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Even The Sheriff Couldn’t Hold Back Tears… This Case Changed Everything | True Crime Story

 

   12 years for the other. Um even though he says he has no reasons to believe my child to be alive, I will go ahead. As hard as this is for me to say, I have not made any inclinations one way or the other since this report came out. My heart, my gut, and my soul tell me my child is no longer alive.  In other news this afternoon, the adoptive parents of a North Carolina teen found dead years after being reported missing.

 The skeletal human remains of Erica Parsons were discovered on Tuesday. Law enforcement sources telling our NBC affiliate WCNC that her remains were found in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, some 40 miles southeast of Charlotte. Now, Erica was last seen in 2011 when she was just 13 years old.  Salsbury, North Carolina, a small city tucked into the heart of Rowan County, where most people know their neighbors by name, and life moves at a steady, quiet pace.

 Nothing about it feels like the setting for one of the most heartbreaking true crime cases this country has ever seen. But on July 30th, 2013, a young man walked through the doors of the local sheriff’s office alongside his uncle. And what he said next would set off an investigation that would shake that entire community to its core.

 His name was Jaime Parsons, and he was there to report his little sister missing. Here’s where this story takes a turn that’s hard to wrap your head around. Erica hadn’t just gone missing recently. No one had seen her for nearly 2 years. Two full years. And in all that time, not one missing person’s report had been filed. No Amber Alert, no search, no public plea, just complete and total silence.

 as if a 13-year-old girl had simply been erased. Jaime said the last time he laid eyes on her was back in November of 2011. His uncle Scott, who came with him that day, told offices he’d been hearing different versions of where Erica might be. But honestly, he hadn’t seen her either. And nobody could explain how a child that young could vanish from a household and not a single adult thought to make a call.

 Erica was quiet, shy, the kind of kid who didn’t take up much space in her room. Born on February 24th, 1998, she had been legally adopted as an infant by her aunt and uncle, Casey and Sandy Parsons, who were already raising several other children, including Jaime, in a house on Miller Chapel Road right there in Salsbury.

 On paper, it looked like a family doing the right thing, keeping a child within the family rather than letting her disappear into the foster care system. But what was happening inside that house was something else entirely. And that is exactly what this true crime documentary is about. This is the story of Erica Lynn Parsons, a little girl who was let down by the people closest to her, failed by the systems that designed to protect her and hidden from a world that never got the chance to know she was gone.

 This case took years to unravel, and every layer that investigators peeled back revealed something darker than the last. If you’re new here and you’re into true crime documentaries like this one, go ahead and hit that subscribe button right now. We cover cases that deserve to be heard and drop a comment of letting me know where you’re watching from.

 Whether you’re in Georgia, Illinois, up in the Pacific Northwest, or somewhere across the ocean, I genuinely want to know. It helps this story reach more people and every single view matters. All right, let’s get into it because this one does not let up. When Jaime sat down with investigators that day, he didn’t just say his sister was missing.

He started talking. And the more he said, the more the officers in that room realized this was not a routine missing person’s case. Jaime explained that he had asked his parents, Casey and Sandy Parsons, multiple times where Erica was and why she hadn’t been living at the house on Miller Chapel Road anymore.

Every single time they gave him the same answer. They said they had taken her to Asheville, North Carolina, where her biological grandmother supposedly lived. A woman named Irene Goodman, but everyone in the family apparently just called her Nan. On the surface, that might sound like a reasonable explanation and the child going to live with a relative.

 It happens. But the more Jaime talked, the more that story started to fall apart because tucked underneath it was something far more disturbing. Jaime told officers that his parents had been mistreating Erica for years, not just occasionally, routinely, both physically and emotionally. And even after Erica stopped living in that house, Casey and Sandy had continued collecting government payments in her name.

 Roughly $600 every single month, that detail right there, that’s where investigators leaned in hard. The very next step was to bring Casey and Sandy in and hear their side of it. and they came in with a completely different story. They denied everything Jaime said about the mistreatment. All of it. According to them, Jaime had recently been kicked out of the house after a falling out with Casey.

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 And this whole thing, every word of it, was just a bitter teenager making things up out of anger and spite. They stood firmly by their account. Erica had gone to live with her biological grandmother in Asheville back in 2011. That was their story, and they weren’t budging from it. They also mentioned that their biological daughter, Brooke, had traveled with them on that trip to drop Erica off.

 Except when investigators spoke with Brooke, she said no. She never went on any such trip. She had no idea what they were talking about. So now you’ve got two completely different versions of events. And somewhere in the middle of all that, a missing 13-year-old girl. Investigators pressed Casey for more details about this grandmother, this woman named Nan.

 Casey said she had been in contact with her through Facebook. But when asked to pull up the account, show the messages or provide even a basic phone number for the woman who was supposedly caring for a child Casey was still legally responsible for, she couldn’t do it. She had nothing. No contact information, no profile, nothing she could show them at all.

 And right there, that’s the moment you could feel the ground shift beneath this case. The deeper investigators dug, the stranger the whole thing became. Because here’s what they found out next. Erica’s biological grandmother, what the real one, had passed away back in 2005. That was more than 8 years before Erica was even reported missing.

 More than 6 years before anyone had last seen her alive. So this woman Casey was describing, she couldn’t have been who Casey claimed she was. And then it got even more complicated. Investigators later concluded that this so-called nan may not have existed at all. Erica’s biological mother, a woman named Caroline Parsons, told police plainly that Erica had no biological relatives living anywhere near the Asheville area.

Nobody by that name. Nobody matching that description. Now, the attorney representing Casey and Sandy tried to flip the script on that. He suggested that Caroline herself should know something. that Nan had supposedly come into Casey and Sandy’s lives through Caroline in the first place and that maybe Caroline knew exactly who this woman really was.

 But Caroline shut that down completely. She said Nan was not a real person. Irene was not a real person. And the only two people on Earth who actually knew the truth, she said, were the same two people who had made it very clear they were never going to tell it. Then Casey changed her story again. This time she said she had been deceived.

 that the woman she handed Erica over to had turned out to be some kind of impostor, someone who had misrepresented herself entirely. At that point, the investigators working this case had heard multiple versions of events, none of which lined up, none of which could be verified, and none of which led them one step closer to finding Erica Parsons.

The day after Erica was officially declared missing, the two youngest children still living in the home were removed by authorities. Then just a few days after that, on August 6th, 2013, the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office made a public announcement. Casey and Sandy Parsons were not cooperating with the investigation.

6 days later, Caroline returned from New Orleans to speak with law enforcement in person. She told officers she’d been receiving updates about Erica through Facebook messages over the years, but that she hadn’t actually seen her daughter in person since January 5th, 2011. She said that last visit played over and over in her mind constantly.

She said her entire body went numb when she thought about it as a mother, as a human being, as someone who had trusted other people to keep her child safe. But she said she was still holding on to hope. She said she kept praying that Erica was out there somewhere alive and that one day she would find her way back.

 About 2 weeks into the search, the street outside the Parson’s home was shut down entirely. A neighbor later told reporters that it started with just one officer showing up. And then before anyone could blink, there were 25, maybe 30 squad cars lined up down that road. Officers walked the property from every angle, combed through the backyard multiple times, but nothing immediately suspicious turned up.

 A month after Jaime filed that report, the FBI officially joined the investigation, working alongside local and state law enforcement. And that’s when this case started to crack wide open. with the FBI now involved. The investigation shifted into a higher gear. The family home on Miller Chapel Road was searched multiple times and what came out of those searches started painting a very specific picture.

 Search warrants carried out in August of 2013 revealed that investigators removed dozens of items from the house. Among them was a plastic bag stuffed with magazines and a book all about John Benet Ramsay. For anyone who needs a quick reminder, John Benet was a 6-year-old girl found murdered inside her own family’s home in Boulder, Colorado on Christmas Day in 1996.

A case that to this day remains unsolved. Inside that book were handwritten notes. Notes that strangely referenced home repairs. Why would someone in that house be that interested in one of the most notorious unsolved child murder cases in American history? Investigators weren’t sure, but they noted it.

 What they found next was harder to explain away. A section of drywall had been cut out and removed from a closet inside the home because it had red stains on it. The baseboards from that same closet were pulled out and sent off for forensic testing. A pair of jeans with similar red stains was also seized from inside the house.

 Then about a week after that search, new warrants were made public connected to a storage unit registered to Sandy Parsons. And from that unit, investigators recovered parts of a vacuum cleaner, a videotape, school related documents, a hammer, and what the warrant described as teeth. And then those warrants circled back to something just as telling.

 Investigators noted they could find absolutely no evidence that Erica Parsons had been living in that home at all. No intact bedroom, no personal space, no signs that a child had occupied any corner of that house in a very long time. It was as if she had been removed. Not just physically, but deliberately. Every trace of her gone.

Law enforcement said it clearly. All the evidence pointed to one conclusion. Casey and Sandy. Parsons already knew Erica was never coming back. Now, alongside the physical search, investigators have been following a financial thread. And that thread turned out to be one of the most significant pieces of this entire case.

The focus was on the money. specifically the government benefits Casey and Sandy had been collecting in Erica’s name long after she had stopped living with them. Officials moved forward with a financial warrant and the affidavit supporting that request stated something striking. It said investigators believe the ongoing desire to keep collecting those payments had played a direct role in why Erica was never reported missing.

 That the money was part of the reason her disappearance was hidden for so long. working with the FBI investigators traced the couple’s bank accounts across three institutions, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Sun Trust. What they found confirmed what they had suspected. Because Erica had been adopted through the state foster care system and had been identified as a child with special needs, the Parson’s family had qualified for over $600 a month from the Department of Social Services to help cover the cost of her care. and they had

kept collecting that money month after month without interruption. Casey and Sandy’s attorney pushed back on this, arguing that since they remained Erica’s legal guardians, they were technically within their rights to continue receiving those payments. But that argument immediately raised a bigger question, one that the attorney struggled to answer cleanly.

 If they still considered themselves her legal guardians, why had they never filed a missing person’s report? Why had no one made a single call? The attorney’s response was that Casey and Sandy didn’t believe Erica was missing because as far as they were concerned, they had personally placed her with her grandmother.

 In their minds, she wasn’t lost. She was just somewhere else. But investigators weren’t buying it. And neither, it seemed, was anyone watching closely from the outside. Because here’s the thing that stood out during every media appearance Casey and Sandy made. Every interview, every press statement, every time they sat in front of a camera and talked about Erica, they spoke about her in the past tense.

 Carolyn, Erica’s biological mother, spoke about her daughter in the present tense every single time, without exception. She told WBTV on August 5th that Erica was her biological daughter, and she wanted the world to know she still loved her. Casey and Sandy, meanwhile, kept adding new layers to an already shaky story. Sandy told reporters that their relatives had recently spotted Erica at a rest area somewhere.

 When reporters pushed back and asked why they hadn’t immediately called the police after hearing that, Sandy deflected. She said the only thing she cared about right now was Erica calling home to say she was okay and getting her two youngest children returned to her. Those children had been removed from the home the day after Erica was officially declared missing.

 And Casey and Sandy were actively fighting to get them back. They were scheduled to meet with representatives from the Department of Social Services with a judge set to rule on whether the kids could be returned. But investigators were also uncovering something else. Something that made this situation has feel even more layered. This wasn’t the first time alarm bells had gone off around this family.

Relatives had made multiple calls to DSS over the years, long before Erica ever disappeared. Concerns had been raised, flags had been planted, and DSS had at some point investigated an allegations of mistreatment involving Erica specifically. Their conclusion at the time, no violations found. Erica did not appear to be afraid of her guardians.

Looking back on that now, knowing everything that would eventually come out, that finding is one of the hardest parts of this entire story to sit with. Casey continued to deny everything. She told investigators that her whole family was lying, that her own mother had put the children up to saying these things, coaching them, feeding them a script.

The family’s attorney echoed that publicly, saying the accusations were unverified and that the couple was doing everything in their power to locate Erica while relatives were simply stirring up trouble. There was also the matter of school records. Casey had been homeschooling the children, and representatives from the North Carolina Department of Non-public Education confirmed that test scores and attendance records had indeed been submitted. But here’s the catch.

 They could not confirm whether any of those records actually belong to Erica. There was no way to verify it. Casey was pressed again about the Facebook contact with the mystery woman. This time, she said the account had simply been deactivated. The woman had disappeared completely. Phone disconnected. No forwarding information, no way to reach her whatsoever.

Casey and Sandy even took their story national sitting down with Dr. Phil. During that appearance, Casey admitted they had never actually visited this woman’s home in person. They had only been shown photographs of it. She also told reporters that they had allowed Erica to go visit on her own and that eventually Erica just hadn’t wanted to come back.

 At one point, Casey even contacted the Rowan County Department of Social Services, claiming she had found a girl on social media with the same name as Erica, and that this girl living in Greensboro was actually their child. Story after story, version after version, none of them matching, and none of them leading anywhere.

 Investigators ran Erica’s social security number through every database available. They searched for any record of her obtaining a driver’s license, any document file in her name, any financial transaction tied to her identity. They found absolutely nothing, not a single trace. The community, meanwhile, was watching all of this unfold, and they were not staying quiet.

 On August 23rd, neighbors organized a candlelight vigil outside the Parson’s home, gathering in the dark to pray for answers. Billboards featuring Erica’s face went up across the area. On August 26th, Casey and Sandy agreed to sit down once more with FBI investigators. And then the very next day, they packed up a moving truck and left the neighborhood entirely.

 They said it was because of the media pressure, because the cameras and the reporters had become too much. Sy’s stepfather, when reached by reporters, said Sandy visited him a few times a year, and only sometimes brought Erica along. He said the last time he had actually seen her in person was sometime around 2008 or 2009.

 This was not a simple missing person’s case. Every answer produced three more questions. Every story changed. And somewhere beneath all of it. Beneath the lies, the deflections, the media appearances, and the moving trucks was a 13-year-old girl that no one could find. But investigators knew one thing for certain. People don’t just disappear.

Not like this. Not without someone knowing exactly where they went. Caroline Parsons never stopped organizing vigils for her daughter. She said the more locations they held them, the wider they could spread Erica’s name, her face, her story. She wasn’t going to let people forget. She couldn’t afford to.

 On January 16th, 2014, a judge ruled that the two youngest children removed from the Parson’s home could not be returned to Casey and Sandy. They were placed instead with an aunt. Though even that arrangement would later unravel, those children were eventually removed from that home as well due to what authorities described as serious behavioral concerns.

 The investigation pressed forward and on January 30th, 2014, nearly 6 months after Jaime first walked into the sheriff’s office. The G FBI announced a reward of $25,000 for any information leading to Erica’s whereabouts. The Rowan County Sheriff’s Office added to that and prevent child abuse. Rowan contributed another $5,000 on top of it.

Almost a full year had passed since Erica was reported missing and still no Erica. Then finally something broke. Federal agents armed and moving with purpose forced their way into the Parson’s residence. Casey and Sandy Parsons were arrested and charged in Fagatville, North Carolina with 76 criminal counts. According to investigators, those crimes have been carried out between February of 2010 and August of 2013.

The charges included theft of the government funds, mail fraud, tax fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States government, and identity theft. The picture that emerged was this. For years, the couple had been illegally collecting government money, adoption assistance, Medicaid, Social Security benefits, and food and nutritional support, all designated for a dependent who is no longer living under their roof.

 On top of that, Casey had allegedly used other people’s personal information, listing them as dependent on fraudulent federal tax returns to increase their refunds. 76 counts, years of it, methodical and deliberate. Because of the scope of those charges, Casey and Sandy were placed under strict supervised release. Electronic monitoring devices were fitted on both of them.

 They were required to check in regularly with a pre-trial officer and were ordered to remain within eastern North Carolina and stay out of any further trouble. Court proceedings began and what came out during that fraud trial went far beyond finances. Testimony from multiple family members, including Jaime, Casey’s sister Robin, and others, began filling in the details of what life had actually looked like inside that house on Miller Chapel Road.

And what those witnesses described was not a home. It was something much darker than that. Robin, Casey’s own sister, took the stand and told the court that she had been asked at one point to take Erica in and care for her for several months. When asked why, her answer was short and devastating.

 She said it was done so that Casey wouldn’t hurt her. Robin testified that Erica frequently had marks and bruises covering her body and that Casey could not even bring herself to make direct eye contact with the little girl. Then Jaime testified and the details he gave were among the most difficult this courtroom and and later the public would hear throughout this entire case.

 He said Erica was not permitted to use the bathroom freely. She was forced to eat food meant for the family dog or food that had been pulled from the trash. She was denied regular meals and made to drink water from the dog’s bowl or directly from the bathroom sink faucet. She was deliberately left out of every family activity.

 No birthdays, outings, holidays, all of it. She had no bed, not a mattress on the floor, not a cot, nothing. She slept on the floor itself in whatever space she was allowed to occupy that night. Her fingers were intentionally bent backward and broken. She was locked inside a closet for extended periods of time.

 and if she had an accident while confined in there, the punishment that followed was severe. Jaime also testified that Casey once pressed Erica’s hand against a hot stove burner and then he admitted something that clearly weighed on him heavily. He said that he and the other children in that house had also participated in mistreating Erica beginning when she was around 5 years old, continuing until he himself was about 16.

 He said there was one specific incident where he broke her arm. He said after that moment he made a decision that he would never raise a hand to her again. But the damage from that broken arm alone told its own story. Brooke, his sister, later told a detective that Casey had sent Noning kids to Walmart to buy basic first aid supplies so they could fashion a homemade cast for Erica’s arm rather than take her to a hospital.

 Relatives who saw Erica afterwards said that arm never healed the way it should have. It was visible. It was noticeable. And still nobody called anyone. On the witness stand, Jaime went further. He testified that Casey instructed the younger children, Sadie and Toby, to pull Erica’s hair whenever she didn’t want to play with them.

 He said Casey didn’t just allow the other kids to treat Erica that way. She encouraged it. He said he regularly witnessed Casey striking Erica himself and that Sandy would punch her on the top of her head. Over time, Erica developed a bald spot in that exact location. A spot that kept reopening and healing and reopening again from the repeated impact.

 Sadi, only 12 years old at the time of her testimony, told the court that she used to try to sneak food to Erica whenever she could manage it without getting caught. She confirmed that Erica was kept locked in a closet, sometimes in Casey’s bathroom, sometimes in Brook’s room. She also described watching Casey grab Erica by the throat and squeeze so hard that Erica could not get air.

 And if Erica ever received a gift from anyone, a relative, a visitor, anyone. The moment that person walked out the door, the gift was taken away and handed to Toby or Saddy. A statement read aloud by the district attorney revealed that Sandy had reportedly told someone that no one would ever find Erica because Casey, in Sandy’s own words, was smarter than the FBI.

The details kept building one on top of the other. About a week before Erica was last seen alive, her siblings described her appearance as alarming. Her eyes were sunken in. Her skin had taken on a grayish tone. She was weak, barely moving, covered in open wounds that hadn’t been treated.

 Jaime said the last time he saw her, she looked, and he used this word himself, like a zombie. She told him she felt sick, that she couldn’t breathe right. And he said Casey’s response to hearing that was completely cold. She told Erica she didn’t care. She told her to go stand in the corner. The next morning, Jaime woke up and his parents were gone.

 They didn’t come back until later that same day. When they walked back through the door, Jaime noticed something immediately. Sandy was pale, quiet. He looked like he was about to be sick. Casey, on the other hand, looked completely unbothered, entirely calm. When Jaime asked where Erica was, he was told she had gone to her grandmother’s.

Prosecutor Anandra Swami addressing the court referenced Jaime’s testimony directly and stated that Jaime had said Erica was no longer alive and that according to the prosecution, Casey and Sandy had made a mutual decision not to report what had happened. Sandy’s defense attorney pushed back hard.

 He argued that poor parenting, as difficult as it is to hear, does not automatically constitute a criminal act. He pointed out that the bulk of the prosecution’s case rested heavily on Jaime<unk>’s account, and Jaime<unk>s credibility was not without question. Sandy’s brother, Scott, had told investigators that Jaime was, in his words, a habitual liar.

 And Jaime himself had waited 5 more months after telling his grandmother he hadn’t seen Erica in a long time before he finally went to the police. Casey’s mother, Shirley, also testified. She said the last time she personally saw Erica was around the holiday season at the end of 2011. She recalled that when Erica was approximately 6 years old, she had noticed bruises on the child’s body and a black eye and that Casey at the time had blamed those injuries on Jaime.

Shirley admitted she and her husband James had wondered whether Casey was hurting Erica. She said they talked themselves out of it. She also described a specific incident where she had personally witnessed Casey grabbing Erica by the throat, her husband. James physically intervened, grabbed Casey’s arm, and as Shirley put it, scolded her.

After that, they left the house quickly, visibly shaken. Shirley also noted that Erica’s hands and fingers showed obvious signs of injury, something that aligned directly with Jaime’s account that Casey would bend them backward as a form of punishment. Robin had noticed the same thing.

 The fingers were crooked, misaligned. When Casey was asked about it, she said it was just arthritis. Robin added in her own testimony that Erica was regularly made to stand in a corner as punishment and that the court was shown actual photographs documenting Erica standing in corners on at least five separate occasions. Five with pictures to prove it.

 There was one more detail from this period of Erica’s life that stopped people cold. When she was younger, Erica used to call Casey and Sandy a mom and dad. At some point, Casey told her she didn’t like that. She ordered Erica never to call her mom again. From that moment forward, Erica was required to address her adoptive parents by their first names only, Casey and Sandy. That was it.

 Sy’s stepmother, Janet, testified about a family beach vacation night during which Erica had been left behind, alone in the house. Erica had been told not to let anyone know she was there and to stay hidden if anyone came by. Sandy’s father, William, ended up stopping by the house while the family was away and found Erica there by herself.

 Janet said she had always felt Erica was treated differently from the other children, that she simply wasn’t afforded the same basic consideration. Even though the fraud trial was not officially about Erica’s disappearance, the testimony pouring out of that courtroom told a story that went far beyond financial crimes. And then, just when you think this case couldn’t get any more layered, it did.

 At some point during the same general period, a woman named Amy Miller and her husband had connected with Casey through a surrogacy website. They were looking for someone to carry their child, and Casey had presented herself as sincere, grounded, deeply faith-driven. Amy described her as the kind of person who felt immediately trustworthy.

 And the fact that Casey had adopted Erica to keep her within the family, that it actually made Amy feel even more confident she was dealing with a good person, someone with genuine compassion. They agreed to pay Casey $10,000, which Casey said would be donated to her church. But Casey almost immediately said she needed a washing machine and a dryer.

 So that first payment and every payment that came after, went straight to her instead. Then Casey told Amy the baby had died. She changed her phone number, changed her email, told Amy she needed to move on with her life and that she didn’t deserve to have a child, but that baby had not died. The infant had been born alive and completely healthy.

 Casey and Sandy then approached Robin trying to sell the baby for $110,000, telling her the biological parents no longer wanted the child. Robin found Amy through her own searching online. Law enforcement was contacted and Amy Miller was ultimately able to get her baby back. Amy said that the Casey she had come to know, warm, religious, caring, had transformed into someone unrecognizable.

She said she finally understood how deeply manipulative these people were and that what they put her family through was something she would never forget. When the fraud trial concluded, Casey pleaded guilty to five counts of mail fraud, one count of aggravated identity theft, one count of conspiracy to commit fraud against the government, four counts of wire fraud, and four counts of aiding in the preparation of false tax returns.

She was sentenced to 120 months in federal prison, 3 years of supervised release, and ordered to pay restitution of over $41,000. Sandy was found guilty on 43 counts following a jury deliberation of less than 5 hours. He was sentenced to 96 months, 3 years of supervised release, and ordered to pay restitution of over $624,000.

At sentencing, the judge did not hold back. He told the courtroom he had sentenced close to a thousand people over the course of his career and that he could not recall a single case that had affected him as deeply as this one. He said the evidence that Erica was no longer alive was compelling and impossible to ignore.

 He called Casey and Sandy morally bankrupt. He said they had made a plan, carried it out, and then spent years covering it up. He said the story about Nan, the mysterious grandmother, it was a poorly constructed, intentional lie. and he called Erica exactly what she was, a defenseless little girl who only ever wanted to be loved.

 Casey’s sister, Robin, speaking to WBTV after the sentencing, said she wished the sentence had been longer, but that it was more than she had expected. She said it felt like a measure of justice for Erica, not full justice. She was clear about that. She said Erica deserved more, but it was something.  10 years for one,  12 years for the other.

Um, even though he says he has no reasons to believe my child to be alive, I will go ahead. As hard as this is for me to say, I have not made any inclinations one way or the other since this report came out. My heart, my gut, and my soul tell me my child is no longer alive. But I want media, everybody who supports, loves, and prays for Erica and myself to understand that does not mean I give up.

 That does not mean I quit searching. That does not mean that I want anybody to give up. Until there is a body, until the DNA or whatever for sure comes from the FBI that she is passed away, don’t give up looking. Don’t give up praying. I’ll give that to her.  Casey’s mother, Shirley, took a very different position.

 She said she didn’t believe the court should have factored anything related to Erica into the sentencing. Not until there was concrete proof beyond Jaime’s testimony that something had actually happened to her. And then Jaime walked back his earlier statements entirely. He said that while he had been concerned about his sister, he had not personally witnessed any of the things he had described.

 Just like that, another twist in a case that had already taken more turns than most people could keep track of. Both Casey and Sandy filed appeals. Sandies went all the way to the United States Supreme Court. It was rejected. Casey’s went to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, also denied. The fraud sentences were final, but Erica still hadn’t been found.

 And the people who cared about her in Rowan County and far beyond it were not ready to stop looking. Even with Casey and Sandy sitting in federal prison, the search for Erica Parsons did not stop. And it wasn’t just law enforcement keeping it alive. Two Rowan County residents, Shannon Moss and a man named W. Rogers, refused to let this case fade into the background the way so many missing person’s cases are eventually due.

 They reached out to an organization called K9 Specialties, led by a man out of Illinois, who specialized in locating missing persons using trained search dogs. Rogers was direct about why he was doing it. He said he hadn’t known Erica before any of this. But now he did and it had become personal. He said if something truly terrible had happened to her and she had been discarded like she didn’t matter, then people needed to understand that she did matter.

 She was not something to be thrown away. She was a little girl and she deserved to be found. Robert T. Larson traveled to Rowan County and led several organized search efforts using his dogs and volunteers. He said the group of people who showed up gave everything they had over that weekend. Every bit of energy, every hour of daylight.

 And he said if he ever had to choose a group of people to work alongside again, it would be people exactly like them. These searches were civilianled, not part of any official law enforcement operation, but authorities were kept informed and updated throughout. Unfortunately, despite everything those teams put into it, nothing was found.

 Rogers made a point of emphasizing something important. They were not only searching for a deceased Erica, they were also searching for a living one because until there was proof otherwise, that possibility had to remain open. He said they were checking everything they possibly could and they were not giving up.

 The Rowan County Sheriff’s Office, working in parallel, reached out to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and requested an age progressed image of Erica. A computerenerated rendering of what she might look like as she got older in case someone had crossed paths with her more recently and simply didn’t recognize her from older photographs.

 That image was released publicly with the hope that it might jog someone’s memory somewhere across the country. By this point, five full years had passed since Ericas was officially reported missing. Then something shifted. The oldest biological daughter of Casey and Sandy, the same Brooke who had for a long time stood firmly by her parents, eventually agreed to sit down with the FBI.

 And what she told agents added yet another dimension to the picture that had been building for years. She said there was a time when Casey had forced Erica to stand outside barefoot on a blazing hot day until the soles of her feet blistered from the heat of the pavement. She said Erica’s skin had looked abnormal, yet that she had open sores across her body, that something was visibly, seriously wrong.

A few months after that conversation, Brooke went to visit her father in federal prison, and that visit changed everything. Sandy Parsons told his daughter that he was ready to help police find Erica. Rowan County Sheriff Kevin Uton confirmed that after investigators spoke directly with Sandy, they were finally after all those years able to locate what they had been searching for.

 According to what Sandy told authorities, Casey had claimed that on December 17th, 2011, she found Erica lying on a blanket on the living room floor, unresponsive. Casey said she had rolled her over and Erica wasn’t moving. Casey’s account was that Erica had taken her own life. Whether anyone believed that version of events or not, what happened next was not the response of two grieving parents.

 Sandy said that after finding Erica, they poured bleach over her body in an attempt to cover any evidence of what had happened. They then placed her remains inside plastic bags, sealed them in a storage container, and that same evening, they went to a holiday party. They walked into a room full of people, smiled, made conversation, and acted as though nothing had happened at all.

 The following day, December 18th, Sandy said the two of them drove south to Pageland, South Carolina, a small town in Chesterfield County, not far from his mother’s property. Sandy dug a hole in a wooded area, and Casey removed Erica’s clothing, and Erica’s remains were placed into a shallow grave in the ground.

 The storage container and the clothing were discarded separately. Sandy also told investigators that Casey had specifically instructed him to let her handle the story about Nan, that managing that part of the cover story was going to be her responsibility. Sandy then led investigators directly to that wooded area in South Carolina. And in less than a minute, in less than 60 seconds of walking into those woods, they found her.

 Skeletal human remains of Erica Parsons were discovered on Tuesday. Law enforcement sources telling our NBC affiliate WCNC that her remains were found in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, some 40 miles southeast of Charlotte. Now, Erica was last seen in 2011 when she was just 13 years old, but family didn’t report her missing until 2013, nearly a year and a half.

 Sheriff Hton described that day as one of the hardest he had ever witnessed in 30 years of law enforcement. He said he had been around experienced, seasoned investigators his entire career. Officers who had seen everything, and every single one of them was shaken by what they encountered that day. He said the officers escorting Sandy walked him into the trees and in under a minute they walked back out. Sandy was crying.

Sheriff Jay Brooks said that when members of Erica’s family came to the burial site, many of them could not hold back their tears. Erica’s aunt, Terresa Goodman, shared that she and a private investigator had actually searched that same general area previously and had found nothing.

 She said she was grateful that the people who truly loved Erica were finally able to have some form of closure, whatever a form that could take. Sheriff Brooks added that the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office had poured thousands upon thousands of man-hour into this case and that every bit of the credit they received was earned.

 He said it was impossible to walk away from a moment like that without pausing to reflect. And then he said something simple that landed heavier than almost anything else connected to this case. He said, “When you leave here today, call your kids.” Not long after Sandy led investigators to the grave, Detective Chad Moose received a phone call.

 It was Casey Parsons. She said she had something she wanted to say. Casey told Moose that in the days before Erica died, Erica had been talking about wanting to die. She said she later found her lying on that blanket on the living room floor and that when she rolled her over, Erica was not moving. She maintained her position, that Erica had taken her own life, but the details kept shifting.

 In one version, Sandy told Casey to pour the bleach. In another, it was Casey who made that call. the sequence of what happened, who decided what and who did what kept changing depending on who was telling it and when. What didn’t change were the bank records. Casey’s debit card showed a purchase of bleach at a Walmart on December 5th, nearly 2 weeks before the date they claimed Erica died.

 That detail did not go unnoticed by investigators. Casey also over time made a series of partial admissions. She acknowledged that she had bent Erica’s fingers backward, but denied breaking them. Years later, she conceded that some of those fingers may in fact have been broken. She admitted to striking Erica with a belt that had a metal buckle.

 And she said that the reason she never sought medical attention for Erica’s injuries, not once across all those years, was because she was afraid her sister Robin would contact social services and the entire situation would unravel. So, she chose to keep it hidden every time, no matter how severe the injury, no matter how much pain Erica was in.

 Back in Rowan County, the community came together one final time to say goodbye. At First Baptist Church, family members, law enforcement officers, and complete strangers who had followed this case for years gathered for Erica’s funeral. The service was held almost a year after her remains had been recovered and identified the day before the funeral would have been her birthday. She was finally home.

 And shortly after that service, the autopsy results were made public, and they told a story that removed any remaining doubt about what Erica’s life had truly looked like. The North Carolina Medical Examiner determined that Erica’s death was the result of intentional violence. The exact cause could not be pinpointed due to the condition of the remains, but the findings themselves were extensive and devastating.

 Investigators documented fractures in multiple stages of healing, meaning injuries that had occurred at different points in time spread across years. Broken bones in her upper right arm, the bone connecting her arm to her collarbone, a finger, her jaw, her nose, her left shin, and seven ribs, several of which had been broken more than once.

There were also indications of spinal injuries, severe weight loss, dehydration, malnutrition, evidence consistent with significantly low bone density, and delayed physical development. A missing tooth, signs that other teeth had been broken, and investigators did not rule out the possibility that she may have also been dealing with kidney failure, untreated infection, sepsis, or even poisoning, none of which had ever been addressed medically.

 The medical examiner’s report stated plainly that given the documented history of physical mistreatment and the injuries identified during the examination, a fatal blunt force injury, asphyxiation, or strangulation could not be ruled out as the cause of death. This was not a child who had died from neglect alone.

 This was a child who had endured years of deliberate sustained harm and whose body, even after years in the ground, still carry the evidence of everything that had been done to her. Caroline Parsons, Erica’s biological mother, said that while she was grateful, Sandy had ultimately led police to her daughter. That act did not absolve him of anything.

 She said he had stood behind Casey through every single lie, every cover story, every media appearance. He had propped up that deception every step of the way. Gratitude for one moment of honesty, she said, did not erase years of  We’ve learned her adoptive parents, Sandy and Casey Parsons, will be charged with firstdegree murder.

 The Parsons have always denied they had anything to do with the disappearance of the little girl.  Sheriff Kevin Uton, who announced the indictments here today, said there were times during the investigation he thought this day would never come. But he did because he said investigators never gave up.  We just did not want to leave a little girl out there.

 We want to bring her home.  Now, the Parsons will be brought back to Salsbury to face charges in her death.  There are people that uh think the Parsons should have already been hung on the square and um you know, they’ll have their day in court and we’ll let the the jury decide their  The case was now entering its final and most significant chapter and the charges that were coming.

 After everything that had been uncovered, every witness who had spoken, every fracture cataloged, every lie unraveled, those charges were the most serious ones yet. On February 19th, 2018, a grand jury handed down an indictment that made official what investigators had believed for years. Casey and Sandy Parsons were charged with first-degree murder, felony child abuse inflicting, serious bodily injury, felony concealment of death, and obstruction of justice.

 The indictment contained language that was stark, even by the standards of a document built around legal terminology. It stated that Casey and Sandy Parsons had knowingly and intentionally dismembered and destroyed the human remains of Eric Lynn Parsons, including removing body parts and otherwise destroying her remains in an effort to conceal what had been done.

 Prosecutors announced they would be seeking the death penalty. The trials would be separated. Casey tried independently from Sandy. Rowan County Sheriff Kevin Uton spoke about what this moment meant to everyone who had worked this case. He said the pressure had been immense. He had been in law enforcement for 30 years and some of his investigators had been working even longer than that.

 He said every one of them felt that if they failed to find Erica and failed to bring charges, it would represent the defining failure of their entire careers. He said this case had sat on them like a weight that never lifted and that they were proud, deeply proud of where things now stood. He also noted that the charges had been filed just one day before what would have been Erica’s 20th birthday.

 All right. Well, in other news this afternoon, the adoptive parents of a North Carolina teen found dead years after being reported missing. Well, they will have separate trials. Sandy and Casey Parsons face multiple charges, including first-degree murder. Their 13-year-old daughter, Erica, was last seen in 2011, but she was not reported missing for another 2 years.

 Sandy Parsons led authorities to that girl’s body in South Carolina in 2016. Casey Parsons is set to stand trial in April of 2020. A trial date for his wife has not yet been set.  Today should have been Erica Alin Parson’s 21st birthday. Instead, her biological family gathered at her grave site in China Grove.

 Erica Parsons, allegedly murdered by her adopted parents back in 2011. Now, they both sit in jail waiting for their trials. A lot has happened in the past year in this case, and the family says that makes today a little different than years past.  Happy birthday to you.  It’s a milestone for almost everyone. your 21st birthday.

 But for little Erica Parson, she’ll never get to experience that.  I should be getting off work, going home, getting dressed, taking my sister out for her very first drink.  Sunday afternoon, family and friends gathered here to place flowers and gifts.  I cried all the way up here.  For Erica’s biological mother, Carolyn, she says this birthday is a little different considering what we’ve seen happen in the past year.

 The fact that a court date was set for Casey, even though it’s in 2020, has a huge impact on how I feel about things being done.  A trial date was set this month for Casey Parsons. Casey and Sandy Parsons, Erica’s adoptive parents, are both charged in the child’s death and could face the death penalty if found guilty. and the two main family members are sitting where they deserve to be, I hope, for the rest of their lives.

 But those two were not the focus today.  Erica is everybody’s angel. Erica is everybody’s story.  Erica’s life and story have traveled across the nation, impacting some that never even met the little girl.  As long as we’re breathing, Erica is never going to be forgotten again.  For the family, this date is difficult every year.

 It’s Erica’s day  and she deserves every bit of this and more.  And as they wait for justice, they tell me they feel Erica’s presence often, not just here at her grave.  But she’s not here. You can spend time with her.  The road to trial, however, would not be a short one. Defense attorneys requested significant additional time to work through what they described as a mountain of evidence.

 The court granted it. Months passed, then more months, and then on August 2nd, 2019, Casey Parsons entered a guilty plea of first-degree murder. There would be no trial, no jury deliberation, no prolonged courtroom battle. Casey stood before the court and pleaded guilty to the most serious charge against her along with felony concealment of death, felony child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury, and felony obstruction of justice.

The sentence handed down was life in prison without the possibility of parole plus an additional 23 years consecutive for the remaining convictions. Casey Parsons would never walk free again. Not in 5 years, not in 20. Not ever. She would spend every remaining day of her life inside a prison cell with no path to release and no second chance of waiting at the end of it.

 The death penalty had been taken off the table through the UN plea agreement, but the outcome was absolute. This was a permanent sentence.  Are you in fact guilty?  Yes.  Casey Parsons, the adoptive mother of Erica Parsons, admitted to killing the little girl. She’ll now spend the rest of her life behind bars.

 Casey Parsons pleaded guilty to charges of first-degree murder and felony child abuse. Yeah, so much emotion inside of that courtroom today as Casey Parsons admitted that she is guilty of abusing and then murdering her adopted daughter, Erica Parsons. Now, of course, this admission is shocking. Since Erica Parsons was reported missing in 2012, Casey and her husband Sandy have denied having anything to do with that disappearance.

At this point, it appears that Sandy Parsons will still have to stand trial for the charges against him. We’re going to get much more information from the district attorney inside right now, and we’ll bring you the latest later. Back to you.  4 months later, on December 17th, 2019, the 8th anniversary of the day Casey had claimed Erica died, Sandy Parsons entered his own guilty plea.

 He admitted to secondderee murder, obstruction of justice, felony child abuse, and felony concealment of death. The date was not lost on anyone in that courtroom. Sandy was sentenced to a minimum of 33 years in prison to run consecutively after the completion of his federal sentence. Under the terms of that sentence, Sandy Parsons would not be eligible for parole consideration until he was 82 years old.

Read that again. 82 years old.  I don’t know why I did I did. I’m very sorry. After years of denial, Casey Parsons openly admitted she abused then murdered her adopted daughter, Erica Parsons. I didn’t have a steady home. I did not have a steady job. Had I known then what I know now, I would have risen. I would have took her different places.

Today, prosecutors shared testimony from Erica’s sibling who said Erica was choked, beaten, and neglected by Casey and Sandy.  Erica always smelled bad that his mom didn’t let her take a bath. Erica had a lot of cuts and bruises and black eyes from mom hitting her.  Casey offered an apology before the judge sentenced her to life in prison with no parole on that murder charge.

 And I want to say I’m sorry to God and to Erica. She also admitted that many family members reached out to her trying to help her with Erica, but she says she pushed them away and eventually murdered that little girl that she was supposed to protect. She said family members tried to step in and protect Erica.

 My parents and my sister reached out to me numerous times to help me numerous. Um, I pushed them back. I would lie constantly. At sentencing, Sandy’s defense attorney read letters written by the two youngest children, the ones who had been removed from the home years earlier. In those letters, they expressed how much they loved and missed their father.

 They said he had never mistreated them. Whatever one makes of those letters, they were part of the record. Now, a psychologist named Dr. Claudia Coleman, who had evaluated Sandy on two separate occasions, testified during the proceedings. She described him as passive by nature, someone who struggled to make independent decisions, and who had over the course of the marriage been dominated entirely by Casey.

 According to Dr. Coleman, Casey had used the threat of taking the children away as a mechanism to keep Sandy compliant. She testified that in her professional assessment, Sandy had not wanted Erica to die and that he demonstrated what she believed to be genuine remorse. She said Sandy had told her he had not fully understood the severity of what was happening to Erica inside that house.

The district attorney was having none of it. The prosecutor stood up and made the counterargument clearly and without hesitation. He said Sandy had not only witnessed the extent of what was being done to Erica. He had participated in it. He had punched that child on the top of her head with enough force and enough frequency that she developed a permanent bald spot from the repeated impact.

 He was an adult. He lived in that house every single day. He was neither a victim nor a passive bystander. And the prosecution would not allow that framing to go unchallenged. Sandy Parsons, the prosecutor said, deserved the full weight of accountability. Caroline Parsons, speaking publicly after the sentencing, said 33 years felt like far too little.

 She said Sandy had made his choices every single day and had chosen every single day to do nothing.  Carolyn Parsons. I am Erica Lynn Parson’s biological mother. I’ve said all along that Casey deserved life in prison versus the death sentence. I still 100% agree with that because their life in prison living her life in prison living will be worse than any death sentence she could ever get.

 I know as far as having her other children participate, I just cannot seem to understand how. I don’t know why, but she did the one thing I wanted her to do. She at least said something. I don’t know that I believe that she is sorry. I don’t know that I believe that I didn’t mean to. Some of it I had heard, some of it I hadn’t heard.

I still completely believe that Casey Stone Parsons has no heart. She has no soul. She is a body that is just there. She is a individual who just functions. The only thing Casey gets is what Erica doesn’t. She gets to live. But in return for living,  she will probably be in solitary confinement. And every time she gets out, she gets to listen to people talk about her, listen to people whisper about her.

 She gets to wonder,  “Am I going to make it back to myself tonight?” But when that judge made that last statement, that last statement was, “And you cannot be around children.” Yeehaw! Casey loses her rights to watch her grandkids grow up. What an incredible final end for her.  She pointed out that it wasn’t just Casey and Sandy who had seen warning signs over the years.

 members of both families and people who had been in that house. People who had noticed bruises and crooked fingers and a child who flinched had also made a choice. They had chosen silence. And that silence, she said, had consequences. The judge in his remarks placed Sandy and Casey in the same moral category while acknowledging the distinction between them.

 He said he viewed Casey as the primary architect of what had happened, but he said Sandy had gone along with it, had participated in the crimes, and had demonstrated what the judge described as a deeply warped way of thinking. Neither of them, in his view, deserve sympathy. While serving his federal sentence, Sandy had picked up two disciplinary violations inside prison, one for possessing non-dangerous contraband, the other for possessing a weapon.

 Casey, meanwhile, completed her federal sentence and was transferred to state custody in November of 2023 to begin serving her life sentence. Sandy began serving his state sentence in January of 2022.  Appeared in court this morning, pleading guilty to murder and other felony charges.  People might forgive me. I know God has to forgive myself.

 I turned the blind eye was going through my faith.  Attorneys argued Sandy was manipulated and controlled by his wife Casey. They said it was Casey who committed most of the abuse against Erica, locking her in a closet, starving and severely beating the girl. They say one day Casey told Sandy that Erica died and manipulated him into covering it up, burying her body in a South Carolina field and lying to police for years.

 Sandy Parson’s role, as I stated, was substantially less than that of Jason Parsons. There is literally no evidence that Sandy Parsons personally intended to kill or seriously injure her. They asked the judge for leniency in sentencing rather than the near 80 years he could have received. The judge sentenced him to a maximum of 43 years.

 Erica’s biological mother was in court today as well, getting to tell Sandy what she thought of him.  I stand by what I have said from day one, which is, I used to love you, now I hate you. And he got to hear that. Both of them are exactly where the law said they needed to be. And with that, after more than 8 years of searching, investigating, testifying, appealing, grieving, and fighting, the Erica Parson’s case was officially closed.

Sheriff Hutton, reflecting on everything, was clear about one thing. He said this case was never about the Rowan County Sheriff’s Office. It was never about the district attorney’s office or the US attorney’s office, the FBI or the state bureau of investigation. He said the only reason every single person involved kept going through the dead ends, the retractions, the delays, the legal battles was for Erica.

 He said everyone working this case understood that no matter how frustrated they got, they had to move carefully, build methodically, and make sure every piece of the foundation was solid before they moved forward. He said giving into public pressure and rushing the process would have been irresponsible and potentially devastating to the outcome. So they didn’t.

 They built it brick by brick and in the end it held. District Attorney Burke said something that became one of the defining statements of this entire case. He said, “We have to have the courage to be a voice for those who no longer have one. He said that people who mistreat and harm children represent some of the worst that human nature has to offer.

that there are few things more calculated and cruel than earning a child’s trust, earning their love, and then using that trust to make them feel worthless, unwanted, and unsafe. He said, “Thinking about how much Erica had suffered, that she had never known the simple comfort of sleeping in her own bed, that every small kindness shown to her had been stripped away, was almost too painful to put into words.

” He said the only thing close to a silver lining in any of this was that the people responsible were exactly where they belonged. Caroline Parson spoke last. And what she said was the kind of statement that stays with you long after you’ve heard it. She said she gave Erica because she believed it would give her a better life.

 She said she didn’t have stability at the time. She didn’t have a steady income or a permanent home. She had made a decision she believed was in her daughter’s best interest. Trusting that the people taking her in would give her what Carolina felt she couldn’t. She described Erica as a gift. She said Erica was the kind of gift that millions of people spend their whole lives hoping to receive.

 She said she just wants to know why. She said she knows she will never get that answer. She said standing there looking at them knowing she had placed her daughter in their hands and trusted them with her life. That pain is something she will carry forever. Erica Lynn Parsons was born on February 24th, 1998.

 She was 13 years old the last time anyone outside that house saw her alive. She spent the majority of her short life without comfort, without safety, without the most basic expressions of care that every child deserves. As a matter of fact, not a privilege. She was hidden while she lived. She was hidden after she died.

 And for 5 years, she lay in a shallows groove in the woods of South Carolina while the people who put her there collected government checks in her name and gave television interviews. But she was found. And the people responsible are going to spend the rest of their lives in prison because investigators refused to stop because a community refused to forget.

 And because a young man walked into a sheriff’s office one July morning and decided it was time for someone to finally say her name out loud. This has been the true crime documentary story of Erica Lynn Parsons. If this case moved you, if you think Erica’s story deserves to be heard by more people, share this video and leave a comment.

 Let the people around you know her name because the best thing any of us can do now is make sure she is never forgotten. Thank you for watching. Take care of yourselves and take care of each other.