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Plenty of murders have been proved with circumstantial evidence alone. I hope this is one of those cases, they are guilty as hell in my opinion.
 
No direct evidence...damn. I'm still hopeful they'll be convicted eventually.

There has got to be some evidence somewhere.
 
BTW, so where's that baby she was supposedly pregnant with? Yeah, right.

I really wanna see these two go to Hell.

RIP Heather
 
Attorneys representing a Myrtle Beach couple on charges of murder and kidnapping in the disappearance of Heather Elvis will appear next week before a judge in Charleston for a hearing to lift a gag order that has prevented officials associated with the case from speaking about it.

The hearing is set for Wednesday at the Charleston County courthouse before Circuit Court Judge Markley Dennis and the motion to lift the gag order was filed last month by Greg McCollum, who is representing Tammy Moorer in the case.


Attorneys in the case are under a gag order, signed on March 21 by Circuit Court Judge Steven John, which prohibits any prosecutors, defense attorneys or their staffs and members of law enforcement, who have investigated the case, to publicly speak or release documents regarding the case.

Prosecutors also filed a motion asking for the case file to be sealed, but that motion has not been ruled on by a judge.
[...]
Tammy Moorer, 42, and her husband, Sidney Moorer, 39, are each charged with murder and kidnapping in Elvis’ disappearance. The couple were released on $100,000 bail after a hearing last month before Dennis in Charleston.

Conditions of that bond include the couple are ordered to stay five miles away from the home of Heather Elvis’ parents, be electronically monitored and report to court.

The Jan. 30 bond hearing was the third for Tammy Moorer and second such hearing for Sidney Moorer.
http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/2015/02/26/4811921/hearing-on-gag-order-in-heather.html
 
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http://www.wmbfnews.com/2018/10/23/jury-finds-tammy-moorer-guilty-kidnapping-heather-elvis/
An Horry County jury came back with a guilty verdict for Tammy Moorer in her kidnapping case.

The jury found Moorer guilty of kidnapping and conspiracy to commit kidnapping in connection with the December 2013 disappearance of Heather Elvis. Moorer was sentenced to 30 years in prison on each of the charges. The sentences will run concurrently.

Tammy Moorer stood before the judge and spoke before sentencing. “I’m a mom to four kids because I have an extra one right now that I’m looking out for. They don’t have anybody else. They don’t live in this state. We had to leave this state because of harassment," Moorer said to Judge Benjamin Culbertson, "They don’t have anybody else to care for them and they need their mom and I don’t know what else to say to you."

Moorer continued and maintained her innocence even after the verdict was handed down. "I am Heather’s number one advocate. I want to know what happened to Heather probably just as much as her parents do. I want to know what happened to her. I have nothing to do with her disappearance. I’ve never met her. I’ve never seen her.”

The Elvis family spoke before the judge soon after. Terry Elvis went first. He said no one seems to want to take responsibility for her disappearance and he still doesn’t have his daughter back. Terry also asked the judge to have the sentences be served consecutively rather than concurrently.
[....]
Debbi Elvis, said shes thought for five years what she’d say in court when given the opportunity. Debbi said her family’s reputation has suffered and they’ve been harassed. “They won’t release our daughter. They kept her and won’t let her go. Five years later they’re still holding her hostage. They stole her life and ruined ours. I’m asking you to give Tammy the maximum sentence you can,” said Debbi Elvis.

Morgan Elvis spoke last for her family. She also requested the judge give Moorer the maximum sentence. “I ask that you give her that. Because she deserves it. Because [Heather] can’t stand here for herself.”

Tammy Moorer’s defense attorney briefly spoke with WMBF news after the verdict. Because of the still imposed gag order, he couldn’t say much, but that it wasn’t the outcome they wanted.

“The jury verdict, it is what it is and we’re in the process of were filing an appeal and we don’t think this is the end of the matter,” said Greg McCollum.

He said they plan on working to get the gag order that they’ve been under for the last four and a half years lifted. If that happens, he said then he’ll be able to make a statement.

Moorer was escorted out of the courtroom by bailiffs after hugging her family in the rows behind her. She’s sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Their verdict capped several days of testimony that began after the jury was seated on Oct. 8.
[....]

I haven't watched this or any of her videos, but I wanted something fresh to go with a new article.
 
Sidney Moorer was found guilty of kidnapping charges and sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Judge R. Markley Dennis issued the maximum sentence, the same one received by his wife last year.

Sidney and his wife, Tammy Moorer, were charged with kidnapping related to the disappearance of Heather Elvis on Dec. 18, 2013. Elvis was last tracked to Peachtree Landing during the early morning hours. She has not been seen since.

Prosecutors say Tammy Moorer grew jealous over an affair between Sidney Moorer and Elvis. Authorities believe the Moorers lured Elvis to the landing where they kidnapped her.

The first trial for Sidney Moorer ended in a hung jury. He later was found guilty of obstruction of justice and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
Despite the lengthy sentences, Heather Elvis’ immediate family members didn’t express much satisfaction because they’re still hoping to find out exactly what happened.

“He’s still holding her hostage from us,” Heather’s mother, Debbi Elvis, told the judge before he issued Sidney Moorer’s sentence.
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On December 17, 2013, Heather Elvis (born June 30, 1993[1]), of Carolina Forest, South Carolina, United States, went out for a first date with a man that ended when he dropped her off at her apartment the following morning at 1:15 a.m. At 1:44 a.m., Elvis called her roommate, Brianna Warrelmann, who was visiting her family, to tell her how the date had gone.[2] The date had been Elvis' attempt to move on after a relationship with Sidney Moorer, a repairman she had met through her job at a local restaurant, that had ended two months earlier. The girls’ conversation lasted approximately ten minutes. Warrelman had advised Elvis against returning Sidney’s calls, and cautioned Elvis “not to do anything rash and to get some sleep.”[2] Elvis’ cell phone activity ends that day around 6:00 a.m.,[1] and Elvis has not been seen or heard from since that morning.[3]
According to some accounts, this had been a result of Moorer's wife, Tammy, learning of her husband's affair. She sent Elvis several confrontational text messages, but denies any role in her disappearance. Phone records show that Elvis' and Sidney's phones were used to call each other several times in the early hours of December 18; he says the two did talk with each other briefly on two occasions, but also denies any wrongdoing—despite security camera footage showing a truck believed to be his driving to and from the boat landing where Elvis's car was found that evening.

Four months later, both Moorers were charged with murder, obstruction of justice, and indecent exposure; investigation also led to the couple being charged with Medicaid fraud as well. The murder and indecent exposure charges were dropped in 2016, but Sidney was convicted of the obstruction charge the following year. Two men, one a relative of Elvis', were charged with obstructing justice in 2014 for posting misleading information online and conducting their own independent investigation.[4] Sidney's 2017 trial on the charges ended in a hung jury and he has been awaiting a retrial; shortly after the mistrial the Moorers were indicted on an additional charge of conspiracy. Tammy was convicted of both charges in October 2018.[5]

Despite the convictions, many of the facts of the case remain in dispute. In text messages and posts on social media, Tammy depicted Elvis as an obsessed stalker whose attention to her husband would not have bothered her if she had not become physically threatening to the family; Elvis' friends have suggested, in turn, that Sidney privately told Elvis he wanted to continue the affair to the point of leaving his wife, who reportedly handcuffed him to the bed at night to keep him faithful to her and, Sidney's family says, physically abused him. Sidney reported to the police several instances in which he was physically threatened while on bail from the murder charges, and posted signs decrying harassment of his children on his property; similarly, the Elvises held a news conference to denounce what they claimed was organized online harassment of them.
 

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