NC MADALINA COJOCARI: Missing from Cornelius, NC - 23 Nov 2022 - Age 11 *Reported Dec 15 *GUILTY of failure to report*

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11-year-old Cornelius girl missing since November, police say​

Police are looking for a child out of Cornelius who has been missing since the day before Thanksgiving.

According to the Cornelius Police Department, officers began investigating a missing person’s report involving a juvenile on Thursday.

The parents of the child, identified as 11-year-old Madalina Cojocari, reported her missing to the Bailey Middle School school resource officer, where she attends.

Police said the child was last seen at home on the evening of Nov. 23 and has not been seen since.


Cornelius police searching for missing 11-year-old girl​

The Cornelius Police Department is searching for an 11-year-old girl who has been reported missing.

Police said they began investigating after the parents of Madalina Cojocari reported her missing to a school research officer at Bailey Middle School on Dec. 15.

Cojocari was last seen at her home on the evening of Nov. 23, according to police.

 
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By CHRIS SPARGO
First Published: 9:31 AM PDT, May 24, 2023

Madalina Cojocari is still missing six months after she was last seen getting off the school bus near her home in Cornelius, North Carolina, on Nov. 21.

Police arrested her mother, Diana Cojocari, and stepfather, Christopher Palmiter, on charges of failing to report the disappearance of a child back on Dec. 17, and the two remain in custody at the Mecklenburg County Jail awaiting an Aug. 11 hearing.


The two also refuse to offer any information about what happened to Madalina according to law enforcement, despite multiple people now reporting that they saw Diana in western North Carolina in the days after her daughter's disappearance.

Now, a new sighting and the emergence of a mysterious private investigator is deepening the mystery around Madalina's disappearance.

<snip>

"On Thursday, February 10, 2023, Cornelius Police Department Detectives and NCSBI Agents reviewed phone records for Diana Cojocari [Phone number redacted]. When reviewing phone numbers that defendant, Cojocari, contacted, she had an extensive communication on December 2, 2022 with a known subject, Octavian Cebanu (Phone Number [redacted])," Det. Patterson writes. "In reviewing this subject's phone records, there was multiple calls to phone numbers belonging to unidentified targets involved in ongoing T3 drag/narcotic trafficking investigations," according to the affidavit.

Diana remains quiet however, much like she did in the weeks after her daughter went missing, for reasons that are still unknown.


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More information at link. ~Summer
 

By Dave Faherty, wsoctv.com
May 23, 2023 at 5:48 pm EDT

BURKE COUNTY, N.C. — Channel 9 has learned a private investigator is questioning people in Burke County in the search for missing Cornelius girl Madalina Cojocari.

Video shows Madalina getting off her school bus on Nov. 21, which is the day investigators say she was last seen at Bailey Middle School.

Channel 9′s Dave Faherty spoke to a woman who contacted the sheriff about the private investigator. He was spotted in the Oak Hill community north of Morganton. Deputies said one off the encounters happened along Tellis Lane, and the other was on Spainhour Road.

<snip>

Now, we’re learning that a private investigator has been spotted twice in Burke County this month asking people if they’ve seen Madalina.

Faherty spoke to a witness by phone on Tuesday. She said the man pulled up in an SUV and claimed he was a private investigator working the case.

“He rolled down his window and said that he was a private investigator, and asked me if I had seen this girl, and showed me the missing persons flyer,” she said. “I had asked him if she had been seen on that road specifically, and he said no, just in the area.”

It isn’t the first time Channel 9 has heard a private investigator is working the case.



Law enforcement sources confirmed to Channel 9 that Diana Cojocari was spotted asleep in her car two hours from Cornelius in Madison County the night of Dec. 4 into the early morning hours of Dec. 5. That was before she reported Madalina was missing. Deputies said Madalina was not in the car at that time.

After deputies and the State Bureau of Investigation searched the area, a store owner told Channel 9 a private investigator hired by the Cojocaris asked several questions about the case.

In Burke County, many of the people Faherty spoke with had questions of their own about why someone would be looking there.

“You would think they would be looking in Cornelius instead of coming out here in the middle of the woods,” said resident Chad Weisner.

“He must know something about her and what’s happened,” resident Lisa Honeycutt said.

The sheriff’s office said they reached out to Cornelius police and were told they had no information that Madalina was taken to the Burke County area. They have stepped up patrols in the area as a precaution.
 

By Anthony Kustura, wsoctv.com
June 29, 2023 at 5:40 pm EDT

CORNELIUS, N.C. — A search for a missing 11-year-old girl that made national headlines last year may have been prompted by a school policy put in place to protect kids just like her.

The FBI shared video of Madalina Cojocari getting off a school bus in November 2022, but court documents obtained by Channel 9 show her mother didn’t report Madalina missing until 22 days later.

In an exclusive interview with Channel 9, Madalina’s school resource officer explained more about the policy executed by school officials.

“We have kids that miss a bunch of days all the time,” said Officer John Nobles, the school resource officer at Bailey. “I don’t normally get pulled in until I can articulate a safety reason or welfare of the child.”

When Madalina got off her school bus on Nov. 21, 2022, investigators say it was the last time anyone saw her at Bailey Middle School in Cornelius. But long before flyers and yellow bows for her went up across town, Madalina’s school raised the red flag to begin the search for her.

“To me, a school resource officer is the most important position in law enforcement,” Nobles said. “The responsibility of taking care of other people’s kids, and keeping them safe.”


He can’t speak directly to Madalina’s case. However, court documents show he and the school counselor went to Madalina’s home on Dec. 12 to check on her, but no one answered the door.

According to court documents, Madalina’s mom then called the counselor to set up a meeting about her daughter, promising to bring Madalina to school. When her mom showed up for that meeting on Dec. 15, she reported her daughter missing, according to those court documents. That’s 22 days after Madalina was last seen.

The home visit is part of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools’ truancy policy, which requires intervention and notifications to parents if a student misses at least 10 days of school.
 

By Anthony Kustura, wsoctv.com
June 29, 2023 at 5:40 pm EDT

CORNELIUS, N.C. — A search for a missing 11-year-old girl that made national headlines last year may have been prompted by a school policy put in place to protect kids just like her.

The FBI shared video of Madalina Cojocari getting off a school bus in November 2022, but court documents obtained by Channel 9 show her mother didn’t report Madalina missing until 22 days later.

In an exclusive interview with Channel 9, Madalina’s school resource officer explained more about the policy executed by school officials.

“We have kids that miss a bunch of days all the time,” said Officer John Nobles, the school resource officer at Bailey. “I don’t normally get pulled in until I can articulate a safety reason or welfare of the child.”

When Madalina got off her school bus on Nov. 21, 2022, investigators say it was the last time anyone saw her at Bailey Middle School in Cornelius. But long before flyers and yellow bows for her went up across town, Madalina’s school raised the red flag to begin the search for her.

“To me, a school resource officer is the most important position in law enforcement,” Nobles said. “The responsibility of taking care of other people’s kids, and keeping them safe.”


He can’t speak directly to Madalina’s case. However, court documents show he and the school counselor went to Madalina’s home on Dec. 12 to check on her, but no one answered the door.

According to court documents, Madalina’s mom then called the counselor to set up a meeting about her daughter, promising to bring Madalina to school. When her mom showed up for that meeting on Dec. 15, she reported her daughter missing, according to those court documents. That’s 22 days after Madalina was last seen.

The home visit is part of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools’ truancy policy, which requires intervention and notifications to parents if a student misses at least 10 days of school.
I love the policy, thank goodness for it, but 22 days before MOM reported an 11 year old? I'm sorry but that's a dead giveaway. I know cases need evidence but there is NO explaining this away.
 

Author: Meilin Tompkins
Published: 10:35 AM EDT July 10, 2023
Updated: 10:35 AM EDT July 10, 2023

CORNELIUS, N.C. — The Cornelius Police Department confirmed Monday that they are aware of a Facebook post noting a possible sighting of Madalina Cojocari, a missing 11-year-old girl from Cornelius, North Carolina, in northern California.

A user in the Find Madalina Cojocari Facebook group said she was driving to Susanville, California, on July 5 when she stopped at a Valero gas station in Weaverville. She spotted a young girl there who asked for a ride "up north." The poster said the girl looked a lot like Madalina.

"She appeared to be alone, but honestly I could not tell clearly due to so many people there," the post reads.

In a statement, a Cornelius police spokesperson told WCNC Charlotte that the agency was "aware of the tip and detectives are following up" on the information.

Police told WCNC Charlotte in an email, "We are aware of the tip and detectives are following up on this information."
 

Author: Meilin Tompkins
Published: 10:35 AM EDT July 10, 2023
Updated: 10:35 AM EDT July 10, 2023

CORNELIUS, N.C. — The Cornelius Police Department confirmed Monday that they are aware of a Facebook post noting a possible sighting of Madalina Cojocari, a missing 11-year-old girl from Cornelius, North Carolina, in northern California.

A user in the Find Madalina Cojocari Facebook group said she was driving to Susanville, California, on July 5 when she stopped at a Valero gas station in Weaverville. She spotted a young girl there who asked for a ride "up north." The poster said the girl looked a lot like Madalina.

"She appeared to be alone, but honestly I could not tell clearly due to so many people there," the post reads.

In a statement, a Cornelius police spokesperson told WCNC Charlotte that the agency was "aware of the tip and detectives are following up" on the information.

Police told WCNC Charlotte in an email, "We are aware of the tip and detectives are following up on this information."
It seems very unlikely and awful coincidental but who knows... This girl was not even reported missing for weeks and she was ELEVEN and that alone points to something imo.
 

Mother of missing girl sent text that she was in her daughter’s ‘presence’ after she disappeared: Police​

In a newly released search warrant, police said the mother of missing girl Madalina Cojocari texted about being in the child’s “presence” during the disappearance. Not only that, but cops claim that there’s surveillance footage possibly showing Madalina and a distant relative together.

As Law&Crime previously reported, officers said that this distant relative, Octavian Cebanu, had been asked by Madalina’s mother, Diana Cojocari, to smuggle both daughter and mom to safety.

“On December 16, 2022, Sugar Mountain Police Department [in North Carolina] provided surveillance photographs of a man and a young female,” police wrote in an application for a search warrant dated Dec. 19, 2022. “The man in the surveillance images was physically consistent in appearance to Octavian Cebanu, the only blood relative known to live in the United States. The young female in the surveillance images was physically consistent with the missing child, Madalina Cojocari.”

Diana Cojocari is from the nation of Moldova.

Cops have suspected the mother of leaving their North Carolina home county of Mecklenburg in the time between her daughter’s last known whereabouts and the time in which she reported her missing. Newly released documents stated she texted on Dec. 2, 2022 about being in “the presence” of the girl.

“In a text message on December 2, 2022, Diana Cojocari indicated she was in the presence of the missing child,” authorities wrote. “On December 4, 2022, Diana Cojocari traveled toward the NC mountains claiming to be searching for Madalina.”

Police did not quote the text message directly.


FULL SEARCH WARRANT APPLICATION DOCUMENTS AVAILABLE AT LINK
 

Drug charges against Madalina Cojocari's mother dismissed due to insufficient evidence​

Two drug charges filed against the mother of missing Cornelius girl Madalina Cojocari have been dismissed, court documents reveal.

North Carolina Superior Court documents filed in Mecklenburg County obtained by WCNC Charlotte show that charges against Diana Cojocari for possession of cocaine and fentanyl while in jail were dismissed on July 6. The charges were dismissed due to insufficient evidence to prosecute Cojocari, the documents say.

Cojocari was originally indicted by a grand jury on the charges in late April. An arrest warrant claimed that "a small clear plastic bag containing a white powder" was found in Cojocari's shirt pocket. The substance was sent to a lab for testing and returned a positive result for "cocaine and fentanyl-based" substances. Cojocari told a judge that the drugs weren't hers and she found the baggie in the shower.
 
So, in other words, this case has gone nowhere, charges that did exist have been dismissed and this girl may well have been secreted...

What IS this?
 

Drug charges against Madalina Cojocari's mother dismissed due to insufficient evidence​

Two drug charges filed against the mother of missing Cornelius girl Madalina Cojocari have been dismissed, court documents reveal.

North Carolina Superior Court documents filed in Mecklenburg County obtained by WCNC Charlotte show that charges against Diana Cojocari for possession of cocaine and fentanyl while in jail were dismissed on July 6. The charges were dismissed due to insufficient evidence to prosecute Cojocari, the documents say.

Cojocari was originally indicted by a grand jury on the charges in late April. An arrest warrant claimed that "a small clear plastic bag containing a white powder" was found in Cojocari's shirt pocket. The substance was sent to a lab for testing and returned a positive result for "cocaine and fentanyl-based" substances. Cojocari told a judge that the drugs weren't hers and she found the baggie in the shower.
Oh come on now!!!
 

Mother of Madalina Cojocari pleads not guilty in daughter’s disappearance​

The mother of missing Cornelius girl Madalina Cojocari pleaded not guilty in court Thursday.

Diana Cojocari was charged with failure to report the disappearance of a child to law enforcement. Her husband, Christopher Palmiter, faces the same charge.

In court Thursday, Diana Cojocari pleaded not guilty. The state did not offer her a plea deal.
 

‘[Madalina] is alive’: Grandmother of missing Cornelius girl makes explosive comments as parents appear in court​

The parents of missing girl Madalina Cojocari appeared in court Thursday, both entering not-guilty pleas, with the judge lowering the bond significantly for the missing girl’s stepfather.

Outside the courthouse, Madalina’s grandmother made some explosive comments to Queen City News after her daughter’s arraignment, saying she strongly believes Madalina was kidnapped and sold to human traffickers.

Diana Cojocari pleaded not guilty Thursday to a felony charge of not reporting Madalina missing.

Diana is still in jail on a $250,000 bond, but her husband, Christopher Palmiter, who has the same charge but now has a bond that is ten times less than that of his wife’s bond, could get out of jail.

A judge reduced Palmiter’s bond Thursday from $200,000 to $25,000.



Rodica Cojocari, Diana’s mother and Madalina’s grandmother, was in court Thursday and spoke with Queen City News outside the courthouse.

A native Russian translator provided a transcript to QCN.

“My children were caught up/by child traffickers,” said Rodica Cojocari in Russian. “My granddaughter is alive. She was sold along with Diana for 5 million dollars.”

She says she wants to take her daughter and granddaughter back to her homeland of Moldova in eastern Europe because she feels they are in danger in the United States.

Reporters asked Rodica if she had a ‘message to Madalina.’

“That I love her very much, very much, Madelina and Diana, I love them very much,” she said. “My Diana is a teacher and a translator of Russian, Romanian, and English languages. She’s an educated child – both Kojarkaris Diana and Kojarkaris Madelina. They are God-fearing people, and they are innocent that they were caught in a trap by criminals and traffickers.”
 

‘[Madalina] is alive’: Grandmother of missing Cornelius girl makes explosive comments as parents appear in court​

The parents of missing girl Madalina Cojocari appeared in court Thursday, both entering not-guilty pleas, with the judge lowering the bond significantly for the missing girl’s stepfather.

Outside the courthouse, Madalina’s grandmother made some explosive comments to Queen City News after her daughter’s arraignment, saying she strongly believes Madalina was kidnapped and sold to human traffickers.

Diana Cojocari pleaded not guilty Thursday to a felony charge of not reporting Madalina missing.

Diana is still in jail on a $250,000 bond, but her husband, Christopher Palmiter, who has the same charge but now has a bond that is ten times less than that of his wife’s bond, could get out of jail.

A judge reduced Palmiter’s bond Thursday from $200,000 to $25,000.



Rodica Cojocari, Diana’s mother and Madalina’s grandmother, was in court Thursday and spoke with Queen City News outside the courthouse.

A native Russian translator provided a transcript to QCN.

“My children were caught up/by child traffickers,” said Rodica Cojocari in Russian. “My granddaughter is alive. She was sold along with Diana for 5 million dollars.”

She says she wants to take her daughter and granddaughter back to her homeland of Moldova in eastern Europe because she feels they are in danger in the United States.

Reporters asked Rodica if she had a ‘message to Madalina.’

“That I love her very much, very much, Madelina and Diana, I love them very much,” she said. “My Diana is a teacher and a translator of Russian, Romanian, and English languages. She’s an educated child – both Kojarkaris Diana and Kojarkaris Madelina. They are God-fearing people, and they are innocent that they were caught in a trap by criminals and traffickers.”
What is she talking about. Maybe it is a mistake in translation but it sounds like she is saying the mother and daughter were sold for 5 million. The mother is in jail. Maybe she means just the child. Even so, uhm who is it that sold them and pocketed 5 million. That is one heck of a price. Was it a wire transfer or cash. Small bills or large? I'm sorry, nothing funny about this missing child but that's ludicrous as is her thought she will be taking either of them to Moldova.

And if charged with the same thing why is his bail reduced?

I think cops need to question this woman. Sounds like a flat out statement and knowledge even of the purchase price that they were sold for 5 mill. To make such a statement there must be some way she knows the exact figure of the sale.

She either needs help or can't come up with anything other than this ludicrous one. Buying into trafficking is one thing but the 5 mill blows it out of any believable water.
 
I don't know. The "sold to a trafficker" is likely pure bull. BUT I do want to know more about the sighting of Madalina with a family member after the date of her disappearance. That information, combined with her mother making a strange trip to Madison County AND having asked a relative to "smuggle" them... Makes me think it might not be as straightforward as "they murdered her".

Newly unsealed search warrants in the case of missing Cornelius girl Madalina Cojocari reveal that on Dec. 16, 2022 surveillance photos of a child and man in Sugar Mountain "were physically consistent" with the missing girl and her only known blood relative in the United States. A police report also indicated the pair were spotted at a Lowe’s Foods in Linville.

As the search for 11-year-old Madalina Cojocari continues, police are now seeking information from people in and around Madison County, an over 2-hour drive away from where Madalina was last seen in Cornelius.

Cornelius Police Department confirmed a woman appearing to be Diana Cojocari, the mother of Madalina Cojocari may have been in the area between Nov. 22 and Dec. 15 in Madison County.

Investigators want to talk to anyone who may have seen Diana Cojocari or a Toyota Prius in Madison County between Nov. 22 and Dec. 15, the three-week period before Madalina was reported missing to police.

In a search warrant dated Feb. 14, investigators said they interviewed one of Diana Cojocari’s distant relatives. He said Diana and her mother asked him if he would help Diana with “smuggling” her and Madalina away from the home. The relative said Diana told him she was in a “bad relationship” with her husband, Christopher Palmiter, and wanted a divorce.

Police said on Feb. 10, Cornelius detectives and North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation agents reviewed Diana Cojocari’s phone records. They discovered she had extensive communication on Dec. 2 with that relative who police interviewed.

Investigators said they reviewed the relative’s phone records as well and found “multiple calls to phone numbers belonging to unidentified targets involved in ongoing T3 drug/narcotic trafficking investigations.”
 
There's definitely a lot to question there but to me that does not sound like innocence on the part of the mom and the $5 million dollars I also find impossible to believe. I took her mother to mean her daughter was innocent.

The things you point out very well may point to something though but which had the mother involved if I am reading/taking it right. I'm not up and fresh on this one these days either I freely admit. I was more reacting to grandma's remarks.

So what are you thinking? Do you think she is alive and in that area?
 
I'm not sure what I'm thinking, honestly. I think it's possible that her mom DID get her taken out of the area. I would like to see investigators either confirm or deny if they believe the sighting was truly Madalina, instead of just "a person matching her description". Because if she was truly seen the day after she was actually reported missing, that changes EVERYTHING.
 
I'm not sure what I'm thinking, honestly. I think it's possible that her mom DID get her taken out of the area. I would like to see investigators either confirm or deny if they believe the sighting was truly Madalina, instead of just "a person matching her description". Because if she was truly seen the day after she was actually reported missing, that changes EVERYTHING.
I don't now what to make of that either, it sounds far from definitive and I don't know why they'd leave it like that. All the other stuff is a bit confusing as well. So the distant relative she asked to smuggle them then had many contacts with these people who happened to be targets in a drug investigation. Just how does that happen to occur? What are the odds he knew a bunch of people being investigated? And WHY for that matter would that be shared if they are trying to nail such people with an undercover investigation, etc.?

She also asked it sounded like that he smuggle the two of them not just Madeline. Would she really have been okay with leaving a female child of this age with a male that is a 'distant" relative? On her own with him? I don't think I would be and again sounded like it was to be the two of them.

I guess they are centered on that area or were anyhow, a good couple of hours away and even shared that info but still fail to say whether the sighting was thought to be real as you say. Yet they share the part about him contacting targets of a drug investigation. I don't know what to make of it either.

Okay, so let's say she sends Madelina with him and she is to join them when she can. In the meantime he had other plans and sells the girl even for the 5 mill claimed by grandma which sounds ludicrous but then I guess I don't know what some sicko might pay for an 11 year old female. Grandma talks drug traffickers and human traffickers doesn't she? And how mom was caught in a trap. Okay I guess it can fit and the distant relative was in touch with drug people at least.

OR again mom planned on hiding Madeline and this is the cover story and she knew the cops would find records of her calls to this guy and his to drug traffickers etc. and they WANTED cops to think that's what happened to Madeline and not that mom did any of it but was innocent and he and the traffickers did it.

I don't know. But for these things shared I'd find it ridiculous. As for grandma she is simply going by this or listening to her daughter's falsely set up story or true one, who knows.

If this was all true then why wouldn't mom be sharing it and helping LE and she isn't is she? And getting herself off?

It's not making much sense to me that she'd put her daughter with a person with such bad connections but she sure could have wanted to make it look like HE took her. I don't know, none of it really works well bu then where is she? I will say one more thing and that is that I don't think it's all that common for a mother to kill an eleven year old child as it is for younger ones. I'm not saying it doesn't happen but it does give some pause. I'd have to go back to see what evidence they have if any...
 

Madalina Cojocari: New theories emerge in case of missing NC girl​

Last November, a North Carolina girl got off her school bus and vanished. The case has had many twists and turns, but as the anniversary of her disappearance approaches, there are still no answers to what happened to Madalina Cojocari.

Police in Cornelius, North Carolina, have been searching for Madalina for more than nine months. Her mother and stepfather have been charged with failing to report her missing because they waited three weeks before filing a police report. That report came only after the girl’s school demanded to see her.

Since NewsNation last reported on Madalina’s case, unsealed warrants have revealed new details about her mother’s trips to the mountains of Western North Carolina, recorded jail calls discussing bags of money, potential sightings of Madalina and a distant relative appearing in theories about the case.


In an exclusive interview with NewsNation, Baucom talked about the efforts to bring Madalina home.

“I can say with confidence that we have followed up on hundreds of leads and spent thousands of man-hours between our agency and all of our partner agencies,” he said.


In the latest development, two conflicting theories have begun to emerge about what happened to Madalina.

Brandon Roseman, Palmiter’s attorney, says his client has cooperated with police and believes Diana is hiding her daughter away.

“He told police on several occasions that he believes that Diana had taken Madalina somewhere into the mountains,” Roseman said. “He told detectives specifically that he believes Diana took her somewhere and that she is safe.”

What reason could Diana have for hiding her daughter away?

Palmiter says Diana believed that he was putting Madalina in danger by naming her as a beneficiary on an investment account.

“In these interviews he gave to police, he’s adamant that he does not believe Diana harmed Madalina. He believes that Diana fervently believes that Madalina is in danger from some unknown third party, apparently related to him placing money and assigning benefits to her in a 401K account, something that doesn’t make any sense,” Roseman said.

According to police, in a text message from Dec. 2, 2022, more than a week after Madalina’s disappearance, Diana indicated she was in the presence of the missing girl.

That was the same day she allegedly had extensive conversations with a male cousin, identified as Octavian Cebanu, about smuggling her and Madalina away from Palmiter.

On Dec. 3, 2022, Diana was seen in Hickory, North Carolina, an hour west of her home, getting her oil changed. An attendant said there were children’s toys in the car, but no child was present.

The warrant states that on Dec. 4, 2022, Diana traveled toward the North Carolina mountains. A local TV station reported that a sheriff’s deputy found Diana sleeping in her car that night near Lonesome Mountain.

Police have asked any witnesses who saw Diana or her Prius in the area around that time to come forward.

NewsNation traveled to the mountains of Western North Carolina to investigate a possible sighting of Madalina, the description matching her and a male relative.

On Dec. 16, 2022, a woman reported seeing a girl resembling Madalina with a male companion at a Lowes grocery store in Sugar Mountain, North Carolina.

“There was a possible sighting at the Lowes Foods here in Sugar Mountain. We were able to track down video-still footage of that and forwarded that to Cornelius,” said Sugar Mountain Police Department Chief Casey Turbyfill.

Police said the sighting, along with another one in California, did not turn out to be Madalina.

But the area is vast, and outdoor experts say it would be easy to stay hidden.

“There’s a lot of remote locations here. It would be easy to hide somebody if you really wanted to. Or to spend time away from anything you want,” said local store owner Mark Russ.

“There’s just a lot of open space. A lot of places without internet or cell phone signal. A lot of woods. A lot of roads that go way off and dead end,” resident Jon Council said.

Affidavits also revealed recorded jail calls. One was between Palmiter and his brother, saying Diana had a lot of cash with her, and he didn’t know where it came from.

Another call was between Diana and her mother, discussing a bag of money, withdrawing cash and a theory that Palmiter gave Madalina away for money.

Diana’s mother repeated the claim, speaking in Russian to reporters outside the courthouse.

“My children were caught up by child traffickers. My granddaughter is alive. She was sold along with Diana for $5 million,” Rodica Cojocari said.

Warrants show police have combed through the couple’s financial records as well as social media, messaging accounts and phone data.

Cornelius police declined to give details, only saying they are looking into every lead.

“We’re taking everything that the grandmother has said into consideration during this investigation, and we’re following up on all possibilities,” Baucom said. “But we have no indication right now that there’s any sort of trafficking ring in our community.”

Both Palmiter and Diana Cojocari have pleaded not guilty to charges of failing to report a missing child.

Palmiter was released on Aug. 18, 2023, after posting a reduced bail of $25,000, ignoring questions from reporters.

Baucom has pledged his department won’t give up on the search.

“I’m confident we will solve this case, and we will find Madalena,” he said.

Diana Cojocari remains in jail, with a bond set at $250,000.
 

Madalina Cojocari: New theories emerge in case of missing NC girl​

Last November, a North Carolina girl got off her school bus and vanished. The case has had many twists and turns, but as the anniversary of her disappearance approaches, there are still no answers to what happened to Madalina Cojocari.

Police in Cornelius, North Carolina, have been searching for Madalina for more than nine months. Her mother and stepfather have been charged with failing to report her missing because they waited three weeks before filing a police report. That report came only after the girl’s school demanded to see her.

Since NewsNation last reported on Madalina’s case, unsealed warrants have revealed new details about her mother’s trips to the mountains of Western North Carolina, recorded jail calls discussing bags of money, potential sightings of Madalina and a distant relative appearing in theories about the case.


In an exclusive interview with NewsNation, Baucom talked about the efforts to bring Madalina home.

“I can say with confidence that we have followed up on hundreds of leads and spent thousands of man-hours between our agency and all of our partner agencies,” he said.


In the latest development, two conflicting theories have begun to emerge about what happened to Madalina.

Brandon Roseman, Palmiter’s attorney, says his client has cooperated with police and believes Diana is hiding her daughter away.

“He told police on several occasions that he believes that Diana had taken Madalina somewhere into the mountains,” Roseman said. “He told detectives specifically that he believes Diana took her somewhere and that she is safe.”

What reason could Diana have for hiding her daughter away?

Palmiter says Diana believed that he was putting Madalina in danger by naming her as a beneficiary on an investment account.

“In these interviews he gave to police, he’s adamant that he does not believe Diana harmed Madalina. He believes that Diana fervently believes that Madalina is in danger from some unknown third party, apparently related to him placing money and assigning benefits to her in a 401K account, something that doesn’t make any sense,” Roseman said.

According to police, in a text message from Dec. 2, 2022, more than a week after Madalina’s disappearance, Diana indicated she was in the presence of the missing girl.

That was the same day she allegedly had extensive conversations with a male cousin, identified as Octavian Cebanu, about smuggling her and Madalina away from Palmiter.

On Dec. 3, 2022, Diana was seen in Hickory, North Carolina, an hour west of her home, getting her oil changed. An attendant said there were children’s toys in the car, but no child was present.

The warrant states that on Dec. 4, 2022, Diana traveled toward the North Carolina mountains. A local TV station reported that a sheriff’s deputy found Diana sleeping in her car that night near Lonesome Mountain.

Police have asked any witnesses who saw Diana or her Prius in the area around that time to come forward.

NewsNation traveled to the mountains of Western North Carolina to investigate a possible sighting of Madalina, the description matching her and a male relative.

On Dec. 16, 2022, a woman reported seeing a girl resembling Madalina with a male companion at a Lowes grocery store in Sugar Mountain, North Carolina.

“There was a possible sighting at the Lowes Foods here in Sugar Mountain. We were able to track down video-still footage of that and forwarded that to Cornelius,” said Sugar Mountain Police Department Chief Casey Turbyfill.

Police said the sighting, along with another one in California, did not turn out to be Madalina.

But the area is vast, and outdoor experts say it would be easy to stay hidden.

“There’s a lot of remote locations here. It would be easy to hide somebody if you really wanted to. Or to spend time away from anything you want,” said local store owner Mark Russ.

“There’s just a lot of open space. A lot of places without internet or cell phone signal. A lot of woods. A lot of roads that go way off and dead end,” resident Jon Council said.

Affidavits also revealed recorded jail calls. One was between Palmiter and his brother, saying Diana had a lot of cash with her, and he didn’t know where it came from.

Another call was between Diana and her mother, discussing a bag of money, withdrawing cash and a theory that Palmiter gave Madalina away for money.

Diana’s mother repeated the claim, speaking in Russian to reporters outside the courthouse.

“My children were caught up by child traffickers. My granddaughter is alive. She was sold along with Diana for $5 million,” Rodica Cojocari said.

Warrants show police have combed through the couple’s financial records as well as social media, messaging accounts and phone data.

Cornelius police declined to give details, only saying they are looking into every lead.

“We’re taking everything that the grandmother has said into consideration during this investigation, and we’re following up on all possibilities,” Baucom said. “But we have no indication right now that there’s any sort of trafficking ring in our community.”

Both Palmiter and Diana Cojocari have pleaded not guilty to charges of failing to report a missing child.

Palmiter was released on Aug. 18, 2023, after posting a reduced bail of $25,000, ignoring questions from reporters.

Baucom has pledged his department won’t give up on the search.

“I’m confident we will solve this case, and we will find Madalena,” he said.

Diana Cojocari remains in jail, with a bond set at $250,000.
I'm sorry, I don't believe any of it. So both parents said the other had money on them in jail phone calls? I'm sure they knew it would be recorded and each blamed the other or talked suspicion of the other. I don't buy the trafficking thing. I also don't buy grandma stating she was bought for so damn much money. ONE child is worth that? Sad to say but I doubtr it. They are WORTH every red cent in this world to save them don't get me wrong, in THAT respect they are.

Mom is hiding her OR she is dead and more likely sadly way more likely is the latter. The mountains and dead end roads, etc. are also a good place to dispose or to help make the story. I pray I am wrong.

Mom COULD be hiding her BUT she remains in jail on 250K and could try to deal but she doesn't. Where's that cool big amount of money the dad and grandma and all talk of now? To make bond?

LE says no evidence of trafficking. I don't always but in this case I will take their word for it at the moment as I don't see it either.

I hope she is alive and hidden with someone and safe. I am honestly not sure if I'd want to know my child passed over knowing they were being trafficked. That's a tough one. In one case at least one could believe they are in a better place and in the other, you pretty much can be assured they are not. Jmo.

Mom hiding her with someone decent who gives a sh*t would be the best case scenario but I find that unlikely for many reasons, some already stated.

The two of them did not even report her missing for how long. Nope. It's likely the sadly typical answer.
 

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