Ep. 104-A Vanishing In New Orleans: The Unanswered Death Of Jessica Easterly Durning
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A quiet August in Lakeview turns into a haunting question mark when 43-year-old Jessica Easterly Durning disappears after telling loved ones she wants to leave home—and is found days later, less than a half mile away, in a spot people insist was already searched. We walk you through the final messages to her sister and friend, the family’s urgent drive to New Orleans, and the ground efforts that blanketed Harrison Avenue before the shocking discovery. Then we sit with the word no family wants to hear from a coroner—undetermined—and unpack what that means in the brutal heat of a Louisiana summer where evidence fades faster than answers arrive.
We look closely at the search narrative, why a body might surface where it “shouldn’t,” and how gaps in early response can echo for years. From pulling phone records and checking neighborhood cameras to establishing tight timelines and preserving scenes, we break down the investigative steps that can still matter and the ones that may have been missed. Along the way, we highlight the steady force of Jessica’s family—organizing social media campaigns, pressing for reclassification, and keeping her story alive across Dateline, People, and true crime podcasts—because persistence is often the only thing that keeps a case from quietly closing.
This conversation isn’t about pointing fingers; it’s about raising the standard. If someone tells you they’re afraid and then goes silent, that’s not a paperwork moment—that’s a siren. We talk safety, advocacy, and the community habits that help: save your doorbell footage, write down what you saw, and ask precise questions with dates attached. If you care about true crime beyond headlines, you’ll find both hard facts and humane context here, anchored in one essential question: What really happened to Jessica?
If this story moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend who cares about justice, and leave a review with the one question you’d ask investigators next—it helps others find the truth we’re still chasing.
SOURCES:
- Dateline NBC – Coverage of Jessica’s Case
https://www.nbcnews.com/dateline
- People Magazine – Reporting on Jessica’s Death
https://people.com
- WWL‑TV New Orleans – Local Coverage
https://www.wwltv.com
- NOLA.com – Investigative Articles
https://www.nola.com
- Justice for Jessica (Family Advocacy Page)
https://www.facebook.com/JusticeForJessicaEasterly (facebook.com in Bing)