Harmony Montgomery’s family given shocking warning by cops as they reveal heartbreaking update for 5-year-old brother
HARMONY Montgomery's younger brother is just five years old and doesn't know why he's been separated from his biological sister for three years.
Running to the doorbell, Jamison asked his parents, "Is that Harmony?" - but Tuesday's troubling updates in Harmony's missing person case have left her family preparing for the worst, The Sun can reveal.
Harmony Montgomery, who turned eight in June 2022, vanished in late 2019.
After a series of errors, no one reported her missing until December 2021.
Law enforcement wheeled a refrigerator in and out of Harmony's biological father's former Manchester, New Hampshire, home on June 14, 2022, along with other potential pieces of evidence.
The months-long investigation led to the arrests of her biological father Adam Montgomery and his now-estranged wife, Kayla, but none of their charges are related to Harmony's disappearance.
HARMONY MONTGOMERY
Jamison's adopted dad, Blair Miller, told The Sun that he and his husband, Johnathon, haven't spoken to Jamison about the potentially devastating news that lurks around the corner.
"We wanted answers, and now we're afraid of it," Miller said.
"The US Marshals and DA's office are telling us to standby and they'll let us know as soon as they can but prepare for the worst," Miller told The Sun.
"We're realizing we're going to have to have that conversation with him. We were trying to keep hope alive, but that hope is being ripped away from us.
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"We are now thinking how are we going to explain this to Jamison? How is this going to impact him when he's 10, 15, 21, [or] an adult? There are no answers."
Just last Tuesday, Jamison and his adopted family celebrated Harmony's eighth birthday with a cake and sentimental message from Jamison that the Millers captured on video.
"Harmony, I hope you have a good birthday, big sister," Jamison said and blew her a kiss.
Miller said there are two things he and his family are grateful for.
"One is law enforcement being so involved and keeping us informed and the other is the community.
"It's been therapeutic reading all the messages of love for Jamison and our family. I feel like they want answers like we do and are concerned about Harmony and Jamison like we are."
'IT'S NOT GOOD'
After police were seen wheeling a fridge in and out of Adam's former home and wearing hazmat suits on Tuesday, former FBI agent Jennifer Coffindaffer told The Sun that it usually means law enforcement needs to "maintain biological evidence."
Drawing on her own experience as a field agent, Coffindaffer said: "If they found a body or body parts in a freezer, law enforcement would want to maintain the level of decomposition."
Authorities have not disclosed what they're looking for or what lead them to the home.
The New Hampshire Attorney General's Office, which is leading the investigation, hasn't responded to requests for comment on Wednesday.
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The medical examiner's office and Manchester police referred all questions to the AG.
"No matter what, it's not good. I have a really creepy feeling about this," Coffindaffer told The Sun on Tuesday.