Nashua Telegraph / Pittsfield Berkshire Eagle / Boston Globe / Boston Herald

February 8, 2009

Note: The Pittsfield Berkshire Eagle has a different headline and additional information in italics.

Boston Globe or Boston Herald difference is at end in large bold. The Lowell Sun has an additional sentence in bold and some of the additional commentary as in the Pittsfield Berkshire Eagle, where indicated.

After 5 years, few leads on missing student

Few leads on missing student

Five years later the case leaves investigators ‘befuddled’

Five years later, case frustrates family

By Beth LaMontagne Hall

The Associated Press

Concord - It’s been five years since nursing student Maura Murray, 21, vanished from the scene of a car crash in Haverhill, and investigators say they still don’t know what happened to the Massachusetts woman that night.

Murray packed up her schoolbooks and drove to northern New Hampshire on Feb. 9, 2004, eventually heading east on Route 112, a rural road that cuts through the White Mountain National Forest. She had told her friends and professors at the University of Massachusetts Amherst that she would miss a week of class because of a death in the family, but her family has said that wasn’t true.

Around 7 p.m., police received reports of a crash along the desolate road. When they arrived three to four minutes later, they found the Hanson, Mass., woman’s car with minor damage, but Murray was nowhere to be found.

“I’m totally befuddled,’’ said John Healy, president of the New Hampshire League of Investigators, a group of private investigators who’s been volunteering on the case for four years.

“The thing that is really, really tough for us, and it’s got to be tough for the state police, is the time frame. Literally, this was in a blink of an eye,” Healy said.

“Did a car stop? Did she walk away? We just don’t know that.”

The mystery has been especially hard on Murray’s family. Her father, Fred Murray, has been pushing the New Hampshire State Police and the Attorney General’s office for answers, but because the case is still under investigation, they have revealed little about what they’ve found.

“She was just 200 yards down the road when (police) got there, two minutes’ worth,” he said. “All they had to do is go grab her and they didn’t. If they did, she’d be here with me now.”

Murray has been critical of state investigators because he believes they didn’t look for Maura quickly enough and were slow to follow up on leads. They aren’t telling him what they’re doing, he said, or if any progress has been made.

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Senior Assistant Attorney General Jeffery Strelzin says the case is still open and active.

"There's been a lot of activity behind the scenes and the state police have put in hundreds of hundreds, if not thousands, of hours on the case, but unfortunately we don't have the answers yet," said Strelzin.

Healy, a former state police lieutenant, said investigators have not shelved the case.

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“Trust me, these people are working their tails off,” he said.

But Murray is frustrated after years of battling with investigators.

"I want to put it together again from the beginning, but I don't want one arm tied behind my back," said Murray. "I want the public to know that the police have been asked, 'What did your guys do?' and they won't say."

He believes if he knew what they knew, he could put together a timeline of the night and, he hopes, a clearer picture of what happened.

Strelzin said police believe Maura Murray could have essentially run away and is living elsewhere, a scenario her family does not buy.

Murray could have also been injured in the accident, wandered off into the woods and died of exposure or ran into someone who harmed her.

“I’m 100 percent certain that it’s foul play. She was supposed to call me that night. She would have if she could have, but she couldn’t,” said Murray. “It’s a question of who.”

Healy said his crew of volunteer investigators has found some possible evidence over the years, such as a human scent picked up by search dogs, but he's uncertain if it ever led to anything.

Although he continues to occasionally examine the area where Maura Murray disappeared, Healy thinks the best bet police have in solving the case is if someone new comes forward.

"One thing that I've learned is that very few people commit a crime ... without telling somebody about it somewhere," said Healy. "Human beings need to talk."