For the first time since police and FBI investigators dug up their yard and searched their house, Amy Sue Pagnac's mother and sister spoke Saturday about the renewed interest in the missing girl's case and asked for the public's help.
It's been nearly 25 years since the Maple Grove 13-year-old vanished in 1989, but the cold case resurfaced two weeks ago when police issued a sealed search warrant of the home.
"They went through everything," said her mother, Susan Pagnac. "What's really important is law enforcement continues to work on this. I want them to follow through completely because that's the only way it's going to get my oldest child back."
'Trying to play catch-up'
She and daughter Susan Jr., 33, who is five years younger than Amy, met Saturday at Missing Children Minnesota, a Minneapolis nonprofit, to ask for the public's help in the case. While public scrutiny is difficult to handle, they said they hope increased attention will help them finally find Amy.
"They're trying to play catch-up 25 years later," Susan Pagnac Jr. said about the investigation.
Investigators sorted through every room in the house, pulling items from closets and cabinets, leaving items in boxes in their living room, they said. A shed in their fenced-in back yard was moved and a concrete patio was torn up. Paver stones by their front door were moved presumably to dig the area.
The family said they don't know what police were looking for, but they think the search was just to rule out one step in a process that should have been done decades ago.
"If it brings Amy home, who cares?" her mother said. "None of these things were done when Amy went missing."