Police initiated a search immediately.

Officers canvassed the area along the described running route and expanded their efforts to surrounding streets, apartment courtyards, nearby parks, stairwells, and drainage channels.

The search continued through the night and into the following days.

Despite the scope of the effort, investigators found no personal items belonging to Myia.

No clothing, shoes, keys, or other objects were recovered.

No residents reported seeing a woman matching her description running, stopping, or interacting with anyone that evening.

Investigators also looked for signs of an assault or struggle.

They documented no disturbed ground, no blood, and no physical evidence suggesting that Myia had been attacked along her route.

Emergency call records were reviewed and no calls related to Myia or the surrounding area were identified during the relevant time window.

The absence of witnesses, physical evidence, or emergency reports significantly limited the ability to establish what had happened after she left the apartment.

As the investigation progressed, detectives examined Myia’s background.

Interviews with friends revealed that 2 years earlier, she had attempted suicide following a serious argument with Andre.

This information introduced the possibility that Myia may have left voluntarily.

Several friends described the marriage as unstable and confirmed that Myia had previously left Andre for a short period before returning due to financial pressure and the lack of stable housing.

Despite this history, investigators found no evidence that Myia had planned to disappear.

Her bank accounts showed no unusual withdrawals or transfers.

She had not closed accounts, sold belongings, or made arrangements suggesting an intentional departure.

No notes or messages were left behind and she did not contact friends or family to indicate that she intended to leave.

Her personal belongings remained in the apartment.

Myia was enrolled at a local university where she was studying accounting and she also served as a reservist in the United States Navy.

Both commitments required structured schedules and long-term planning.

Her sudden absence from classes and reserve duties occurred without prior notice.

Investigators noted that this behavior did not align with her habits and responsibilities, further complicating the voluntary departure theory.

Andre Symonds became the primary focus of attention due to his proximity to Myia and his status as the last person known to have seen her.

However, detectives found no direct evidence linking him to a crime.

Employment records confirmed that he worked as an operator at a United States Air Force data processing facility and had an official work shift on the day of Myia’s disappearance.

In 1990, the neighborhood lacked surveillance cameras, limiting independent verification of movements.

Search dogs were deployed but were unable to establish a scent trail leading away from the apartment complex.

With no physical evidence and no witnesses, the investigation stalled.

In 1992, police received an anonymous tip claiming that Myia was being held in the basement of a private residence in a suburban area.

Officers executed a search warrant at the address.

The occupants, a married couple with children, denied any connection to Myia.

The search produced no evidence supporting the claim and investigators concluded that the information was false.

Several months after Myia’s disappearance, Andre Symonds was dismissed from his job for drug use.

In January 1991, he was arrested in connection with a series of bank robberies.

He was later convicted and sentenced to 16 years in prison.

In 1999, he was released on parole.

During this period, no charges were filed against him in connection with Myia’s disappearance.

The developments in Andre’s criminal history further complicated the status of the missing person case.

While authorities continued to view him as a possible suspect, they lacked evidence sufficient to pursue charges related to Myia.

Before his arrest in 1991, Andre contacted police periodically to inquire about the status of the investigation.

These inquiries produced no new leads.

Eventually, the disappearance of Myia Symonds was classified as a cold case.

No arrests were made, no remains were recovered.

The case remained unresolved with the circumstances of her disappearance unknown and the last confirmed accounts of her movements resting on a version of events that could neither be proven nor disproven at the time.

In the fall of 2012, routine municipal work was underway in Houston, Texas, focusing on the cleanup and deepening of the Buffalo Bayou waterway.

The project was part of a broader maintenance effort aimed at improving water flow and reducing long-term sediment buildup.

This particular section of the bayou had not undergone dredging for many years, allowing layers of silt, debris, and discarded objects to accumulate undisturbed on the riverbed.

As heavy machinery moved slowly through the channel, the dredging equipment began lifting materials that had remained buried beneath the surface for decades.

During one of the work days, the dredge extracted a large, rectangular object that immediately stood out from the surrounding debris.

Unlike the usual mix of sediment, branches, and scrap metal, this object had a defined shape and substantial weight.

Workers halted operations to examine it more closely.

As layers of mud and aquatic growth were cleared away, it became evident that the object was a heavy metal container.

When the workers forced the container open, they identified it as an army issued trunk, a standard metal storage box designed to hold personal belongings.

The trunk was severely corroded, its surface eaten away by rust after years of submersion.

Thick layers of silt and algae coated both the exterior and interior, indicating that it had remained underwater for an extended period without disturbance.

Inside the trunk, investigators documented human remains along with athletic clothing and a pair of women’s running shoes.

The remains were in an advanced state of decomposition due to prolonged exposure to water and sediment.

It was clear the chest had been used to conceal the body.

Despite the condition, the remaining fabric and footwear were still identifiable as athletic.

Upon recognizing the potential significance of the find, the workers immediately stopped all activity in the area.

Law enforcement was contacted and officers arrived at the site.

Initial observations suggested that the container had entered the water fully intact and had sunk rapidly.

Its weight and construction allowed it to penetrate the riverbed, becoming embedded in the dense layer of silt at the bottom.

Over time, additional layers of sediment accumulated above it, effectively sealing it beneath the surface.

The section of the waterway where the trunk was discovered had not been dredged deeply in the past, allowing the container to remain concealed.

One feature immediately drew the attention of investigators.

On the inside of the trunk’s lid, an inventory plate was still affixed.

Despite corrosion and wear, the serial number remained partially legible.

This trunk carried an identifiable number that could be traced through official records.

That detail transformed the discovery from a general anomaly into a lead with concrete investigative value.

The information was transferred to the cold case unit for preliminary review.

At that stage, the discovery was treated as an unidentified set of human remains recovered from a military storage trunk.

No assumptions were made regarding ownership or identity.

Responsibility for further analysis fell to Detective Elias Gray, an investigator assigned to unresolved cases.

At that stage, no connection to any missing person case had yet been established.

Gray’s sole objective was to determine the origin of the trunk and establish who had possessed it before it entered the bayou.

Gray submitted a formal request to the United States Air Force Archives, asking for records associated with that serial number.

The request covered issuance logs, reassignment documents, and any records reflecting the disposal or transfer of the item.

The archival response confirmed that the trunk was part of a batch of military property officially decommissioned in 1989.

Rather than being destroyed, the items were reassigned for personal use to employees working at a United States Air Force data processing facility.

The records showed that the specific trunk recovered from Buffalo Bayou had been formally assigned to a systems operator named Andre Simmons.

The trunk was no longer an anonymous container, but documented property that had once been under the control of a specific individual.

Gray checked the name through law enforcement databases to establish the identity of the individual listed in the records.

The search showed that Andre Simmons had a documented criminal history and had previously served a prison sentence for offenses.

Further review of existing files confirmed that he had been married to Maya Simmons, who vanished in Houston on June 19th, 1990.

At that point, the connection between the recovered trunk and an existing missing person case became unavoidable.

The discovery of a military-issued container assigned to Maya Simmons’ husband containing unidentified human remains provided sufficient grounds to formally reclassify her disappearance.

The case, which had remained inactive for more than two decades, was reopened and transferred into active status.

With the case officially revived, Gray shifted his attention to the original investigative assumptions.

In 1990, one of the key factors that limited scrutiny of Andre Simmons at the time was the conclusion reached during the original investigation that he had completed his work shift and was at home when Maya disappeared.

That version was accepted without deeper verification and his movements during the evening were not examined beyond confirming that he was scheduled to work that day.

Gray requested internal control records from the Air Force facility for June 1990, including shift schedules, access logs, and transportation documentation.

The records confirmed that Andre Simmons had reported for duty at approximately 6:00 on the evening of June 19th.

However, further review revealed inconsistencies that had gone unnoticed.

Access logs showed that Andre’s access card was registered at the facility after the beginning of his shift, creating the appearance that he remained on site.

However, vehicle logs and internal movement records indicated that he was not physically present at the facility during that time.

The mismatch between access card activity and independent records demonstrated that his credentials had been used in his absence, showing that presence could be simulated.

To clarify the inconsistency, Gray reviewed shift rosters from June 1990 to identify personnel who had worked alongside Andre Simmons that night.

The records showed that only one coworker shared the same shift during the relevant hours.

Gray located that individual, Curtis Johnson, who no longer worked at the facility and had withdrawn from his former professional environment.

During questioning, Johnson admitted that he had used Andre’s access card while Andre was absent.

He stated that he had done so in exchange for a small quantity of drugs and that he did not know where Andre went or why he left the base.

Curtis’ admission explained why Andre appeared present in facility records despite his physical absence.

It also established that Andre had left the workplace during his shift rather than after it ended.

This detail fundamentally altered the timeline that had been accepted in 1990.

This admission did not, by itself, establish criminal responsibility.

It demonstrated that Andre’s original account relied on a false premise.

As a result, Andre Simmons’ statement that he had been at home at the time of his wife’s disappearance could no longer be treated as reliable.

Detective Gray continued the investigation by focusing on transportation records from the Air Force base.

He requested the route logs for the service truck assigned to Andre Simmons’ shift in June 1990.

According to the log, the truck’s mileage for that night exceeded the standard operational range by nearly 40 miles.

The excess mileage stood out immediately because the truck was not scheduled to leave the base during overnight operations.

Gray analyzed the possible routes that could explain the discrepancy.

The road network connecting the Air Force base, the Simmons residence, and the bridge over Buffalo Bayou formed a continuous and direct path.

Distance calculations showed that a round trip between the base and the bayou crossing, including travel through residential areas, aligned closely with the unexplained mileage.

By this point, several elements now converged.

The military truck recovered from the bayou had been formally assigned to Andre Simmons.

A service vehicle linked to his shift showed significant unexplained use.

His work presence in 1990 had been artificially maintained through the use of an access card by another employee.

His original account of remaining at home throughout the evening was no longer supported by records.

Each element on its own raised questions, but together, they formed a consistent sequence that pointed toward deliberate action rather than coincidence.

Parallel forensic specialists completed the examination of the remains recovered from the trunk.

Dental records obtained from Maya Simmons’ files were compared with the recovered remains.

The comparison confirmed that the remains belonged to her.

This finding eliminated any remaining uncertainty about the identity of the victim and formally established that Maya Simmons had died.

With that confirmation, the case was no longer treated as a disappearance, but as a homicide investigation.

In 2013, Andre Simmons was taken into custody.

During questioning, Andre repeated the account he had maintained since 1990.

He stated that he returned home after completing his shift, spent the evening playing bass guitar, and later realized that his wife had not returned from her run.

This version directly conflicted with the documented timeline derived from access records, vehicle logs, and witness testimony showing he left the base during his shift.

The reaction from Maya’s family was restrained, but revealing.

Her mother stated that she had long questioned the explanation that Maya disappeared during a routine run.

For years, she had no factual basis to challenge that narrative.

The arrest did not bring a sense of relief, but instead confirmed her belief that the disappearance had not been accidental or voluntary.

Curtis Johnson provided a formal statement to investigators.

He reiterated that he had used Andre’s access card during the shift to create the appearance that Andre remained at work.

He emphasized that he had not known about any crime and had not participated in the disposal of a body.

Investigators classified his actions as workplace misconduct and providing false information.

Both offenses were subject to statutes of limitation that had long expired.

The evidence assembled at this stage established a documented basis for prosecution, but did not yet explain how the crime had unfolded.

Key elements of the timeline remained unresolved, including the events inside the apartment and the precise circumstances that led to Maya’s death.

A full reconstruction was not possible without information that only Andre Simons himself could provide.

Andre Simons agreed to cooperate with the prosecution after being formally charged with murder and informed that the state would seek the death penalty.

In exchange for a guilty plea, prosecutors removed capital punishment from consideration.

As part of the agreement, Andre was required to provide a complete account of the events of June 19th, 1990.

Only after this plea agreement did it become possible to reconstruct the crime as a continuous sequence of actions.

On June 19th, 1990, Andre Simons arrived at the Air Force data processing facility for his scheduled evening shift.

The day before, he and Maya had a serious argument that left their relationship in open conflict.

Shortly after the start of his shift, Andre received a phone call from Maya.

During the call, she told him that she was leaving him and that she would not be in the apartment when he returned.

The call escalated the unresolved conflict from the previous day and prompted Andre to leave work shortly afterward.

Within the first hour of shift, Andre left the facility using a service truck assigned to the base.

His personal car remained parked in the lot, creating the appearance that he was still on site.

A coworker covered his absence by using Andre’s access card at the entrance, ensuring that electronic records showed no interruption in his presence.

Andre’s departure went unnoticed.

Andre drove directly to the apartment he shared with Maya.

At that time, Maya was still inside the apartment.

The two argued shortly after Andre arrived.

The argument centered on Maya’s decision to leave and her refusal to continue the relationship.

The confrontation escalated quickly and became physical.

During the struggle, Andre killed Maya inside the apartment.

The killing was not planned in advance, but after Maya was dead, Andre did not call for help.

Instead, he began acting to hide what he had done.

He used a metal military trunk that he already had in the apartment.

The trunk was heavy and was strong enough to hold a body and sink in water.

Andre placed Maya’s body inside the trunk.

She was wearing athletic clothing.

The trunk was closed.

Andre then moved the trunk to the service truck and loaded it into the vehicle.

This process took place without interruption or witnesses.

After securing the trunk, Andre drove toward Buffalo Bayou.

He selected a bridge location where the depth of the water and the strength of the current would ensure that the container would sink.

At the bridge, Andre pushed the trunk into the water.

The heavy metal container sank immediately and penetrated the soft riverbed.

It became embedded in the silt at the bottom of the bayou, where it remained concealed.

The depth and sediment prevented the trunk from resurfacing or being detected.

After disposing of the trunk, Andre returned the service truck to the base and left it in its usual location.

His coworker continued using Andre’s access card, maintaining the appearance that Andre had remained on duty throughout the shift.

Andre returned to the apartment approximately 2 hours after the killing.

Before contacting police, he removed visible signs of the struggle and restored the apartment to its usual condition.

Only after that did he leave the apartment, approach a passing patrol vehicle, and report that Maya had gone out for a run around 8:00 and had not returned by 10:00.

For more than 20 years, the sequence of actions carried out that evening prevented discovery.

Maya’s body remained concealed beneath layers of sediment and Andre’s movements appeared routine.

The reconstruction showed how a domestic conflict escalated into violence and was followed by immediate decisions to hide the crime.

What initially appeared to be an unexplained disappearance was revealed to be the result of a clear and deliberate sequence of actions carried out within a single evening.

After the reconstruction was completed, the case was formally transferred to court.

The prosecution built its case on a consolidated body of evidence assembled over the renewed investigation.

Central to the charges was the military-issued metal trunk recovered from the bottom of Buffalo Bayou.

Archival records established that the trunk had been officially assigned to Andre Simons and was under his control at the time of Maya’s disappearance.

Transportation records formed another critical component of the case.

Route logs from the Air Force base documented unexplained mileage recorded by the service truck assigned to Andre’s shift on the night Maya disappeared.

The excess distance matched a route connecting the base, the Simons apartment, and the bridge over Buffalo Bayou.

Testimony from Curtis Johnson explained how Andre was able to leave the base during his shift without it being noticed in 1990.

This point mattered because Andre later claimed he had gone home after his shift and spent the evening playing bass guitar.

Johnson’s statement showed that Andre had left work much earlier than he said, meaning his timeline for that evening could not be trusted.

Additional context was provided through witness statements describing the deteriorating state of Andre and Maya’s relationship.

The court reviewed evidence showing that the couple had experienced serious conflicts prior to the disappearance.

The defense challenged the case primarily on the basis of time.

Attorneys argued that the passage of more than two decades had weakened the reliability of evidence and eliminated the possibility of direct eyewitness testimony.

These arguments were unsuccessful.

Under Texas law, there is no statute of limitations for murder.

The court determined that the age of the case did not invalidate the evidence, particularly when that evidence consisted of official records, preserved documents, and physical findings recovered intact.

Andre Simons entered a guilty plea under the terms of the agreement previously reached with prosecutors.

The plea removed the possibility of the death penalty, but did not reduce the severity of the sentence.

The court accepted the plea after reviewing the evidence and confirming that it was entered voluntarily and with full understanding of the consequences.

The sentence imposed was life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

The judgment reflected the deliberate concealment of the crime, the prolonged deception that followed.

The verdict formally closed a case that had remained unresolved for more than 20 years.

After sentencing, Maya Simons remains were formally released to her family for burial.

For her mother, the end of the trial did not bring relief.

It marked the close of a long period in which uncertainty had defined daily life and replaced it with a final, irreversible outcome.

The case of Maya Simons illustrated how a combination of routine assumptions, limited oversight, and a single concealed object could delay accountability for decades.

But even carefully hidden crimes can resurface when one overlooked detail is brought back into view.

The case that had lingered for more than 20 years was formally closed.