Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace, a pregnant mom just twenty
five years old, missing tonight. The family's desperate plea, Where's Emma.
I'm Nancy Grace, this is Crime Stories. Thank you for
being with us.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
I'm Emma BAM's mother. I would like my daughter home.
You miss her. She's her Baby's need her, her family
needs her. And if anybody knows anything or can help
search for her, could you please help us? We need
her home.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
That is Emma Baum's mother A desperate plea to bring
Emma home. Emma nine months pregnant, dilated to one centimeter
to our knowledge. That from our friends at ABC seven.
Joining me right now in All Star panel. But first
I'm going to go to Emma's mother, Jamie Baum. Jamie,
(01:02):
thank you for being with us. Also with Jamie is
Emma's father, Jason Waddell and sister Abby. To all of you,
thank you for being with us. I've just learned about
Emma's disappearance. I'm very curious. I know that she's been
gone several weeks at this point. But the first thing
(01:23):
I want to do, Jamie is get her photo out there.
Emma gorgeous, stunning inside and out.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
A real girly girl. She loved putting on makeup and
dressing up.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
She loved different styles, wearing wigs, just everything fashion. Now,
at nine months pregnant, seemingly has vanished straight back out
to Jamie Baum. First of all, tell me about the pregnancy.
Speaker 3 (02:00):
Is it correct that she was at one centimeter when
she gets missing? Yes, she was.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Tell me about her pregnancy. Has it been a difficult pregnancy?
Has it been high risk? What can you tell me?
Because I'm trying to imagine. Is she in some hospitals somewhere?
Has she had the baby? What is behind all of this?
How do you just vanish at.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
Nine months pregnant?
Speaker 1 (02:24):
I could hardly walk at six months pregnant with twins,
So how does a pregnant young she's just twenty five,
a young woman just seemingly disappear.
Speaker 3 (02:36):
Tell me about her pregnancy.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
She she's had a good pregnancy. She's just dilated. When
she went. We tried to have her stay home, as
she ended up going out.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Right now, her children want to know where's a mommy again?
Joining me in All Star panel to make sense of
what we know right now.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
But listen, we've all gathered here today because We are
looking for my sister. She is one centimeter dilated on
October fourth. She has been missing since October ten. My
sister is.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
Beautiful, She's energetic. She reaches for this.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
Guy just like a sunflower, which is her favorite.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
You're seeing that from our friends at ABC seven joining
me in addition to Emma's mother Jamie, father Jason, and
sister Abby. Lisette gian is joining us host of Caase
Files Chicago and you can find her at Tase Files Chicago.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Lisette, thank you for being with us.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Lisa, tell me about the area from which she goes missing.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
This is Gary, Indiana. Is it in the city.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Is it the metropolitan area around the city.
Speaker 6 (03:47):
This is in the city, Nancy, It's in a more
dilapidated area. We're talking about twenty fifth block of Connecticut Street,
which there are a lot of empty buildings around. There's
a lot of empty land and wooded area. Yea there,
So it is, you know, part of the city.
Speaker 7 (04:04):
One of the concerns.
Speaker 6 (04:05):
That is also very near our expressways here, and of
course we're known as the crossroads of America in this area.
So you know, the thought of maybe her, you know,
being even gone on that highway is actually a concern too.
Speaker 3 (04:17):
You're absolutely correct. Listen to this.
Speaker 8 (04:19):
Emma Baum was last seen near twenty fifth Avenue in
Connecticut Street, about two miles directly south of downtown Gary, Indiana.
It's been described as a dismal and desolate area. Baum
was visiting a home in the neighborhood. Her friends and
family have been there scouring abandoned homes looking for her
and for clues into her disappearance.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
Joining me in addition to the family analysta Gian Brian
Fitzgibbons is with us Director Operations USPA Nationwide Security, leading
a team of investigators specializing and finding missing people. You
can find him at USPA security dot com. Brian, thank
(04:57):
you for being with us. I've got all sorts of
thought colliding in my head regarding the disappearance of twenty
five year old, nine month pregnant Emma Baum. Number one
a case I'm sure you're very familiar with, and that
is the case of Shasta and Dylan Gronie who go
missing out of Cord Delane, Idaho. Why what does that
(05:19):
have to do with Emma's disappearance? If you could control room,
please show me that map again. If you look down
at an aerial off cord delane. You see nothing but green,
densely wooded trees.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
That's all you see. Running through that very rural area heavily.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Forested is an interstate. What happened to these two children?
A guy a perv driving down the interstate gets a
glimpse of Shasta gronee about eleven years old, and little
brother Dylan gets the glimpse through the trees of them
(06:01):
at an above ground pool. He goes and lies in wait,
kills the whole family to abduct the children, ultimately killing
Dylan as well.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
Shasta lived.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
After our program broadcasts the photos, a woman in a
convenience store spotted Shasta with her attacker and call.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
The tip line.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Okay, the significance of that interstate cannot be emphasized enough,
explain Brian.
Speaker 9 (06:38):
To have a main thoroughfare like that so close to
where Emma was last seeing is very concerning because she
could move at a high rate of speed to get
away from that area. And complicating factor even further is
the phone that she was holding at the time did
not have served and connected.
Speaker 10 (06:59):
So even though it's.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Yes, that's a whole another can of worms. The cell
phone issue but Brian, just think about it. Sixty miles
an hour if she was in a vehicle, that's how
quickly she'd be gone. At one centimeter dilated just before
her disappearance. Look at Emma five to three, one hundred
(07:22):
and thirty six pounds, nine months pregnant, brown hair, light
brown hair, blondish hair and eyes, brown eyes.
Speaker 3 (07:31):
Tattoos you see one right there. Now.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
She loves to dress up and wear different colored wigs.
That's just her. What is she wearing right now? We
cannot project that there you see her and other shots
you may see her with short, light brown hair.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
Just look at her face. If I could show her
face again.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
And specifically, specifically, I want to see a show of
that tattoo along her neck and collar bone, because regardless
of how she's got her hair done, that is something
that will not change.
Speaker 3 (08:10):
To Jamie, this is Emma's mom. What is that there?
Speaker 1 (08:14):
She is with a brown here with a brown wig. Jamie,
what is the tattoo? It looks like a sunrise?
Speaker 2 (08:20):
It is, Yes, it is a sunrise.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Emma is a natural brunette, but often has her hair
like this.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
Now the other case I want to bring up to you, Brian, Fitzgibbons.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
We just heard Lizette Gin joining us from Case Files Chicago,
talking about multiple abandoned homes in the area where she
was last visiting friends. In that neighborhood, there are some
abandoned homes, and it brings to mind a case that
I covered extensively, the disappearance of a Leanna Defreese, a
(08:57):
schoolgirl on her way to school. Ultimately found she had
been tortured. She was killed in an abandoned home. Brian
fitz Gibbons, police must go through every single abandoned home
in that area, explain the danger.
Speaker 10 (09:19):
There's a lot of inherent danger there.
Speaker 9 (09:21):
First of all, Gary, Indiana is a dangerous place with
all these abandoned homes. Nancy, you complicate search efforts, particularly
for volunteers. Police need to get on the ground there
in that vicinity of twenty fifth in Connecticut and start
searching some of those abandoned properties immediately.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
How do you go about doing that? I mean, this
is your expertise. You don't just drive by for Pete's sake.
The problem I see with an abandoned home is that
a victim can be taken in there, They can be raped,
they can be murdered.
Speaker 3 (09:53):
They can be.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
Held hostage and no one's going in and out. People
stay away from abandoned homes. Who wants to get near it.
You don't know what's in there. They're deemed unsafe, so
people can be in there and nobody knows.
Speaker 9 (10:06):
Yeah, the city should have access to these abandoned properties
without needing a search warrant. In many cases they will
indeed have that access, so I don't see that being
an issue in this case.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
Another case that is startlingly similar is that of a
young mom, a Memphis mom, Eliza Fletcher, outlining her own business.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
Eliza was jogging.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Here, we have Emma innocently visiting a friend and she
goes missing. Eliza goes missing, she was found in an
abandoned home that no one thought to look in. I
would advise some sort of a grid search at this point.
Brian Fitzgibbons, a grid search of this entire area.
Speaker 9 (10:51):
Absolutely, and it's listen, there are quite a few abandoned
homes in that vicinity, but this is not a massive.
Speaker 10 (10:59):
Area around the place that she was last seeing. And
we have to think if something did happen.
Speaker 9 (11:04):
To her, she would have had to be moved very
close by that she wouldn't have been moved too far away.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
To Abby Smith joining me. This is Emma's sister, along
with mom, Jamie. Abby, tell me about the phone, the
phone that Emma had.
Speaker 5 (11:19):
Emma used a lot of the WIFEI data, so she
should be able to connect to some sort of cell
tower or some sort of area where we'd be able
to determine whether or not that phone was moved. I
thought her last message was at five point thirty two pm,
and then she's just gone completely blank. We haven't had
(11:40):
any contact. No one has said anything. We haven't come
up no Facebook, no Snapchat, no like, no anything, and
we have not found the phone.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
Now, hold on right there, right there, hold on, hold on,
I've got a dissect everything you're saying, Abby is Emma Sis. Guys,
Please help us, Please help us. The family contacted me.
We read about the case online. I have seen no
other media coverage of Emma's case. The family is desperate tonight,
(12:15):
joining together, the dad, the mom, the sister, begging for help,
begging for your help. I want to give you a
couple of numbers. Right now here is a toll free number.
It's one eight hundred you tell us one eight hundred,
eight eight three five, five eight seven repeat one eight hundred,
eight eight three, five, five eight seven.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
You can remain anonymous.
Speaker 1 (12:39):
You can remain anonymous one eight hundred you tell us
eight eight three five five eighty seven. Or there's a
detective work. A detective working the case out of Lake
County Homicide Detective Gordon two one nine seven five five
three eight five five two one nine seven five five
(13:00):
three eight five five. The mom and dad desperate, desperate
for help. They have been out searching, they have been
out putting up flyers. Won't you help us? Help them
to Sister Abby? I want to understand a little bit
more about her cell phone now.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
Was this a prepaid phone? You said she was using
Wi Fi? Was she out of minutes? Help me understand
what's happening.
Speaker 5 (13:28):
She's going to turn it on. I believe she was
using the phone company Boost. Was it the Boost I Boost?
So like it's one of the prepaid phones. She had
no minutes, so she did actively use the WiFi. She
would connect anywhere she could could so she could keep
in contact with everybody.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Hold on just a second, Abby, you cut out on me?
Would would you just start that over place. I need
to hear every word. Was she using a prepaid phone, yes,
through Boost Mobile?
Speaker 3 (14:02):
Okay, prepaid phone Boost Mobile? Had she run out as
minus yes, ma'am.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Okay, So let me understand, Brian Fitzgibbons, I don't have
a prepaid phone.
Speaker 3 (14:15):
Explain to me how that works quickly.
Speaker 9 (14:18):
Whether your phone has minutes or not, it's still communicating
to cell phone towers. Anybody who has an old phone
knows you can still make an emergency call from it.
It's not sending as much information, it's not going to
be as precise, but that phone would have still been
communicating with cell phone towers urgent.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
Are you telling me, Brian that even though she was
out as minutes, her phone could still be pinged.
Speaker 10 (14:45):
That is correct, Nancy, That's what.
Speaker 3 (14:47):
I was getting at.
Speaker 1 (14:49):
I'm sorry to cut you off, Abby, but that's what
I'm trying to find out. To Hey, with the prepaid
minutes and the blaw and the blaw, I want to
get a ping. I want a ping on this phone.
So do you belie Abby, she had simply run out
of minutes? Was the phone cut off or was the
phone dead at a battery? Because the prepaid aspect is irrelevant.
(15:10):
According to Fitzgibbons, Well, like.
Speaker 5 (15:12):
You said, she was a girly girl, so she would
not have a dead phone. It just isn't like her
to walk around without a cell phone, especially being as
pregnant as she was. It makes no sense.
Speaker 3 (15:25):
Why she would not have it.
Speaker 5 (15:28):
Yes, way more responsible than that.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
When you say she was very responsible to mom Jamie Baum,
what do you mean she was more responsible than that.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
She just was honest. She wouldn't have not called any
of us. We talked to her daily. She has a
huge family and we all stay connected all the time.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Very responsible, a great mom, pregnant nine months Brian, I
just want to nail something down, Okay.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
So if she had her phone with her, and she.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
Like most of us, is very careful about keeping it charged,
it doesn't matter, Brian, if she had run out of minutes,
is that correct?
Speaker 10 (16:12):
That's correct.
Speaker 9 (16:13):
It changes things a bit because it's not communicating with
the towers as much as a phone that has service.
So on your phone that has service, you might have
one hundred different applications that are communicating out to the.
Speaker 10 (16:28):
Internet and through the tower all right.
Speaker 9 (16:30):
When that service is off, you only have that emergency
beacon in GPS and the ability to make a call
to the cell phone company back to.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
Sister Abby joining us.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
Abby, my control room just came into my ear and
told me that Emma's father, Jason, actually had to walk
out of the room.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
What happened.
Speaker 5 (16:53):
It's a lot emotionally, this is one of the hardest
things our family has ever dealt with.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
I own it say.
Speaker 5 (17:00):
He wants to admit that he feels broken or unable
to do anything to help return, and it's this is breaking,
It's breaking everybody.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
He's broken. Isn't your dad a war vet?
Speaker 9 (17:16):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (17:17):
Yes? What war was? He him?
Speaker 5 (17:19):
Iraq much Iraq.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
So this is a man that's faced the enemy far
from home and fought bravely, and he cannot talk about
Emma's disappearance.
Speaker 3 (17:33):
What has this done to him? What has this done
to him?
Speaker 5 (17:36):
He wants to do when it is right, so we
can make sure we have the correct justice.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
And it's just really hard emotionally.
Speaker 5 (17:43):
He feels like his country has turned to the back
on his children, and he has put all the effort
into making it safe for everybody, and it's not. It's
still not. So it's probably hurting him in a way
that none of us will ever understand, but we see it.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
For those of you joining us and just joining us now,
there is a desperate search right now in Gary, Indiana
and beyond for a twenty five year old pregnant mom,
Emma Baum.
Speaker 3 (18:13):
Please help us.
Speaker 8 (18:15):
The search for Bomb has been extensive. Police say three
primary locations have come up in the investigation, and those
searches have been exhausted. CA nines brought in on the
search found nothing. Multiple interviews have been conducted as volunteers
search overgrown fields, knock on doors, and pass out flyers.
Officers are now scouring old video footage in the area
where Bomb went missing.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
A twenty five year old mother, nine months pregnant is missing.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
Stunningly, I have learned that the number one.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
Cause of death amongst pregnant women in the US is homicide.
It's not a stroke, it's not blood pressure, it's not
a heart attack.
Speaker 3 (18:57):
It's homicide. When I heard that, I.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
Actually tracked down the first author, a doctor that wrote that,
because I couldn't believe it. As I recall she was
with the New England Journal of Medicine. I thought, certainly
I had it wrong. I didn't.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
She didn't. It's true. Look at Emma Baum. Please look
at Emma Bahm.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
I know we tonight sound angry and agitated because we are.
She cannot just vanish off the face of the earth.
Who saw a nine months pregnant woman, her beautiful Emma.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
We know that her.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
Phone should still be pinging, but apparently it's not. We
know that, we know there have been searches with canines
they found nothing. Volunteers searching overgrown fields, knocking on doors,
passing out flyers. We know officers say they are scouring
old video footage in the area from which she went missing.
(20:05):
No sign of Emma. I don't believe in supernatural reasons
for disappearances or reappearances. This is very real, and someone
very real and very much alive knows where is Emma?
Joining me in All Star Panel. But in addition to Sister Abby,
(20:30):
hopefully father Jason can rejoin us. This has triggered so
much for him. He is in a rocky.
Speaker 3 (20:37):
Warvette Crime Stories with Nancy, Grace.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
Mom, Jamie, and now Sister Page joining us, begging for
your help. Back to Lisette Yihan joining us host of
Tase Files Chicago, Lisa, I've been looking at the crime
rates now. While Indiana itself has one of the lower
(21:12):
national crime rates, Gary not so much when it comes
to violent crime twenty seventh and violent crime nationally explained.
Speaker 6 (21:22):
The area of Gary is, you know, very it is
very urban, and there is a lot of migration that
comes through from the city of Chicago, people that are
relocated there to hear. So it's interesting and we know
that Chicago has some issues of its own and some
of those people come and bring some of those issues.
So we were adding that onto the already on top
(21:43):
of the issues that Gary's already had. The other problem
is is that there is a flight I mean, people
aren't living in Gary no more. People aren't putting a
lot of businesses there like they used to, and so
people are scavenging for jobs. People have to move out
to find other jobs. The school system, there's plenty of
schools that are not open anymore. In fact, one of
(22:03):
them that came into question, Pulaski School, which is a
point of interest for police, was set on fire recently,
and so we have in addition to abandoned buildings, we
have abandoned schools now as well. So that all plays
into the part of the crime and the dilapidation of
the city of Gary.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
All of what Lisa just told us is true, but
that leaves me still asking where is this beautiful girl?
Speaker 3 (22:28):
At one centimeter dilation Listen.
Speaker 8 (22:32):
Emma Bomb comes from a very close, big family with
brothers and sisters for just about every day of the week.
She loves the closeness they share now as adults, and
she's creating her own large family with three children Camden six,
Lucas three, Amber, two, and her fourth is on the way.
Her sister Abigail says, Emma is energetic, always reaching for
the sky like a sunflower, which is her favorite flower.
(22:55):
Emma is very creative with her appearance, as she usually
wears wigs of all kinds of colors and styles over
her naturally brown hair. She never looks the same for
very long.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
Emma's family is desperately pushing for more resources to be
put toward finding Emma Listen.
Speaker 8 (23:13):
Walm's family is pushing for more resources to be given
to the search effort. Sister Abby Smith says the family
has put their own lives at risk searching abandoned houses
and digging dir piles. According to the Gary Police Commander,
there are license plate reading cameras and gunshot detection technology,
but no police observation device cameras or pod cameras in
the area Bomb was last seen in. Another sister, Haileybaum,
(23:35):
says she has stopped people in their cars, stop people walking,
talking to everyone possible. They're now turning to the public
for help. Emma's mother, Jamie Baum, says quote, We're always
going to look for I'm never going to stop looking
for her.
Speaker 1 (23:49):
Let me understand, Jamie Baum, this is Emma's mother joining us.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
You and Abby have been.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Stopping cars asking if anyone has seen Emma.
Speaker 3 (24:00):
Tell me about this.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
We've been out every day, all day twenty for twenty
four seven, walking in the middle of the road, going
in houses, just getting anyone that we can, holding her
sign up to every window.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Does her Page bom joining us in addition to Abby
and Jamie Page, tell me about your family's effort on
your own without police or sheriffs trying to find Emma.
Speaker 2 (24:30):
We've been searching every day.
Speaker 5 (24:34):
We haven't found any answers, but we're gonna do.
Speaker 3 (24:40):
She keep trying.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Abby, tell me about what you what is going through
your mind when you're out in the middle of the road,
running up to cars saying have you seen my sister
and showing her pictures.
Speaker 5 (24:55):
Hoping that someone is gonna give us an answer, that
someone knows something that maybe if they run us over,
the look harder because that could be the guy running
from the situation.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Well, I don't understand why you have to be out
going car to car and door to door and in
abandoned homes looking for Emma Jamie. Why are your daughters
doing the police work.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
Well, we have to find her somehow, and if we
have to do it, that's it's gonna happen. Police aren't
out there doing going through houses, so we are.
Speaker 3 (25:35):
Why why aren't they? Have you asked them.
Speaker 2 (25:37):
That yes, they said, they said, they say they're doing
their job.
Speaker 3 (25:44):
Joining me is.
Speaker 1 (25:45):
Greg Morse, high profile trial lawyer, partner at the law
firm of King and Morse, Palm Beach. You can find
him at kingmorselaw dot com.
Speaker 3 (25:55):
Greg.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
Very often you and I are on the different sides
of the fence, but I think you agree with me
that there's an issue here, a disturbing issue. How can you,
without antagonizing or agitating law enforcement, how can you get
them to do more? And what do you do as
a family. If you're not getting answers, well.
Speaker 11 (26:17):
It is surprising in this one. I looked into it.
What I haven't read the police have been trying to do.
This country has license plates readers across the entire work.
There's an expressway that borders this There's also a port
to Lake Michigan that borders the eye. There's a lot
of opportunity for law enforcement to look at technology to
(26:40):
shrink the story as to where this young lady was
taken or where she went. I surprised a lot of
the mainstream media has not given very many details, which
police of course hold back some stuff to verify credibility.
Speaker 10 (26:58):
I get that, But when I look at.
Speaker 11 (27:00):
This area, that's unfortunately a common area in America, low
income area that's forgotten. There's a lot of industry around it.
One thing we talk about cell phone towers. That's just
one component of what it sells. Cell phones also routinely
their bluetooth will ping off of things anywhere they are.
(27:20):
There is a lot of data that law enforcement could
be looking at, and maybe they are. It sounds like
though from the family that they're not. So I don't
know how there hasn't been further information. There's a lot
of resources they'll go to to try to find where
this girl or what happened to lead down that path.
Speaker 12 (27:40):
The family of Emma Baum says the police have not
been helpful in their efforts to find Emma. But police
say they have dedicated their search efforts to the three
primary locations that have come up during the investigation and
are now pivoting the investigation to scour old video footage
in the areas where Emma was last seen. The area
around Antoine Butler's.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
House, area around the Bio Dad's home is the beginning
where she was last seen before according to him, she
left that area. But the family has made it known
that the Geary PD was not helpful to them and
their search for Emma. Now a new detective with Lake
(28:24):
County Homicide. Lake County Homicide is on the case and
they feel rejuvenated. They feel that someone cares about their case.
Detective Gordon's number is two one nine seven five five
three eight five five repeat two one nine seven five
(28:45):
five three eight fivey five. When this goes to air tonight,
please have that number emblazoned on a screen so people
can see it. To Jamie Baum. Explain to me why
you felt that the Gary, Indiana police their feet you
know what.
Speaker 3 (29:01):
Let me ask you a question.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
According to a report given to me, one of the Gary,
Indiana police said to you, when Emma went missing, well,
if she's dead in a dumpster, you'll never find her.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Did not happen. I'm going to confirm that with you, Yes, ma'am,
I did.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
He told he had told my daughter that if she
was gone to would not be found, and that hurt
my family.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
I understand that after that you feel renewed hope because
Lake County Homicide, specifically Detective Gordon.
Speaker 3 (29:50):
Is now on the case.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
May I ask you what led the Gary, Indiana Police
officer to tell you in the midst of the search
of Emma, nine months pregnant, Yeah, she's dead in a dumpster,
you'll never find her.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
What brought that on?
Speaker 5 (30:05):
Somebody had give us some information and I had called
and asked to pass it on to him. I asked
him if he wanted it, I had it all nicely
where he could read it with the times and no
questions asked, No, cutting it.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
Off perfectly, here you go. And he told me no,
not only did he not.
Speaker 5 (30:26):
Need it, that if that was accurate, we would never
be able to find her. If she was domed and
shoot a garbage dump.
Speaker 3 (30:42):
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
To Brian Fitzgibbons, Director Operations USP, a nationwide security specialty
finding missing people. You know, in the midst of an investigation,
I've had victims families give me a lot of information
and sometimes I knew immediately it was not going to
be pertinent to the investigation, Like two years ago.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
She got a hang up phone call, just an example.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
But you don't tell the family. I don't need your information.
She's probably dead in a dumpster and you'll never find her.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
Well what was he thinking?
Speaker 9 (31:23):
Yeah, this defies logic, Nancy, And to the family, I'm
so sorry that you know, you had to hear that.
Speaker 10 (31:31):
It's very troubling to hear that.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
I mean, you take the information and you may believe, well,
this is not pertinent, but you don't say.
Speaker 3 (31:40):
That to a victim's family.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
You take the information, you review it, you look at it,
you study it and determine if it is.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
Or is not relevant. But to say that to a.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Family with they are the ones out looking in abandoned homes.
Speaker 3 (31:56):
They are the ones digging through.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
Feels high in grass. They are the ones out in
the street asking drivers to help them. Joining me right
now is a renowned forensic psychologist, doctor Sherry Schwartz. You
can find her at panthermitigation dot com. Doctor Sherry. I
(32:19):
recall the feeling of helplessness when my fiance was murdered.
There was nothing I could do.
Speaker 3 (32:27):
Nothing. That is a feeling you never get over.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
This family has felt they had no ally, that no
one was helping them.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
That can destroy you. Saw the father have to get
up and leave.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
Jason couldn't even listen because he feels so helpless.
Speaker 3 (32:55):
What is that?
Speaker 1 (32:55):
How can we fight that so the family can get
back on track and find Emma.
Speaker 7 (33:00):
Well, first of all, I want to say to the family,
how sorry I am for everything that you're going through.
For Jason, for dad, and for mom, and even for
the siblings. You can see the overwhelming sense of fear
and helplessness and frustration that they can't get the help
that they need from the people that we turn to
(33:20):
to get help. They're being told, well, you know she's dead,
she might be in a dumpster somewhere and you'll never
find her. But what they're failing to understand is that
nobody knows if she's dead, and if they don't go
out and investigate, then we're not going to know. And
it's not just missing Emma. There's a baby, possibly right
(33:41):
and infant baby that's missing. So from my position, there's
two people missing here. And for the family, you guys
are doing, from my perspective, everything that you can possibly do.
Just continue to stick together, that's really really important, and
support each other. Try to overcome your feelings of guilt
because you're not doing anything wrong and you didn't do
(34:02):
anything to cause this.
Speaker 1 (34:03):
Sound guys, this has been dragging on for weeks the
disappearance of Emma Baum, and in that time, wild fantastical
theories have have emerged.
Speaker 3 (34:16):
Listen.
Speaker 8 (34:16):
Bobby Joe Sten is eight months pregnant. Lisa Montgomery lies
to her saying she wants to buy one of her puppies.
Montgomery drives from Melbourne, Kansas to Bobby Joe's home in Skidmore, Missouri.
Montgomery strangles the mom to be and cuts the baby
from her stomach. Lisa Montgomery is arrested the next day.
The baby girl lives and is now a teenager living
(34:37):
with her dad.
Speaker 3 (34:38):
You think that's fantastical.
Speaker 1 (34:39):
It was actually floated as a defense theory, and the
Scott Peterson murder trial dead Lacy Peterson an unborn child Connor.
These fantastical theories are not helping in the search for Emma,
but yet they continue, such as comparing the case to
(35:00):
a teen girl Marlon at to Lopez.
Speaker 8 (35:03):
Nineteen year old Marlon and Joe Lopez is lured to
the home of Desiree and Clarissa Figueroa with the promise
of baby clothes. Once there, prosecutors say Clarissa got on
top of Marlin, continuing to strangle her for up to
five minutes. After researching how long it would take for
someone to die that way, they allegedly cut the baby
from Marlin's body, stuffed her in a plastic bag in
(35:24):
a hidden garbage can outside. Clarissa then claimed the baby,
with the umbilical cord and placentas still attached, was hers.
Her boyfriend is accused of helping to hide the murder
and evidence at the home.
Speaker 12 (35:35):
On Friday, October eleventh, Emma Baum does not reach out
to her family members, even though they are expecting her
to come home. Emma has a phone, but it is
out of minutes, telling her mother not to worry, she
is getting minutes.
Speaker 10 (35:47):
Put on the phone.
Speaker 13 (35:48):
On Friday, Emma said she would be back on Friday
to do something with her six year old son, Camden.
She doesn't show and doesn't call. The family waits through
Saturday for Emma to come back, and when she isn't
home by Sunday, her mother calls Antoine Butler. Antoine told
Emma's mother, Jamie Baum, that he saw her leave with
some girl in a car.
Speaker 1 (36:07):
What look, when my husband has to go out of
town for work or he has to go somewhere.
Speaker 3 (36:15):
I think I know where he's going and what he's doing.
Same thing with my children. What does this mean?
Speaker 1 (36:21):
The BF, the bio dad boyfriend says he quote saw
her leave with some girl in a car. Li set
Gian joining US investigative reporters, host of Case Files Chicago.
Speaker 3 (36:38):
Li set again, let me understand.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
That is the level of detail I've got from the
boyfriend that she left with quote.
Speaker 3 (36:47):
Some girl in a car.
Speaker 5 (36:50):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (36:51):
That's it, Nancy.
Speaker 6 (36:51):
And that's where the frustration lies is there's very little details.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
Okay, hold on just a moment, Jamie Baum. This is
Emma's mother has.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
The boyfriend and helping to look for Emma.
Speaker 2 (37:02):
No, and his family has never reached out either.
Speaker 1 (37:06):
Yeah, I don't like the way that smells to Greg
Moore joining me, high profile lawyer at King Morse as
a silk stocking law firm out of Palm Beach County. Greg,
When I look at a statement or I evaluate the
credibility of a witness, I look to see if their
(37:26):
statement is quote rich in detail. I can tell you
exactly what my son was wearing when he left for
school this morning, exactly, and I know what vehicle he
was driving. I can tell you exactly what my daughter
was wearing, what vehicle she was in, right down to
their backpacks, their tote bags, and their water bottles.
Speaker 3 (37:46):
What is this gibberish? Some girl, a girl in a car? What?
Speaker 10 (37:52):
Well?
Speaker 11 (37:53):
Not everybody remembers the same detail as everyone else. However,
five years and practicing law and handling every type of case,
these type of general statements that don't aren't made in completion.
Where the car went here, I knew the person was coming.
The police generally look at that as suspect. They're not credible.
(38:14):
And as I mentioned before, why isn't there information about
this potential car? Why aren't there people looking into where
this car go? It's a very easy thing to follow
for police.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
So of course, yes, I hear you say. Not everybody
remembers details. Did you say that.
Speaker 10 (38:32):
I did say that, Nancy. Not everybody remembers the same
all differently.
Speaker 3 (38:35):
My fiance Keith was murdered decades ago.
Speaker 1 (38:40):
I can remember right now what he was wearing, blue Jayson,
a denim shirt.
Speaker 3 (38:44):
He was going to work on a construction crew. He
was driving a white.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
Lamon's and as he left, he hung his left arm
out the wind and wave goodbye to me. I remember it,
crystal clear. It's branded on my brain.
Speaker 3 (39:01):
Jamie. Do you remember the last time you saw Emma. Yes,
she was wearing what did she say.
Speaker 2 (39:11):
Black clothing, She had her bag strapped around, she had
her purse strapped around her chest, and she get the
huge bye.
Speaker 6 (39:20):
So this should be home Toarrow.
Speaker 1 (39:22):
That makes says, I understand that you represent a lot
of clients, but that is total bs man that he
all he knows is she left with some girl in
a car.
Speaker 3 (39:37):
Technical legal term. I don't know if you use that
at King and Morse, but that's BS.
Speaker 1 (39:43):
And I'm calling him out on this another thing, another thing.
Speaker 3 (39:47):
I don't like. It's the last time she's seen.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
It's at his house, Abby Smith, this is Emma's sister,
isn't that true?
Speaker 5 (39:58):
That is correct? Our sister Jaden and Jewel dropped her off,
poor sure at that house to meet her boyfriend.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
Now, I don't want to make an issue of this
because this is a side issue, it's a collateral issue.
But I'm curious. I'm very curious, Abby, This BS boyfriend,
Antoine Butler. Was he supportive of the pregnancy?
Speaker 3 (40:21):
Was he helping her?
Speaker 1 (40:22):
No?
Speaker 5 (40:22):
There had been multiple times that he had asked her
to get an abortion, and that is a bath. He
didn't want it.
Speaker 2 (40:29):
Well.
Speaker 5 (40:30):
When mfone oue she was going into labor, she just
wanted to go more or less, make sure it confirm
and decide. She decided that no matter what, she was
going to keep the baby and it was going to
make her a better person. And then if you didn't
want to be a part of it, that she needed
to figure it out prior to fully going into labor.
Speaker 1 (40:49):
So no money, he's not supporting her, He's not excited
about the baby. He wants her to have an abortion,
you know what, all of that moral flaws.
Speaker 3 (41:00):
That does not make him a kidnapper or a murderer.
Speaker 1 (41:03):
However, I'm very concerned about the fact, Brian Fitzgibbons uspa
that that's where she's last seen. That doesn't bother you,
and nobody can tell me what kind of car she
left in, or where she went or anything.
Speaker 9 (41:21):
It's absolutely disturbing, Nancy. A vague statement like that, coupled with,
you know, potentially a motive that he didn't want her
to have the baby, and that she's having this conversation
as she's about to go into labor dilated a centimeter.
You know that that was the purpose of this conversation.
(41:44):
So all of this adds up to be very suspicious.
Speaker 3 (41:47):
Jamie, why did she go over to his place?
Speaker 2 (41:52):
I tried to keep her. I tried to ask her
not to you she wanted to talk with him over
about the baby's fighting.
Speaker 1 (42:03):
Doctor Serry Schwartz, what we women go through to try
to have the Hallmark Christmas card? You know, we want
the house stick, we want the house. We want the
husband or the partner, we want the children, we want
the Turkey dinner, we want the Christmas tree.
Speaker 3 (42:25):
We want it the.
Speaker 1 (42:27):
Way we have grown up to think it should be right.
And I've got a feeling Emma wanted that she wanted
the bio dad to want the baby be part of
the life, be a family, and was going over to
probably try to convince him of that.
Speaker 7 (42:49):
I'm sure for Emma she probably couldn't imagine that he
didn't feel the same way she felt in terms of
wanting to have this baby and parent this baby. And
so that's one of the difficulties. You're absolutely right, this
is what we crave. She's about to give birth, and
she wants to talk to them and say, don't you
want to be a part of this amazing child's life.
Speaker 2 (43:11):
I think you hurt my baby. And when you find
your shoes out.
Speaker 1 (43:22):
The family in so much pain now out flagging down cars,
going to abandoned buildings, walking through fields, begging for volunteers.
Speaker 3 (43:33):
That from our friends at ABC seven.
Speaker 1 (43:36):
The boyfriend, the bio dad in this case, Antoine Butler,
has not been named a formal suspect in the disappearance
of Emma. Emma Baum just twenty five years old, nine
months pregnant, and today I join with her family asking
(43:57):
for your help tip line to Detective Gordon two one
nine seven five five three eight five five or one
eight hundred You tell us one eight hundred eight eight three, five,
five eight seven. To Emma's mother, Jamie Baum, Jamie, what
(44:19):
is your message tonight? If Emma can hear you?
Speaker 2 (44:23):
Baby? We love you, watch your home. We'll miss you,
searching for you. We will not stop until we find you.
I love you, everybody loves you.
Speaker 3 (44:35):
We'll find you again.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
The tip line one eight hundred You tell Us or
two one nine seven five five three eight five five.
Speaker 3 (44:47):
We wait for justice. Two Unfold. Nancy Grace signing off,
goodbye friend