6-year-old girl found alive under staircase two years after she was reported missing
Paislee Joann Shultis in a photo released by the Saugerties Police Department.
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A
child who was reported missing in 2019 when she was 4 years old was found
hidden under a wooden staircase with her noncustodial mother, in a home
officials had visited several times while investigating her disappearance,
authorities said.
The
child, Paislee Joann Shultis, now 6, was reported missing on July 13, 2019, from Cayuga Heights, a
village on the outskirts of Ithaca, New York. At the time, she was believed to
have been abducted by her noncustodial parents, Kimberly Cooper and Kirk
Shultis Jr., police said in a news release.
Paislee
and her mother were found Monday when investigators spotted "a pair of
tiny feet" in a secret space under wooden steps leading to a basement.
"We
should all wait until the facts come out," said Carol K. Morgan, who
represents Cooper. "Everyone should be patient before they draw their own
conclusions."
In
the basement of the house, detectives searching for the girl found an
apartment, including a bedroom with Paislee's name on a wall, Saugerties Police
Chief Joseph Sinagra told CNN on Wednesday. The bed appeared to have been slept
in.
"Our
officers asked, 'Is she here?' ... And they denied that anybody was living in
that house, in that particular room," the chief said in an interview.
"They said they had set the room up like that in the event that Paislee
should ever return."
Throughout the 2.5-year investigation, authorities received
several tips about the Saugerties-area home where the child was eventually
located -- but each time, the residents denied knowing anything about the
girl's whereabouts, the release said. Saugerties is about 160 miles east of Cayuga
Heights.
"The
quick answer: That's our criminal justice system," Sinagra said of his
department's inability to find the girl earlier, adding that Monday was the
first time officers were able to obtain factual information -- not hearsay --
and secure a search warrant.
Sinagra
said the homeowners were always "adversarial" with the officers,
accusing police of "harassing" and "badgering" them and
"insisting we should be out looking for Paislee."
Sinagra
told CNN on Wednesday that officers previously had been in the home roughly a
dozen times but were not allowed in the basement or bedroom areas.
"We're
bothered by the fact that this went on for two years," the chief said.
"They lied to us for two years -- including the father stating that he had
no idea where his daughter was."
On
several occasions, investigators were allowed into the home without a warrant,
but they were given "limited access" by Kirk Shultis Jr. and Kirk
Shultis Sr., police said in the news release.
That
changed Monday when police received information the child was being hidden and
got a warrant for the home.
Officers
arrived outside the house about 4 p.m to ensure that no one left. Police then
executed the warrant a little after 8 p.m., the chief said. The homeowner
denied knowing the girl's whereabouts, saying he had not seen her since she was
reported missing in 2019.
Something
peculiar in a staircase
An
hour into the search, one detective noticed the steps leading to the basement
were oddly constructed. The detective, Erik Thiele, pointed a flashlight
through a crack in the wooden steps and saw what seemed to be a blanket, the
release said.
"There
was something about the staircase that bothered him," Sinagra said of the
officer who discovered the hidden compartment.
As
officers began to pull the stairs apart, Sinagra said the silence was eerie.
"The
child never made a sound. Kimberly never made a sound," Sinagra said.
"The
question that needs to be answered is what she was told by her parents that
would keep her so still and quiet while the cops are walking up and down the
steps, while they're taking the steps apart," Sinagra added.
Investigators
removed several of the steps, the release added, and "that is when
detectives saw a pair of tiny feet."
A
door in Paislee's basement room opened onto a short hallway that led directly
to the secret compartment under the stairs -- about three to four feet away,
Sinagra said.
"The
child and her abductor, Kimberly Cooper were found hiding in the dark and wet
enclosure," the police release said. Authorities believe Cooper and the
child had been staying at the home since they disappeared in 2019, Sinagra
said, adding the staircase appeared to have been built to hide them both.
"It
is our opinion ... that, that location was used probably each and every time
that we sent an officer to the residence," Sinagra said.
Police
arrested Cooper and Shultis Jr. -- the girl's biological parents -- as well as
Shultis Sr., the release said.
Cooper
was charged with two misdemeanors: custodial interference in the second degree
and endangering the welfare of a child, and remains in jail because of a prior
arrest warrant issued through family court, according to police.
Kirk
Shultis Jr. and Kirk Shultis Sr. were each charged with custodial interference
in the first degree, a felony, and endangering the welfare of a child, a
misdemeanor. Both were arraigned and released on their own recognizance, police
said. All three defendants were ordered by the court to stay away from the
child.
Cooper,
who made bail, and the two men appeared in court Wednesday.
The
cases for the men were adjourned to later this month. Their lawyers declined
comment. Cooper will be back in court March 2.
The
child was found to be in good health and released to her legal guardian and
reunited with her older sister, police said.
On
Tuesday, "detectives met with the family that has the child, and she was
in very good spirits," the chief said.
One
last stop: A McDonald's drive-thru
The
young girl was "upset and was concerned" when police first rescued
her, Sinagra said.
"That
begs the question, what was the child told about the police and, you know, why
the police would come and take her," Sinagra said. "That's what I'm
concerned about. ... And I'm sure that when she saw several of our officers,
who were heavily armed ... that was somewhat traumatizing to the child."
Before
she was released to her legal guardian, detectives drove the girl to police
headquarters, in part so medics could examine her. As they drove, she saw a
McDonald's and recalled having some a long time ago, the chief said.
"So,
the detectives turned the car around and went to the drive-through at
McDonald's, picked her up a Happy Meal, and brought her back to headquarters.
And she was fine after that," the chief added.
An
investigation is ongoing, police said.
"We
don't know what Paislee lived (through) for the past two years," Sinagra
said.
"And
we don't know what kind of damage may have been done because of the conditions
that she had to live under."


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