-
Haleigh's Father Fired For Abandoning Job
Ronald Cummings Not Worked Since Daughter Disappeared Feb. 10
Published On: Oct 13 2011 03:27:00 PM EDT Updated On: Apr 16 2009 01:57:10 PM EDTRonald Cummings was fired this week after his employer said he has not come to work since his 5-year-old daughter Haleigh disappeared from their Satsuma Home more than two months ago.
Haleigh disappeared in the early-morning hours of Feb. 10 just before Cummings came home from his job at PDM Bridge in Palatka.
PDM Bridge said they held Cummings' job open for weeks expecting to hear from him requesting a leave of absence or make some other arrangement, but they never did.
Cummings' lawyer, Greg Kimball, released a statement saying Cummings agreed to return to work on April 6.
"Ronald agreed to this date and was prepared to go into work when he was told on Friday, April 3, 2009, that the offer to return to work was being withdrawn for 'abandoning his job,'" Kimball said. "Cummings in the last two months has had to deal not only with the disappearance of his daughter Haleigh, but also false muckraking allegations by attorney Kim Picazio, representing Crystal Sheffield."
Kimball said they are consulting with a Daytona firm that specializes in labor and employment law over possible legal action over his termination.
Kimball also denies that Cummings ever threatened anyone connected with PDM Bridge.
Custody of Haleigh and her younger brother was awarded to Ronald Cummings because he had a steady job and could provide health insurance for the children -- something a Putnam County family court judge found Sheffield, their mother, could not.
Search For Haleigh Continues
Haleigh was last seen when Ronald Cummings' girlfriend, Misty Croslin, put her to bed inside Cummings' Satsuma home on Feb. 9. Despite hundreds of leads, Putnam County investigators have found no trace of the girl.
On the first day Haleigh was missing, more than 130 law enforcement personnel from several local and state agencies began searching for her.
Investigators proclaimed everyone -- family members, neighbors and associates -- is a suspect in the girl's disappearance.
"I will give up everything I own. All I want is my child, please," said Ronald Cummings said in the hours after an Amber Alert was issued for Haleigh.
Night after night, family members held vigils and prayed for Haleigh's safe return.
The ground search using hundreds of law enforcement personnel, specially trained dogs and volunteers on horseback continued for two weeks. Investigators went door to door and stopped cars along main road.
Over 1,400 calls -- tips and reported sightings -- poured in to a hot line, leading investigators as far away as Kentucky and Indiana.
The focus began to turn toward Haleigh's parents when a heated interview on national television put Ronald Cummings on the defensive.
After a month, police tape was removed from around Haleigh's home, which investigators said was no longer considered a crime scene. The home, however, remained vacant as Haleigh's father refused to move back home without his daughter.
Five weeks after Haleigh disappeared, Cummings and Croslin were engaged, then married.
The newlyweds were interviewed on the "Today Show," where Croslin was unable to explain her inconsistent accounts to police.
-
Advertisement
-
-
- Mitt Romney wins Maine caucuses
- Rapper 50 Cent visits impoverished areas in Africa
- 6 days after death, Powell brothers remembered as smart, loving boys
- On first anniversary of Mubarak's ouster, unease reigns in Egypt
- Report: Syrian general gunned down in Damascus
- Romney wins CPAC straw poll
- Sun newspaper staff among eight arrested in police probe
- Greece lawmakers debate bailout deal as crisis simmers
- Gingrich jokes about tracking immigrants via mail
-
Advertisement
Comments