Micheal Chukwuebuka, Reporting
FOUR people have been booked by officials in Oklahoma on suspicion of kidnapping and murder in connection with the March disappearance of two women who are still missing.
Stonix News reports that the four were arrested and booked on Saturday and were identified as Tifany Machel Adams, 54; Tad Bert Cullum, 43; Cole Earl Twombly, 50; and Cora Twombly, 44.
In a statement on Saturday, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation said they were booked into the Texas County Jail in Oklahoma on suspicion of first-degree murder, kidnapping and conspiracy to commit murder.
State court records did not appear to show charges had been filed, and the suspects’ names were not yet listed among active inmates.
As of the time of filing this report, it wasn’t clear if the suspects had legal representation.
NBC News reported that authorities weren’t saying what may be behind the disappearance, only that the four were arrested in Texas and Cimarron counties in the westernmost section of the Oklahoma panhandle.
“The OSBI and local law enforcement are still currently working to locate the two victims,” the bureau of investigation said.
Veronica Butler, 27, and Jilian Kelley, 39, were the subjects of an “endangered missing advisory” issued by Texas County authorities on March 30 after a vehicle they were traveling in was found abandoned in a rural part of Texas County south of Elkhart, Kansas, the bureau said.

Veronica Butler, 27, and Jilian Kelley, 39.
“OSBI special agents immediately began investigating the vehicle and determined there was evidence to indicate foul play,” it said in Saturday’s statement.
Bureau spokesperson Hunter McKee said previously that Texas County Sheriff’s Office deputies first came upon the vehicle.
They approached the vehicle, but “these women are gone and they’re nowhere to be seen,” he said.
The investigation was challenged by just how remote the area was with few if any homes and businesses where authorities might typically find security cameras.
Investigators didn’t reveal exactly what evidence suggested the possibility that a crime had taken place.
The two were en route to pick up children, though it wasn’t clear if the children belonged to one, both or neither of the women. Bureau spokesperson Hunter McKee said investigators believe the two are friends.
Butler’s stepmother, Guadalupe Torres, said in an interview that Butler was in the midst of a heated custody dispute. Court records show she is a party to a custody claim that was first filed in 2021.
Though the bookings connected to the investigation included allegations of murder, authorities have so far stopped short of saying they’re searching for bodies.











