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With Cheyenne Brock & Billie Fain
October 22, 2024
In the latest episode of the Murder Police Podcast, listeners are drawn into the haunting mystery of Timmy Sterner’s disappearance, a case that has left a community in Nicholasville, Kentucky, searching for answers. This gripping episode features heartfelt interviews with Cheyenne Brock and Billie Fain, two individuals who knew Timmy intimately and share their emotional journeys in the wake of his vanishing.
Cheyenne Brock paints a vivid picture of her childhood with Timmy, describing him as an extra brother who was deeply woven into her life. From playful sibling rivalries to shared passions for football, Cheyenne’s stories highlight the bond they shared and the profound impact his disappearance has had on her. Her plea to the community is simple yet powerful: “If it was your kid or your brother, your nephew, what would you want somebody else to do?” Her words resonate deeply, urging those with any information to come forward.
Billie Fain, who affectionately refers to Timmy as “little mama,” shares her own experiences and the unique connection she had with him. Her narrative adds layers to Timmy’s character, portraying him as a loyal and kind-hearted individual who was loved by many. Billie’s recount of her search efforts, including a chilling visit to the last place Timmy was seen, underscores the desperation and determination to find closure.
As the episode unfolds, listeners are invited to reflect on the importance of community involvement in solving such cases. The podcast hosts emphasize the need for anyone with information to step forward, reminding us that justice for Timmy is not just a family matter but a community responsibility.
This episode of the Murder Police Podcast is more than just a recount of events; it’s a call to action. It challenges listeners to empathize with the families affected by such tragedies and to consider the role they can play in bringing justice. With its compelling storytelling and emotional depth, this episode is a must-listen for true crime enthusiasts and anyone interested in the human stories behind unsolved mysteries.
Tune in to the Murder Police Podcast to hear the full story and join the effort to bring justice for Timmy Sterner. Your listen could make all the difference.
True Crime, Missing Person, Timmy Sterner, Nicholasville, Kentucky, Murder Police Podcast, Cheyenne Brock, Billy Fane, Family Loyalty, Community Involvement, Unsolved Mystery, Justice For Timmy, Podcast Interview, Emotional Testimony, Crime Investigation, Listener Discretion, Family Closure, Kentucky State Police, Anonymous Tips, Community Appeal, Podcast Series
Show Transcript (Please excuse AI generated errors)
Part 5
The Murder police podcast focuses on missing Kentucky teen Timmy Sterner
Cheyenne: Be honest. If it was your kid or your brother, your nephew, what would you want somebody else to do? You know, like, there’s a mom and a dad out here that has no idea where their son is. So whoever’s responsible, think about if that was your kid.
Wendy Lyons: The only thing I ever noticed when we went down was there was a bad odorous, like, between the house he was at and the end of the road. And my sister noticed it, too. My nephew noticed it. there was just a really bad odor, but you never could track where it was coming from.
Wendy Lyons: Morning. The podcast you’re about to listen to may contain graphic descriptions of violent assaults, murder, and adult language. Listener discretion is advised. Welcome to the Murder police podcast. In today’s episode, we’re going to continue the series on never forget little Timmy. Timmy Sterner is a young man who went missing out of Nicholasville, Kentucky, April 2024. In today’s episodes, we’re going to be meeting with Cheyenne Brock and Billy Fane. Pay close attention to these ladies interviews as they release some, never heard details and what may contribute to the case of Timmy’s missing. Thanks so much for listening. Share with your friends. Welcome to the Murder police podcast we have with us today. Very lovely. Cheyenne. Hi, Cheyenne. Thank you for coming.
Cheyenne: Of course.
Wendy Lyons: How are you?
Cheyenne: I’m good, I’m good. How are you guys?
Wendy Lyons: We are great. We’re just very grateful that you came to talk with us. David, how are you doing?
David Lyons: Good. excited to get more and to learn more about who Timmy is. And, just in a few minutes that we talked to you before. I’m excited to hear because I think.
David Lyons: You’ve got a great part to add to this.
David Lyons: Let, everybody know who he is and how special he is.
David Lyons: So.
Cheyenne and Timmy met through their parents, who were together
Wendy Lyons: Well, and, Cheyenne, we know that you grew up with Timmy, so I’m going to open the door and let you talk about how you and Timmy became, acquaintances like you are.
Cheyenne: so we met through our parents. our parents were actually together in a relationship. His dad, my mom. we grew up. It was kind of a wild household. M I have, a lot of siblings, and then it was Timmy and his cousins were around a lot, so we had a lot going on, you know, as kids.
Wendy Lyons: How old were you guys?
Cheyenne: I, wanna say anywhere from ten, maybe even younger than that. It might have started when we were younger than that, honestly.
Wendy Lyons: So you kind of grew up together?
Cheyenne: Yeah, we definitely grew up together.
Wendy Lyons: How long were your parents together?
Cheyenne: for about six years.
Wendy Lyons: Six years. So you all grew up and kind of had sibling fights and sibling take up for each other and all that fun stuff.
Cheyenne: Yeah, we definitely did. Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: So what was Timmy like as a little boy?
Cheyenne: pretty much like your typical boy. he loved football. He loved playing outside. you know, he loved everything about sports in general, you know? but football was definitely the main thing for him.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Cheyenne: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: So I guess at some point, you’re all’s parents kind of parted ways. Did you all still stay in touch, you and Timmy?
Cheyenne: Yeah, we’ve always stayed in touch, even with our parents not being together. He was the extra brother, you know? I wouldn’t call him my stepbrother. I would just say, yeah, that’s my brother, you know? And, it’s been like that since I can remember, so.
Timmy came back into your life right before he went missing
Wendy Lyons: So you all. We learned that for a while, Timmy had been gone for a little bit, and then he came back into your, back into your life right before he went missing.
Cheyenne: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: So you all. Do you want to talk about, seeing him, how great that was to see him again?
Cheyenne: Yeah. So, whenever Timmy got out, he messaged me on Facebook, and he asked me what I was doing, if I was going to a meeting. and I was like, yeah, you know, I’m going to this meeting at this time. And, so he ended up being late, so he didn’t make it in for the meeting. But whenever I walked out of the meeting, there he was, you know, and, like, he embraced me with the biggest hug. And we sat down and we talked and we called, and, before we left, I gave him a big hug again, and I said, I love you. You know, I just. I never knew that, like, that would be the last time
00:05:00
Cheyenne: I got to see him.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah, you all were probably thinking that you’d have another get together in the next week or so or.
Cheyenne: Yeah, I mean, I told him, like, all the meeting dates, times, I’m like, you know, these are the days that I come and, you know, just to, you know, that’s something we could bond over, you know?
David Lyons: But when he was, when he was incarcerated, did you all have a chance to write letters or talk?
Cheyenne: We didn’t communicate. Sorry. We didn’t write letters, but, he did call me a few times.
David Lyons: Okay, cool. Yeah, good deal. That had been good to hear from him then, too. any other childhood memories, like things that you remember that were fun or that really stick with you from when you all were growing up?
Cheyenne: Yeah. So, me and Timmy, we’re the same age, so I am two months older than him. So me and him were really, like, glued to the hip, you know? but we also got on each other’s nerves. And I had older brothers, you know, that were blood related. And, they would always, like, make me and Timmy, like, play each other in football because I was like a tomboy, like a big tomboy. So I was always with the boys. So me and Timmy would, like, you know, get our gear on and, like, get ready, and then, like, we would go, like, head to head with each other and see who would win, you know? And, that always sticks out to me. And then I was a cheerleader for the football team that he played for pretty, much throughout the whole little league. we always tried to be on, like, the same team. And then, I can remember, like, halloween, we would always dress up. I was usually like the boys, so I wanted to be the football player, too, you know? there’s just memories like that that I can remember from us being little and just having fun, like, no care in the world, you know?
Wendy Lyons: Yeah. Which is what it should be like.
Cheyenne: Yeah.
Cheyenne family hopes to bring justice for missing son Timmy
Wendy Lyons: So your brother, we’ll call him your brother because that’s how you referred to him. so you get to see him, and then do you recall when you found out he was missing?
Cheyenne: Yeah, I do. I couldn’t really believe it because I’m like, there’s just no way.
Wendy Lyons: Cause you had just seen him.
Cheyenne: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I had literally just seen him.
Wendy Lyons: So they just told. Did they call you looking for him or did they just say, you know? Cause they probably knew you had seen him, right?
Cheyenne: Yeah. So one of his friends had actually reached out to me and was like, hey, you know where Timmy is? And I’m like, no. Like, last time I seen him and I told him, and he’s like, well, nobody can find him. And I’m like, what do you mean? And then it just started from there. Like, I immediately contacted big Timmy. I’m freaking out, you know? And here we are.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: Four months later.
Cheyenne: Yep.
Wendy Lyons: so I guess our hope in this cheyenne is that we can maybe talk to enough people and hopefully somebody’s conscience will come clear and they’ll tell, you know, we talked, formerly to his uncle and his grandmother, and, you know, his uncle said, we just really would like to have him back, which is really just a sad thing to hear, but he said, we just want to be able to have a proper burial. And I know that sounds so horrible, but I think, sadly, for, for that family, that’s. Yeah, they really think that that’s what’s happened. And obviously, everybody would have hoped for a different outcome, but we are hoping that someone will feel enough compassion to say, I, ah, know what happened, and it’s only the right thing to tell, to bring justice for little Timmy.
Cheyenne: Yeah. And I agree completely. And, I’ve talked about it, you know, like, it’s hard to grieve because there’s still, like, that hope. Yeah, sure. Maybe that’s not it, you know? But then also, it’s like there’s that feeling that something’s not right.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah.
Cheyenne: You know? So without the closure, it’s like you can’t even grieve properly.
Wendy Lyons: Yes.
Cheyenne: You know, it’s still. I know for myself, like, I still hold on to some kind of hope.
Wendy Lyons: Like maybe he just took off and met a girl and met her and they’re living happily ever after in Tennessee or something. yeah, that would be our hope as well. you know, we do have a lot of interviews that we’re hoping to get on board, and hopefully we can bring some kind of justice for little Timmy.
Cheyenne says whoever is responsible for Timmy’s disappearance needs help
David Lyons: If you could, speak to people in the community. There’s rumors, and we don’t do the rumors because they’re just rumors, and we want the case to be successful should we get a case made. But what would you say to people in the community or people that were close to Timmy that. What would you ask them to do in something like this?
Cheyenne: Be honest. If it was your kid or your brother, your nephew, what
00:10:00
Cheyenne: would you want somebody else to do? You know, like, there’s a mom and a dad out here that. That has no idea where their son is. So whoever’s responsible, think about if that was your kid, you know, or if that was your brother or your best friend, you know, and, like, how you would feel, because it’s just. It’s not. Okay. It’s not.
David Lyons: Not at all. I agree, too. Somebody’s got to come forward.
Cheyenne: Yeah.
David Lyons: Somebody’s heard something.
Wendy Lyons: Well, we know that somebody knows something.
David Lyons: you know, there’s too much that points to that last place he was with and the people that were there, and somebody either there knows or they’ve talked with people and they know, too. So that’s what we’d like to have, as well as somebody come forward.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: Well, Cheyenne, is there anything else that you’d like to add? We know that you’ve said what you would like to say to whoever’s responsible. is there anything else that you’d like to add about little Timmy or any additional plea you might have for someone.
Cheyenne: I, think I just want to say, like Timmy, you know, like, we went through a lot as kids and Timmy was a good person, you know, and he loved his family and he wanted better for himself, you know? And I just think what happened to him, it’s not fair, you know? So if there is anybody out there that knows anything, please, please come forward to give his family closure that they deserve.
Wendy Lyons: Well, thank you so much for coming and sharing what timmy meant in your life and how you all grew up. That’s never an easy thing to do. But we’re grateful for you all coming to, tell who timmy, who he is and share some of your special memories.
Cheyenne: Of course.
David Lyons: Very, very thankful. Take care. Thank you.
Welcome to the Murder police podcast. Today we have with us Billy Fane
Wendy Lyons: Welcome to the Murder police podcast. Today we have with us Billy Fane and we’re here to talk about the missing case of Timmy Sterner, or as we refer to him, little Timmy. So thank you for coming. Billy, how are you today?
Wendy Lyons: I’m good, thank you.
Wendy Lyons: David, how are you doing?
David Lyons: Great, thank you, Billy, because, I think you’re going to add a lot to the fabric of what we’re trying to do to talk about just how special little Timmy is.
Wendy Lyons: I hope so.
David Lyons: I think you will. And the conversation we had before we started, so I’m eager for everybody else to hear the things we talked about.
Wendy Lyons: I’ve missed out on that. I’m late, as usual.
Billy Garrett helped raise his grandson Timmy for 13 years
So, Billy, I obviously have never gotten to meet you, so it’s such a pleasure to meet you. I’ve heard your name just a couple of times. So, why don’t you tell me a little bit, ah, about how you know Timmy and how you’re woven into this.
Wendy Lyons: Oh, goodness. I first met Timmy when he was probably, I don’t know, say, eleven or twelve. his aunt, his mother’s sister was my best friend. and, her son, Josh, I met him through them. And, then, a few years later, him and my daughter became friends and basically, best friends. they actually dated a little while and he, pretty much, he helped to raise my grandson for the first 13 years of his life. I was in my house one day and I hadn’t saw him for a year or so. And, all of a sudden he just walks in the door and, I look outside, I’m like, where’d you come from? And there’s this old late model ford Bronco driving up the road and they dropped him off and it got to where they were dropping him off like every day till like maybe. I don’t know. Maybe a month goes by, and then he just starts going to school from my house, and, just kind of took over residence. Yeah, just kind of took over residence. And, he was always so. He, was always so kind, and just. He was shy, and, I don’t know, he just took right up with me, and I took up with him. And, so then after a few years goes by, then I end up marrying his uncle.
Wendy Lyons: Oh.
Wendy Lyons: And, he would come in from school, and he’d say, my grandma told me that you’re going to be married to my uncle Terence. I said, your uncle Terence? And he said, yeah, my uncle Terence. My grandma says, you’re going to end up marrying him. And he was, and I was like, oh, I didn’t know who Terrence was. You know, I had never seen Terrence. I was like, okay, whatever. And sure enough, about two years later, we ended up married. And, so he was always, like, a permanent staple at my house. Wow. And, then, like I said, he got in trouble, and he went to prison. And, I talked to him off and on. He called me mom. He called me little mama. That’s what he called me, little mama. And so he, would call me every now and then. I had, like, a little account on his jill thing. And so he would call me, and he’d send me pictures of.
00:15:00
Wendy Lyons: And, the day that his mother picked him up, she told me that I was the second person he called after she picked him up. And, so the next day, he was coming to Nicholasville, and I moved out of Nicholasville. I live in Lexington now. And he had called to tell me that he was going to come see me, and I said, well, do you know about what time that’ll be? And he said, around 06:00. And I never got that visit. And, Yeah.
David Lyons: Was that the last time you spoke on the phone, though, that last conversation?
Wendy Lyons: That was the last, yeah, that was like, I talked to him about 04:00 the day of the night that he come missing.
David Lyons: And you never got your 06:00?
Wendy Lyons: I never got my 06:00.
Wendy Lyons: Did you know at that point that he had gone missing, or did you just think something must have come up and he just didn’t come?
Wendy Lyons: No. his mother messaged me and asked me had I heard from him, because she knew that he had told me he was coming to see me. So she messaged me and asked me if I’d heard from him, and I was like, no, you know. And, then like after the next day that he didn’t show up and she hadn’t heard from him, when she had not heard from him, then my heart knew that something bad, bad had gone wrong. Because no matter how upset he would be with her, he was very loyal to her. And I knew, especially when she told me that he was driving her vehicle when he left Garrett county, that, you know, he wouldn’t have kept her car. Well, yeah, he might have kept her car because he’d kept mine a couple times. He might have kept her car, but.
Wendy Lyons: he would bring it back.
Wendy Lyons: But he would bring it back. But he would not go for a day or two or three without. He would contact her.
Cheyenne: I.
Wendy Lyons: If she was calling him, he would answer, you know, eventually.
Wendy Lyons: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: And so after two days had gone by, and he’s not answering for anybody, I’ve still got the message on my telephone I sent him. I said, I said, little Timmy, I said, are you okay? Do you need me to come get you? You know? And when he did, he didn’t answer. And my, heart just knew.
David Lyons: You had a feeling that something.
Wendy Lyons: I had a feeling, yeah. Because, I mean, when, especially when Timmy was not answering for her, you know, when he didn’t answer her, I knew because, I mean, he was her. She was his mother, but she was more like a friend. I mean, they did things together that, you know, friends do, you know, I mean, she was his mother. Yes. And he was very loyal to her and he loved her. But I knew once he didn’t. Once she had not heard from him that something bad was wrong.
David Lyons: We keep hearing about how loyal he was, and so we’re starting to put together a picture.
Wendy Lyons: without, he wasn’t just loyal to her. If he considered you a friend, he had your back.
When Timmy didn’t show, his mother reached out to say he was missing
We heard that for you, he had your back. And if you told him not to tell, he wasn’t telling.
David Lyons: Right.
Wendy Lyons: You know, if you told him, I need you to do this. He was there. If he cared for you in any way at all, you knew. You, you know, he was there for you. Yeah. Yes.
Wendy Lyons: Wow. So when he didn’t show, and I guess then his mother reached out to say, is he with you?
Wendy Lyons: Right.
Wendy Lyons: I guess you all just kept waiting for later in the day and tomorrow and still nothing.
Wendy Lyons: Well, no, she told me, she told me where he was supposed to have went. And I think she had talked to someone there.
Wendy Lyons: And so I know that same person too. So I had called and I got a certain story, you know, and so that just. Yeah, it just didn’t make sense. It didn’t add up, and. Yeah, and nobody’s heard from him since.
Wendy Lyons: So, you know, and that’s a lot of what we’re hearing, is that the stories are, they vary, and that they don’t make sense. And so that really raises a lot of suspicion and worry. Of course.
Wendy Lyons: I mean, I loved himmy so much that I even. I went there looking for him.
David Lyons: So you went down to the holler where he was? Yes.
Wendy Lyons: I went to the house of the last place he was supposed to have.
Wendy Lyons: Been, and just nothing.
Wendy Lyons: Oh, I came across something, but it. Yeah, it was. Yeah, it was eerie.
Wendy Lyons: Oh, so you went there?
Wendy Lyons: I did.
Wendy Lyons: What, what does. Did you just drive down looking for maybe Timmy, or. What did you find when you got there?
Wendy Lyons: Well, actually, his mother had asked several of us to come down and meet her at the boat dock, and so it was. It was she and I, both her sisters, Terrence, and her niece, and we all met at the boat dock, and we were just walking the roads and everything, and I just. I just. I said, I’m going there, you know? So I pulled up at the bottom of the hill where he was supposed to have been parked, and I walked up to the door because I know the people that live there, and I asked them. I asked him to tell me what they told her on the phone.
00:20:00
Wendy Lyons: I wanted to see their reaction. And I didn’t, like the feeling that I got when they talked to me. And so I went outside, and they had told me that he had wrecked their car, but yet he went there in his mother’s car. Well, that’s not Timmy. Timmy wouldn’t have left his, anything that belonged to his mother to take someone else’s. So when I walked outside, there was a car that was sitting sideways in the yard, and it did appear to be wrecked. And so I asked, is this the car that Timmy was driving? And they said, yes, that’s it. So I just walked over and opened the door, and the passenger side was laying flat down black, you know, flying flat.
Wendy Lyons: The back of the seat was like.
Wendy Lyons: Like the whole back of the seat was like. Like you were laying down in the front seat. And I looked down, and there was a tennis shoe in the floorboard, and I picked it up, and I, asked, whose shoe is this? And they. And I, said. She said, that was Timmy’s. And I said, this shoe? And I said, this shoe right here was Timmy’s. And somebody, another guy there, he kind of shrugged it off and kind of made like a little giggle. And he said, well, not that one. And I knew right then that something bad had gone wrong. You know, something bad had gone wrong, but nobody’s gonna say anything.
Wendy Lyons: And did you ask that person what they meant by that?
Wendy Lyons: No. Because the feeling I got when I was in that house, I just. I just. And then just whenever he made that comment, and just when I had Timmy’s shoe in my hand, I mean, just the feeling that I had was, you need to leave here and leave this to the police. So I took the shoe and I gave it to the police. I took the shoe with me. I wasn’t leaving it there.
Wendy Lyons: Was there anything else of his in there?
Wendy Lyons: No. His mother found his phone at the place where they said that he wrecked. And it was found smashed on the ground. And she had walked up and down that road for two days. And then on the third day, she found his hat. But it wasn’t there the day before.
Wendy Lyons: Oh, she had walked those same steps, and it wasn’t there. M. And then there it was.
Wendy Lyons: Yep. And we went down there. We drove up and down. We walked up and down. We went, I mean, for two weekends in a row, at least. And then she was down there almost every day. And, Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: Did she ever find more things as she kept going down?
Wendy Lyons: No. The only thing I ever noticed when we went down was there was a bad odor, like between the house he was at and the end of the road.
There was a bad odor down in the river and we never could track it
And my sister noticed it, too. My nephew noticed it. there was just a really bad odor. But you never could track where it was coming from.
David Lyons: It’s tough to do in the woods like that, too.
Wendy Lyons: So we didn’t know if it was a dead animal or. Because it could have been because down in that area. But the thing that really struck me, too, was that at that time, it had rained. It had rained for a week, and it was flooded. And that river was up on the banks and it was rolling. I mean, I hate to say it, but if he had fallen off in the river or if something happened, he either. If he was in the water, he would either be hung up on something in the water or they’re going to find him in Mississippi somewhere, because that water was just rolling. And it was like that for three or four days. I mean, it didn’t go down for days. There would be no way they could have taken a dive team in there because that water was just too.
Wendy Lyons: Too much rack.
David Lyons: Yeah.
Wendy Lyons: I mean, it was up over the. Up over the banks, the boat dock.
David Lyons: Whereabouts was that was that. What road did you use to get.
Wendy Lyons: To down at the end of silver well.
David Lyons: Okay. Gotcha, gotcha.
Wendy Lyons: You know where sulfur will turns into river road?
David Lyons: Yes.
Wendy Lyons: there’s no other way to go. You either have to turn on river Road or you have to go down to the boat dock, turn around, go back up.
David Lyons: Okay. Big ramp.
Wendy Lyons: Christmas meals. Yeah, yeah. Not Christmas meal. Sugar. Sugar. Not sugar Creek silverware.
David Lyons: Okay. Yeah, a lot of people go, swimming down there and stuff like that. Is that.
Wendy Lyons: Well, I don’t know cuz I wouldn’t go swimming down there. Yeah, so I don’t know.
David Lyons: So I’ll check that one off the list. Yeah, exactly.
Wendy Lyons: Not a place to swim.
Wendy Lyons: No, I really don’t think it’s a place to swim. It’s more like just a boat dock because I gotcha. It’s kind of a deepen. It’s like a steep landing.
Wendy Lyons: So did you go back down there again after you smelled that? Another time, yeah, I went down there.
Wendy Lyons: Like every day for like a week.
Wendy Lyons: Was that smell still?
Wendy Lyons: Well, my sister and I and my boyfriend, we would just drive from one end of the road to the other and then we’d go up kissing Reggie and we’d come back around and then we got out and walk around and you know, just like we would catch the scent and try to try to find it, but you never could. It’s like you would catch it and then like the wind would blow in it and so you never could tell if it was something that, like, an animal dead, but it was very, very possible or
00:25:00
Wendy Lyons: it could be some kind of. Somebody threw trash out of the road, you know, because down there that’s just what they do, you know? So you nested it. You just never knew.
David Lyons: It is a holler.
Wendy Lyons: It is, exactly.
Wendy Lyons: Did that smell ever dissipate the longer you went down or the whole time you continued to go? Did you continue to smell it?
Wendy Lyons: I think it just started to dissipate. You know, it rained again and we. I was looking for buzzards and everything I could, you know, everything that.
David Lyons: Yeah, yeah.
Wendy Lyons: And at one time we did see some buzzards flying around. But like I said, by the time you’d go to look from the spot they were at, they, you know, saying they were gone. And so I just eventually just. I just pretty much told myself in my heart that he’s gone and there’s nothing that I myself can do to bring him back. And, I have been in touch with the Kentucky state police. I stay in pretty close contact with them, because I will do everything in my power to bring, if something happens, whoever did this to Timmy, I want to see them come to justice. And so I pretty much stay in pretty close contact with them. but I pretty much left it to them, and I just gave Timmy to God, and that’s all I can do. I mean, you know, I just have to honor his memory and just know that I love him, and I’ll always love him.
David Lyons: To that point.
What would you ask people in the community to do? Because we,
What would you ask people in the community to do? Because we, you know, I think that the common theme in this is we have a last known location, last, seen with several people, which makes you reasonably, assume that people know something that hadn’t come forward. What would you ask the people in this little community to do?
Wendy Lyons: Well, little Timmy was known by a lot of people. He was widely known. a lot of people knew him, and the people who knew him loved him. And so I would ask anybody that has any information, don’t look at it as, you know, you’re being a rat or you’re, you know, think of it as if this was your brother, was it? If this was your son, if this was your, you know, cousin, if this was your family, you’d want somebody else to come forward. You know, if you know anything, just have a heart, you know, have a heart and, you know, have a heart for his family and the people that, you know, want closure. And, you don’t even have to give your name. You can do it anonymously, but come on, people, you know, have a heart. You know, come forward because, you know, it could easily. Because it could very. Because if somebody down there knows something and there’s more than one person that seems to be involved, who’s to say it’s not you next, you know, who’s to say it couldn’t happen to you?
David Lyons: Or a family member?
Wendy Lyons: Or a family member? You know, we didn’t never expect this to happen to Timmy. He wasn’t home 24 hours. He didn’t get to see any of his family. He didn’t get to see any of his friends. The only. The very first people he saw was his mother and his grandmother. The next people he saw were the people that he come missing with. You know, he became missing with. So, you know, who’s to say? Who’s to say? It may not, you know, it could happen to you. It could happen to your brother, your sister, you know, your girlfriend, your boyfriend. It could happen to you. So, you know, just, I don’t know. I don’t know. I just. Somebody knows, and God knows, and I have faith in God, and I know that one day, the people in this little town here, you know, somebody’s going to get upset. Somebody’s going to get angry. Somebody’s going to try to get, you know, they’re going to be thinking that they’re going to be, I don’t know what’s going to happen, but I know they’re going to. It’s going to come out.
Wendy Lyons: It’ll come out.
Wendy Lyons: It’ll come out. It all comes out in the wash. And this is a little town, you know, and the people that run with the people down there, you know, they’re not good people. Or, this would have never happened. We wouldn’t be sitting here now talking if they were.
David Lyons: Good point.
Wendy Lyons: You know, we wouldn’t be sitting here having this conversation if those people were any kind of people. So, you know, it’s gonna come out. It’s just a matter of time, and they’re, they’re just, they’re gonna hang their own self.
Wendy Lyons: And that’s our hope, that we can get somebody to feel bad enough. Somebody knows. Oh, I know you wouldn’t want it happening to your family, so hopefully they have enough compassion that they come forward and tell so that it can give timmy’s family, or, like, you, loved ones, an answer and give him a proper peace.
Wendy Lyons: And to the little girls who have tried to message me and tried to talk to me, but they’ve been cut off, just know. I just want to tell you. I just want you to know that you can. You can come forward without having. You can come forward. You can. I know you know something, and I know you want to tell it. I know you do. So that’s all I want to say.
David Lyons: They’re close.
Wendy Lyons: Thank you, Billy, so much for coming in and,
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Wendy Lyons: taking the time to share with us about Timmy’s story. And. And we. We are hopeful that somebody will come forward and give. Give everyone answers.
Wendy Lyons: Can I say one more thing?
David Lyons: Oh, please.
Wendy Lyons: Sure.
Wendy Lyons: To Timmy and Tammy and to Sandy. I want you to know how sorry I am and that, I love you all and that I hope that God gives you all comfort and peace. Just comfort and peace. I just pray that we end up having justice for Kimmy.
Wendy Lyons: We all hope that, Billy, for all of you all involved, we really do.
David Lyons: Well said, billy. Thank you.
Wendy Lyons: Thank you.
Wendy Lyons: Hey, you know, there’s more to this story, so go download the next episode. Like the true crime fan that you.
David Lyons: Are, the Murder police podcast is hosted by Wendy and David Lyons and was created to honor the lives of crime victims so their names are never forgotten. It is produced, recorded and edited. Edited by David Lyons, the Murder Police podcast can be found on your favorite Apple or Android podcast platform as well as@murderpolicepodcast.com where you will find show notes, transcripts, information about our presenters and a link to the official Murder Police podcast Merch store where you can purchase a huge variety of murder police podcast swag. We are also on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, which is closed captioned for those that are hearing impaired. Just search for the Murder Police podcast and you will find us. If you have enjoyed this podcast, please subscribe for more and give us five stars in a written review on Apple Podcast or wherever you download your podcasts. Make sure you set your player to automatically download new episodes so you get the new ones as soon as they drop. And please tell your friends lock it down Judy.
David Lyons: Judy.
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