For years, no one could say with certainty what happened to Larry Ely Murillo-Moncada, the young man who ran barefoot into a winter storm in Council Bluffs, Iowa. On the evening of November 28, 2009, the 25-year-old left his home in distress after returning from work at a local supermarket. According to his family, he appeared frightened and believed someone was following him. By the next day he was reported missing, and what followed was a long season of unanswered questions.
His family searched, police investigated, and flyers appeared around the city. Yet the trail never led anywhere clear. As months turned into years, the case slowly quieted in the public eye, though for those who loved him the uncertainty remained. The hardest part of such disappearances is not only the loss itself, but the long silence that follows it — a silence that leaves families suspended between hope and grief.
Nearly a decade later, in 2019, workers clearing out a long-vacant supermarket building made a discovery no one expected. Behind a large refrigeration unit, hidden in a narrow space between the cooler and the wall, they found badly decomposed human remains. The building had once been the No Frills supermarket where Larry had worked before his disappearance.
Because of the condition of the remains, identification was not immediate. But investigators soon suspected the truth, and DNA testing later confirmed that the remains were Larry Ely Murillo-Moncada.
The discovery helped reconstruct what likely happened. Investigators believe that after leaving home that night, Larry returned to the store and climbed onto the large cooler units — something employees sometimes did while restocking. At some point he appears to have slipped and fallen roughly twelve feet into the tight gap behind the equipment. Once inside that narrow space, escaping would have been extremely difficult.
Even if he had tried to call for help, the circumstances were unforgiving. The refrigeration units produced a constant mechanical noise, loud enough that any cries might easily have been lost beneath it. An autopsy later found no signs of violence or trauma, and authorities concluded that his death was a tragic accident.
What makes the story especially painful is that life continued around that hidden space for years. The store operated, customers came and went, and the truth remained concealed until the building itself was finally emptied.
Stuck Behind Fridge For Ten Years 😨 pic.twitter.com/AAcxVd9xCq — Zack D. Films (@zackdfilms1) August 11, 2024
For his family, the discovery ended a decade of uncertainty, though it also brought the weight of a difficult truth. Sometimes closure arrives quietly and painfully at the same time. What remains now is not only the strange circumstances of his death, but the reminder of how fragile a moment can be — how a single misstep, unseen by anyone else, can change a life and leave a long echo behind it.