Mollie Tibbetts’ mother: Abductor can claim reward money if she’s set free

The search continues for for Mollie Tibbetts, a 20-year-old University of Iowa student.

She was last seen July 18 jogging around her hometown in Brooklyn, Iowa.

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Credit: Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation, Getty Images

Credit: Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation, Getty Images

Update Aug. 3, 2018 11:07 a.m. EDT: There are no new leads or updates as the search for Mollie Tibbetts goes into its third week, officials with the Poweshiek County Sheriff's Office said during a press conference Friday.

A $172,000 reward is being offered for information leading to her safe return.

Laura Calderwood, Tibbetts' mother, believes her daughter is still alive and said even the kidnapper could claim the reward money if she is returned home.

Dalton Jack, Tibbetts’ boyfriend, said he does not believe Tibbetts would have left on her own.

"Everybody has a Mollie, a person that has changed your life in such a huge way and that's in everybody's lives. Just imagine if somebody had taken your Mollie," Jack said in an interview Friday on "Good Morning America."

Jack is not considered a suspect in her disappearance, police said.

Reports of a sighting of Tibbetts at a Missouri gas station proved to be untrue.

Officials with the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation told the Des Moines Register that the reported sighting was not substantiated and has been ruled out by investigators.

Update Aug. 2, 2018 2:30 p.m. EDT: The reward for Tibbetts' safe return has reached $172,000, the woman's family said in a press conference Thursday.

Tibbetts' mother, Laura Calderwood, read a prepared statement, WHO reported.

"We believe that Mollie is still alive and if someone has abducted her we are pleading with you to release her," Calderwood said.

Police have interviewed a local pig farmer who reportedly pleaded guilty to stalking, Fox News reported.

Police have not identified any suspects in the case.

Investigators are holding a news conference at 9:30 a.m. Friday at the Poweshiek County Sheriff's Office to release more about the case.

Update Aug. 2, 2018 10 a.m. EDT: Investigators in Kearney, Missouri, have joined the search for Tibbetts.

Kearney is located just outside Kansas City and is about three hours from Tibbett’s hometown.

Investigators were following up on a tip that Tibbetts might have been seen at a truck stop in the area, according to KMBC.

Police searched the area, reviewed surveillance video and have interviewed potential witnesses, Kearney police told the Des Moines Register.

Tibbetts' family told KCCI they are offering a $30,000 reward for her safe return.

Original Story: Federal agents have joined the search for Mollie Tibbetts, 20-year-old University of Iowa student who has been missing from her hometown of Brooklyn for nearly a week.

Volunteer searches for Tibbetts were called off this week as federal officials took over, KCRG reports.

A spokesman for the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation said Tuesday that they’re “leaning more and more toward something happening against her will.”

According to KCRG, Tibbetts was staying at her boyfriend's house before she disappeared to watch his dogs while he worked at a construction job in Dubuque -- a town about 100 miles away.

Tibbetts' boyfriend, Dalton Jack, 20, told KCRG that investigators searched his house for the second time Monday afternoon.

"I still call her every day, too, hoping by some weird chance she will pick up," Jack told the Des Moines Register. "It just goes straight to voicemail. The phone is dead."

Neighbors told police they last saw Tibbetts go for a jog late Wednesday evening.

She was reported missing Thursday when she didn’t show up for work.

Over 1,500 people helped search for Tibbetts in the fields around her house, where she was staying.

Officials said the FBI and Iowa investigators are searching places Tibbetts is known to have frequented in the past.

They are also studying Tibbetts’ online usage and cellphone apps to help pinpoint where she might be.

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