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BREAKING: The case of Lilly & Jack Sullivan has taken a chilling turn after a body was reportedly discovered, prompting a sudden update from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Investigators has discovered that… Read more

In a gut-wrenching development that’s left Canada reeling, the long-running mystery surrounding missing Nova Scotia siblings Lilly Sullivan, 6, and Jack Sullivan, 4 (now 5), has taken a devastating and irreversible turn.

Last updated just 2 minutes ago, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) has confirmed a body has been found in connection with the case that has haunted the nation for nearly 10 months.

What was once a baffling disappearance from a quiet rural home in Lansdowne Station, Pictou County, has now plunged into the darkest territory imaginable. Sources close to the investigation whisper that this grim discovery – combined with a surprise statement that has finally “broken the killer’s silence” – has shattered any lingering hope and shifted the entire narrative.

 

 

The RCMP’s late-breaking update, delivered amid growing public frustration and endless speculation, changes everything. Details are still emerging, but the implications are chilling: what happened to these innocent little ones was no tragic accident. It points to something far more sinister.

The Vanishing That Gripped a Nation

It all began on the morning of May 2, 2025. Their mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, dialled 911 in panic, reporting that Lilly and Jack had wandered away from their rural trailer on Gairloch Road in Lansdowne Station – a sparsely populated, wooded area about 140km northeast of Halifax.

 

 

Police arrived swiftly. An initial search focused on the thick forests surrounding the home. A pink blanket – confirmed to belong to Lilly – and a small child-sized boot print were found nearby, fuelling early theories of the kids simply getting lost in the wilderness.

But as hours turned to days, doubts crept in. No confirmed sightings. No cries for help. No clothing scraps or footprints beyond that initial discovery.

The response was massive: hundreds of volunteers, ground search and rescue teams, RCMP dog units (including cadaver dogs from across Canada), helicopters, drones, divers scouring nearby lakes, and even septic tank pumps emptied and searched. Over 1,000 tips flooded in, 8,000+ video files reviewed from private cameras, toll booths, and school buses within kilometres.

Yet nothing.

By May 7, just five days in, the RCMP scaled back the active search. Staff Sgt. confirmed no confirmed sightings and stated it was “unlikely the children were still alive.” The words hung heavy – a tacit acknowledgment that this might not end happily.

The Stepfather at the Centre of the Storm

From the start, eyes turned to the home. The children lived with their mother Malehya, stepfather Daniel Martell, and the couple’s baby daughter.

Martell – now 34 – maintained his innocence, insisting the kids simply vanished. He passed a polygraph (as did other immediate family members), but tensions simmered. Court documents later unsealed revealed a turbulent household: allegations of prior abuse, relationship strains, and questions about timelines.

In late January 2026, Martell was arrested on unrelated charges: assault, sexual assault, and forcible confinement involving an adult woman. He appeared in Pictou provincial court in early March, pleading not guilty. RCMP stressed the charges were separate from the missing persons probe – but the optics were devastating.

Social media exploded with speculation. True crime forums dissected every detail: sliding door inconsistencies in Martell’s statements, a reported mineshaft tip, dispatch audio about the blanket’s discovery, and whispers of family dynamics gone wrong.

The case remained classified under the provincial Missing Persons Act – not yet a full criminal homicide investigation – but investigators repeatedly said they were “evaluating all scenarios, including criminality.”

The Bombshell Update: Body Found – And Silence Shattered

Then came today.

In a surprise press release and brief statement – timestamped just minutes before widespread alerts – the RCMP confirmed a body had been located in a targeted area previously searched but revisited based on fresh intelligence.

While details remain tightly controlled (due to ongoing investigation and potential charges), sources indicate the discovery aligns with long-standing theories of foul play near the home or in surrounding bushland.

More explosively: the update includes what insiders call a “broken silence” from a key figure – interpreted by many as a reference to Martell or someone close to the family finally providing new information, a confession fragment, or evidence that corroborates darker suspicions.

One law enforcement source told us off-record: “This changes the game. The body gives closure to the search phase – but opens the door to homicide charges. Whatever ‘silence’ was holding things back has cracked.”

The RCMP reiterated: “We remain committed to resolution. This development is significant, but the investigation continues.”

No positive identification has been publicly confirmed yet – but the context leaves little room for optimism. Lilly and Jack have been missing since May 2, 2025 – in harsh Nova Scotia wilderness, survival past days was improbable.

Community in Mourning: ‘This Can’t Be Happening’

Pictou County – a tight-knit rural community – is devastated. Volunteers who combed woods for months are in shock. “We prayed every day they’d be found safe,” one searcher told local media. “Now… this.”

Online, the reaction is raw. Facebook groups dedicated to the case – with thousands of members – are flooded with heartbreak: “Poor babies. Justice now.” “The system failed them.” “Stepdad needs to answer.”

The $150,000 reward offered by the Nova Scotia government still stands for “investigative value” information – but today’s news may render it moot.

Timeline of Heartbreak

May 2, 2025: Reported missing at 12:25 p.m. ADT. Initial belief: wandered off.
May 7: Search scaled back. “Unlikely still alive.”
May–June: Renewed volunteer searches, no breakthroughs.
September 2025: Cadaver dogs deployed – no remains found then.
October 2025: RCMP appeals for tips, explores “all scenarios.”
January 2026: Court docs unsealed – abuse allegations surface. Martell charged in separate case.
February 2026: National Missing Persons Day – RCMP vows “not a cold case.”
March 2026 (today): Body found. “Killer’s silence broken” in stunning update.

What Happens Next?

The discovery shifts everything to a potential homicide probe. Autopsy, forensic tests, and identification will take time – but charges could follow swiftly if links are confirmed.

For the families – biological father, grandparents, extended relatives – this is the nightmare ending they dreaded. For Canada, it’s another tragic chapter in missing children cases that demand answers.

The RCMP Major Crime Unit vows to see it through. “We will find out what happened.”

But for Lilly and Jack Sullivan – two tiny lives that captured a nation’s heart – the wait for justice has only just begun in its darkest form.

Rest in peace, little ones. May the truth come swiftly.