Allen Elementary 6th-grade student’s death announced by Floyd County Schools

School leaders in Floyd County announced with heavy hearts on Wednesday morning that a sixth-grade student at Allen Elementary had passed away.

Có thể là hình ảnh về văn bản

“Diesel Miller, a former head start to 5th grade student at May Valley Elementary and a current 6th grade student at Allen Elementary School, passed away on April 28, 2026,” Floyd County Schools announced on social media Wednesday.

District leaders said they were heartbroken beyond words to break the tragic news.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with this child’s family, friends, and all who are grieving,” officials wrote. “We are committed to supporting the family, students, staff, and community during this incredibly difficult time.”

Counselors and support staff will reportedly be available on May Valley and Allen Elementary campuses to any student or staff member following the student’s passing.

Có thể là hình ảnh về xe địa hình

“Our thoughts and prayers are with this child’s family, friends, and all who are grieving,” officials wrote. “We are committed to supporting the family, students, staff, and community during this incredibly difficult time.”

Counselors and support staff will reportedly be available on May Valley and Allen Elementary campuses to any student or staff member following the student’s passing.

The distance of a mere five kilometers is a hauntingly small span, a stretch of road that Sharon Granites’ mother likely traveled hundreds of times without a second thought, now forever transformed into the boundary between a life of hope and a reality of profound loss. During a heart-wrenching public statement, she recounted the agonizing moment investigators sat her down to map out the final known location of her daughter, revealing that the site was practically on the doorstep of their community. The proximity added a layer of cruel irony to the tragedy, as it meant Sharon was almost home, nearly within the reach of those who loved her, when her journey was violently interrupted. It was at this specific coordinate that the forensic narrative solidified, with DNA evidence providing a genetic fingerprint that placed Jefferson Lewis directly within that five-kilometer radius, tethering him to the site in a way that left little room for ambiguity.

While the confirmation of Lewis’s presence provided a target for the family’s grief and the state’s prosecution, a growing sense of unease has emerged regarding a specific forensic detail that was reportedly withheld or glossed over during those initial briefings. The family has voiced a distressing realization that the complete picture of the forensic results was not immediately shared, leading to speculation about a secondary finding that might complicate the current understanding of the crime. This missing detail is whispered to be a piece of “trace evidence” that does not fit the profile of Jefferson Lewis or Sharon Granites, suggesting the presence of an unidentified third party or a biological marker that indicates the scene was far more complex than a two-person encounter. If this hypothesis holds, the “detail they hadn’t been fully told” could be the existence of a mystery contributor whose role remains the investigation’s most guarded secret.

Another prevailing theory regarding this undisclosed information involves the timing of the DNA deposition rather than just the identity. If the forensic results indicated that the biological material was deposited at different intervals, it would suggest a timeline that contradicts the prosecution’s current theory of a single, localized event. The family’s frustration stems from the possibility that the evidence suggests Sharon was at that location for a much longer duration than they were led to believe, or perhaps that the site was revisited in a manner that the authorities were not yet ready to explain. This lack of transparency has created a rift of trust, as the family wonders if the full truth of Sharon’s final hours is being filtered to ensure a smoother path to a conviction, rather than providing the raw, unfiltered reality of what occurred just five kilometers from safety.

For Sharon’s mother, the pain of the proximity is compounded by this forensic “black box.” The realization that her daughter was so close to home, coupled with the feeling that the authorities are holding back a crucial piece of the story, has turned her mourning into a crusade for total transparency. She remains haunted by the idea that there is more to the “match” than she was told—a secret held in a lab report that might change the way the world views Jefferson Lewis’s culpability or the events of that night. Until the full forensic file is laid bare in a courtroom, that five-kilometer stretch of land remains a place of unanswered questions, where the science of DNA has provided a name but perhaps not the entire, devastating truth.