Sergeant Brandon Danielson said it would have been a 12-foot fall, while the noise of the freezer units would have been ‘so loud’ there was ‘probably no way anyone heard him.’
“Our heads are spinning, finding this out after so many years, and it is distressing, it makes us feel a lot of pain,” said Larry’s father, Victor Murillo, after the discovery of his son in 2019.
“They closed the building. The freezers weren’t working anymore. So how can a body just be there?”
Hauntingly, former staff members claimed they had reported a terrible smell coming from the freezer units, though their complaints were repeatedly dismissed.
Rest in peace, Larry Ely Murillo-Moncada.