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 Post subject: Kelly Morris: MISSING
New postPosted: Thu Oct 16, 2008 6:50 am 
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Location: Montreal
Granville sheriff, SBI search for missing mom
Stem, N.C. — Granville County Sheriff David Smith met with officers in the State Bureau of Investigation Monday to discuss the case of a missing Stem woman.

Police found Kelly Morris's car, keys, purse and cell phone about a mile away from her home Thursday, shortly after firefighters responded to a fire at her home.

The sheriff's office considers Morris, 28, a missing person. Investigators searched for her in southern Granville County Monday, including a boat search of Creemor and Falls lakes.

The SBI was assisting in the search for Morris and this investigation of the fire at her home at 3220 Tump Wilkins Road.

Smith said the use of arson investigators is a routine procedure after a fire, and that there was no sign that Morris was in the home when it burned. Deputies will not say when she was last seen.

Her husband, Scott Morris, was at work at the time of the blaze; their two children were at school.

Investigators have not established a cause for the fire. On Monday, yellow crime-scene tape encircled the home, and investigators were seen coming and going.

A neighbor said Scott Morris and his two children had not returned to the home.

Granville County sheriff's investigators are asking anyone with information about the fire or Morris' disappearance to contact them at 919-693-3213.

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 Post subject: Mother: Kelly Morris' marriage had 'problems'
New postPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 7:59 am 
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Mother: Kelly Morris' marriage had 'problems'
Stem, N.C. — The mother of a missing Granville County woman says there was trouble in her daughter's marriage.

Kelly Morris, 28, was last seen the night of Sept. 3 by her husband, Scott Morris, and two children at her home at 3220 Tump Wilkins Road in Stem, according to the Granville County Sheriff’s Office.

The next day, police found Morris' burgundy, 2005 Honda Accord along with her keys, purse and cell phone in an undeveloped subdivision, shortly after firefighters responded to a fire at the home.

Investigators said there was no sign that Morris was in the home when it burned. At the time of the fire, Scott Morris was at work and their two children were at school, authorities said. The fire has been classified as arson.

"I am not well at all,” said Wanda Hollis, Kelly Morris' mother. "I have been going through this with Kelly and Scott for the last year – with the problems."

Hollis said her daughter's marriage was strained and that she had considered leaving her husband.

Granville County Sheriff David Smith has said Scott Morris is what police call a person of interest in his wife's disappearance. He has not made any public statements since she disappeared and has not returned repeated phone calls from WRAL News.

"I felt like if she stayed, something would happen. If she were to leave, something was going to happen,” Hollis said.

The Morris family has hired a team of tracking dogs to try to find her scent.

"I hope she is found soon, just found soon,” Hollis said.

A vigil for Kelly Morris is scheduled for 7 p.m. Friday at the First Baptist Church in Creedmoor.

Granville County sheriff's investigators are asking anyone with information about the fire or Morris' disappearance to contact them at 919-693-3213.

[b]Say prayers please[/b


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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Tue Oct 21, 2008 1:06 pm 
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KELLY CURRIN MORRIS

Please take a look at her website

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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Tue Oct 21, 2008 1:09 pm 
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Kelly Currin Morris

Kelly's friends have also set up a Myspace page



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 Post subject: Friends of missing Stem mother: 'Bring Kelly home!
New postPosted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 7:25 pm 
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Friends of missing Stem mother: 'Bring Kelly home!

Creedmoor, N.C. — Friends of a missing Granville County mother held a vigil for her Friday night and stood outside her husband’s parents' house chanting: “Bring Kelly home," “Why lie to the SBI?” and "Don't be scared of Nancy Grace."

SBI stands for State Bureau of Investigation, and Grace is a host on CNN.

Kelly Morris, 28, was last seen the night of Sept. 3 by her husband, Scott Morris, who has been named a person of interest in her disappearance.

About 20 of Kelly Morris' friends and family held a vigil in the parking lot of the First Baptist Church in Creedmoor at 7 p.m. Friday.

Some of the attendees later walked down the street to Scott Morris' parents' house and began chanting "Bring Kelly home," among other things.

"This is to let them know that we are not going to forget, and we want answers," said Myra Wrenn, Kelly Morris' friend. "We want people to know that we love Kelly regardless if anyone else does over there."

At one point, a woman walked to Scott Morris' parents' house and knocked on the door until two people came outside. After an exchange, a man from inside the house chased the woman's car as it pulled away.

Kelly Morris' friends said the woman was not part of their group.

Police arrived not long after. They stayed in the background and did not intervene in the protest, according to a WRAL reporter at the scene.

Wanda Hollis, Kelly Morris' mother, said her daughter's marriage was strained and that she had considered leaving her husband.

When asked if she thinks they are close to finding out what happened to her daughter, Hollis said: "I do, I really think so."

"I miss my daughter desperately," she said.

Family members are asking for volunteers to continue the search for Morris this weekend.

Kelly Morris was last seen the night of Sept. 3 by her husband and and two children at their home at 3220 Tump Wilkins Road in Stem.

The home caught on fire the next day, and police found Morris' car, keys, purse and cell phone in an undeveloped subdivision.

The fire at Morris' home has been classified as arson, and Granville County Sheriff David Smith has named Morris' husband, Scott, a person of interest in her disappearance.

At the time of the fire, there was no sign that Morris was in the home. Scott Morris was at work and the couples' two children were at school, investigators said.

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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Mon Dec 15, 2008 11:01 pm 
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Father keeps searching for missing daughter
Pat Currin spent Sunday morning the way he has spent nearly every morning of the last 90: scouring acres of fields and forests where a killer might have stashed his daughter's body.

For three months, Currin has roamed pastures and cemeteries, peered into lakes and wells, hunting for clues to what became of Kelly Currin Morris. Morris is grown, a mother herself, but she is still Currin's baby daughter, and he wants her home.

"We'll only be done when we find her," Currin said Sunday.

Morris, 28, vanished sometime after her stepmother hugged her goodbye the night of Sept. 3 and before firefighters rushed to her Granville County house the next day to subdue a raging fire. Morris had not shown up to work that day. Firefighters found no trace of her in the charred house.

The next day, deputies found Morris' car, with purse and keys inside, abandoned in an unfinished subdivision near her house in Stem. Authorities later determined that someone had torched the house she shared with her husband, Scott Morris, and her two girls.

That's when Pat Currin started searching for his daughter. At first, he hollered, hoping his daughter would yell back. These days, he just looks. He is searching for bones and tattered clothes.

Other family members and friends joined the search. Then, days later, strangers showed up. They came with good shoes and silent pats on the arm. Those who couldn't walk cooked for the search crews.

As time wears on, the hope and the numbers of volunteers diminish. September brought more than 50 searchers. Sunday, there were fewer than two dozen.

Weekdays now, it's mostly Currin and a few others. Currin has stopped working; his son Carl manages the family's construction company.

Currin invested in sonar equipment to search rivers and lakes; he and others have searched all of Falls Lake. He bought scopes to look down in wells. Still, no luck.

"We need a durn break," Currin said.

Juanita, his wife of more than 20 years, finished his thought: "I don't understand how someone could put a family through this. We hurt so bad."

Granville County sheriff's investigators named Morris' husband "a person of interest." No arrests have been made. Scott Morris could not be reached for comment Sunday.

A stranger helps

Al Mignacci, a retired IBM engineer, walked into the Currins' lives in September when he saw on television that another mother in the Triangle was missing. Since then, he has taken over as commander of the search efforts, leading crews that slowly nibble at a radius of more than 15 miles around Morris' home.

In the workshop of Currin's construction company on the outskirts of Creedmoor, Mignacci leans over a map colored with yellow highlighter marks. Every week, the circle around Morris' house gets a little brighter. On Sunday, Mignacci filled in another inch around a cattle farm west of Stem. Those yellow lines offer about as much hope as searchers get. Every day, they know a bit more about where Morris is not.

At 71, Mignacci is nonchalant about his work for the strangers.

"They needed help," he said. "I had it to give."

He has watched the Currins' hope rise with each small discovery. An article of clothing here or there. In November, they found bones. Investigators later ruled that the bones were an animal's.

For now, the Currins have nothing to bury. No place to go to bid farewell. In the world of police and courts, bodies define crimes, and Morris is just missing.

The Currins know their daughter wouldn't vanish without her girls, without saying goodbye.

So they walk, looking for a sign of Morris that lets them let go.

(News researcher Brooke Cain contributed to this report.)

HOW TO HELP

Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Kelly Currin Morris is asked to call Granville County Crime Stoppers at 919-693-3100. E-mail can be sent to searchers at helpfindkelly@gmail.com.

The family is offering a $36,000 reward for any tip that leads to the discovery of Morris.
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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 8:42 pm 
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Mother of Kelly

GRANVILLE COUNTY — Correction: A recent NC WANTED TV segment erroneously identified Juanita Currin as the mother of Kelly Morris. Ms. Currin is Kelly’s stepmother. Kelly’s biological mother is Wanda Hollis of Hillsborough.

A Mother’s Fear

The mother of Kelly Morris contacted NC WANTED on Tuesday. She said she fears for the safety of her granddaughter, Haley Morris, 5, who is living with Scott Morris in Creedmoor.

"I just don't want Haley to get caught in the crossfire," Wanda Hollis said. Haley is the biological daughter of Kelly and Scott Morris.
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