Arkansas police have released body camera video of a last known sighting of Katie Ferguson, a Cody woman who has been missing for two months.
Fergusonâs boyfriend Adam Aviles Jr., 26, is in jail on a separate crime and is a suspect in her murder, but police agencies have not announced a discovery of either Ferguson or her body.
It was about 11 a.m. on Oct. 5 in Trumann, Arkansas, when a Trumann Police Department officer approached a black SUV with its passenger-side door open, according to a bodycam video Aaron Benzick, of investigative nonprofit Solve the Case, sent to Cowboy State Daily on Saturday.
Benzick got the video via a public records request and also provided an email from the Trumann Police Department confirming the department released the video.
What Does The Video Show?
âHow you guys doinâ?â asks a police officer with an Arkansas accent in the body cam video. âWhat you guys up to?â
Rain drizzles, fleeting across the body cam view and dripping onto the SUV.
The body cam video shows the officer approaching a dark-colored Dodge Durango and walking to the passenger side. The camera captures a clear view of Katie Ferguson, in a red T-shirt, her legs crossed casually, as she sorts through snacks and folds baby garments in the carâs passenger seat. She smiles in mild surprise at the officerâs approach.
A baby coos in the back seat. A toddler clambers in the front-seat area between her parents.
âTrying to clean up and head over to Jonesburough, how you doing?â answers Aviles Jr., who sits in the driverâs seat, shadowy in the dayâs weak light.
âI was just seeinâ the door open and it looked suspicious, so I had to come check it out,â says the officer.
Ferguson smiles again. âYeah, weâre headinâ out,â she says, adding that the family is on its way back to Wyoming.
âDo you guys have a ID or anything?â asks the officer.
âYeah ââ Ferguson begins, still folding baby garments.
âIs Arkansas an ID state?â asks Aviles.
The Conversation Continues
The officer doesnât answer that question in the video. The Immigrant Legal Resource Center lists Arkansas as a state where officers can stop people to ask for their identification in public areas or on othersâ property. People may be charged with loitering if they donât provide an identity, says ILRC.org.
âI just need to verify you,â says the officer.
âI donât think weâve done nothing â I donât think weâre breaking the law,â says Aviles. âUnless we got a call called on us, I donât think weâve done nothinâ wrong.â
âWell, it is a suspicious vehicle in a parking lot,â says the officer. âI was drivinâ right here and I seen you guys.â
âSo no one called in. âK,â says Aviles.
The officer asks Ferguson for her ID. She sorts through some of the items in the vehicle, saying she didnât have her wallet just then.
The officer asks her name.
âKatheryn â Ferguson,â she answers.
The babyâs crying intensifies.
âCalm down,â says Aviles to the child.
âWeâre Trying To Get Back To Wyomingâ
Ferguson, who appears fatigued throughout the encounter, yawns.
âWe would have been at a hotel but Priceline took a bunch of our money,â Ferguson says.
The officer asks how long theyâve been in Trumann.
Just one night, says Ferguson.
âYou guys just passinâ through?â asks the officer.
âYeah, weâre trying to get back to Wyoming,â says Aviles.
Ferguson explains that she was with her family in Alabama because she and Aviles had âseparated for a while.â Then they came back together.
âSo, he came down to see me. And we decided to just get back together and take care of the girls,â Ferguson adds.
âI donât want to be here, at all,â she says with a smile, through a yawn.
âAll right,â says the officer, and walks promptly away.
Never Made It Back
That was the last time anyone saw Ferguson, who never arrived back in Cody with Alives and their two young children.
Investigators later found Avilesâ Durango abandoned in Park County, Wyoming, on Nov. 4 smelling of putrefied blood and with a bullet hole in the door, an evidentiary affidavit says.
The front passenger seat was missing. There were multiple Clorox wipes inside the vehicle, and a Glock pistol magazine loaded to capacity near the vehicleâs center console, the document alleges.
While law enforcement was processing the Durango, Aviles walked up to them carrying a gas canister. He said he was there to fill the vehicle up because it had run out of gas, the affidavit says.
Aviles was arrested, and later charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, and his defense attorney has since in court documents confirmed heâs a murder suspect.
Aviles and Fergusonâs two daughters made it back to Cody with their father when he first returned in October.
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Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.







