Crime and Justice
Associated Press

US man charged with murder after his sons went missing 15 years ago

8:44am
This photo provided by Michigan Department of Corrections shows John Skelton.

A Michigan man long blamed for the disappearance of his three sons at Thanksgiving in 2010 has been charged with their deaths, court records show.

John Skelton is facing three counts of murder and tampering with evidence in the deaths of 9-year-old Andrew, 7-year-old Alexander and 5-year-old Tanner Skelton, according to Lenawee County District Court records. They have never been found.

The charges, filed Wednesday, came just days before Skelton, 53, was due to be released from prison after a 15-year sentence for failing to return the boys to their mother, the only conviction in the saga so far.

A message seeking comment from the prosecutor's office was not immediately returned.

This plaque honors the missing Skelton brothers in the municipal park on the banks of Bean Creek in Morenci

The brothers disappeared while with their father at Thanksgiving in Morenci, a small town near the Ohio border, 160 kilometres southwest of Detroit.

Skelton and his wife, Tanya Zuvers, were having problems and living apart in Morenci.

The boys were supposed to return to Zuvers the next day. Instead, they were gone.

The brothers have not been found, despite countless searches of woods and water in Michigan and Ohio and tips from across the country.

Tanya Zuvers, the mother of three missing boys, leaves a courtroom on March 3, 2025

Police said Skelton fed them a long string of lies about the boys’ whereabouts, sending investigators to an old schoolhouse in Kunkle, Ohio, and a dumpster in Holiday City, Ohio. Police said claims that the boys were handed to other people for their safety also turned out to be false.

A lead investigator, Michigan State Police Detective Lt Jeremy Brewer, said in March that he has “no doubt whatsoever” that Skelton killed the brothers. He was testifying at a hearing to declare the boys legally dead.

Skelton declined to participate in the court hearing.

“Anything I say isn’t going to make a difference,” he said on March 3 by video conference from prison.

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