Post Mortem | The Day Maddi Kingsbury Went Missing
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Welcome to Postmortem.
I'm your host, Anne-Marie Green, and today we are talking about Maddie Kingsbury, 26-year-old mother of two who disappeared on March 31st, 2023, after dropping her kids off at daycare.
About a week after her disappearance, about 2,000 people turned out to search for Maddie, covering a large stretch of southeastern Minnesota, And her sister, Megan, took to TikTok for help.
So, with me to discuss their reporting on Maddie Kingsbury's case, our correspondent Peter Van Sent and producer Jordan Kinsey.
Welcome, guys.
Hi, Marie.
Hey, I'm Marie.
Good to be with you again.
Once again, this is a fascinating case.
If you haven't watched or listened to the episode, The Disappearance of Maddie Kingsbury, then go do that now.
It's the episode just below this one in your podcast feed.
To start, though, Jordan, we've had a few cases in Minnesota this season.
How did you learn about this case?
Yes.
So how I learned about the case was that I was covering another trial in Minnesota and a court employee who I became really close with mentioned to me about this case and knowing that the person missing was someone she went to college with.
And of course, that blew my mind in that moment.
And she did say that I also attended college with Maddie's ex-boyfriend and father of her two kids, and that we think he might have some type of involvement.
Wow.
So this is, you knew about the story before there was national coverage.
Yeah, yeah.
Day one.
It just happened in that moment in the courtroom, just on break, and their friends are already texting, trying to figure out what's going on.
So yeah, I knew sort of before it hit the headlines.
And that's when we reached out to the planning team to find out if we want to really invest in trying to cover this case.
And then how do you go about doing that, though?
How do you go about building those connections?
Because this is a really emotional, sensitive time for everyone involved.
It is.
It is.
And it can be a challenge, right?
Because people are going through the emotions at that moment.
But I think for me, what really worked out was that I had already been in Minnesota
for an employee.
She connected me with some of the college friends who I just met with over dinner.
And
we stayed in contact.
And then from there, they were able to connect me to additional friends and family.
The other thing about Jordan, for the audience listening to this, he learned to speak Minnesotan, which is really important.
He doesn't say.
And Minnesota nice.
And Jordan is Minnesota nice.
And he can really connect with people.
And so to have him there at the very beginning was just crucial for us in putting together this successful hour.
So, Peter, to give people this backdrop, this town in particular seems like a prime example of Minnesota NICE.
It seems like a sweet town.
It is a beautiful, beautiful town on the banks of the Mississippi River.
It is clear water that flows by and the bluffs in the area where Winona is situated.
The locals talk about their geology with pride, and the town is something out of a Hollywood movie set.
The famous actress, Winona Ryder, is from Winona and it has some sense of celebrity, but everyone seems to know everybody there.
And when someone goes missing, as Maddie did, the entire community mobilized.
Finding Maddie went beyond the work of investigators, and it's all because of Maddie's sister, Megan.
She started posting on TikTok and people
tuned in.
Absolutely.
Megan, who's an absolute sweetheart and loves her sister as deeply as anyone can, she went on TikTok because she had watched dozens of videos from people who were in similar situations that she was in, you know, a missing loved one.
And in one of her first posts, she was so panicked and anxious to tell people an update that she appears on camera, which you'll see in the show, fresh out of the shower, just wearing a towel.
She's a remarkably genuine person, and she was desperate for any kind of tip that could help find Maddie.
And it was truly heartbreaking for her.
She posted nearly every day for 68 days until her sister's remains were found.
And one of her posts had half a million views.
And as a result, the community mobilized, and you get this situation.
As you mentioned earlier, Anne-Marie, a couple of thousand people turned out to search.
I mean, I've never seen anything quite like this.
And it was all through Megan and TikTok.
So was this also therapeutic for Megan?
Absolutely.
I've done this now for 20 years on
48 Hours.
I still cannot imagine what these families go through, the loss and the fear and knowing she's out there somewhere.
And it was cold.
And is she alive?
Is she being held somewhere?
Is she dead?
And
Megan became the face of that for us.
And it's very powerful in this story.
So people, I mean, who knows, all over the world were transfixed by this story, but even closer to home.
I mean, you spoke to the mayor and it almost seemed like he was personally offended that anything like this could happen in his town.
He was.
Scott Sherman is his name, an incredible human being.
He's a mountain biker.
And so as soon as he heard about this, he got on his mountain bike and went for mile after mile in those hills out there looking for her.
And he had set up a command center there in downtown at the government complex.
And what was really an incredible moment is when Maddie's mother walks into this room, he said, and says, who are you?
And he says, I'm the mayor.
She comes up and gives him this bear hug.
He said, he'll never forget.
And she wouldn't let go.
And he got emotional and he was hugging her back.
These two total strangers.
And he says that he was communicating that he will do anything he can to try to find her because she's a daughter of the community.
In other words, they were holding each other without speaking, and it was very powerful.
He also shared with us that at one of the vigils for Maddie, they showed a video of Maddie singing, You Are My Sunshine.
And he said that he sings that same song to his daughter every night before bed.
And so every night he was thinking about Maddie as he would sing that song.
So, Peter, you also spoke with former prosecutor and defense attorney Mary Fujiniti, who is a consultant for 48 hours.
And she said, with regards to the police investigating missing persons' cases, that they know there is a ticking clock on these things.
Can we talk a little bit more about how crucial it is to gain some traction in those first few hours of an investigation?
It is so crucial when there's a missing person, particularly when they suspect foul play.
In case after case that I have covered, police say that the first 12 hours are critical, sometimes life or death critical.
Maddie's friends are frantic.
They're trying to get a hold of her.
They're calling.
They're not getting a response.
And eventually they go to the police.
They want to file a missing person's report.
Let me ask you this.
Is it a myth that you have to wait 48 hours?
Like, that's what they were told by police when they tried to say she was missing.
This happens all the time.
These are really intelligent people.
They knew of a history of alleged abuse in this relationship.
And they go to cops and say, we have got a problem here.
She's disappeared.
None of us can get a hold of her.
And they say, Well, it hasn't been 24 hours yet.
I hear that all the time in cases.
Usually it is 48 hours because they think, well, maybe they had a fight.
She was just emotional.
She's gone off to be on her own for a time.
She'll be back.
When you're close with someone, you know when their movements are out of the ordinary.
So Maddie's friends, they text Adam and say to him, We're really concerned.
But his response is not appreciation.
In fact, this is what he said.
Why are you doing this, right?
She hasn't even been gone 24 hours.
So I was able to connect with Maddie's best friend, Katie Colco, and she told us that there was a text exchange between Adam and her husband, which she shared with police.
And so I just want to read that text exchange.
Adam said, I talked to the police.
Who or what prompted you guys to go check at the house?
I'm so confused.
She hasn't been gone for a day yet.
So I'm not freaking out, but everyone else is.
Then Adam responded again.
So Katie called the police.
He then said she was leaving for Farmington in the morning.
Katie's husband responded, yes, she did.
Weird that no one could get a hold of her.
Adam responded, well, wow, that's a little out of bounds of Katie.
It hasn't even been 24 hours and I saw her this morning.
And Katie's husband responded with, not really, when no one has heard from her most of the day, Apparently, no one was able to reach you either.
So at least you've heard from her.
You can't blame people for being worried, man.
And then Adam said, nobody tried to reach me until 7 p.m., which was Megan.
So IDK, what you mean by that?
And then Adam said, I get being worried, but no one asked me anything.
So it's like WTF, laugh out loud.
Laugh out loud.
Yeah.
And I think that and that interaction right there is what sent Katie, you know, to telespin.
That's what got her really concerned about Adam.
You interviewed Haley Scott, one of Maddie's sorority sisters, who shared that Adam had a fascination with Gabby Petito's murder.
For those who might not be familiar with that case, Gabby was killed by her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, while the couple was on a cross-country road trip.
With this case in particular, the judge released 60-plus search warrants.
So all these search warrants were unsealed and it it detailed, Adam told investigators he was infatuated with Gabby Petito and that he did tell Maddie if she didn't listen up, that she would end up like Gabby Petito.
And this statement was also detailed in the criminal complaint.
So he admitted to making that statement, but claimed it was only a joke.
And you know, he also told investigators that there had never been any physical violence in the relationship.
And also during the search, Adam released a statement through his attorney, which read in part, I have corroborated with law enforcement at every turn.
I did not have anything to do with Maddie's disappearance.
So this is kind of interesting.
Adam's defense team says that he wasn't read his Miranda rights for one of the police interviews, specifically his second interview.
For those who might not know what those are,
you should know that for your own sake.
Can you explain the Miranda rights and what's the defense suggesting?
Because I presume that this means that he was read his Miranda rights at some point, at least initially, but I guess you got to do it each time.
Well, anytime you begin a new interview, you have to read rights.
And we've all seen this on police TV shows, right?
And I know a lot of the audience listening right now can lip-sync this along with me.
But the Miranda rights require police to inform a suspect that they have the right to remain silent, that what they say can be used against them in court, that they have a right to a lawyer, and that the suspect must indicate that they understand what's been said to them by the police officer.
And the defense attorney said, what may end up being a crucial moment for jurors, his fascination with the Gabby Petito case, he had not been read his rights.
So they want that thrown out of any
trial that's coming up.
We can't say this enough.
He's an innocent man, Adam Fravel, until proven guilty.
And his defense team and his brother and sister have told us we have answers for every issue that you've heard, that we've talked about thus far and will talk about.
And they say they are 150% confident in his innocence.
As we heard in the hour, there were allegations made by Haley Scott that there were physical altercations between Maddie and Adam, that this relationship was frayed, it was falling apart.
Adam had denied this.
Maddie's family said that she never filed any police reports alleging violence.
And you really get from the family that they're conflicted about whether or not they should have pushed her to do something like that.
According to a search warrant and criminal complaint, police discovered a screenshot on Maddie's phone of a text exchange between Maddie and Adam dated September 21st, 2021, and it details an alleged choking incident that occurred.
Jordan, can you read those text messages to us?
Absolutely.
So Maddie says to Adam, you know, I'm not really okay with or over the fact that you put your hand around my neck and pushed me down in front of the kids earlier.
So don't.
Not okay with it at all, but especially with them there.
Adam said, you'll adjust.
Maddie responds, the F, I I will.
Then Maddie says again, you do that again without asking me.
You can go somewhere else.
Adam responded, you got it, mother.
And then Maddie said, don't patronize me.
That crossed the line.
You see that she seems to stand up for herself in these text messages, but her friends, her family, they encourage her to leave Adam.
She does not leave.
I want to play a clip from the hour, Peter, with you speaking to Maddie's father, David.
I did tell her at some point, he's going to kill you.
You said that to Matt.
Yeah.
You felt there was enough danger that you had to say to your own daughter, I think he may kill you.
And how did she respond to that statement or did she?
Honestly, I mean, she became a pro at minimizing thing, and it came back to, well,
he was joking.
He told me he was joking.
And she wanted to believe that.
You spoke to her dad.
This is a woman who was well loved by her family.
They would have done anything to help her out, to help her get out of that relationship if she wanted to.
Can you talk to me a little bit about how the dad was feeling?
I mean, what's your take on that?
Well, David Kingsbury is a brilliant man and a loving father.
And he did the best he could over and over again, including to have her move in with him for a brief time.
No one imagines that this will actually end up in murder.
They just can't believe
that's not on their radar whatsoever.
And she kept going back to him, which is not uncommon.
And
that's what really drove David crazy.
He said that she told him, too, the fact that she had these kids, it was just impossible to leave Adam.
They were this partnership, and it just ended up in tragedy.
They tried, Anne-Marie.
They tried.
Yeah.
As of now, Adam Fraville's trial is expected to start in the fall of 2024.
Can we talk about the evidence that we might see at trial, Jordan?
So based off of what we have in the search warrants, Adam gave his timeline of what happened that day that Maddie disappeared.
Now, when investigators reviewed surveillance footage, they noticed that there was a discrepancy in what Adam mentioned with the times where he was at, and they weren't matching.
You know, another observation, when police interviewed Adam in his first interview, they noticed scratches along his face and neck.
And so we spoke to Adam's sister.
She said Adam told her that he got those scratches from a friend's dog.
Wait, I'm hearing a little noise in the background.
What's going on down there?
Yeah, there's some wind happening.
There's a storm that's hitting Florida at the moment.
So that's why you hear some rumbling going on.
Now, another interesting point is that Adam's family has a UTV, a utility terrain vehicle.
And so the cadaver dogs had alerted to a scent actually on that UTV and the shovel.
And also mentioned in the search warrants that cadaver dogs are trained to pick up on any human remains.
Now, Adam's family mentioned that they have a reason for that.
They claim that the weekend prior, their father had used a shovel to move a dead raccoon.
I heard that in the hour, and I thought there's a difference between the smell of a body, which is what these dogs are trained to pick up on, and a wild animal.
But
that's their response.
Jordan, what other evidence is there?
The area where Maddie's body was found was previously maintained.
by Adam's family.
They admit that they did know the area very well.
This came from a tip, by the way, that someone had seen Adam Fravel on this all-terrain vehicle driving out in that area.
And then they take the sniffer dogs out there and they alert on that vehicle.
And prosecutors, this is all circumstantial, are obviously going to be suggesting the reason why they alerted on that vehicle was that Maddie's body was back there and that this was an area that Adam Fravel was familiar with.
and where her body was found.
Again, we can't say it's strong enough.
The family says they are going to be presenting answers to all this.
Remember, the defense attorneys did not speak with us in this.
Now, I know the prosecution doesn't have to present a motive, but it certainly helps when you're arguing a case.
And there's a motive that was floated, which was that Adam was financially dependent on her.
And if she was to leave, it would pull the rug out from under him financially.
Well, she did everything.
And what her friends and family say is that she financially supported the family with her job at the Mayo Clinic.
Friends claim that Adam did not help with the raising of the children and that she was very much on her own.
Also, this was not much of a loving relationship.
It was on again, off again.
And as we know, she sought another relationship and she had made the decision that she was going to leave him.
In the very beginning of the hour, when you speak to his sister, she says something to the effect of, he did the right thing.
He dropped out of school and got a job when she became pregnant.
I got the sense that she felt like there was an unfairness to this.
He made these sacrifices for her.
And now this relationship could be ending and she could be leaving.
His family will tell you that was all to support the family, all to support her so she could get her degree.
and that he was being generous with this.
He did have a job for a time, but when COVID hit, he lost his job.
And so they depended completely on her salary.
But on her side of the
ledger, people say that he just was not much of a provider and not much of a responsible adult.
Yeah.
And sort of another really heartbreaking part of this story of the hour is Spencer, Maddie's new love.
At the time of the murder, they were in a relationship and there's talk about whether she was going to be leaving Adam to start a life with Spencer.
He certainly says that he was starting to think about a life with her.
And now all of that potential, all of that hope is lost.
This is an incredibly moving part of this story, a tragic part.
Spencer is a military veteran.
He was a very soft-spoken man, big-hearted.
He was just devastated by the loss of the woman that he said he wanted to spend the next 60 years of his life with.
And keep in mind, after she disappeared, when you have what appears to be a love triangle, there can be a motive for murder.
Adams' family says, even today, you have to look more closely at Spencer.
Now, authorities have said he is no longer a suspect, but he was generous enough to talk to us.
He talked about the sadness.
And by the way, the day I interviewed Spencer, it was his birthday.
And exactly one year earlier, he'd spent that birthday with Maddie.
And he has a card that he reads over and over again.
Spencer got very emotional with me when he said the last thing Maddie said to him was, love you.
And he just wishes he had said, I love you back.
And he didn't.
And every day he thinks about that.
He's just a devastated man hoping for justice in this case.
Maddie's father said in the Court of Common Sense, all roads lead to Adam Frable.
What was it like talking to this clearly heartbroken family?
Boy,
Maddie's father said, I will always be the father of a murdered girl.
And that pain, you could just, you could see it, you could hear it, and it will echo in his life for the rest of his days.
We keep going back to Adam Fraville is innocent until proven guilty.
And that's where we stand.
We need to hear where all the evidence has been presented.
It is intriguing, though, after they found Maddie's body, The charges were elevated against Adam Fravo from second-degree murder to first degree murder.
Why is that?
We don't know yet, but to have the charge elevated to first degree murder, they have something new, right?
Maddie's family, they just so desperately want not only justice for their daughter, but to prevent this kind of domestic violence from taking someone else.
Right now is a Facebook page called Finding Madeline Kingsbury.
It has 28,000 followers, and it's a good source to see what's happening in this case.
You know, you bring up something.
I thought there is going to be one family out there who's going to hear this story and pick up the phone and say, no, I insist you leave.
Absolutely.
They will save lives for sure.
I want to thank you, Peter and Jordan, once again for joining me on the podcast.
Thanks, Emery.
Thank you.
Thanks, Emery.
I appreciate it.
So listen, join us next Tuesday for another post-mortem and watch 48 Hours on Saturdays, 10, 9th Central on CBS and streaming on Paramount Plus.
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