Below is the original version of the story on new information in the Sage Smith investigation, which ran online on December 24.
More than two years after Dashad Sage Smith went missing, recently unsealed court documents are offering information about the case that until now was unknown to the press and public. The records, which include search warrant affidavits and court orders, detail the transgender teen’s potentially contentious relationship with Erik McFadden, the last man Smith had phone contact with, and show the extent to which police tried to track down McFadden in the months that followed.
In a six-page document attached to a March 2013 search warrant affidavit, police make their case for gaining access to McFadden’s phone records and bank and e-mail accounts, laying out what they’d learned of his interactions with Smith and others before and after Smith disappeared on November 20, 2012.
According to the document and further explanation from the lead investigator in the case, Charlottesville Police Detective Sergeant James Mooney, Smith’s own phone records gave investigators their first clues. Smith’s last phone contact was with a number traced to McFadden, the document says. According to Mooney, the two had been communicating for several weeks, and planned to meet that night for sex.
“It’s pretty graphic sexual stuff,” Mooney said of their communications. “It was about money, too.”
They had met on Craigslist, said Mooney, and from their text messages, it appeared Smith had asked for and received some kind of payment from McFadden already. “The suggestion is blackmail,” Mooney said, though he added he couldn’t be sure from their back-and-forth if the exchanges added up to blackmail, prostitution or neither.
The police documents also introduce someone who has been critical to the investigation from the early days: McFadden’s girlfriend at the time, a UVA student who said she had no knowledge McFadden was secretly having sex with men until she learned of his possible involvement in the case. She called police four days after Smith vanished to report she hadn’t heard from McFadden, who was staying at her 14th Street NW apartment while she was away with family for Thanksgiving. Once she learned police wanted to speak to him about Smith’s disappearance, she became a key link between him and investigators. She turned over the belongings McFadden left in her apartment, including his computer and clothes, according to the documents, and she initially encouraged McFadden to talk to police, which he did, briefly—that’s when he told a detective he had planned to meet with Smith near the Amtrak Station on West Main Street on November 20, but that he “got stood up.”
But then McFadden stopped talking to police, and never showed up for a planned meeting with a detective in Charlottesville. His girlfriend forwarded investigators an emotional e-mail McFadden sent her on November 30, which is reproduced in police documents, in which he provided a different account of the evening Smith went missing.
McFadden told her he “never did anything sexual with that guy and he was blackmailing me.” He goes on to say in the e-mail that Smith threatened to harm McFadden’s girlfriend, and that Smith had “a lot of enemies.” He and Smith met that night, he said, but some other people showed up and McFadden “kept walking not looking back.”
McFadden said in the e-mail he was “going somewhere out mid west” and told his girlfriend he was sorry for hurting her. “even ir [sic] we dont see each other again i wanted you to know i really really cared and loved you,” he wrote.
Police used McFadden’s differing statements and his sudden departure, paired with Smith’s disappearance and uncharacteristic silence, to make the case for gaining access to McFadden’s phone records, e-mail accounts, bank records and even his Twitter account.
“These facts when considered together present probable cause to believe that Dashad Smith has been abducted, is either being held against his own will or has met with harm,” reads the six-page attachment to the March 2013 search warrant. “It is reasonable to believe that Erik McFadden has knowledge of these circumstances and the previously requested searches will yield evidence of such.”
But those records didn’t advance the case any further, said Mooney. McFadden has surfaced a few times since, he said, sending e-mails to his girlfriend from Yahoo accounts he then abandoned. But Mooney said police are still treating Smith’s disappearance as a missing persons case, and don’t have enough evidence to arrest McFadden.
“If we were to charge this guy, I don’t think we could get a conviction,” he said. “I don’t think it goes beyond a reasonable doubt for an abduction. There’s still a possibility [Smith] just went off on his own. Same with Erik McFadden. He could have just been running from his lifestyle.”
That explanation doesn’t satisfy Smith’s grandmother. As she faces her third Christmas without her grandchild, Lolita Smith said she’s frustrated and angry that police haven’t charged McFadden with a crime.
“He was the last one that had contact with Sage, but he’s just a person of interest, and there’s nothing they can do about that?” she said. “I don’t understand that. They pick people up for less than that all the time.”
She said she’s not sure what to think about the blackmail allegations.
“I’m not saying he didn’t do it, but I’m not going to say he did, either,” she said. “I wasn’t there. I don’t know what happened.” But she doesn’t think it should have any impact on the urgency of the case.
Despite the efforts police made to look into McFadden, Lolita Smith still feels they didn’t press hard enough in the investigation from the start.
“Don’t tell me there’s nothing y’all can do,” she said. “Y’all are the police. My grandchild is out there somewhere, and it’s been two long, hard years.”
She just wants closure now.
“If Sage has gone to be with our maker, then I need to know this,” she said. “Just not knowing where my grandbaby’s at is killing me. It’s eating me alive.”