
Foye Wade Davis still missing from Jacinto, Mississippi, after going on a walk with his dog nearly 3 years ago
Foye Wade Davis had a reputation for being a walker.
'He has walked anywhere from five to eight miles for probably ten years or more,' his daughter, Sharon Clemmer, told Dateline. 'He's an avid walker.'
According to his daughter, 78-year-old Wade had a few routes he liked to take near the home he shared with his wife in Jacinto, Mississippi. 'Typically, his walk was a route that made a circle around their house,' Sharon said. 'He was raised there. He's been there all his life, so it was an area he was very, very familiar with.'
On Wednesday, June 22, 2022, Wade set out for a walk around 9 a.m. with his dog Buddy — a brindle Boxer.
He never returned.
Sharon told Dateline that, in 2022, her father had been experiencing early symptoms of dementia. They were mild enough, however, that they hadn't stopped him from living his life the way he always had. Wade is the father of 4, the grandfather of 12, and the great-grandfather of 12. According to Sharon, he remembered all of them well. 'He knew us all,' she said. 'He was still allowed to drive, per the doctor.'
Wade was also a preacher at a small church. 'He had his sermon started — prepared for Sunday,' Sharon said. 'Wednesday, he would have been doing a Bible class that night. And he had that prepared, also.'
That Wednesday morning, June 22, 2022, Wade got into a small disagreement with his wife, Sue.
'It was something about doing the dishes and mowing the yard,' Alcorn County Sheriff Ben Caldwell told Dateline. 'So he just took his dog for a walk just to kind of cool off, or just — he did that pretty much every day, anyway.'
According to Sheriff Caldwell, Wade and Buddy left the house around 9 a.m.
At around 9:20 a.m., Wade could be seen on a home security camera about half a mile from his house. 'They did have video cameras and he was on camera walking north past that residence,' Caldwell said.
A witness reported seeing Wade about 10 minutes later walking north on County Road 343. Sheriff Caldwell says this is believed to be the last sighting of Wade Davis.
According to his family, Wade's walks would sometimes take place off of County Road 343 — a gravel road which veers onto several former logging or hunting trails surrounded by wooded areas.
'He would typically walk those logging trails — old logging trails — and would be gone several hours,' Sheriff Caldwell told Dateline. 'Around lunchtime — around 12, 12:30, when he didn't come back — [Wade's wife] got a little concerned.'
Caldwell says Sue Davis reported her husband missing to the sheriff's office around 2:45 p.m. that same day and the search began immediately. 'It was a very intense search,' he said, explaining that multiple agencies — including several sheriff's offices, fire departments, and search and rescue teams — participated in the initial efforts. A Silver Alert was also sent out by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, which assisted with the investigation.
Wade's two daughters, Sharon Clemmer and Sheila Tice, both of whom live about an hour from their parents, drove to Jacinto immediately after hearing their father was missing.
'By the time we got there, it was 4 or 5,' Sheila told Dateline. 'There was Homeland Security trailers there, police cars, emergency rescue vehicles.' The sisters described the scene as overwhelming. 'The scene was devastating,' Sharon said. 'We were thankful they were there, but it was very shocking.'
According to Sheriff Caldwell, officials quickly found Wade's footprints in the area he was last seen walking. 'It was very clear it was a New Balance shoe. You can see the NB on the sole of the shoe and there was also dog tracks alongside his footprints,' he told Dateline. 'We found those all over that area.'
The footprints told a story. 'It wasn't like he would just walk down a trail, turn around, come back onto the main road,' Sheriff Caldwell said. 'It appeared he would walk through the woods, come out to another trail and come back out to the main road. And actually from the information we gathered from, you know, his family and other individuals in that community, that was — that was a regular thing for him to do.'
Caldwell says officers were unable to track Wade's footprints in the more heavily-wooded areas that surrounded the trails. The department used thermal drones at night in its attempt to locate him in those areas. Officers searched 'day and night' for about five days. 'And then at that point it became — we started searching during daylight hours trying to give us the best option to locate him,' Caldwell explained. On-foot daytime searches continued for about a week after that. 'And then it got to a point,' he said, 'there was nowhere else to search.'
Two weeks after Wade disappeared, volunteers found Buddy about half a mile from home. 'That dog — when he came back, it did not have a collar on it,' Sheriff Caldwell said. On the security video of the last known sighting of Wade, Buddy can be seen with both a collar and leash on.
The Alcorn County Sheriff's Office took Buddy to a veterinarian, who gave him some medication to empty out his stomach contents in the hope that it would give the department a clue as to where he'd been for the prior two weeks. 'We found some pine needles and some green leaves,' Sheriff Caldwell said. 'That kind of put us in an area of those woods, where that dog might have been. But, you know, it didn't unfortunately didn't lead us [to Wade].'
Sheriff Caldwell says the department does not believe Wade Davis met with foul play. 'The evidence points to — is that he either had a medical episode, he got turned around — got lost in those wooded areas,' he said. 'Obviously, we — we don't take anything off the table.'
As the third anniversary of Wade's disappearance approaches, his family just wants answers. 'That's all we can think about. That's all we want to do — is search for Dad,' Sheila Tice told Dateline. 'We wake up thinking about where he might be. We can't sleep.'
Sharon Clemmer says that through this process their faith in God has grown stronger. 'Dad lived and breathed the Bible.' she said. 'We know that, no matter what, God was with him.'
Wade is 5'7' and weighed approximately 200 lbs. at the time of his disappearance. He has white hair and hazel eyes. He was last seen wearing dark blue jeans, a checked short-sleeved shirt, and brown New Balance tennis shoes. He would be 80 years old today.
Anyone with information about the disappearance of Foye Wade Davis is asked to contact the Alcorn County Sheriff's Office at 662-286-5521.

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For instance, despite heavy rains which may have washed away crucial evidence, Kristin's bloodstained clothing was found carefully positioned next to her body in the cornfield. However, there's an overwhelming amount of physical evidence still tied to the harrowing crime - over 318 items ranging from the victim's fingernails and a blood-stained sweater to the pillowcase and possibly hundreds of strands of hair. Even with these items at their disposal, and technological progress, no new forensic examinations are taking place. In 2009, a leading Dutch lab offered to analyse evidence from Kristin's case, but the New York State Health Department turned down the offer due to the facility not being certified in New York. District Attorney Richard Swineheart expressed his frustration to the Ithaca Journal: "We feel this is our last, best effort to solve this case. We are very frustrated with the bureaucracy of the Department of Health." Despite efforts by Kirsten's mother, Phyllis, and a Minnesota senator, attempts to get the Amsterdam lab certified have hit a bureaucratic wall. The O'Connell family has started a petition on to push for DNA testing to help move the investigation forward. In a shocking twist in 2010, the New York Inspector General informed Phyllis that a forensic expert who may have been involved in Kristin's case had previously been accused of falsifying evidence. Gerry Veeder was implicated in "dry-labbing", a deceitful practice where tests are pretended to be conducted to produce lab results without the actual work. Phyllis lamented the oversight in the system, saying: "In 1985 he did the initial evidence. I don't know how many items but anything to do with cloth because that's what he handled. I mean, my God - this is an important job they're doing there and how could they allow this and not be supervised properly?". In a turn of events that's almost beyond belief, it was revealed last year that an elite cold case team, headed by the former chief of the FBI's Violent Criminal Apprehension Program, had offered to let a New York State-endorsed forensics lab examine all the physical evidence from Kristin's unsolved murder case free of charge. This offer was part of a documentary on the homicide being produced by two-time Oscar winner Bill Guttentag, which could have bypassed the issues encountered over a decade earlier with a Dutch laboratory. However, the New York State Police turned down the offer and refused to back the project. Troop spokesperson Mark O'Donnell explained that involving external entities in an active murder investigation would breach their policy. The State Police said: "As in all cases, the State Police does not share critical information, evidence or the techniques used in solving cases. By sharing such information, it could jeopardize the integrity of the investigation." Despite what seems to be a wealth of evidence in the murder case of Kristin, the mystery continues to go unsolved. A $10,000 reward was put up in 2010 for details leading to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator, and as of 2015, the police had pursued over 1,900 leads, all to no avail. Phyllis continues to call on the police to either use modern forensic techniques to analyse the evidence or close the case, which would then enable her to make a Freedom of Information request to access the files. Additionally, Phyllis is campaigning for a law change that would mandate all police departments to establish dedicated cold case units, aiming to prevent cases like Kristin's from being shuffled between detectives over the years. She explained: "I think there are people up there who know what happened but are afraid to come forward. I believe people are scared. I know I can't bring her back. But I can't rest until I find out who did this to her." The Mirror has reached out to Seneca County Police for a statement. The investigation into Kristin O'Connell's murder remains active, and the authorities continue to appeal for information, asking anyone able to assist to get in touch with the New York State Police Major Crimes Unit at (585) 398–4100.