June 2, 2025 – Nova Scotia

Today marks one month since six-year-old Lilly Sullivan and her four-year-old brother Jack were reported missing from their home in Lansdowne Station. Despite ongoing search efforts and renewed public appeals, no major developments have been reported. The timeline remains unclear. The evidence remains minimal. The silence, louder than ever.

This past weekend, search and rescue teams returned to the Gairloch Road and pipeline trail area where a single boot print had previously been discovered. It was a targeted search, informed by earlier findings. But by Monday morning, the RCMP confirmed what many feared – no new evidence had been found.

The property where the children were last seen continues to raise more questions than answers. Publicly released aerial footage shows a yard that appears undisturbed in the immediate aftermath of the reported disappearance. No signs of an intensive search. No forensic markers. No disruption that would indicate two young children had gone missing from that very spot.

The RCMP has remained cautious in its public statements, citing Canadian privacy laws and the active nature of the investigation. However, to date, there have been no suspects named, no persons of interest, and no major leads disclosed to the public.

In a statement, RCMP officials reiterated their request for dashcam or surveillance footage from the public – specifically from Gairloch Road between April 28 and May 2. That window, notably wider than the original May 2 disappearance date, reflects the continued uncertainty about when the children were last definitively seen.

To mark the grim one-month milestone, a candlelight vigil is being held tonight in Stellarton at 8:30 p.m., organized by community members still holding out hope – and demanding clarity.

But as the fifth week begins, what’s most disturbing may not be the absence of evidence. It’s the growing sense that time is passing, and with it, urgency. That in the void left by unanswered questions, speculation grows, suspicion festers, and trust in official narratives quietly erodes.

Two children vanished. One month later, the only thing confirmed is how little we know.


Anyone with information about the whereabouts of Lilly and Jack Sullivan is urged to contact the Northeast Nova RCMP Major Crime Unit at 902-896-5060 or submit anonymous tips via Nova Scotia Crime Stoppers at crimestoppers.ns.ca.

Glow of Light Avatar

Published by

Leave a comment