
A cloud of suspicion still hangs over Misty Croslin, the last person to see missing Florida five-year-old. When HDLN cameras went inside the Cummings’ trailer, they noted that there was a 3.5 foot difference between the bed Croslin was sleeping in and Haleigh’s toddler bed. Croslin says that neither she nor the child’s four-year-old brother heard any disturbances in the night. However, when she awoke to use the bathroom, she noticed that the kitchen light was on and the backdoor was propped open by a cinder block.
Ronald Cummings, father of abducted tot, has already been cleared by police—but his wife has yet to be. Why? Because of her inconsistencies. After realizing that the child was not in her bed, she waited to call the police. It wasn’t until Ronald returned from work, that a 9-1-1 call was made. Cummings’ believes that his new wife had hesitated because “she did not want to make a false call.”
Nancy Grace, HDLN host and attorney, says that Croslin should not be the only suspect. Grace thinks that the inconsistencies are due to the 17-year-old’s age. She states, “She isn’t savvy enough.”
People that knew the layout of the trailer should be checked into. The abduction was more-than-likely premeditated. The assailant used a cinder block to prop open the backdoor to make a quick exit. He/she knew what they wanted to find. They had a plan to grab a child, and that child was Haleigh. A friend of the family, or even a family member, could be the one holding Haleigh. Would they not have to know where she was sleeping? It’s hard to see in the darkened night.
But this all leads back to Croslin. Her claim is that a kitchen light was on. So why would an abductor with an exit strategy risk being caught by doing that? Haleigh’s father says that she “will not go to just anyone, only the people she knows.”
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