Gone Cold N.H.

The Disappearance of Maura Murray

New England College Communication Students Season 1 Episode 4

The disappearance of Maura Murray has gained attention around the world.  In 2004, she was involved in a car accident in Haverhill, NH. She hasn't been seen since.

Cole Kjersgard spoke with Maura's sister and the investigators that have been working this case.



Gone In Minutes...
- Spooky into music with Maura Murray clip playing over
New Hampshire is known for its heavy snowfalls and cold winters. People from
around the world visit NH’s White Mountains to ski, hike, and camp while
enjoying all the views the state has to offer. But it’s not always easy to enjoy these
activities, as temperatures can dip into the negatives, and snowfall near Mount
Washington reaches 23 feet, making the area the snowiest place in the country. So,
when a college student slides off the road in the middle of NH, you’d think they
would call 911, or even AAA and wait for help. Instead, just 10 minutes after her
accident in Haverhill NH, Maura Murray vanishes without a trace, and hasn’t been
seen since.
- Que Music
- Julie quote in background
I’m Cole Kjersgard, and this is Gone Cold New Hampshire where we’ll cover some
of the coldest cases in the state. The disappearance of Maura Murray, a case heard
around the world.
Maura Murray was just 21 years old at the time of her disappearance. Today, she
would be 39. Her physical impression made her seem like a nice girl, 5’7 in height,
brown hair, greenish blue eyes, and weighed about 125 pounds. Her disappearance
is one that hasn’t gone unnoticed in the slightest since the days after her crash.
Dozens of news articles, video reports, Netflix documentaries, social media pages,
and podcasts just like this one has kept up with any updates or latest information


leading to her disappearance throughout the years. Local, State, and Federal


officials have scoured the area and possible surrounding areas near the scene of 


her crash as recently as this past summer of 2022. To fully understand why 


Maura, a Massachusetts college student, was almost 3 hours away in Haverhill, 


NH that night to begin with, we have to look at her life, years before she


disappeared.


- Intuitive/Music that is not scary


In 2000, 4 years before her disappearance, Maura graduated from Whitman 


Hanson High School, where she was the captain of her track team and did very 


well academically. After graduation, she was accepted into West Point Academy. 


West Point, located in NY, is one of the most prestigious military academies in the 


country, with an acceptance rate somewhere around 9%. She majored in Chemical 


Engineering. Up until this point, Maura’s seems like someone who has a level head 


on her shoulders. A girl who has ambition, standards, pushes herself for the 


better. And keeps herself involved.


- Music leading to her minor criminal background


But it’s here in her story where we start to see some record of Mauras’ character. 


During her first year at West Point she had a slip up. She was caught stealing 


makeup from a commissary while at Fort Knox and received an honor code 


violation from the academy. Now Maura didn’t get expelled by the Academy, but 


she did have t0 defend her case and most likely stay on good behavior. It’s unclear 


why, but after she finished her first year at West Point, she decided to transfer to 


UMASS Amhurst, and later switched her Major to nursing. Now from the time she 


was at west point to when she transferred, it’s known that she had a boyfriend 


who also attended West Point named Billy Roush. He ended up graduating from 


West Point and was later stationed at a base in Oklahoma.


Fast forward 3 months before Maura went missing, while she was at UMASS, she 


had ANOTHER slip up with theft, yet this time it’s a little more serious. It’s 


nothing too serious, but more serious than stealing a little makeup. She attempts 


credit card fraud. She stole the credit card information of her dormmate and used 


it to purchase food, from pizza shops like dominos. The charges were presumed to 


add up to $250, which is still considered petty theft. If you don’t know, petty theft 


is stealing anything that amounts to under $500. Now she didn’t serve jail time or 


anything, but she did have to be on good behavior for 3 months, which did not end 


up happening, we’ll get to that. You wouldn’t think being on good behavior would 


be a problem for a student like Maura, but to fully understand why she may have 


brought herself to do this, I spoke directly with Mauras sister, Julie Murray.


The real reason Maura brought herself to do this is much deeper than what we see 


on the surface


- Julie on Mauras ED (11:50) (lasts 50 seconds)


Fast forwarding again, Thursday, February 5th


, 2004, the week of her 


disappearance, or more specifically four days prior to her leaving campus, while 


Maura was at work, she had a phone call with her boyfriend 3 times, and a call 


with her sister, which lasted a half hour. Now, Maura was at work during all these 


calls. She worked for one of UMASS’s security desks, and these phone calls are 


strange because usually you wouldn’t be on the phone during work, especially for 


that long. After the phone call with her sister, her supervisor on shift noticed that 


she became physically upset and decided to end her shift early, at roughly 12:00


AM, and escorts her back to her dorm. When I spoke to Julie about this, she said


something really didn’t sit well with Maura after that phone call.


- (Julie 6:50) (Lasts until around 8:20)


The next morning, which is the 5th of February, there was a snowstorm that 


cancelled classes on campus, it is reported from Mauras call log that she checked 


her voicemails and received an unknown incoming call that lasted 17 minutes, and 


called Fort Sills, the military base her boyfriend is stationed at, for 10 minutes.


Saturday, February 7th. Mauras Dad, Fred Murray, arrives at her dorm around 


noon that day. The main reason for his visit this weekend was to go car shopping


for Maura. Mauras current car at the time, a 1996 Saturn isn’t the safest and was 


not in the best shape. So, her dad went to visit her to try to find her a better car 


and ended up not purchasing anything that day. After shopping, Fred brings Maura 


and her friend Kate out to eat at the Amherst Brewing Company. After that,


around 10 pm, Maura drops her father off in his car at the hotel he was staying at 


in town and Kate and Maura drive over to their other friend's dorm, Sarah, for a 


party or what could have been just a hangout. Maura’s dad agreed that she could 


use his car because he really didn't want her driving the Saturn too much, as it 


was in that bad of shape, and it had just snowed.


At 2:30 AM on what is now Sunday, Maura and Kate leave the party, and at 3:30 


UMASS Police receive a call that Maura had hit a guard rail. There aren't any 


reports of Kate being in the car for this crash, so Maura must’ve obviously dropped 


Kate off first, which is part of the reason this crash happens a full hour after they


left the party. Maura uses AAA to call a tow truck which arrived at 4:29 AM and


dropped her back off at the hotel her dad was staying at. When she got back, she 


made a call to Billy at 5:38 AM, obviously telling him what had happened that 


night. Later in the day around 1:00-1:30, Fred drops her off at her dorm in 


Kennedy Hall. This would be the last time Fred sees his daughter Maura.


- Sad/Erie Music


Monday, February 9, the day of Mauras disappearance. Maura makes a call about a 


condominium rental in New Hampshire. This phone call is the first piece of 


evidence as to why she might have been in Haverhill, NH that night. But she never 


ended up booking a condo at all.


Later on, that afternoon at 3:40 PM Maura is spotted on an ATM CCTV camera 


where she took out $280. This footage of Maura is the last time Maura was seen 


on camera. After she left the ATM, she purchased $4o worth of alcohol, which to 


me at least, seems like more than enough for just one person. Whether she was 


meeting someone at her destination or not is still unclear to this day... In the next 


few hours, Maura drives north into New Hampshire.


Around 7:27 PM, a woman hears a loud noise outside her home. She saw that a car 


had crashed into the side of a snowbank, sliding the car around 180-degrees, and 


pointing it in the opposite direction of traffic, it was Maura. At 7:29 pm, she calls 


local police to report the incident.


At 7:40, a local school bus driver by the name of Butch Atwood who lived nearby 


stopped on his way home as he passed the crash to make sure Maura was all right. 


When he stopped an asked her if she needed any help, she refused and told the 


man she had already called AAA. Butch noted that she looked shaken after getting 


in the crash but did not notice any blood or visible wounds. However, he knew 


that she couldn’t have called AAA, because the cell service on that road is non-


existent, it's like a dead zone. She was also adamant about telling him not to call 


the police, which is strange, but also makes sense at the same time. 


She is in an accident in the middle of nowhere, on a freezing winter night more 


than 2 hours away from home, it is strange to think that a girl like her would not


want the police to be called. But she does have her reasons. She had a lot of 


alcohol in the car that got spilled when she crashed, so she could have been under 


the influence. Along with that she needed to be on good behavior after her credit 


card fraud incident. Obviously, it is unknown whether Maura drank any alcohol 


while driving her vehicle that night, but we do know a report shows that there 


was an empty beer bottle found in the vehicle and liquor missing from what she


initially bought. Butch, who is a tall burly man from northern, NH, also admitted 


that he isn’t the most friendly-looking person to meet on a dark, unlit road. So for 


safe measure, even though she told him not to, he drove back to his house, which 


was only give or take 150 yards away from the crash, got cell service and called 


the police to report the crash. At 7:46 pm, police logs report that the first officer 


arrived at the scene. But it was already too late...


“Creepy suspenseful music.”


Maura had already disappeared. From the time it took the first resident to report 


Mauras crash to police at 7:29 to when the first officer arrived on scene at 7:46, 


Maura had vanished, and hasn’t been seen or heard from since. 16 minutes at most 


is all it took for her to vanish.


(Suspenseful relief music)