A volunteer search team discovered the remains of Murry “Alexis” Foust on May 24, 2026, at the grounds of an abandoned steel plant in Wilder, Kentucky, bringing closure to a weekslong search for the Northern Kentucky University student who had been missing for nearly a month.
EquuSearch Midwest, an independent volunteer group that assists with missing-person cases across the region, coordinated the search party that located the body at 1 Steel Plant Road. The Campbell County Coroner’s Office confirmed the location as an old steel plant site, roughly three miles from where surveillance cameras last captured Foust on April 27 in Covington’s Latonia neighborhood.
The Covington Police Department announced the recovery on Sunday and said no indication of foul play has been found so far, though the official cause and manner of death remain pending with the coroner’s office.
A Disappearance That Puzzled Friends
Foust, a fine arts major in the university’s College of Arts and Sciences, was scheduled to graduate earlier this month. The senior had planned to attend an afternoon class at NKU on April 27 but never arrived, friends said.
The circumstances surrounding the disappearance unsettled those closest to Foust from the start. The student’s phone was left behind at home, and a backpack later turned up on the Northern Kentucky University campus, according to accounts from friends. The last verified sighting came from surveillance footage showing Foust walking through Latonia, a quiet neighborhood about nine miles south of Cincinnati.
Covington police issued a public alert about the disappearance on April 30, urging anyone with information to come forward. In the weeks that followed, the search expanded considerably. Officers deployed water rescue and search teams along nearby waterways and brought in drone operators to scan terrain that ground searchers could not easily reach.
Body Found at Old Steel Plant Site
It was not law enforcement, however, that ultimately located Foust. The discovery, made by the independently organized search party, closes a painful chapter for a campus community that had been bracing for word for nearly four weeks.
Police thanked EquuSearch Midwest and the other local law enforcement agencies that contributed personnel and resources to the weekslong search effort. The department also indicated that no additional information about the case will be released until the coroner’s office completes its examination.
NKU Community Reels From Loss
At Northern Kentucky University, the announcement landed hard. Foust had been weeks away from collecting a diploma, a milestone classmates and faculty in the College of Arts and Sciences had anticipated alongside the student. The school responded with a public expression of grief and a reminder that mental health resources remain available to anyone struggling.
The university directed students, faculty, and staff to NKU Counseling Services, which operates around the clock and can be reached at (859) 572-5650. Administrators also expressed gratitude to the Covington Police Department and the volunteers who searched for Foust over the past month.
Questions Remain as Investigation Continues
For now, central questions linger. How Foust traveled the roughly three miles from Latonia to the Wilder property — and what happened in the hours after the student left home without a phone — remains unanswered. Investigators have repeatedly emphasized that nothing in the evidence collected so far suggests foul play, but they have also been careful to note that the determination of cause and manner of death rests with the coroner.
Until the coroner’s office issues its findings, the police department has said it will withhold further details. The case file remains open, and the timeline assembled by detectives — anchored by the surveillance footage from April 27, the backpack recovered on campus, and the phone left at home — is likely to be revisited once forensic results arrive.
What is clear is that the search that captivated friends, neighbors, and strangers across northern Kentucky has ended, even as the answers the Foust family has waited weeks to hear are still days or weeks away.







