They thought it was just a bad smell coming from the basement. What police found under that tarp? A đĄđđđđ„đđŹđŹ torsoâand it belonged to a missing woman, last seen with the man upstairs.| HO

âKeep everyone out,â a sergeant ordered. âNo one goes back in until we get the right people here.â
Marioâs knees looked unsteady. âI told yâall,â he kept saying. âI told yâall I wasnât gonna look.â
In the bright circle of emergency response, the quiet neighborhood watched from behind curtains, and the officersâstill trying to name what they couldnât undoâbegan doing what they always did when the world changed: they started asking questions.
âWho lives upstairs?â an officer asked.
âJared,â Mario said, voice low. âJared Chance.â
The name meant nothing to Mario beyond âthat guy upstairs.â But to law enforcement, the name would start to connect to something already activeâa missing person report that had been filed three days earlier.
One hinged sentence: Sometimes the most terrifying cases donât start with a screamâthey start with a smell and a name.
Three days earlier, thirty-one-year-old Ashley Young had been reported missing by her mother, Christine. Ashley was a Kalamazoo native who worked at a call center and was enrolled in college. People who knew her described her as generous in the simple, everyday waysâchecking on friends, answering texts, showing up when someone needed help. Christine didnât describe her daughter as perfect; she described her as consistent, which is sometimes the more important word.
âAshley was never not on her phone,â Christine later said. âNobody had heard from her. People that hear from her daily.â
Christineâs first attempt to file the report ran into the familiar wall: Ashley was an adult, time had to pass, there wasnât enough to classify her as missing. Christine didnât accept that. She started calling Ashleyâs friends one by one, collecting fragments until a name kept surfacing.
Jared Chance.
Christine knew the name already. Years earlier, Jared had broken into Ashleyâs apartment and left with her computer, money, and medication. Ashley had forgiven him. Believed heâd changed. Christine never stopped feeling the unease.
âUsually, spots on a leopard donât change,â Christine said. âI never got a good feeling.â
When she called Jared, he didnât answer. On Friday, November 30, she left a voicemail, careful, controlled, the way mothers speak when theyâre trying not to panic through the phone.
âHello, Jared. My name is Christine Young. I am looking for my daughter. She was last with you. Is she with you? She needs to contact me. Tell her Iâm going to contact the police department to do a missing person report.â
According to Christine, Jared responded quickly after hearing it. He told her theyâd been outâhookah lounge, then Mulliganâs, then back again. He said Ashley left her phone at the hookah lounge and was going to retrieve it. He gave Christine a number for a friend, Demetrius Taylor, suggesting Demetrius might know something. When Christine called, Demetrius had never heard of Ashley.
Christine kept moving anyway, combing social media, asking strangers questions, refusing to let the world tell her to wait.
And then, on the night of December 2, a downstairs tenant on Franklin Street told officers there was a tarp in the basement.
On scene, the officers werenât sure what they were dealing with at first. Mario tried to help without stepping into the darkness again.
âThe thing is,â he said, gesturing toward the basement door, âI stepped over it going down. Didnât think nothing. But on the way back, I shined my flashlight and it looked like blood leaking from it. I ainât gonna touch it, âcause I donât wanna lift thatâ and see that.â
âYour neighbor been acting weird?â an officer asked.
âYeah,â Mario said quickly. âLike he been in the basement. On edge. He asked me to unlock the basement door for him. Like, several times. But my girl told me he already be down there. So Iâm like why he keep asking me?â
In the middle of the questions, a different conversation began near the back of the house, where someone else on the street had heard what was happening and came close enough to be recorded by body cameras.
âMiss,â a man said to an officer, holding up his phone. âLook, theyâre saying this is what she was wearing last. Theyâre looking for this girl apparently. And apparently she was last with him Thursday night.â
âOkay,â the officer said, taking the information, eyes narrowing. âOkay.â
âIs this something got to do with thisââ the man started.
âWeâre not sure what we got,â the officer cut in, honest and careful.
The house had become two stories at once: one happening in the basement under a tarp, and one happening on phones in peopleâs hands, a missing personâs face traveling through Facebook posts and text threads.
One hinged sentence: When a missing personâs name meets a physical scene, coincidence stops being a reasonable explanation.
Medical examiners arrived. The area became controlled. The tarp was handled like what it was nowâevidence. In a basement that smelled of something no one wanted to name out loud, investigators confirmed what they feared: the remains belonged to Ashley Young.
The confirmation didnât bring relief. It brought urgency, because the scene immediately raised a second, crueler realityâidentification had been made, but a full accounting had not. Investigators understood exactly what that meant for Ashleyâs mother. It meant questions that didnât end.
While some officers secured the area, others worked the edges, interviewing Mario and his girlfriend, trying to reconstruct the past week in the building. The girlfriend spoke fast, words spilling because fear doesnât pause for grammar.
âIt smell like sewage,â she said, then corrected herself, shaking her head. âLike burnt. Like something burning. Iâm like what is he cooking? Itâs burnt. It just smell burnt. Like he going to kill us.â
An officer steadied the conversation. âTell me about anyone coming by.â
She nodded hard. âTwo people came and knocked. It was a manâI donât know. Not the dude in that truck. Somebody else. They pulled in, came to the back banging on the door.â
âWhen was this?â
âToday. Or yesterday. Today.â
Another detail came outâsmall but sharp. âThey were going through the garbage can,â she said. âI heard the door close. Our room is in the back. I look out the window, Iâm like, âMario, come look.ââ
She described going outside, confronting them, and being asked a question that stuck like a hook.
âShe was a white woman,â the girlfriend said. âShe was like, âYou seen Jared?â And Iâm like, âI donât know.â She said first heâs missing, then she said her friend is missing.â
The officerâs expression tightened. âSo someone came looking for a missing woman⊠at this address⊠and mentioned Jared.â
The girlfriend nodded, swallowing. âThatâs why I freaked.â
Investigators recognized what they were hearing: a third party had known enough to come to the house. Someone had been circling the edges of Jared Chanceâs world, asking questions, sensing something wrong before law enforcement reached the basement.
Earlier that same day, another twist had already unfolded at police headquarters. CCTV had captured Jared Chance walking into Grand Rapids Police with his father, Jamesâa retired police officerâsaying they needed to speak with a detective. At the front window, James claimed his son was being harassed on Facebook because heâd been the last person seen with a missing woman. He suggested he might have information about Ashley Young.
Officers offered to speak with Jared directly. James then insisted Jared wouldnât speak without an attorney present. When told no attorney was available, the mood shifted. Jared and his father left, and James told them they were âmaking a big mistake.â
Now, on Franklin Street, that earlier visit looked less like concern and more like positioning.
Detectives arrived at the residence and began lining up what they knew with what they could prove.
âJared is our suspect,â one officer said quietly as information traveled through radios and notebooks.
âMario just told me,â another said, âthat Jared keeps a .22 pistol on the kitchen table upstairs.â
The words hung there. A weapon. A missing woman. A basement scene. A suspect who had shown up at police headquarters and asked for a lawyer before anyone even accused him of a crime.
Christine Young arrived at the scene, hope and dread wrestling on her face. When officers told her what they had found, she refused to accept it and asked them to check her daughterâs eyes, to confirm it was really Ashley.
The officers had to deliver the most devastating part of the news: there were no identifying parts left to check.
Christine crumpled into grief that didnât have a place to land.
A close friend of Ashleyâs, however, was able to give investigators what they needed: timestamps, text threads, the last known movements.
âShe called me when she was at the bar with Jared,â the friend said, holding her phone like it was both proof and punishment. âWe texted all the time. Thereâs a lot on here.â
âWhenâs the last message?â a detective asked.
The friend scrolled, eyes wet. âThe very last time I received was at 5:46 a.m. Thursday morning.â
5:46 a.m.âa number that would become a marker investigators returned to again and again, because it was the last point where Ashleyâs life spoke back.
One hinged sentence: The last text at 5:46 a.m. wasnât just a timestampâit was a door closing.
With multiple witnesses placing Ashley and Jared together on the night of November 28, detectives traced Ashleyâs path from her drive up to Grand Rapids to the Franklin Street apartment to Mulliganâs. Surveillance footage from a business nearby showed Jared walking ahead with Ashley a few steps behind, her knee-high black boots distinctive on camera. In another angle, they stood in a parking lot talking, looking like any other couple, any other night.
It was the last time anyone saw Ashley Young alive.
Armed with a search warrant, a special response team moved toward Jaredâs apartment.
âPolice with a search warrant,â a voice called from the stairwell. âCome to the door. Police. Anyone inside on the main floor, make yourself known.â
âPolice. Fire department,â another voice added, a standard call meant to bring out anyone who might be inside and to reduce the risk of a panic response.
The apartment door gave way to a scene of disarrayâitems scattered, the kind of chaotic clutter that can mean nothing or everything depending on what youâre looking for. In the middle of it, Jared Chance was asleep, as if the world hadnât changed.
âCome up to the stairwell right now,â an officer ordered.
Jared stumbled into view.
âHands up,â another voice commanded. âHands up.â
Jared complied, moving down the stairs with his hands on top of his head, face angled away as officers directed him like a person whoâd done this before.
âWhatâs your name?â an officer asked.
âJared,â he answered, voice flat.
They put him into the back of a cruiser, and as the door closed, Jared showed no reactionâno visible shock at police tearing through his home, no panic that an innocent person might show at being arrested in the middle of a night like this. Just stillness.
âYou guys stay busy, donât you?â Jared said at the station later, voice almost conversational.
âHuh?â the detective said, not taking the bait.
âYou guys stay busy, donât you?â
âPretty much,â the detective replied, watching him.
In the apartment, investigators found items that suggested Ashley had been there: a pair of womenâs boots, a container with womenâs clothing, a purple tote bag with personal items, a prescription bottle with Ashleyâs name. They found cleaning materials and tools that told a story without using words. They found evidence of an attempt to erase, to control what could be known.
And Jaredâs body language didnât change.
Detectives tried to get answers in an interview room.
âWe appreciate the fact that you came in earlier,â a detective began. âIâm sorry you got turned away.â
Jared nodded, speaking quickly, rehearsed. âYeah, no, I just came in because I read on Facebook that the last person this person was with was me. So I was just concerned, trying to get information. But my dad recommended I ask for advice of an attorney, because I donât really know what the hell is going on. I donât want to talk about anything that may incriminate me⊠so I just donât want to say nothing right now.â
âSo youâre asking for a lawyer?â the detective clarified.
âYeah,â Jared said. âIâm asking for a lawyer.â
And just like that, he shut the door on questions.
But asking for a lawyer didnât stop the evidence from accumulating. It just meant investigators had to let footage, records, and objects speak instead.
They obtained warrants for Jaredâs phone and financial records. The picture filled in slowly, then all at once.
Jared had made multiple trips to a local convenience store called Miss Tracyâs. CCTV caught him crossing the street in the early hours, dropping items into a trash bin outside before heading inside to buy ammonia. When officers searched the bin, they found personal belongings connected to Ashley and items consistent with cleanup.
The sequence of purchases and disposals created a pattern. Not a mistake. Not confusion. A series of decisions.
Phone records placed Jared making another tripâthis time to his parentsâ home in Holland, Michigan.
Detectives arrived with a search warrant. Inside the family home, they found a major piece of evidence hidden in the living roomâan electric saw concealed under a couch, with material stuck to it that did not belong in a household tool.
At that point, investigators no longer believed Jaredâs parents were innocent bystanders. They believed they were part of what happened after.
James and Barbara Chance were arrested and taken to the station.
James, the retired police officer, tried to speak like a man who still believed his uniform history should buy him the benefit of the doubt.
âDo you understand the charges?â an investigator asked.
âTheyâre saying itâs a felony,â James said, irritated. âTheyâre saying I perjured myself at that meeting. I donât⊠I donât get what that means exactly. I donât know what kind of truth they want to get at.â
His tone tried to turn the room into a debate about procedure. The detectives refused to play.
Barbara, in a separate room, looked shaken, like her body was finally admitting what her mind had been trying not to hold.
âThis is a different kind of case than you and I are used to working,â a detective told her gently.
âYeah,â Barbara said, voice thin. âWhat do you want to know?â
âWe need to recover all of this young lady,â the detective said. âWe need to account for all of her. Her mother⊠cannot sleep. Weâre trying to help her.â
Barbara swallowed, eyes glassy. âI feel guilty about this whole thing since day one.â
The detective turned to James again later, shifting angles. Not as a suspect. As a father.
âYou can relate to that,â the detective said quietly. âA parent.â
Jamesâs posture softened, almost imperceptibly. Then he started talkingâslowly, defensively, trying to frame himself as a victim of his sonâs choices.
âIâd like to make a statement that weâre all victims here,â James said. âIâm a victim of this too. Iâm notâ Iâm not wanting to say Iâm not compassionate. If I could help you find her⊠I would, but I donât know where they are.â
The detective didnât argue with the self-pity. He kept pulling.
James admitted Jared called and asked them to come get him. He admitted helping load items from Jaredâs apartment into the trunk. He described Jared asking them to stop near a parking lot, to grab âa few thingsâ from a friendâs car.
That trail led officers straight to Ashleyâs vehicle, found scraped and marked in ways that suggested hurried movement and poor choices.
Back at the station, James described Jaredâs explanation in a way that tried to reduce everything to chaos and panic. A story of drinking, a gun, an âaccident,â fear of consequences.
âInstead of calling 911,â James said, voice strained, âhe panicked and decided to do what he did.â
Barbaraâs version matched the outline. âThey had been drinking,â she said. âThey were playing with the gun. She had it and it went off.â
Detectives listened, faces unreadable. They had heard too many stories designed to keep a son from becoming what evidence already said he was.
The detective leaned in, voice steady, and said the words that cracked the script.
âWe both know she didnât do that to herself, donât we?â
James hesitated. âI donât know. Iâm going by what he told me.â
âMaybe thatâs what he told you initially,â the detective said. âBut you and I both are suspicious of this story.â
James tried to hold on to the line. âI think itâs a possibility,â he muttered. âThe guyâs⊠when he gets going, heâs crazy.â
The detective pounced gently. âSo you think he did it.â
James swallowed. âI do.â
Then, in the middle of the back-and-forth, James made a slip he couldnât rewind. He used âheâ when describing who had the gun, then tried to correct himself, insisting it was just words.
The detective didnât raise his voice. He didnât need to.
âYouâre making these slips,â he said. âAnd you know.â
In Barbaraâs interview, the detective asked about smellâbecause smell doesnât care what story you want to tell.
âDid you notice any smell?â he asked.
Barbara nodded faintly. âI thought it was a smell.â
âWhat kind of smell?â
She swallowed, eyes down. âLike⊠blood. Like stinky. Like⊠I donât know.â
She tried to assign it to a mop. The detective let the excuse hang in the air the way people do when they know an excuse is the only thing holding a person together.
One hinged sentence: The parents didnât have to touch evidence to be touched by what they helped move.
Jared refused to give up where Ashleyâs remaining remains were, and that refusal carried its own cruelty for Christine. It meant the kind of absence that never resolves. It meant an end with missing pieces.
Christine finally spoke publicly because silence wasnât bringing her daughter home.
âI want to bring my daughter home,â she said, voice breaking. âThere are people out there that know something. I just want my baby. Please. I need help finding her.â
A reporter later sat down with Jared, hoping the weight of public attention might crack what detectives couldnât.
âWhat happened to Ashley Young?â the reporter asked gently.
Jaredâs face tightened. âI canât⊠I canât even talk about it.â
âYou canât talk about it because youâre emotional?â
âThat too,â he said, swallowing, then shook his head. âI just canât.â
For a brief moment, his composure fractured and he looked like a man carrying something heavy. Then he rebuilt the wall.
âDo you have anything to say to Ashleyâs mom?â the reporter asked.
Jared stared past her, jaw working, and said nothing that mattered.
Even when offered a dealâone that could have made him eligible for parole after decades if he revealed the locationâJared refused. Silence became another choice.
On September 10, 2019, Jared Chanceâs trial began. Prosecutors didnât soften what jurors needed to understand: not just that Ashley died, but that what happened after required actions no normal person can separate from intent.
The defense tried a technical counterâarguing that what happened afterward did not automatically prove who caused the death. But the prosecution built the case with what they could prove: surveillance, texts, physical evidence, purchases, and behavior.
Then a move nobody expected became the final lock.
Jaredâs own brother took the stand.
When asked about Jaredâs familiarity with a revolver, the brother described a moment that chilled the courtroom: Jared pulling out a .22-caliber gun, pointing it at him, pulling the trigger multiple times without checking whether it was loaded. Not a one-time mistake. A pattern of recklessness with a weapon that demanded respect.
The jury heard it. They saw the timeline. They saw the footage. They heard the last messages that ended at 5:46 a.m.
Victim impact statements followed, and Christine stood before the judge holding what remained of her daughter in a small containerâan image that left the room unable to pretend it was just a âcase.â
âNow I cry seven days a week,â she said. âIf I want a hug, I have to hug a box and close my eyes and pretend.â
She spoke of texts Jared sent her, promises of safety that were already untrue when he typed them. Her voice shook with grief and fury. Her words landed where facts canât.
The judge spoke last.
He described the facts as âextremely disturbing,â noted that only part of Ashley had been recovered, and that despite exhaustive work, critical parts had never been found. He looked at Jared and said, in plain courtroom language, what everyone understood: that the defendant was a danger to society and should never be free.
Jared Chance was found guilty. He was sentenced to 100 to 200 years in prison and would not be eligible for parole until he was at least 130 years old.
His mother pleaded guilty and received 45 days in jail and a year of probation. His father, the retired officer who had helped his son in the crucial hours after, went to trial. The jury hung on one count of perjury but found him guilty of being an accessory after the fact. He received 30 days in jail and a year of probationâtwenty years on the force, reduced to a sentence that couldnât undo what he had done by choosing his son over truth.
As for Ashley, key parts of her were never recovered. Without them, her official cause of death could not be determined. The case closed in court, but it stayed open in a motherâs life, because some endings donât arrive with completeness.
In Ottawa Hills, people still drove past Franklin Street and tried not to picture it. Neighbors still carried that memory like a bruise: the night the police lights painted their quiet block, the night a blue tarp became the most important object in the city, the night an ordinary phone call revealed an extraordinary horror.
And for those detectives, for Christine, for everyone who watched that timeline end at 5:46 a.m., the case left behind a final truth that couldnât be wrapped up with tape or sentencing: some questions were answered in court, but the missing pieces stayed missing, and the silence around them was its own kind of sentence.
One hinged sentence: The investigation ended with a verdict, but the story never gave the kind of closure that feels like mercy.
News
They finally welcomed twin babies, and the hospital room felt like a new beginning. Then she asked his parents to come closer and whispered, âThey arenât his.â No yelling. No scene. Just a pause so quiet it felt unrealâuntil the alarms started minutes later, đđĄđ đđđŹ đđđđ | HO
They finally welcomed twin babies, and the hospital room felt like a new beginning. Then she asked his parents to come closer and whispered, âThey arenât his.â No yelling. No scene. Just a pause so quiet it felt unrealâuntil the…
He fell for her quiet, effortless calmâand married her fast. On their wedding night, something felt *off* | HO
He fell for her quiet, effortless calmâand married her fast. On their wedding night, something felt *off*⊠not nerves, not chemistryâa đ*đ đąđ§đ đ°đđŹ đ đđ€đ đđ§đ đŹđŠđđ„đ„đđ đđđ. He started digging and found almost no past at all. A week later,…
Thursday dinner went cold⊠then my husband walked in with âhonestyâ on his arm. I didnât yell. I just opened the door when the bell rangâmy guest arrived. One look at him and his mistress went ghost-white, dropped her wine, and whispered, âHusbandâŠ?â | HO
Thursday dinner went cold⊠then my husband walked in with âhonestyâ on his arm. I didnât yell. I just opened the door when the bell rangâmy guest arrived. One look at him and his mistress went ghost-white, dropped her wine,…
He came home to a maid âcaughtâ with $50,000 and a wife wearing victory like perfume. Everyone saw theft. He asked for 24 hours. That night, his four-year-old whispered the truth: Mommy hurts us when youâre gone. By morning, the charges vanishedâand the divorce began.| HO
He came home to a maid âcaughtâ with $50,000 and a wife wearing victory like perfume. Everyone saw theft. He asked for 24 hours. That night, his four-year-old whispered the truth: Mommy hurts us when youâre gone. By morning, the…
Her Husband Didnât Know her Nanny Cam Was Still On When she Left For Work; And What she Discovered | HO
She opened the nanny-cam app out of boredomâand froze. 9:47 a.m., their bedroom, his âworkdayâ started early⊠with someone in a red dress. She didnât scream. She didnât confront. She smiled, backed up every file, and kept saying âLove you.â…
Family Feud asked, âName something that gets bigger when you blow on it.â One contestant smirked and said, âMy wifeâs expectations.â The whole studio went silentâSteve included. Everyone heard đđĄđđ⊠until he explained | HO!!!!
Family Feud asked, âName something that gets bigger when you blow on it.â One contestant smirked and said, âMy wifeâs expectations.â The whole studio went silentâSteve included. Everyone heard đđĄđđ⊠until he explained It was a clean Tuesday in Atlantaâbright…
End of content
No more pages to load