Listen Live
Fantastic Voyage Generic Graphics Updated Nov 2023
Black America Web Featured Video
CLOSE

WHEATON, Md. (AP) — Authorities on Wednesday announced an indictment on first-degree felony murder charges in the disappearance of two sisters from a suburban Maryland mall in 1975, bringing some clarity to the baffling case that made parents question whether to allow their children out of their homes alone.

Twelve-year-old Sheila Lyon and 10-year-old Katharine Lyon walked from their house to the Wheaton Plaza Mall in March 1975. They never came home. No bodies were found.

Fifty-eight-year-old Lloyd Lee Michael Welch Jr. was indicted on two first-degree murder charges by a grand jury on Friday, officials announced at a news conference Wednesday.

Welch is a child sex offender serving a lengthy prison term in Delaware. At the time of the girls’ disappearance, he was an 18-year-old carnival worker and drifter who had been spending time in the Wheaton area. Authorities have established that he was at the mall the day the girls vanished and was seen paying attention to them.

Since last year, authorities have been searching a mountain in Bedford County, Virginia, about 200 miles from Wheaton, for their remains. The grand jury in that county handed down the indictment, and county Sheriff Mike Brown made announced the charges Wednesday. He said the indictment had initially been sealed.

Lloyd Welch had previously been named as a person of interest along with his uncle, 70-year-old Richard Welch. Richard Welch’s wife, Patricia, was charged with perjury after testifying before the grand jury in December.

Lloyd Welch denied involvement in the girls’ disappearance in a letter to The Washington Post. Richard Welch, who lives in Maryland, has declined to comment.

According to police affidavits obtained by The Post, Lloyd Welch told investigators that he left the mall with the two girls and that he saw his uncle sexually assaulting one of them at his home the next day. Lloyd Welch told investigators he left the home and never saw the girls again, according to the affidavits.

The Post also reported that Welch asked a relative in rural Virginia to wash bloody clothes that he was carrying in a duffel bag, according to a search warrant affidavit. Welch told the relative that the blood was from raw hamburger, but investigators believe that it could link him to the Lyon sisters’ presumed deaths, The Post reported, citing the affidavit.

Over four decades, police have pursued numerous leads and periodically identified potential suspects in the girls’ disappearance.

Officials stressed Wednesday that the investigation remains active.

Like BlackAmericaWeb.com on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.