, and she even unfollowed many of her friends on social media,
and just spent a lot of her time on her own as she headed into her 19th birthday.
As she processed her harrowing experience,
Elaine met and began dating a man named Divine Compare,
who often goes by Div, and he's the son of a prominent Hollywood producer.
Now Div's father, Shaquem Compare, is Queen Latifah's business partner, as the co-owner of Flavor Unit Management and Flavor Unit Entertainment.
Now, Elaine and Div began dating in November of 2016,
so almost a year and a half after her assault when she was 20 years old.
And reportedly, they had a very caring and devoted relationship for their short time together, even exchanging I-love-yous.
Just over a month after they began dating on December 28th, 2016, she posted a thread on Twitter detailing the work that she was undertaking to process her trauma and just move forward with her life
After what happened to her two summers earlier
Elaine wrote quote as for the rape the people involved know damn well who they are, but I don't fight fire with fire
I've forgiven because now I can move on and then she continued in another tweet quote
I'm not making it a legal matter because the more important weight of the situation
is that I stay true to myself and find my self-justice."
Now, in addition to taking space from her friends, she also began to distance herself
from Div toward the conclusion of 2016.
So shortly after posting these tweets, trying to work through the trauma and start anew going into 2017.
So she's just kind of taking a little bit of time for herself.
That's completely understandable.
She went through something very, very traumatic and this is kind of her way of dealing with
it.
Yeah, and it does seem, like you said, based on her tweets, that she's really coming to
terms with what happened to her almost a year and a half later,
and making adjustments in her life
that she feels like she needs to
for the greater good of herself.
Yeah, and she even texted Div, quote,
"'I need this year to really invest in myself right now,
"'so I'm gonna grind and spend time alone
"'until I can get myself real right.'"
Div was obviously disappointed by this
and expressed the pain that he felt at the thought
of losing someone that he thought of as a best friend, though he told her that he understood
and that he did support her reasoning.
But her cooling relationship with Div wasn't the only setback in her personal life at the
time.
Elaine had recently been let go from her serving job at a restaurant, and so she was forced to move back in with her mother, Susan,
who she reportedly didn't necessarily have the best relationship with at the time, back in La Crescenta.
At this time, Elaine had been attending classes at Pierce College, which is a community college in Woodland Hills, which is also located in the valley,
but she struggled with attendance, so in the
light of everything else that was going on at the time, she withdrew her enrollment just
kind of for the time being.
Her older brother Dustin remembers that the last time he saw her, they planned on going
snowboarding together in one of the many mountains surrounding Los Angeles, but had gotten into
a fight.
Back at home, Elaine was also frequently getting in arguments with her mother,
so it seemed like she was kind of on her own during this time.
She didn't have a lot of people that she could, you know, confide in or really talk to as she was experiencing the struggle.
So she really was just struggling under the weight of, you know,
her memories of the assault, everything that was going on, and the aching desire that she had to turn her life around.
So she just had a lot going on at this time in general.
Cause then of course she was also going through a breakup that she instigated,
but still, so it was a lot.
On January 20th, 2017, following about a month of little to no contact with Div,
he says that he started getting worried about her and he was trying to get her to talk to him on the phone,
despite her constantly telling him that she was fine.
But they wound up making plans for the following week anyway.
In the midst of her withdrawal from her academic and social life, tensions between Elaine and her mom were really reaching a boiling point.
Allegedly, Susan felt her 20-year-old daughter was irresponsible with money,
and in the month leading up to her disappearance, they fought frequently over finances.
Susan also bemoaned Elaine's relationship with her father Ray, saying that he spoiled her and he would give her money whenever she asked for it.
So it seems like her mom felt like her ex's financial influence wasn't really helping Elaine grow and she just completely disagreed with it. morning hours of January 26th, 2017, around 345 AM.
Elaine told her mom Susan that she had run out of gas
and also that her battery had died.
She was out of the house,
so she called her in the middle of the night
and said that she needed her to come help her out.
So Susan and her boyfriend, Jeff,
met Elaine on a freeway bridge where her car had stopped
and they got it up and running again.
But this is kind of what her mom was talking about, that something like this would happen.
Her battery would die, she would run out of gas, it was the middle of the night, and she
needed her mom to come to the rescue.
So the next day after this, she sent Elaine $20 per Elaine's request, but she asked Elaine
to pay it back by 6 p.m. that same
evening.
But, as the hours passed and the money wasn't returned to her, Susan grew increasingly agitated
about this.
But little did she know at the time, that afternoon, Elaine stopped by her dad's house
to borrow a bit more money as well.
Ray later explained that Elaine seemed to be in good spirits, and that nothing seemed
to be out of the ordinary about her appearance or her behavior when he saw her that January
day.
And afterwards, she circled back to the home she shared with her mom across the valley
and briefly met up with a friend.
Alayne's friend Sadie, who was one of the last people to see her before her disappearance,
stopped by that evening to pick up a curling iron that she had left behind at the house.
When she was there, she noted that Elaine gave it to her without so much as a greeting,
and then locked the front door behind her, leaving in her car.
So this was a bit of a weird interaction.
It felt clear that something was probably on Elaine's mind, despite her dad having
a more positive interaction with her a couple of hours earlier.
So that night, the evening of Friday, January 27th, 2017, Elaine took off from La Crescenta
bound for Calabasas, where her ex-boyfriend and good friend, Div, lived in the guest house
of his parents' property.
Now traffic would have been about moderate to heavy at the time, taking her likely around
45 to 55 minutes to drive the 35 miles.
Elaine arrived at 8pm and spent time hanging out with Div before they headed out to see
a movie.
At around 9pm she texted her mom telling her to give her until later that night to repay
the money via an app.
Then at 10.30 they left in an Uber heading for the Commons at Calabasas to go see that
movie.
And for those who don't know the area, the Commons is like an affluent outdoor shopping
center in Calabasas, has a ton of shops and restaurants, you know, coffee shops, an ice
cream shop, a Barnes and Noble, etc.
And it has a Regal Edwards movie theater, which is where they were going.
So very good place for a date night or just hanging out with friends.
And I'm sure it is still this now, but when I grew up here, it was the Friday spot to go in middle school or as a young teenager.
Yeah, everybody's got those places.
Yeah, this is that spot for this area. Obviously, people of all ages enjoy it, but there are security officers there.
It's very safe. So just wanted to give a reference. This is a really good safe,
active, highly populated area, especially on the weekends, like when they're going, that they could spend a few hours at, which they did,
until returning via an Uber to Div's house around 1 30 a.m.
He did live kind of around the corner and up the hill in a gated community off Mulholland Highway,
which we will describe more in a minute.
And security footage from the Compares driveway confirms the timeline of their
leave time and their arrival time back that early morning.
Both Uber drivers were later questioned by police and claimed that
both Elaine and Div seemed happy and content that night and that they were being affectionate
with each other in the car rides. The only thing that seemed even slightly out of the
ordinary was that Div asked Elaine multiple times if she was okay.
And I'm assuming he did this because they hadn't seen each other in a while, so he's just trying to confirm that she's good, because obviously they did split after,
you know, this time of her kind of like trying to find herself. Yeah, and we know that he
had been asking her that recently anyway, so it seemed like he was worried about her
for sure. Now, Elaine was last active on social media accounts around 3.20am, so two hours after
returning to Div's parents' house, remember, where he lived in a guest house, possibly
before she went to bed.
But a short while later, Div was awakened by Elaine undergoing what appeared to be a
panic attack.
Now, he recalls this taking place around 4am. So that would have been roughly 40 minutes after she
last checked her social media. But this answer has changed a few times, likely due to the early hour
and the fact that he was, you know, awoken from sleep. He's not like clocking what time exactly it
is, you know. Some people they don't wake right up, especially when there's, you know, something
going on like a commotion or somebody having a panic attack
The first thing that they're gonna do is probably not check the clock so it's easy to kind of
Misunderstand the timing here
Yeah
And even if he did it maybe it wouldn't have been easy to remember exactly the time later because he didn't think it was
Important to remember he didn't know what was gonna happen after but of course whenever somebody changes their story or misremember something, you know, people kind of hold a magnifying glass to it.
So I just did want to mention it,
but it is unclear whether Elaine ever went to sleep that night at all.
But by Div's recollection, she was singing,
shaking and acting erratically during this very early morning panic attack.
He claimed that he attempted to calm her down, but that she refused to stay put.
Now despite Div's protests, Elaine got dressed quickly and headed to her car leaving in a hurry.
He even offered to get her an Uber, just worried about her driving while she was in this state,
but he says that she refused and she left by herself.
Div said later, quote, I've never seen a woman dress so fast.
At one point, he allegedly also claimed that Elaine mentioned needing to meet with somebody,
but he later recanted that part of his recollection, which I feel like is such an important detail,
you know, whether or not that's true with what's to come.
Yeah.
That's kind of a good thing to know if she was supposed to meet with somebody or not.
Yeah, you would think that that would be a huge detail.
Well Div also explained that Elaine wasn't elaborating about what was going on and why
she was feeling so stressed and paranoid or if there had been a triggering incident.
She just kind of got up and left,
but she didn't leave when this panic attack allegedly started.
Like I just said, he says that it started around 4 AM,
but she left around 6 0 5 AM.
But the exact time has been hotly debated because it seems as if the timing on
the multiple security cameras on the property were kind of out of sync, which led to possible inconsistencies. Many
people were quick to point out later that because the cameras were cut off at
the driveway, investigators could not be sure that it was in fact Elaine driving
her Honda Civic away from the compare's home. However, it does seem kind of clear that she left the neighborhood as the security camera
captured her driving away from the small gated community minutes later.
Also, I want to mention, just kind of describe the property in the house a little bit better.
The property that his family lived on is freaking huge.
It's amongst the mountains. Like I said, it's right off Mulholland Highway.
So that's a very mountainous area.
Very affluent area as well.
Yes, it's a seven bedroom, nine bathroom house with a pool, a hot tub,
and its own private tennis courts and a small putting green.
And it's obviously then surrounded by a bunch of hiking trails.
And since it's right off Mulholland, it's smack dab basically in the middle of the mountain
between the 101 freeway of Calabasas and PCH, the Pacific Coast Highway of Malibu, which
is relevant to the story because through those dark canyons and along the winter Southern California ocean, a lane would vanish. the Shortly after Elaine left Div's house at 6.28am that morning, her location was shared
via iMessage with Div.
They had been sharing their locations previously, but Elaine had put a stop to her sharing when
they weren't, you know, together and they were taking some time apart.
But now, suddenly, she's sending it to him.
45 minutes later, at 7.13am, Elaine's phone received an automated message from her music
streaming app, which was Pandora, leading investigators to believe that she had been
streaming music via the app while she was driving. Div later acknowledged that she liked driving and it was kind of this meditative thing for her,
so it's possible that she was, you know, driving around the area to clear her head
after having this panic attack. An hour and a half after this, at 8.51am, Elaine received
three urgent and upset messages from her mother, demanding that $20 repayment
immediately, because at this point Elaine was over 12 hours late for their previously
agreed upon deadline of 6pm.
Well Elaine did not respond, but 40 minutes later at 9.32am, Elaine's Pandora app prompted
her again, asking if she was still listening. Between 10.13am and 3.42pm, Elaine received multiple communications, five calls from Div
checking to see if she was okay, all of which went unanswered, three calls from her mother
checking on the status of her repayment, and growing increasingly concerned.
And finally, a text from her friend Sadie,
asking what she was up to that day.
3.42 p.m. is the last ping of Elaine's phone,
which had a cell tower in Malibu.
As the hours passed and Elaine didn't respond to her mom
nor return home, Susan started to become really worried
about where her daughter was.
Shortly before midnight, so nearing 20 hours since she had last been seen, Susan called
the local sheriff's office and asked to file a missing persons report.
However, acknowledging that she was a grown woman and would frequently spend nights out
with her friends and Div, officers encouraged her to wait another day. But the following day, which was Sunday, January 29th, 2017, there was still no word from or
sign of Elaine.
Susan claims that she knows Elaine would have returned her money by then, and that she was
becoming concerned something happened to her.
Now the most eerie part was that Elaine, who was very active on social media platforms,
had gone radio silent since early that Saturday morning, which was just completely unlike
Elaine.
Then the following day, Monday, January 30th, 2017, Elaine was officially reported missing.
Susan initially called the Sheriff's Department again, but was transferred to the nearby Glendale Police
Department based on where her home is located,
and filed a missing persons report with them.
And again, this is not the area that Elaine went missing.
So this obviously would kind of slow things down even more.
But still, four and a half hours later,
an officer reported to Susan's house to take down the report.
Now, this officer was the first to alert Elaine's dad, Ray, that his daughter was missing.
And for unknown reasons, Susan waited until that day to reach out to Elaine's friends and inquire about her whereabouts.
Obviously, we don't know why she did this. Maybe she didn't really know Elaine's friends all that well.
But hindsight is 20-20.
Well, on Thursday, February 2nd, 2017,
Susan stopped by the Calabasas home of Div and his parents,
Tanya and Shaquem, to speak with them
regarding Elaine's disappearance,
of course, since Elaine was last seen at their house.
And she just kind of tried to get as many details
from them as possible, but Div maintained that he went back to sleep after Elaine left, remember this was around 6 a.m.,
and that he hadn't spoken with her since, despite having been reaching out to her just like Susan
had been. His multiple calls to her that past Saturday had gone unanswered, you know, now this
is five days later, and she had not been in touch since.
Susan later accused the Compares of only giving what limited information they wanted to, and
claimed that she begged Div's mom Tanya to view the footage with her, but that Tanya
instead turned over the footage to the Glendale Police Department and didn't show it to her.
I mean, I understand the reasoning for wanting to see it,
but the right thing to do is to get that footage over to the police.
Well, and police have announced over the years, numerous times,
that Div and his parents were never anything less than cooperative,
and in fact, were very helpful,
and that none of them were ever considered suspects.
Div also didn't leave his home during the time frame that Elaine vanished, as has been
proven by security footage.
Sergeant Robert William of the Glendale Police Department even announced, quote,
The boyfriend has actually been the most cooperative in the investigation.
We can see she left on her own and he stayed at his residence that night.
The Compares also allowed their home to be searched and were cleared from suspicion early
on, like officially.
So they were looked into, the police did their due diligence searching their home and questioning
them, but it was just a dead end.
Elaine was nowhere to be found. As police continued to investigate, they saw that Elaine's car was captured on surveillance
footage driving past a 76 gas station on the corner of Pacific Coast Highway and Coral
Canyon Road, and can be seen making a U-turn about 19 minutes after she reportedly left Div's house.
Now, by the way, we are going to make a map and post it after this episode drops
for anybody who wants a visual because having a visual is very helpful to show
the different location spots.
And, um, you know, we talk about a lot of places in this episode, but also, you
know, it's kind of weird because this spot where she allegedly made this U-turn,
there is footage of it happening.
You can see her car just like the tip of it and you can't see who's in it.
It's, you know, she's kind of off in the distance.
This is on the gas station security camera, but it is in the opposite direction of her
mom's house.
When she makes the U-turn, she's going back towards where she would have to go to go to
her mom's house.
But going to Malibu in general is not at all on the way home anyway.
She would have needed to go into Calabasas, hit the 101 freeway, and then gone deeper
into the valley.
But she wasn't doing that.
She was going the opposite of inland.
She was going out to the coast and again, driving in the opposite direction.
But when she makes this U-turn that is turning around to go back in the direction of Div's house
and technically towards her mom's house where she lived.
So this does kind of lead us to believe that she had gone there to try to cool off by the ocean
or that she was meeting someone.
But also this 19-ish minutes does match up with how long it would take to get to that
spot but then she turns around.
So this occurred at 6.26am on the day she vanished.
Remember she apparently left Divs at 6.05am but the driver is not confirmed to be Elaine.
It's just believed that this was her car because of the timing,
the location of where her car was later found, as we will get into here in a moment,
and the fact that PCH was basically empty at this time otherwise.
Well, about 25 minutes after her car drives off screen, two men can be seen walking into the frame from that direction. The pedestrian men could also just be a coincidence and are not necessarily suspected of involvement
in her disappearance, but of course we did want to mention it because it does feel pretty
interesting.
After speaking with the Compares, Susan and her boyfriend reported to the Lost Hills Sheriff's
Station, the jurisdiction that Div's family's home falls under, and requested that they
ping Elaine's phone to determine her last location.
They obliged and discovered that her phone number had last interacted with a cellphone tower
near Coral Canyon Road in Malibu,
the same road in which her car was thought to be spotted near that gas station.
Upon further investigation that same day, which again was February 2nd,
2017, according to Susan, Elaine's car was located, parked on the Pacific Coast Highway
just south of Coral Canyon Road, so near where her car was seen turning around in the surveillance
footage, meaning she made a U-turn and soon pulled over on the side of the road.
It was parked on the south-facing side of PCH, so on the beach side,
and it was directly across the street from the Malibu RV park.
Otherwise, this is a pretty isolated spot of PCH where the closest other structure is a Malibu seafood just a short ways up,
and then up a little ways after this is a string of homes.
Now the state in which Elaine's car was found was nothing short of eerie.
The engine wasn't on, but the electrical was running.
Her keys were still in the ignition, the doors were unlocked, and her battery was dead.
So pretty weird because obviously nobody's gonna walk away from their car with their
keys in the ignition and the door unlocked because that is very risky for car theft.
Of course, and you can also, you know, lock your car door with the keys still inside.
You can lock the door and shut it and then you're locked out of your car.
So this is pretty strange as well.
Now inside on the front passenger seat was her laptop computer, with a battery still
at 30% and her duffel bag containing her journal and makeup bag among other personal items.
There were two iPhones in the console, and many more of her personal belongings in the
back seat.
The car also contained Elaine's driver's license and $37 in cash.
So also not things that you want to leave in your car and walk away from.
Yeah, definitely not. And strangely, the officer who recovered her car noted that it looked
as if it had been staged in its place. However, there were no signs of foul play in or outside of her 2015 Honda Civic.
The car was examined forensically, but nothing of note was found, which only added to the
strangeness of the situation.
The vicinity was also searched by bloodhounds and cadaver dogs, but the results were, unfortunately,
inconclusive.
And when Elaine's car was no longer considered a crucial piece of evidence, it was turned back over to her mother.
Because her car was found in the vicinity of the beach, there were two searches of the ocean water nearby,
but neither pointed the investigators towards Elaine's whereabouts. She was just gone at this point.
After the discovery of her car, she was upgraded to critical missing,
but this did little to ascertain her whereabouts either.
Susan believed that it was nearly impossible for Lane's car to have been sitting where they found it,
with the keys in the ignition since the day she disappeared.
And she believes that it was planted there by whomever took or harmed her daughter.
It's definitely strange, and it's hard with this case because it's unsolved so there's
a lot of information that has not been released by the police including when exactly they
found the surveillance footage of her from the 76 gas station, allegedly making that
U-turn.
I say allegedly because we don't know for sure if she was driving, but let's say she was. She made the U-turn onto PCH, from PCH, and then pulled over after only a few feet.
That's where her car was found.
It was found very close to Coral Canyon.
Yeah, so this was not like some isolated back road.
This was a very, you know, public and a very like trafficked road.
Yeah, exactly.
And if they knew, again though, maybe it took them a few days
to even learn that her last call was made,
like it does seem like it did,
near the Coral Canyon intersection on PCH.
So it's possible that it took a few days
to pinpoint her last whereabouts,
and that's how they found the 76 gas station footage,
and then that's how they found her car,
because it's not like you leave the compare's house they found the 76 gas station footage and then that's how they found her car because
it's not like you leave the Compares house and are spit out into Malibu after going down
the canyon and there was her car.
You know, she was traveling north before making that U-turn.
So it wasn't in the immediate area.
It would make sense if they weren't just driving all the way up and down PCH looking for her
yet, especially because they thought that maybe she was not an endangered missing person.
But I could see why her mom thinks this, because we don't know how long her car was sitting there for.
Well, with all that information, you know, things just became even more mysterious and confusing,
because on March 2nd, 2017, so just over a month after she went missing,
20 year old Elaine's Facebook history was deleted.
And I just want to say that it is possible that this was done to maybe protect her reputation and history
from the prying eyes of the investigation, but it's also possible that it was done as a cover-up.
But either way, as tips slowed down, theories began to emerge.
Yeah, because we basically have nothing to work off of here.
Very little has been released regarding her actual disappearance.
And so of course, a big assumption in this case on its face is that Elaine took her own
life, which we really don't want to
weigh on too much as to not be disrespectful, especially because suicide really should not
be up to an outsider's speculation.
But many point out that in the aftermath of her sexual assault, as well as the painful
season of change and growth that she seemed to be going through at this time, it's certainly
possible, especially since on the morning she vanished in particular, she was clearly undergoing some mental health discomfort,
and she was also in the midst of an ongoing argument with her mom about the money she
owed.
However, private investigator Jaden Brant, hired by the family, maintained that the family
had no reason to believe that Elaine was experiencing
suicidal ideation or that she took her own life and there's no evidence
whatsoever to support that she did. Especially since no trace of her has
been found. Jayden said quote, we firmly believe that Elaine did not commit
suicide and she's not a runaway. It's our strong contention that Elaine Park is an involuntary missing person and that
foul play is involved in her disappearance.
Now this next bit is tough for us to bring up because we hate pointing or even suggesting
pointing at family members ever, even though sometimes that's just the way the story unravels,
but it would be somewhat injustice to the story of the investigation if we didn't bring
it up since it is so widely discussed in and outside of this case.
So with all due respect, the person who has garnered the most negative attention is Elaine's
mother Susan.
As we know by now, their relationship was often fraught with tension, and Susan reportedly
once had asked her husband, or her ex-husband, sorry, Ray, Elaine's father, to take Elaine
in, fearing that one of them would get hurt as their relationship reached a low point.
But it's important to note that there are many extenuating factors here, including cultural
differences as Susan was born in Korea. Susan will be the first to admit that she was harsh
on her daughter and that very often they did not get along, but that doesn't necessarily
point to her involvement in her daughter's disappearance. Like doesn't automatically mean
she has to be involved in something, and it can be a very
harmful accusation without evidence.
But that said, her behavior in the aftermath has raised some red flags.
Many have accused Susan of money-grubbing in the wake of Elaine going missing, and of fraud
before she vanished.
In May of 2016, Elaine was driving in the car with her friend Sadie when the pair were
in a minor accident.
Though Elaine sustained very minor injuries, some cuts on her hands from helping the passengers
in the other car, Susan allegedly insisted that she seek treatment from a chiropractor
and receive a settlement from the insurance claim.
Elaine even reportedly accused her mother of fraud
for forcing her to do this.
Which, like, yeah, that is.
Yeah. A stranger still was the fact that Susan was calling the insurance company for a payout
on the claim on the very day that she reported her daughter missing, as well as the same
day that Elaine's car was found.
So that's a- it's just a little weird.
Yeah, it's really just bad timing.
On March 21st, 2017, Elaine's settlement from the accident was paid out, and Susan received
$5,000 to be split between Elaine, her injury attorney, and her chiropractor.
So obviously that happened almost two months after Elaine went missing, meaning Elaine's
portion of the money never went to her
Yeah, but going back for a second
I guess Susan and Elaine had been fighting over this money for months including one particularly nasty interaction in July of
2016 so six months before Elaine's disappearance when Elaine told her mom that she was skipping her appointment with her
Chiropractor that day because she didn't need a chiropractor.
Exactly.
So this conversation, you know, escalated so heatedly that Susan wrote, quote,
Fuck you, die and leave me alone.
I fucking hate the bullying ass of yours.
And you make me sick.
And remember, this is what Susan said to her daughter, Elaine,
which then culminated in
a series of the word, die, eight times.
In her own defense, Susan claimed that she felt her ex-husband had spoiled her daughter,
as we mentioned earlier, and that she was trying to get Elaine to be more responsible
with her money.
She also explained that when she was married to Elaine's father, the family was better off, living in a nice house with more disposable income.
So Elaine had apparently become accustomed to a lifestyle that Susan no longer felt that she could provide.
Additionally, in December of 2016, Ray stopped paying child support to Susan because Elaine was in her 20s. In the time between when Elaine moved in with her mother
and when she disappeared, Elaine and Susan exchanged dozens of texts about money, including
amounts as small as just $2. But it was Susan's conduct after Elaine's disappearance that drew
the most controversy. As soon as it became clear that her daughter was not returning home,
controversy. As soon as it became clear that her daughter was not returning home, Susan rented out her room, sold Elaine's car, discarded her belongings, and gave her two cats to the local animal shelter. The Words spread quickly about Elaine's disappearance in the small community of Malibu with many
people jumping in wanting to help, learning of how amazing Elaine was, and knowing something
was very fishy about the situation.
Malibu is a very safe, quiet, spread out city that turns off its lights
earlier than most other parts of LA, like nearby Santa Monica. It's like a super sleepy
town if you didn't already know.
Yes it is.
So although this type of thing is very rare to happen in Malibu, something just felt off
to everybody who got close to the case and learned the details. And since we were just talking about Susan, I do want to note that when it came to consenting to a polygraph examination,
she was initially hesitant, but she did agree to, or she eventually did agree to do one, and she passed.
She even allowed drug dogs and cadaver dogs to search the home that she shared with Elaine, which happened on May 6th, 2017.
So a few months after her disappearance and weirdly,
the dogs indicated to spots in Elaine's room,
as well as the cleaning closet of the home and in particular to a
suitcase in that closet.
The door to Elaine's room also reportedly had a crack in that closet.
The door to Elaine's room also reportedly had a crack in it as if it had been,
you know, slammed or kicked in at some point.
And there were also scrapes on the wall,
maybe as if her bed had been moved in front of the door to block it. So when you take that information and you mix it with how much we know they
fought and argued and the fact that Susan had once asked her ex if she could take Elaine in because she was worried one of them was gonna hurt
Each other it's a little disturbing
Also, I want to mention as a lot of you guys probably know there is a true crime podcast that focused its second season on
this case it's called to live and die in LA and
season on this case, it's called to live and die in LA. And basically at the onset of their investigative efforts, because this podcast did do their own investigation into this story,
Susan was accused of gouging the podcast for money when she asked them to donate to the
reward fund upon their first meeting. So, you know, a lot of people, a lot of family want donations to help pay for
private investigators or other resources.
Totally normal.
But it didn't feel like maybe that's what was going on here.
Yeah, I think it kind of came off the wrong way.
And so people were kind of surmising that maybe she was just
trying to get involved so that she herself could obtain some money from this.
Right, well going back to the cadaver dogs really quick, sorry for that little
segue, before and after the dogs visits to the house, Susan's phone had some
reminders to hide items in a shed. Yet Susan claimed that she was referring to her
personal stash of marijuana, which she didn't want the drug sniffing dogs to find. Because
although recreational marijuana was legalizing California in November of 2016, so right before
this case, it wasn't first sold in stores or in dispensaries until January of 2018, so a year after Elaine vanished.
So she did have a right to be concerned about them finding it because it would have been
illegal possession at that point. But that was her excuse.
Susan has continued to maintain her innocence in the case of her missing daughter and even shared
a string of texts to Elaine's Facebook group,
detailing the pain that she was enduring as a result of losing Elaine.
A text exchange in which she wrote, quote,
I am so sad again.
Just tried to start up Elaine's car and the battery is dead.
Then I started to cry.
It could be two things.
One, I had to rescue her on Thursday, 3.35am near my house because her gas tank got empty
in the middle of the freeway bridge.
When we got there, the car needed to be jumped.
So it could be that when her car battery died, she did not want to call me again and she
got fed up and committed suicide.
Two, since her car battery died, she flagged people down to help with jumping,
then they abducted her. She was having a panic attack, shaking, singing and all. She was
probably OD or drugged out.
I, I, I, I don't know. This doesn't feel like a super sympathetic thing to write. Just
the fact that you would say she was probably OD and drugged out,
that seems a little off. Also to say that maybe she got fed up that her car battery died and she
committed suicide I think is an extreme jump in my opinion. I mean, especially because there's no
mention of other factors. Like it's just like, oh, she got fed up that her battery was dead, so she killed herself. What? Like that's just a little like, whoa, what?
Yeah, that's way, way extreme.
Yeah. And by the way, what I was mentioning when she said Thursday, 3.35 a.m., that's
what Heath was talking about earlier about how her car battery died and her car ran out
of gas. So that's what that was about. But I do think this is an interesting piece of information
that her car battery died
because again, there's still a lot of information
that has not been released at this point in time.
But it does seem like when they found her car,
her battery was dead.
And that would mean that she needed to go get help from someone.
So we know that she had been distant with her friends.
She and Div were not together officially anymore.
She and her mom were fighting.
It was early in the morning.
So she probably felt like she couldn't call anybody and she had to figure it out another
way.
I think that's a really interesting perspective.
Well, when we're talking about the fact that her car battery had died and it was sitting
on the side of the road, if that was the case, you know, her car battery died and she needed
to go get help, she would have taken her keys with her, she would have taken her license
with her, she probably wouldn't have left her belongings.
So it's like, on one hand you imagine that maybe she locked the car and she got into
another person's car and said, hey, can you drive me down to this gas station because I need you know
somebody's help but then why would you leave all of those things behind and
that's what leads me to the conclusion that I think somebody did actually plant
her car there well and her car was unlocked so we know that sorry I think I
said I think I said locked but yeah left it unlocked yeah well that's that's
what's weird is like you're saying
It would have not made a lot of sense for her to leave all of her stuff in her keys in the car and drive
Off with somebody which would then kind of make you wonder did somebody come by to quote-unquote help
Which we have seen in a ton of other cases and then before she could do anything. She was abducted, right?
Yeah, I was kind of thinking that as well
Because then she wouldn't have had any time to really get anything out of her car if they just suddenly you know grabbed her
So there's definitely two scenarios there that could make sense
Also if she did want to walk to get help as we know that 76 gas station was sitting right there, so
She could have gone there, you know, to get help.
And that would have been a very short walk away.
And we know that there wasn't just a ton of cars, although I will say, of course,
we don't know what time this would have happened.
Is this at about 6 30 AM after she made that U-turn, did this happen then,
or like you're saying was her car planted?
And it's just hard to know because we don't know what time she parted from her vehicle
Yeah, I just think that no matter what you know if you're going to leave your car on
On a highway right there on the side of a highway
You are not going to leave your keys and your your your license and everything else that she left behind
You're just not gonna do that
Even if the 76 station is just a few short blocks away and you can walk there easily,
you know, within a few minutes, you're still not going to leave your keys in your car.
Well, here's actually a really weird thing that I want to remind you guys of.
Earlier we mentioned that at 628 AM, she shared her location with Div.
That is only two minutes after she made that U-turn.
So that to me gives us a little bit of a timeline.
That tells me personally that she pulled over
because her car was stalling or stopping or whatever,
and she had to pull over because her battery died.
Can your battery die, dumb question, while you're driving?
Yeah, it can.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like your battery can just stall and then it stops?
Yeah, if your battery is just ran out of juice,
usually your car battery will charge while you're driving,
but if the battery is old enough, you know?
It'll just stop?
It'll just stop, yeah.
Yeah, so if that happened, or let's say she pulled
over for a second, turned off her car, got a got fresh air for a minute and then went
to go keep driving. And then she was like, wait, now my car is not turning on either
of those situations. Then maybe that is why she sent her location to div as a way to say,
shit, here I am. I need help. my battery's dead, but without giving the context.
But she would also imagine that if she, you know, shared her location with Div, that she would also
maybe give a little context and say, hey, this is what happened, I'm sharing my location because of
this. So that also is kind of weird, because it also kind of leads you to believe that maybe
she was in the midst of somebody dangerous, and she didn't have time to text div
So she just needed to share her location quickly so that people could know where she was
Yeah, exactly which we have also seen in other cases where that's like all you can manage to do
Right send one little text send your location whatever it may be
So there's just so many questions because also
after sending her location, remember as we said, she got that prompt from Pandora asking if she
was still listening to music. We don't know if she hit yes or no. We do know that prompt came up
later. So that would lead me to believe that she hit yes, you know, because the music stops, right?
Right. Like, you know, just like if you're watching Netflix, the show pauses until you
say yes or no. And then if you don't say anything, your TV just turns off eventually. So there's
a lot of questions there of was somebody else trying to make her phone seem active? Because
she also didn't communicate with anybody again after sending her location to div anyway.
So that was the last known thing.
Yeah, so what the hell happened?
I mean, it is also plausible that Elaine's disappearance may have been the result of an
accident, like maybe she wanted to be with nature and take a hike into the Malibu wilderness as the
sun rose at 6.54am that morning, or simply, you know, go on an early morning walk on the beach
and that she became lost, injured, or maybe fell prey to the elements.
I think this is a little less likely in my opinion.
Because then where is she?
Yeah, exactly.
And because Elaine can't be seen on any of the footage that her car was spotted in on the morning of her disappearance,
some kind of speculate that it's possible that she was abducted, as we mentioned, either by somebody that she knew or someone who took advantage of her mental health episode.
Though Div and Susan have been at the receiving end of most of the accusations of foul play,
Elaine's ex-boyfriend, an aspiring rapper named Lolo, also caught some flak for his behavior after
the end of their relationship. When they were still dating, Lolo was charged with having an unauthorized firearm
after being pulled over by the police with Elaine.
Now, Elaine had no knowledge of this illegal weapon,
and she did sever ties with him after finding out.
However, according to her friends,
Lolo continued to call and pursue Elaine even after he was blocked on her devices.
In the months following her disappearance, she was set to testify against him regarding his unauthorized weapons charge,
but her testimony probably wouldn't have affected the outcome of his case, as she hadn't been aware of the presence of a gun at all, but still.
aware of the presence of a gun at all, but still. And coincidentally, Lola was released from prison pre-trial just two days before Elaine
disappeared.
So it's all pretty strange, but investigators noted that he seemed genuinely upset and scared
by her disappearance, and that he cooperated with authorities, even offering to help them
search.
Multiple searches were conducted by her friends,
family, and concerned locals in the area,
but they did not turn up any more evidence.
Ultimately, though names and accusations
have been tossed around for years in this case,
it remains without resolution.
Elaine would now be 28 years old.
She stood at 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighed about 125 pounds.
She had brown eyes and brown hair with blonde at the tips.
Her ears and nose were pierced and she had a number of tattoos including a rose on her
left shoulder, a dagger on her lower right arm, and a moth and a bull's head on her upper left arm.
Currently, the reward sits at $250,000 but has not yielded any sign of her.
In September 2017, so shortly before what would have been her 21st birthday,
her mom released this statement, quote, I am pleading for the public's assistance in bringing Elaine home before her 21st birthday.
Somebody knows what happened to her.
And if the news of this reward can just reach them, we promise to protect their confidentiality.
Please help me spread the word.
All I want is to find my daughter.
Nothing else matters."
So let's talk about this case for a second, opinions.
We know that Elaine wasn't in a great financial position.
She had recently lost her job.
She borrowed $20 from her mom the day before her disappearance, which isn't significant,
yet she needed an extension to pay it back, which I really think shows her financial situation at that time very well.
So, although she was going through a lot,
it's hard for me to believe that she electively went missing.
Especially since by the time we're recording this,
it's almost been eight years exactly since this happened.
So, although people do sometimes just leave their life,
I'm not of the belief that this is what happened here.
I have to agree with you there because just because of all the things that are in this case that are pointing
towards some sort of foul play, you know, we look at all of the details in this case
and it just seems to point to foul play, you know,
she left everything behind in her car, and I just can't see somebody doing that.
It just feels like somebody took her.
Yeah, I agree, especially like everything we already said about her sending Div her
location two minutes after she made that U-turn.
It's very strange to me, and, you know, again, I don't want to speculate on her taking her
life, but since her body wasn't found, as grim as this is to say, she wouldn't have been able
to hide her own body. So I struggle with that as well. It was really like she was plucked
from the sky. So, you know, she was she going to Malibu to meet someone, maybe for drugs,
some type of financial opportunity, somebody else and something happened, whether
it be an accident or some premeditated plan.
I mean, truly, who knows?
There's just this unlimited number of possibilities here.
And her phone being found in her car, reportedly two iPhones found in her car, one of which
we know for sure was hers, is also suspicious because she left with
absolutely nothing. And I think that her simply going to Malibu to clear her head and then her
car breaking down, you know, her battery dying, and then the wrong person driving by to help,
that idea makes a lot of sense to me too, that this was a crime of opportunity.
And unfortunately we've just seen it far, far too many times
in so many different cases we've covered.
Yeah, and especially because of how quiet it would have been early that morning.
So maybe the wrong person was out there.
Yeah, I mean, when you think about Malibu and you think about the PCH
at like, you know, six in the morning, it's not, you know,
hustle bustle. It's not going to be a ton of a ton of people driving back and
forth because it is a coastal highway.
Yeah. And it's off to off season for tourism. You know, this is late January.
But I will say, just like unfortunately we have right now, which is why we have
all these fires in L.A., it was on the warmer side that day in the 70s,
but yeah, it's not a busy time for people to be driving down this road.
S2 And obviously that doesn't mean that there were no cars driving on that highway that morning,
because of course people do live and work in Malibu, but it's not going to be as busy as the
middle of the city in LA. S2 Well, you know, something else is, according to that footage, the security footage
at the 76 gas station, right where her car was found later,
25 minutes after she made that U-turn,
meaning, you know, 23 minutes after she sent Div
her location, those two guys started walking down the road.
So, was she sitting in her car, battery dead, trying to wait it out until people woke up before she figured out what she was doing.
Use this time to sit and think before figuring something out. And these two men walked by and offered to help. Did they leave in her car and return it there later? You know, your mind just runs with possibilities.
later, you know, your mind just runs with possibilities. If you have any information about the disappearance of Elaine Park, please call the Glendale Police
Department at 818-550-4400. Thank you so much everybody for listening to this episode of Going West.
Yes, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode.
I know that there's quite a bit of speculation in this case and of course we're not trying
to just throw out random theories at you guys, but it truly is so baffling that she could
just go missing like this. And despite there being such little public information on this case,
it's really important to push these types of cases out as well because this case is only eight years old
and something happened to her, you know?
Yeah, exactly.
She went somewhere or she was taken somewhere and she deserves to be found.
So thank you guys so much.
Please let us know
what you think. Check out the map, check out the photo, share her missing poster. And yeah,
we really appreciate you guys listening and recommending this story.
I just said exactly. And I think somebody said that take a shot every time one of the
hosts says exactly. So sorry if we say that word too much. Sometimes it's just kind of
like the go to response. We're trying not to do that. It's funny whenever somebody says that we just agree with each
other it's because we do agree and we're conversational. We're talking. So just like you would say
that in a normal conversation, we do it here. So we are trying to be more aware of not doing
that. Sorry.
Yeah. But again, thank you guys for listening to this episode. Head on over to our socials
if you want to see photos from this case and all the other cases that we've covered.
We're on Instagram at goingwestpodcast and we also have a discussion group on Facebook.
So head on over there and let us know what you guys think about this story.
Alright guys, so for everybody out there in the world, don't be a stranger. Thanks for watching!