An age-progression photo to show what Kyron Horman would look like now has been released in a poster from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
Dede Spicher, a friend of missing child Kyron Horman's stepmother, Terri Horman, invoked her Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination 142 times during recent testimony in a civil lawsuit, according to court documents.
The judge called Horman a "suspect" in an opinion filed as part of a civil case against Kyron's step-mother. It is, however, separate from any criminal investigation. Police and prosecutors have still not named any formal suspects in the two-year-old case.
In a motion filed July 25 to hold the case in abatement, Terri Horman said the civil suit seeks facts that could lead to a criminal prosecution. She wanted the judge to stay the case by two years.
Monday marked the two-year anniversary since 7-year-old Kyron Horman disappeared from Skyline Elementary. His father, Kaine, says he's not giving up hope that his son will be found and returned home.
Kyron was marked as absent from his first class and then did not get off the school bus at the end of the school day about eight hours later. Search efforts began a short time later and eventually involved numerous local law enforcement agencies and the FBI.
The mother of Kyron Horman, the young boy who vanished two years ago, filed a lawsuit against the boy’s stepmother on Friday claiming that she is “responsible for the disappearance of Kyron.”