Because of the publicity the case receives from time to time, law enforcement and the local prosecutors occasionally speculate about what happened, and a former classmate is serving about fifteen years for manslaughter in the case; a guilty plea was accepted without the requirement that he name the person he "saw" murder Kiplyn or reveal her location. Such is justice when children disappear from small Midwestern schools.
But what does that have to do with Frankfort, Kansas? There is a small school there, too. There was also an incident involving a child who disappeared; thankfully, that child was found. But some of the elements are very similar to the Spanish Fork case. The child who disappeared from Frankfort High was a female freshman who had been abandoned by herself alongside of a highway by a guidance counselor who doubled as a track coach. When she disappeared, he looked for her a little bit, but gave up after awhile. He did not bother to call her parents or the police. After about three or four hours, someone noticed her walking on the shoulder of the highway and gave her a ride back to Frankfort. And now for the most disturbing similarity: Frankfort is largely populated by humanoid creatures who call themselves "people" who actually do not think that a coach or teacher "losing" a student and failing to call law enforcement or let the appropriate people know she is missing is dangerous or criminal! Had that child not been offered a ride by a person with good intentions, but found by someone with bad intentions, or had remained missing, the above mentioned humanoid creatures probably would never have tried to find her, or even tried find out what had happened. The fact that this freshman was not a native "Frankforter" disentitled her to basic safety and consideration. Tom Schroeder, the coach in question, is still employed at the school. Laura McNish, the Marshall County prosecutor, apparently does not have a problem with teachers who turn children into statistics.
On February 11, 2011, Timothy Brent Olsen entered a guilty plea to manslaughter in the disappearance of Kiplyn Davis. This was sixteen years after the last time Kiplyn was seen alive. The court did not require that he name his accomplices, and the court did not require that he reveal the location of Kiplyn's body. Had the child who was "lost" by Frankfort High School, in Kansas become a statistic, the faculty at Frankfort High School and the county attorney would probably not care about justice, or about finding her, either. They certainly didn't care about finding her during the first three hours she was missing.
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