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Unsolved May 10, 1986 Missing Person

Kimberly Ann Moreau

Status Unsolved
Type Missing Person
Date May 10, 1986
Location Jay, Maine
Victim Age 17
Gender Female

Seventeen-year-old Kimberly Moreau vanished after a night out with acquaintances in the Jay and Livermore Falls area of Maine in May 1986. Foul play is suspected and she was declared legally dead in 1993, but her body has never been found and no one has been charged.

Kimberly Ann Moreau was a 17-year-old junior at Jay High School in the small paper-mill town of Jay, Maine. On the night of May 10, 1986, she skipped her school's junior prom after arguing with her boyfriend and instead went out with a friend, Rhonda Breton, who has since died. The two spent the evening in the Livermore Falls area, and at some point a late-model white Pontiac Trans Am pulled up carrying 25-year-old Darren Joudrey and an acquaintance, Brian Enman. Kim and Rhonda joined the young men, and the group reportedly made several stops over the course of the night.

Brian Enman told police he dropped Kimberly off in the early morning hours about a half-mile from her home, saying she wanted to walk the rest of the way because she was upset over the fight with her boyfriend. She was never seen again. Kimberly left behind all her belongings, made no contact with family or friends, and had shown no intention of running away, leading investigators to quickly suspect foul play. The Maine State Police, who continue to manage the case through the Major Crimes Unit, have long considered her disappearance suspicious.

Enman has publicly denied any involvement, repeating over the years that he simply let her out near her street. Kimberly's father, Richard Moreau, never believed that account and spent decades pressing for answers, maintaining a post-office box in Jay where people could anonymously send tips and offering a reward for information leading to his daughter's remains. Police have said two men were considered prime suspects but have never publicly named them or filed charges. Rhonda Breton, potentially a key witness to the night's events, died without the case being resolved.

Kimberly was declared legally dead in 1993, but her body has never been found, and her gravestone at Holy Cross Cemetery marks an empty plot. Her siblings, Karen Dalot and Diane Levesque, have continued the search alongside their father, pleading publicly on the anniversaries of her disappearance for anyone with knowledge to come forward so the family can finally bring her home for a proper burial. In recent years the Maine State Police assigned new detectives to the file, and the family has expressed cautious optimism that renewed attention and modern investigative techniques might yet produce answers. Nearly four decades after a teenager stepped out of a car and vanished into the Maine night, the question of what happened to Kimberly Moreau remains unanswered, and her father has said he fears he may not live to learn the truth.

Missing Teen Unsolved Suspected Foul Play Maine Cold Case 1980s
May 10, 1986
Kimberly skips her junior prom and goes out with friend Rhonda Breton; they meet 25-year-old Darren Joudrey and Brian Enman, who drive a white Pontiac Trans Am.
Early May 11, 1986
Brian Enman says he dropped Kimberly off about a half-mile from her Jay home in the early morning hours; she is never seen again.
1986
Maine State Police open an investigation, quickly suspecting foul play; two men are considered prime suspects but are never publicly named or charged.
1993
Kimberly is declared legally dead, though her body has never been recovered.
2019
Her father Richard Moreau publicizes new hope in the case, maintaining a tip line and reward as he continues searching for his daughter's remains.
2025-2026
On the 39th and 40th anniversaries, the family again pleads for information as newly assigned detectives review the still-unsolved case.

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Have Information About This Case?

Cold cases are solved when someone comes forward. Even a detail that seems minor can matter. If you have any information about this case, contact law enforcement through one of these channels:

  • FBI Tips (tips.fbi.gov) — submit a tip online to the Federal Bureau of Investigation
  • FBI Tip Line: 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324)
  • NamUs (namus.nij.ojp.gov) — the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System accepts information on missing persons cases
  • National Center for Missing & Exploited Children: 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678)
  • The local police department or sheriff's office in Maine, or the state bureau of investigation

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