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Today in Canada > News > 2nd round of polygraphs conducted in disappearance of N.S. children
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2nd round of polygraphs conducted in disappearance of N.S. children

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Last updated: 2026/03/11 at 7:23 AM
Press Room Published March 11, 2026
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2nd round of polygraphs conducted in disappearance of N.S. children
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Nova Scotia RCMP have conducted a second round of polygraph examinations in the disappearance of Jack and Lilly Sullivan, with two of those tests focused on one of the only pieces of physical evidence in the case: a light pink blanket found hanging in a tree.

Lilly, 6, and Jack, then 4, were reported missing on the morning of May 2, 2025, from Lansdowne, N.S., a sparsely populated area about 140 kilometres northeast of Halifax.

Their disappearance sparked a massive grid search of the thick woods surrounding their home, where they lived with their mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray; stepfather, Daniel Martell; and their younger sister.

A piece of Lilly’s blanket, found on the first day of the search tangled in a tree’s twigs, has been the subject of much speculation, fuelled by a lack of answers in the case. 

WATCH | Family member who found pink blanket was asked about it during polygraph:

Pink blanket focus of N.S. missing children polygraphs

Nova Scotia RCMP have conducted a second round of polygraph examinations in the disappearance of Jack and Lilly Sullivan, with two of those tests focused on a pink blanket found hanging in a tree. The CBC’s Aly Thomson reports.

Family members on all sides have suggested online and in media interviews that it was planted.

Haley Ferdinand, Brooks-Murray’s stepsister, was one of the people who came upon the piece of tattered blanket off Lansdowne Station Road, a kilometre from the children’s home, as they scoured for Jack and Lilly alongside dozens of search and rescue members.

“We went down one side of the road and came back up the other,” said Ferdinand, adding that Brooks-Murray’s half-brother, Haiden Murray-Smith, was with her at the time.

“We came back up the other side and all of a sudden there was this pink thing in the tree.”

A woman wwearing glasses with short blonde hair sits on a sofa and stares off to the side.
Haley Ferdinand is Jack and Lilly Sullivan’s aunt. (Aly Thomson/CBC)

Ferdinand said it was intertwined in branches roughly a metre off the ground. She described its position as “odd.”

“Emotions were very high that day already. And then it was just like ‘Oh my God, what is that?’ And then Haiden said, ‘That’s Lilly’s L.O.L. doll blanket.’ And sure enough, we sent the picture to Malehya and she ID’d it as being Lilly’s,” said Ferdinand in a recent interview at her home outside Truro, N.S.

“It was just very emotional to see.”

Ferdinand said she was asked four questions during a polygraph examination on Feb 20: “Did you plant the blanket in the tree? Did you place the blanket in the tree? Did you put the blanket in the tree? Did you leave the blanket in the tree?”

She said she responded “no” to each question, and at the end, she was told she passed the examination.

Haiden Murray-Smith confirmed to CBC News that he was asked the same four questions during a polygraph examination on Feb. 19. He said he responded “no” to each question, and was told by the examiner at the end that he passed.

Two children, a boy and a girl, standing in front of woods with backpacks on.
Jack and Lilly Sullivan vanished from Lansdowne, N.S., on May 2, 2025. (Submitted)

RCMP declined a request for an interview, but confirmed in an email that more polygraph examinations have taken place as part of an extensive investigation being led by major crimes.

The Mounties also confirmed the blanket — one of two pieces of physical evidence in the case that the public is aware of — is still at the RCMP lab for forensic examination. 

The second piece is a boot print consistent with Lilly’s foot size found on the pipeline trail near the family home.

In Canada, polygraph tests are used as an investigative tool and are not admissible in court.

Michelle Jeanis, an associate professor in the criminal justice department at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, said police conduct polygraphs to help shape interviews, narrow down suspect pools and to guide who they should be speaking with as part of an investigation.

A woman with red ahir and glasses.
Michelle Jeanis is an associate professor in the criminal justice department at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. (Submitted by Michelle Jeanis)

Jeanis, whose areas of expertise include best practices for recovering missing persons, said she feels the fact that police are conducting a second round of polygraphs signals that RCMP have exhausted all immediate leads.

“The best thing to do when you have a long … term missing persons case would be to go back from the beginning and start over and with fresh eyes and look for anything that they might have missed before,” said Jeanis, who has been following the case closely.

“It is absolutely concerning that the investigation has gone on for this long and we still have no recovery. All missing persons cases are usually resolved very quickly. So this in and of itself is very abnormal and concerning.”

Details about the blanket’s discovery are laid out in search warrant applications sought by RCMP early in the investigation.

The documents said the blanket was discovered around 4 p.m. AT on May 2, 2025, and police dogs were brought to the location, but no scent was picked up.

Two days later, another piece of the same blanket was seized from inside a trash bag at the end of the driveway at the children’s home, said the documents, which lay out an officer’s summary of the investigation to that point.

A man with blue eyes stares.
Daniel Martell is the stepfather of missing children Jack and Lilly Sullivan (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

Martell had been using the blanket to stop a draft from a door, it said. About a week before the disappearance, Brooks-Murray took it from the door because the weather was getting nicer and she threw it in the garbage.

“There was already a piece missing from it when she did that because Daniel ripped it off when he put it up,” the document said, summarizing Brooks-Murray’s statement to police.

Martell told CBC News in a January interview that he had voluntarily provided a DNA sample to investigators the month prior. 

He said it was his understanding that his DNA was taken in connection with the blanket, but RCMP have not confirmed that.

According to the court documents, a number of people underwent polygraphs in the weeks and months immediately following the disappearance, including Martell and Brooks-Murray.

Ferdinand and Murray-Smith were not polygraphed during the first round of tests.

‘Another task to complete’

Martell previously told CBC News that all the questions he was asked during his first polygraph were presumptive that the children were no longer alive, such as, “Did you kill Lilly and Jack?”

Martell did not respond to a request for comment from CBC News on the second round of polygraphs.

Brooks-Murray confirmed to CBC News that she has undergone a second polygraph examination and that she was told she passed. She would not elaborate on the questions she was asked.

During an interview in January, RCMP Staff Sgt. Rob McCamon said there were “a number of different areas” investigators were following up on in connection with the blanket.

“We’ll make decisions on that once we have all that we need, but right now we’re not in a position to really comment on that.”

For Ferdinand, her polygraph was simply another box to tick. 

“I knew that I went into the test being truthful and I knew my result was going to be truthful. So it was really just another normal day … another task to complete in the pursuit of finding out what happened to them,” said Ferdinand, becoming emotional at times.

“It hurts the longer time goes. We just want answers and we want Lilly and Jack home.”

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