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Click here to hear Jacque Reid’s interview with Rep. Austin Badon about the discovery of Monette’s car.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Authorities pulled Terrilyn Monette’s car from a New Orleans bayou Saturday and police said there was a decomposed body inside.

Authorities couldn’t immediately say whether the body was Terrilyn Monette, who was last seen leaving a New Orleans bar not far from the bayou in the early morning hours of March 2. She would’ve had to cross the waterway to get home.

Monette was a Long Beach, Calif., native who moved to Louisiana to teach. Her family has been flying back and forth from California to look for her. They attended a prayer vigil Friday and appealed for FBI intervention, accusing the New Orleans Police Department of mishandling the case. The department has denied the accusations.

Monette’s mother, Toni Enclade, was among the family members who came to the scene Saturday.

“I don’t understand why it took them so long to find her car,” Enclade told The Times-Picayune. “This is supposedly one of the first places they would have checked. I’m just overwhelmed. It doesn’t make sense.”

Louisiana state Rep. Austin Badon helped spearhead the search. He said he and a volunteer diver resurveyed the waterway and found the car.

“We decided to sonar this area again, and more heavily, and it got a hit,” Badon told The Associated Press.

A diver got into the water and found the car, which was covered with a film when it was pulled out. Badon described the body as “heavily decomposed.”

John Gagliano, the Orleans Parish coroner’s chief investigator, said he could not immediately tell if the body was a man or a woman. Gagliano told The Advocate an autopsy will be performed Monday to determine the identity of the body and cause of death.

Monette was a second-grade teacher at Woodland West Elementary School in Harvey, which is located across the Mississippi River from New Orleans. She had come to Louisiana through a program that recruits teachers to area schools and had been nominated for a teacher of the year honor.

After going to a bar, her friends left her at her car. They told police she planned to sleep before driving home. She left a parking lot about 5:15 a.m. and a traffic camera captured her making a turn in New Orleans’ City Park.

Monette’s disappearance sparked a broad search handled in part by the Texas group Equusearch. A number of cars were pulled earlier from Bayou St. John as part of the search, some of which had been reported stolen.

“Unfortunately it wasn’t what we were looking for in terms of finding here alive and well, but it does bring the family some closure,” Badon said.

(Photo: AP)

Black & Missing: May 2013 Edition
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