Jace Walsh went 74 days without knowing where his daughters were.Â
When he reunited with his daughters â 12-year-old Lilyana and 8-year-old Tamzen â in Georgia on Monday, Walsh wept as they clung to him. He asked if they were OK, and he told them he loves them. Â
Walshâs wife Stephanie left the familyâs Alpine, Wyoming, home with their daughters Feb. 23. Sheâs had a years-long battle with mental illness, Walsh told Cowboy State Daily in a series of interviews. Â Â
Jace said he thought he saw Stephanieâs car at the grocery store that afternoon and assumed they were âjust getting groceries.â Â
By 6 p.m., they were gone. So were the familyâs two dogs. Â Â
At first Walsh figured the girls had gone out for a dance class. He soon realized they left their phones behind at the house, and he could not find his family anywhere. Â
Walsh became frantic.
He reached out to police and the public, posting the girlsâ pictures on social media. Â
Custody OrderÂ
But law enforcement agents were limited in what they could do. Jace and Stephanie Walsh are not divorced; they hadnât even been separated except during Stephanieâs 2022 stay in a mental health facility, said Jace. Â
Walsh provided Cowboy State Daily with documentation of Stephanieâs facility stay and other incidents pertaining to her mental health. Â
The parents shared custody until Wyoming District Court Judge Joseph Bluemel gave Jace temporary emergency custody of the girls in a March 6 order.
The order had the potential to give authorities more legal standing for getting the girls back home, since interference with custody is against Wyoming law. But no one could serve Stephanie Walsh, the girlsâ biological mother and homemaker, with the order because no one knew where she was. Â
âSo we (were) stuck in this Catch-22 of, âWhat sheâs doing isnât criminal until you serve her papersâ â but they canât help you find her until sheâs done something criminal,â said Walsh. Â
Walshâs mother came to stay with him, and he undertook counseling sessions himself to deal with the strain. Â
At The LibraryÂ
Walsh tracked Stephanie and the girls as they used the family credit card in Twin Falls, Idaho, then Heyburn, then down eastern Nevada, he said. Â
On Feb. 25 in Las Vegas, Stephanie bought a new Honda Odyssey with a $37,700 cashierâs check using her home address on the purchase forms, said Jace Walsh. She then went to Los Angeles, along with a historic winter blizzard that hit the city that week. Â Â
On March 15 came a glimmer of hope â a librarian staffer in Henderson, Nevada, reported seeing the girls with their mother at the library three days earlier. Â
Knowing how his girls and their mother adore books, Walsh had been calling libraries in areas where he spotted new credit card purchases. Â
âShe said they looked disheveled but OK, and seemed pretty timid, which is not real normal for my older daughter,â said Jace Walsh of the librarianâs account. âMy younger one is pretty timid.â Â
Lilyanaâs favorite books are Tui Sutherlandâs âWings of Fireâ series. Tamzenâs favorites are Alexandra Dayâs âGood Dog, Carlâ books, said Walsh. Â
Walmart Parking LotÂ
The Lincoln County Sheriffâs Office contacted Walsh on Sunday, saying police found the girls â and the dogs â just outside Atlanta in Duluth, Georgia. Â Â
âHe wasnât able to give us much information at the time,â said Walsh. âJust that theyâd been located and were OK.â Â
Police in nearby Dunwoody had arrested Stephanie Walsh for reckless conduct, said Walsh. Â
Duluth police gave Cowboy State Daily the report detailing Stephanie Walshâs arrest and the girlsâ rescue. Â
The girls were not in distress and were in good health, in a car in the Walmart parking lot, wrote Duluth Sgt. Brett Miles. But the girls did not know where their mother was. Â
Stephanie Walsh walked alone for 5-7 hours while her children and her two dogs waited in the parking lot, the report says. Miles later told his supervisor that Stephanie told authorities sheâd been sleepwalking, and she was crying when police found her, according to bodycam footage released to Cowboy State Daily. Â
BodyCamÂ
The bodycam recording shows Miles talking to the girls in the Honda odyssey, half ensconced by shade trees in the Walmart parking lot. Â
âHey,â said Miles. âIs your parents here?â Â
Tamzen poked her head out of the car through the open driverâs side window, then ducked back into it. Â
âWe donât know where she is,â said Lilyana, as the dogs in the car barked and growled. âThe last time we saw her she was in the car before we went to bed.â Â
Lilyana muzzled a dogâs mouth with her left hand. Passersby coursed around the vehicle. Â
âDo you guys usually stay in Dunwoody?â asked Miles. Â
âWeâve been moving around,â said Lilyana, her hair swept into a bun. Tamzenâs hair was loose around her shoulders. Â
Other officers joined Miles and discussed whether they could hold Stephanie Walsh in jail because Lilyana is 12, and legally able to babysit for a short time. Â
The officers believed that because Stephanie Walsh had been gone for nearly seven hours, she may have committed a crime by leaving the girls. Â
Miles decided to recommend reckless conduct charges against her. Â
SouthwardÂ
Walsh and his mother scoured the airlines for the quickest flights to Georgia. They drove from Wyoming to Salt Lake City and took two more flights to get to Georgia from there. Â
In the meantime, Walsh gave the Duluth authorities permission to have his girls stay at a family friendâs house in the Atlanta area Sunday night. The woman, whom Walsh said is a close friend of his wifeâs, took the girls in, let them cool off in her pool and did their nails Sunday. Â
Stephanie had been wandering along the road searching for this friend when police found her, said Jace Walsh. Â
Walsh would later learn that his wife and daughters had been living in their new car, which was disabled because of a dead battery. He theorized that they left the lights on in the car, in the Walmart parking lot where they were living.
Stephanie and the girls had been surviving on sandwiches and other groceries in the car for weeks, he said. Â Â
30 HoursÂ
Walsh was awake for 30 hours straight before he collapsed into his daughtersâ arms in front of their family friendâs house. Â
He wasnât sure how their reunion would be: he had no idea what reasons Stephanie had given them for running away from home. Â
âBut you know,â said Walsh, âthey ran right up and gave me hugs.â Â
He did not pepper the girls with questions, he said, other than to make sure theyâre OK.Â
Walsh said he plans for the whole family to go through these incidents together at counseling once everyone is home. He also said he and his mother are working to get his wife out of jail and into mental health treatment. Â
Walsh is still convincing himself he has his girls back. Â
âItâs still sinking in,â he said. âIt had gone from virtually no information for six weeks to, theyâre located; theyâre OK, and trying to find a flight out here that got us here as soon as possible.â Â
Moving ForwardÂ
Jace Walsh still hasnât seen his wife. Â
He wants to see her once he gets through the local visitation procedure, he said.
And heâs very nervous.
âItâs important to note I still love Stephanie,â Walsh told Cowboy State Daily in late April when his wife was still missing with the girls. âI desperately want her back. This (course of action) is not her; this is the mental illness. But the mental illness makes it not safe for her to be in charge of the girls.âÂ
Walsh on Tuesday said he wants to thank everyone who searched for Stephanie and the girls. Â
âWe felt so much support over the last few months, and thatâs been huge,â said Walsh, referring to himself and his parents. Â
Walsh and his daughters are staying at their family friendâs house in Georgia until Stephanieâs legal issues are resolved, he said.





