![]() She grabbed the keys and she handed them to Jimmy so that he could go look for Stacey.” ![]() “She notices that he looks he's just woke up. “He's getting dressed, he's tucking in his shirt,” Tanner said. “I thought maybe truck broke down or something.”Ĭarol Stites said she “immediately” called Fennell to let him know, and he said he’d “be down in just a minute.” shift at the grocery story, according to Fennell. Prosecutor Lisa Tanner said Stites left home at 3 a.m. “The last words out of her mouth was, ‘Mom, I love you.’ And I said, ‘I know you do,’” Stites remembered. Shea Maloney, who hosts a podcast that covered the case, said Carol Stites saw her daughter and Fennell embrace outside her window, then saw them laughing and joking together as they made their way upstairs. The last time Carol Stites said she saw her daughter was on the evening of April 22, 1996, right before she and her fiancé were about to head upstairs to their apartment. This guy was here and it was just about everything that I wanted in a son-in-law. “He's had the same values I was raised with. “He was raised in the church that I was raised in,” she said. “She was really excited about getting married. Stites’ sister Debra Oliver told “20/20” Stacey didn’t share any concerns with her. “For a 19-year-old that’s kind of a big transition.” ![]() “It was definitely stressful for her just because she had to work and come home and she was expected to do laundry, clean,” Amen said.
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