Trevor McFedries

Mickie

When a popular high school junior doesn’t make it home from track practice, her family springs into action. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Published Jun 8, 2026
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Uploaded Jun 14, 2026
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0:00-1:35

[00:00] Behind every mile of rail and every ton of freight, people and technology work side by side, making rail safer and more reliable. From sensors that detect what the eye can't, to VR training that prepares railroaders for any scenario, freight railroads are investing in real-world solutions. The equation is simple. Human grit plus advanced tech equals a stronger, safer tomorrow. Learn more at aar.org slash americasengine. [00:30] Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile, with a message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment. [00:47] Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. [01:01] *music* [01:09] What was she thinking as she secretly slipped into a car, wearing just her pajamas? Her mind a turmoil as she rode down Interstate 80 across northern Nevada. [01:25] Would she, could she, reveal what she knew? She was just 18, tiny, 98 pounds and barely 5 feet tall.

1:39-3:09

[01:39] What should drive? Was, she knew, going to change everything. [01:45] She came and we talked and we recorded the conversation with her permission. [01:49] And it was dynamite. The man she had come to talk to was a distinguished attorney. [01:56] If anyone could advise her, surely it would be he. [01:59] about the story she said she had to tell. It had been eating at me and eating at me. I couldn't sit there and live with myself knowing [02:09] what I knew [02:10] And then out it came, the whole terrifying story. [02:15] Possibly true. And possibly a careful and cunning deceit. [02:22] to and shop and numb. I didn't know what I was feeling. It was like I was in a daze. [02:31] "Still was," she said. [02:33] about the thing that happened. [02:35] and about who was there and what happened after. [02:38] And what might happen next in a small town deep in the American desert? They deserve to be in hell. [02:47] for doing that. [02:48] and there is nothing they can say or do that will make it better. [02:52] They cannot fix this. Some things aren't fixable. [02:58] Some things are hard to explain. It doesn't make sense. [03:02] I still [03:03] I wonder to this day, why? [03:06] What's the real reason? [03:09] or

3:10-4:47

[03:10] What even really happened? [03:12] I'm Keith Morrison, and this is Five Miles From Home, a podcast from Dateline. [03:20] Episode 1, Mickey. Mickey. [03:24] There is a place, a remote, windy place, tucked away in a sliver of northeast Nevada, next to the Utah border. You'd certainly see it if you cruised along Interstate 80. Casinos, five of them, flashing away like some Vegas in miniature, a golf shot or two off the highway. [03:54] or so spilling out onto the surrounding desert. And if tempted by a meal or a rest or a roll of the dice, if you pulled off that highway, you'd be welcomed by a great grinning cowboy, or the improbable towering image of one, 63 feet high, garish, and weirdly charming, as it waves a welcome. A giant concoction in neon and steel they call Wendover Will. [04:22] for West Wendover, name of the town. And a reminder of more innocent days. [04:30] It's pretty much the only thing Wendover was known for. [04:32] Her name is Christina. [04:35] She knows what happened to innocents. [04:37] Knows all too well. Now, you know, everybody's like, oh, Wendover. Oh, do you know that girl? And it's a question, unfortunately, that gets asked because we have a lot of tourists that come in to...

4:47-6:22

[04:47] The casino towns from all over. [04:49] And, [04:50] That's what Wendover is known for now. [04:54] Yes, even now, all these years later. And how did it begin? That memory is as clear as the morning sun on the high desert. And cold. Like the desert wind that Thursday morning in March 2011. [05:13] 16 year old Michaela Costanzo, Mickey, as everybody calls her. [05:21] was up early preparing for school. She was a creature of habit, was Mickey. She stuffed her signature polka-dotted black bag full of track gear, and then made sure she had her lanyard full of keys with her favorite charm, a little panda bear. [05:37] While Mother Celia, a single mom, quickly dressed so she could drop Mickey at school before heading to her hosting job at one of the local casinos. [05:45] All very routine, except for one little thing. The thing about coming home after school. [05:54] She was supposed to walk home, which is not a normal thing for her. Usually, Mickey would ride home with Christina, 28 years old then and 12 years older than her little sister. [06:09] But Christina was out of town, vacationing in Las Vegas with her boyfriend, soon-to-be husband. [06:15] Here's Christina. [06:17] I thought that everything was fine. I mean, everything was normal. I remember because...

6:22-7:58

[06:22] before we had left. [06:24] Me and or my boyfriend would always pick Michaela up from school. And so we were like, are you sure you're going to have a way home? [06:32] This is something you do every day. This is something I do every day. And it was the very first time I had ever left my sister. [06:41] Still, it wasn't far to walk. A mile or so in this relatively safe little town. And Mickey wasn't worried. Not at all. She wasn't the worrying type. [06:51] She was confident, pretty and popular, with long dark hair, warm brown eyes, an easy smile. People seemed to gravitate to her, said her mother Celia. She had a way of looking at life that was just amazing. She was always positive. Celia's brown eyes were beaming, as she told me about the youngest of her three daughters. If someone was... [07:16] not so good or it wasn't such a great day, she'd say, [07:20] It's okay. It'll get better. She found the good in everything and everybody. [07:24] And Mickey was quite good herself. [07:26] A super student, a gifted writer, a star athlete, and the leader of the West Wendover Wolverine track team. And so that day, after classes, she hurried to the locker room, suited up in her bright red running outfit, laced up her spikes, and headed down to the big oval track for some speed training. [07:49] There was no mistaking Mickey... [07:52] fast and graceful as she glided through her laps in the high altitude air.

7:58-9:29

[07:58] long hair flowing, legs pumping, perform... [08:02] They're perfect. [08:04] After 45 minutes of sprints and stretching, [08:07] Mickey went to the gym. [08:08] for a weight training session. [08:10] followed by a quick change of clothes in the girls' locker room, and then [08:14] out the school's back door to walk that mile or so home. [08:20] It was just after 5 p.m. [08:22] Across town, Celia was schmoozing with customers inside the bustling Nugget Casino. [08:28] But her mind was on Mickey. [08:30] and the phone call she'd be getting from her any minute now. [08:34] Michaela? [08:35] is not your typical teenager. [08:38] that girl would... [08:40] Check in with me. [08:42] All the time. [08:43] I'm changing. I'm going to be heading out. [08:46] The next call I get from her is, I'm heading home. Always kept in touch. Always. [08:52] to a fault. [08:53] But Mickey did not call. [08:56] So Celia called Mickey. She'll never not answer me. [09:00] It does not matter what she does, she'd answer. And she's always been like that. And so... [09:07] At a quarter after five. [09:09] I started calling. [09:12] her phone. [09:13] And it rang and rang and rang the first time. The sun, orange and anxious, sank behind desert foothills. [09:23] And then the next call, it went straight to voicemail, like the phone was off. And I'm like, okay.

9:29-11:07

[09:29] This is so not her. [09:32] So Celia, panic rising, called her eldest daughter Christina 400 miles south in Las Vegas. Here is Christina. She said, when's the last time you talked to Mickey? And I said, a few hours ago. And she says... [09:47] I can't find her. [09:48] And I said, "Mom, she's probably at practice." [09:52] And she says, no, practice... [09:53] They ended and she's not home. And I said, well, maybe she went to the gym. Calm down because my mom's... [10:01] I was easily upset. [10:03] You're probably just missing her. [10:06] - Christina tended to be the cool head in the family. Mature and wise with cold, dark eyes under a pair of wire-rimmed glasses. She wasn't too concerned. [10:16] And I'm thinking... [10:17] Maybe for the first time in her life she's being a normal teenager. Really? So you still weren't worried? I was trying not to worry, and so my husband's telling me the same thing. [10:28] Don't worry until she doesn't go to school tomorrow. [10:30] He says, if Mickey's being a normal teenager and hiding out, [10:34] doing something crazy. [10:36] We both know she'll go to school in the morning. [10:39] Even so, Christina dialed Mickey, fully expecting an answer. [10:44] And it rang and rang and rang and then went to voicemail. So I left her a voicemail. [10:49] Mickey, why aren't you answering? Call me back. Mom's going crazy. [10:54] So I waited. Nothing. [10:56] - Called my mom back and I was telling her, "Calm down, you know, it's Wendover." And it's Mickey, she never does anything. - It was dark by then.

11:08-12:42

[11:08] Dark and suddenly cold, [11:10] 45 excruciating minutes had passed from Mickey's normal call-in time. [11:15] you [11:16] at the casino. [11:18] Celia could no longer pretend to be calm. [11:21] I was still at work. I had been frantically texting [11:25] and calling. [11:26] and everything and [11:29] Just getting more and more upset? More and more upset because I knew the moment she didn't answer her phone, the first time, something wasn't right. The second time, I knew something was really wrong. And with that, Celia dropped everything and raced home, hoping she'd see Mickey on the way or open the door to encounter her smiling face. But... [11:51] The house was silent. [11:54] Nobody home. Cecilia, heart pounding, hurried to the high school, checked the track, the gym, the locker room. [12:03] All empty. Frantic now. [12:08] She roared out of the school lot. [12:11] looking to find anybody who knew Mickey. [12:14] And they started trying to call her cell phone and wasn't getting answers. [12:18] And... [12:19] I'm going to the next friend, and that friend I had just talked to is calling other friends, and they're all panicked. [12:26] because none of them had seen or heard from Mickey either. [12:32] Celia was bargaining with God by then as she hurried home again. Please let her be there, please. But Mickey wasn't.

12:42-14:17

[12:42] Only her middle daughter, DJ, was home. [12:46] Then my mom came in. [12:47] She said, Nikki's not here. [12:50] So I immediately went out and searched for her. [12:52] called her friends, called my friends. If you hear from Mickey, you need to tell me. And then, [12:57] I called her phone real mad. I said, "This isn't funny." [13:01] You need to tell me where you are. [13:03] What's going on? That Mickey didn't return DJ's call was a bad sign. The two were close, practically inseparable, even looked alike. [13:14] Hey! [13:14] Consider us twins. [13:16] See you. [13:16] Always promise to stick together no matter what and to be each other's. [13:21] Best friend. [13:22] If we weren't. [13:23] At the same place, we always had to know [13:26] where the other was at all times. But now nobody knew where Mickey was. Cecilia, nowhere else to turn, called the West Wendover Police Department. Would they take it seriously? They would. And right away assigned Detective Donald Burnham. We don't wait. [13:45] to start responding to somebody that's missing. We'll start looking right away. The longer you wait, the harder it is going to be to find them. Burnham, lean and 30-something, had been a cop virtually half his life. Chiseled face, short, cropped, black hair. Around the department, Burnham was known as the quiet one, cool and circumspect. [14:05] And he offered Celia a ray of hope. [14:09] Hi. [14:09] Didn't believe she was dead. I was hoping maybe she was just somewhere, and we weren't able to find her at the time. That she had just gone off to be with a friend and...

14:17-15:48

[14:17] been irresponsible for once. [14:19] Well, we didn't know whether that was it or if she'd met with foul play or if she was [14:24] being restrained and held somewhere against her will. [14:28] That evening, volunteer search teams ventured out into the profound darkness beyond the neon glow of the town's casinos, their flashlights stabbing at vast, empty desert. There was already over 80 people looking for her, and they're all panicked. [14:47] What did you feel like while all this was going on? [14:50] *laughs* [14:52] That's a hard question. [14:54] Scared? [14:56] Upset. [14:58] Panic, worry, because it was dark now and it was cold and she had no jacket. And Celia waited, waited as a mother would wait on the longest night of her life. I didn't sleep. [15:14] It was horrible. And in the bottom of my heart, I knew something was really, really wrong. [15:26] America's privately owned freight railroads keep the nation on track, investing $23 billion a year, six times more than the average manufacturer, to deliver safe, reliable service. [15:37] That's how railroads move 59 tons of goods for every American each year and help their customers grow. Railroads do all this while offering some of the safest, best paying jobs in the country.

15:48-17:34

[15:48] supporting families and driving the economy forward. Learn more at aar.org slash AmericasEngine. [15:56] Game day at my place is kind of a big deal. If I'm grilling, chilling, and watching hoops, my outdoor patio setup better be ready to play. That's where Wayfair wins. From patio seating and umbrellas to grills and grilling accessories, Wayfair's got it all, and it shows up fast. I'm talking championship-level fast and easy delivery. So level up your grill game and your outdoor chill game and head to Wayfair.com now to get your outdoor space ready for the season. [16:26] Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile, with a message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment. [16:44] Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. [16:59] That first night, they all agreed. All the searchers. Mickey Costanzo didn't just wander off. [17:07] Someone took her. Holding her in town? Maybe. But somehow it seemed more likely she'd been taken out there somewhere. Out in what they call the Great Basin. 200,000 square miles of unforgiving desert that makes up most of Nevada. Here are jagged mountain peaks, deep remote valleys, sand and sagebrush. When somebody says the middle of nowhere, this is the place.

17:37-19:07

[17:37] Early the next morning, volunteers were back combing the empty desert around West Wendover. [17:43] Here's Detective Burnham. There was a large search party that was formulated, and, um, [17:49] They had constructed different groups to search different areas. There was a huge turnout of volunteers for the search. [17:57] Just regular folk from around town. In times of need, we all come together, and everybody turned out. Among them, of course, was Mickey's sister and soulmate, DJ. And out searching, I remember dropping to the ground. [18:11] And I said, [18:12] I really don't think she's alive. [18:15] They're like, "You need to think positive." And I said, "I really just don't [18:20] this isn't her [18:22] This isn't right. [18:23] And I just kept calling her phone. [18:26] crying, begging her, "Please." [18:29] answer. [18:31] Please be okay. [18:34] But it wasn't okay. Downstate at an RV site outside Las Vegas and ostensibly on vacation, Mickey's eldest sister Christina tried to do the impossible, both sleep and persuade herself that Mickey would show up, safe and sound. Woke up at 6 o'clock. [18:53] called my mom, still no sign of Mickey. [18:56] So I call the school. [18:58] And I'm like, is she showed up for class yet? [19:01] No. [19:02] They're still looking for her, Christina. And I'm like, "Oh my God." [19:06] And at that moment,

19:07-20:42

[19:07] I knew something had happened. [19:11] And I think, [19:12] I woke up my husband and I said, [19:15] She is not in school. And he said, "Okay, now we worry." [19:19] "What do you want me to do?" And I said, "I don't know." By now, media had gotten wind and descended on little West Wendover. Satellite trucks and news vans with giant microwave antennas sprouted like palm trees. [19:34] beaming the fears of Mickey's friends and neighbors back to Salt Lake City. [19:38] and nearby towns in northern Nevada. [19:41] I just hope that we find this little girl safe. [19:44] Without anything I guess would ever happen in my normal... [19:48] The news made its way south to Las Vegas, where Christina was chained to her cell phone, trying to figure out what to do. [19:56] And a couple of our friends actually had shown us that [20:00] Mickey's picture went... [20:01] in the news that she was missing. [20:04] And she said, "Kristina, [20:06] Nothing bad happens in Wendover. [20:10] And I said, you are absolutely right. And I looked at my husband and I said, you need to take me home right now. [20:17] He says, "Well, what changed your mind?" And I said, "Because nothing happens in Wendover." [20:22] And something did. [20:23] and I have to get home. [20:26] And he took his truck and drove me straight home. [20:29] It's about an eight and a half hour drive. [20:32] He got me home in about six and a half hours. Christina and her husband drove all afternoon and into the evening. The whole way...

20:42-22:13

[20:42] Back home, I kept crying and he would say, [20:45] "It's okay, you don't even know anything." And I kept telling him, even if she's just hurt somewhere, [20:50] It's cold and stank. [20:52] 24 hours now. [20:54] That's all I could think. [20:56] Even if she was just [20:57] laying somewhere hurt, she wouldn't have made it because [21:01] It was cold. [21:02] I knew that she wasn't okay. [21:06] All the way home, she worried away at terrible ideas. What if some stranger, some traveler, saw her walking home from school and snatched her? After all, the casinos depended on the tourists, who pulled off the interstate for a few free drinks and a little roulette or blackjack or whatever. "It was no way, Barry," as Detective Burnham said. [21:29] It's not the small, quiet rural community that most people would like to assume. Yeah, it's a little place along the road, but it's got stuff going on, right? It's got big problems at times, and we do have our share of violent crimes. Thus the fear that some passing motorist had taken her. Because around home, Mickey was what cops call a low-risk victim, not an enemy of the world, a straight arrow, going places, good places. [21:55] A totally trouble-free life. [21:58] Mikayla was the one who was going to do everything, I guess you would say, the right way. [22:04] She was gonna... [22:05] finish school, [22:07] And she had such a bright future. She could have done... [22:11] anything that she put her mind to it.

22:13-23:43

[22:13] Bright, talented, good-looking, talented. The trifecta. Yes, she had it all. And one more thing about Mickey. [22:23] She was unusually generous. [22:26] Not with money, she didn't have much of that. [22:29] But Sherry herself [22:32] said her mother Celia. [22:34] She helped everybody. She tutored kids at school. If she goes to bed at 10 o'clock at night and [22:40] You're struggling on homework and it's one o'clock in the morning and you text her or call her because you need help? [22:46] She will get up and help. [22:48] And she'll tell me, [22:50] Mom, I have to help Jackie. I have to help Javier. [22:54] We have a project. They can't do it. Well, no, no, no. But mom, they're my friend. I have to. [22:59] Javier, by the way, was Javier Trujillo, Mickey's boyfriend. Soft-spoken, polite young man. The two had been dating for several months. [23:09] "It seems serious," said Celia. [23:11] Michaela was not allowed to date till she was 16. Her first real boyfriend is Javier. You would have to see Michaela and Javier together and hear them and... [23:22] That was her boyfriend. [23:24] In fact, the entire Costanzo family liked Javier, and he was [23:29] "Crazy about her." "And she could have had her pick of boys at school," said Sister Christina. [23:35] But... [23:36] Mikayla would have never looked at anybody else. [23:39] She was. [23:41] very happy and

23:44-25:17

[23:44] She was very much in love with Javier. [23:47] Now police wanted to have a little chat with Javier. He wasn't a suspect, at least not yet, but he was part of Mickey's inner circle. What did he know about where she was or if she had been taken? So Detective Burnham had him come down to the police station, where he ushered Javier into a small, white-walled interrogation room. [24:06] Javier seemed a little nervous, upset too, as his eyes twitched ever so slightly as Detective Burnham rolled tape and started asking questions. [24:18] How's she been acting lately? I don't know, she's been acting pretty fine. [24:22] If something was wrong, she'd vent. She's not one of those girls that hides her feelings, like, [24:28] Thank you. [24:29] puts her emotions in her. - So everything's been good, huh? - Yeah. [24:33] And we haven't had any problems. Javier said he had no idea where Mickey was, who she was with, or what happened to her. Said he was at work around the time she was setting out from school to walk home. They checked his alibi, of course, and yes, he was indeed at work, just like he said he was. I got out at 10 yesterday and went looking for her. They had permission to, like, two. I think she's not safe because if she was, she'd notify other people. [25:03] to be just as frantically worried as the rest of her family. So they let him go. [25:11] There was one way to track down Mickey, or what happened to her, and Detective Burnham was on it.

25:17-26:50

[25:17] Mickey's cell phone records. Her family told the detective she used that phone a lot. The records couldn't tell him what Mickey said or to whom she said it, but it would reveal the phone numbers she was communicating with. [25:31] and the specific times of those calls and texts. And right away, something stood out. At the very time she left school for that walk home, [25:41] you [25:42] Here's Detective Burnham. [25:44] There was a lot of text and phone calls transpiring just immediately after school and up till just after five. [25:51] And then they stopped. Abruptly stopped right at the time that she had left the school. [25:55] But there was more. [25:57] And this might... [25:58] matter. [25:59] A lot. [26:00] Those calls and text messages pinging off the local cell phone tower were all from one number. [26:06] Definitely having communication back and forth. There was something going on. Something. What did you think about that? [26:12] very suspicious. [26:14] Time to find whoever owned that other phone. [26:28] America's privately owned freight railroads keep the nation on track, investing $23 billion a year, six times more than the average manufacturer, to deliver safe, reliable service. [26:39] That's how railroads move 59 tons of goods for every American each year and help their customers grow. Railroads do all this while offering some of the safest, best-paying jobs in the country.

26:50-28:24

[26:50] supporting families and driving the economy forward. Learn more at aar.org slash America's engine. [26:58] It's Charles Barkley here with Wayfair. And let me tell you, game day is serious business at my house. If I'm grilling, chilling, and watching hoops, my outdoor setup better be ready to play. That's what Wayfair wins. From patio seating and umbrellas to grills and grill accessories, Wayfair's got it all. And it shows up fast. I'm talking fast and easy delivery. So level up your grill game and your outdoor chill game. And head to Wayfair.com to get your outdoor space ready for the season. [27:28] Home. [27:28] Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile, with a message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment. [27:46] Anyway, give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. [28:07] It was a virtual goldmine, a jackpot of numbers, phone numbers, that had flowed in and out of Mickey Costanzo's personal cell phone. All her calls and texts from the very day and time she disappeared. It was now Friday, day two.

28:24-29:56

[28:24] of Mickey's mysterious disappearance. [28:27] Inside the West Wendover PD, Detective Donald Burnham was holed up in his sparsely decorated office, carefully perusing those pages and pages of calls and messages. His eyes must have been glazing over, scanning what seemed like an endless list of digits chronicling Mickey's constant phone activity. And though he couldn't see the content of those messages, something did jump right out. Had to be important. [28:53] Her phone either was disabled or [28:55] The battery was dead, but in any manner, she never made another phone call or text after leaving that school. [29:00] And there was something else. Those last calls in and out of Mickey's phone, the ones made just before she disappeared, were all from one number. So Detective Burnham traced the number and found the name. The last calls were made to Cody Patton. Cody Patton? [29:21] Cody was a classmate of Mickey's. [29:23] "Practically a member of the family," Celia told the detective. Or not quite that, but he certainly hung around enough. Cody and Mickey had known each other most of their lives. [29:34] They grew up together. He was our apartment manager's son. He was always around. [29:38] "Not like a boyfriend," said Celia, "just a pal, a chum." [29:42] Her, DJ, and Cody, they hung out. They were all best friends. Did they ever date Michaela and Cody? [29:49] They didn't date, but I'm sure it was probably what I call puppy love. [29:53] you know, so. At 12 or 13.

29:56-31:32

[29:56] Probably 13, 14. Yeah. [30:00] But they'd long since moved on. Cody was 18 now, a senior at Mickey's High School. And he certainly stood out. Big, handsome, strapping kid, 6'6", with ginger-colored hair and hazel eyes. Everybody in town seemed to know him. And he was engaged, well and truly committed. In fact, he'd moved in with his fiancée, Tony Frato, and her parents. [30:26] to marry sometime after high school, and Cody also had a sight set on joining the Marines after graduating. So now, Detective Burnham wanted to know a little more about that flurry of phone calls and text messages Cody exchanged with Mickey just before she vanished. I actually went to the school and asked him if he'd come to the police department and speak with me, which he agreed to. [30:49] This was actually Cody's second interview with the police. He was one of many students and friends [30:56] night. [30:58] And now the next day he looked tired and he seemed sad. [31:02] a little on edge. [31:03] What with this lifelong friend missing? [31:06] Detective Burnham started recording. [31:08] It's March 4th. 12 noon exactly. [31:13] Detective Sergeant Donald Bernal was still a patent. [31:17] With a nice 30 minutes, Cody reviewed again and again what he did and where he went the day of Mickey's disappearance, especially during that flurry of calls and texts on Mickey's phone just before she disappeared.

31:32-33:10

[31:32] It was a fairly simple story. Cody had returned to school, he said, in a white SUV he borrowed from a friend. [31:39] wanted to use it to pick up some car parts he'd left there. It was a chore, and he thought maybe Mickey was still around, extra pair of hands to help. [31:48] I had texted McKayla and asked her if she could help me, and I'll answer. [31:52] So I called her and [31:53] No answer. She called me back. [31:56] Remember, I had left my phone in the car when I was getting some of the particles done. [32:00] They kept missing each other, said Cody, until around 5:00 p.m. when Mickey called back and the two finally connected. I said, "Can you come help me?" And she goes, "I can. I have to go home." And I said, "Okay, no worries." But something in her tone on the phone seemed off. Not the usual upbeat Mickey. She seemed a little upset, said Cody. I asked her if she was okay, because she had a weird tone of voice, kind of like an indifferent, like, [32:30] I don't know, sat, mad type. I was like, are you all right? She goes, yeah, just like, [32:35] He's like, "Okay, no worries." And I hung up. [32:40] Soon after, Cody said he packed up the borrowed SUV with those car parts and left the school. The last time he seen him was [32:49] - Well, that sounds weird. - Have you seen her leave the school? - Yeah. - Where was she leave them from? [32:54] She was going out the front. How sure you were was that it was fair to go out the front? Positive. [32:59] Pinning down the last known sighting of Mickey could prove crucial, and Cody was emphatic. He watched her walk out the front door of the school.

33:10-34:42

[33:10] and that was the last time he saw her. [33:13] Burnham filed that away. [33:15] and went on listening. [33:16] After he left campus, said Cody, he picked up his fiancée, Tony Frato, [33:21] And they went to McDonald's for a bite and to hang out. And then later, the two drove around looking for Mickey... [33:28] because by then the alert had gone out that she was missing. [33:32] Everybody was out looking, so we went and drove around for a little bit. [33:35] "They crisscrossed much of the town," said Cody. [33:39] They even drove by Mickey's house. Didn't see a trace of her, though. [33:43] They got home a little before 10 p.m. And now... Well... [33:48] Detective Burnham asked the question, [33:51] What do you think about your opinion? Honestly, I hope she has gotten in a fight with her boyfriend or mom or something. [33:58] Like Fred's house or something. [34:00] Do you have any questions for me? [34:02] Yeah, find it, please. [34:06] At the very time Cody was pleading with the detective, search teams were continuing to check every gully and ditch, and hole and hillside, in town and out, deep into the night. By then, at the Costanzo's little apartment, Celia was gripped by a cold certainty. When she didn't go to school on Friday morning, [34:30] *sniff* [34:31] I knew I wouldn't see my daughter. Alive. [34:36] I didn't know how to make things right for DJ, and I couldn't make things right for Michaela, and I felt...

34:42-36:14

[34:42] Like a failure. As a parent. By now, what little hope DJ had left was running on fumes. [34:52] And just the more hours I went, [34:55] The more I search for and then panic. [34:58] She hasn't called. She hasn't... [35:02] done anything [35:03] That's not her. [35:04] Especially not to me. She'd send me a text or something. I'm fine. [35:08] but nothing. [35:10] Later that Friday evening, eldest daughter Christina rolled in. [35:15] After the long drive from Las Vegas, I went to my mom's house. [35:20] and I told her that I was going to go find my sister. [35:25] And she was very upset. And she was like, Christina, I'm sorry. [35:29] They're all looking for her. And I said, but... [35:32] I'm going to go get her and bring her home. [35:35] Even though she's not okay, I will bring her home. [35:39] I knew that [35:40] I was going to find her, and I wasn't going to find her the way we wanted to, but that I was going to bring her home. [35:47] And out she drove into the ink-black desert, crisscrossing miles of remote dirt roads, surveying all the party spots. [35:57] where West Wendover teenagers were known to hang out. [36:00] I stopped and looked at any little [36:02] mound of dirt. [36:04] that looked weird, I'd stop. [36:06] Maybe that's her. [36:07] and I went [36:10] to the gravel pits. In point of fact,

36:14-37:55

[36:14] Had Mickey been able to call out to her sister at one particular moment during that frantic drive, [36:21] Christina would have heard her. [36:24] heard her calling. [36:26] out there in the dark of the desert. [36:31] next time I went straight to my mom's and she says they've called off the search and I said I know where she's at [36:43] What did you think when you got that calling? [36:45] I thought the worst. [36:47] I'm waking up, shaking. [36:49] cops there. [36:50] My heart sank to the pit in my stomach. [36:53] This is not over yet. [36:55] until the person or persons [36:57] responsible and brought to justice. [37:10] - Five Miles From Home is a production of Dateline and NBC News. Robert Dean is a producer. Brian Drew, Marshall Hausfeld, and Meredith Greenstein are audio editors. Molly DeRosa is associate producer. [37:24] Adam Gorfain is co-executive producer. Paul Ryan is executive producer. And Liz Cole is senior executive producer. [37:33] From NBC News Audio, [37:35] Sound mixing by Rich Cutler. [37:44] America's privately owned freight railroads keep the nation on track, investing $23 billion a year, six times more than the average manufacturer, to deliver safe, reliable service.

37:55-38:13

[37:55] That's how railroads move 59 tons of goods for every American each year and help their customers grow. Railroads do all this while offering some of the safest, best-paying jobs in the country. [38:06] supporting families and driving the economy forward. Learn more at aar.org slash America's engine.

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