News spread fast. Lincoln County was swarming with reporters. Camera vans lined Dry Creek Road. By the next morning, every major outlet in the region had picked up the story: “Car Linked to 1992 Prom Night Disappearance Found Buried Under Concrete.” For a town that had carried the ghost of this case for decades, it was like the clock had been rewound.
The car was carefully extracted in sections to preserve evidence. The body was twisted and crushed inward as though it had been lowered into a confined pit before concrete was poured. When forensic teams opened the door panels and sifted through the interior, they found human remains—three skeletons seated as if frozen in time. The driver’s seat still held the remnants of a tuxedo jacket, buttons tarnished but intact. Beside it, in the passenger seat, a bracelet glinted faintly under forensic lights—a delicate silver band engraved with the initials NB. In the back seat, they found what was left of a class ring inscribed WH Lincoln High 1992. Among the wreckage lay fragments of a cassette case and magnetic tape, the kind teenagers used for road trip mixtapes.
The forensic team labeled each item with trembling hands. These weren’t artifacts. They were answers—and reminders of three lives lost.
That evening, the sheriff’s department held a press conference outside the old industrial park. Families stood behind barricades, silent, clutching each other as the sheriff confirmed what they had feared and longed for in equal measure. The vehicle recovered from the site was confirmed to belong to Joseph Mulaney. Three sets of remains had been located within; positive identification was pending DNA confirmation.
For the Mulaney, Hamilton, and Beles families, the world seemed to collapse and steady all at once. For 24 years, they had lived with not knowing—a kind of limbo that left them unable to mourn or move forward. Now, they had something tangible. Proof their children hadn’t run away, hadn’t disappeared by choice. But as reality sank in, so did the questions. How did a full-sized vehicle end up under a poured slab of concrete on a property developed in 1993, a year after the three were reported missing? Who had access to the site at the time, and why had no one noticed the buried car when the foundation was first poured?
Detectives began re-examining old files, timelines, and land records. The discovery site was less than two miles from the banquet hall where the teens were last seen. In 1992, that stretch of land had been a gravel yard used by local contractors. By mid-1993, it had become part of a small manufacturing complex. The foundation where the car was found matched an expansion rushed to completion that summer.
Within days, search warrants were issued for original property records and business permits. Investigators learned the slab had been poured by a construction company called Henders and Sons Contracting, one that no longer existed. The company’s owner, Paul Henders, had fled the state in the mid-’90s amid unrelated financial crimes. The connection was thin, but enough to reopen the investigation.
Forensic experts examined the car closely. There was no evidence of an external collision, no signs it had been struck or forced off the road. The undercarriage was intact. The wheels were turned slightly left, suggesting it had been driven into a confined space voluntarily or under control. Inside, the gear shift was in neutral, keys in the ignition. The scene looked less like an accident and more like a burial.