The disappearance and death of 6-year-old Isabel Celis has hung over her familyand Tucsonfor 12 years. Now, a second jury is in deliberations on Christopher Clements’ retrial, after the initial trial ended in a mistrial in 2023.

The question of how someone stole her out the family home without alerting four family members and a collection of dogs has been a continuing mystery, and a chilling idea for families.

Christopher Clements is a registered sex offender who police questioned right after the kidnapping; however, he did not become a suspect until five years later when he offered to lead detectives to the young girl’s remains in return for getting a burglary charge dropped.

He said he simply knew the location but had nothing to do with the death.

RECENT CLEMENTS TRIAL UPDATES:

Tucson child murder trial goes to jury next week Defense for Christopher Clements works to cast doubt on Celis kidnapping Clements defense says cell tracking too unreliable for tie to Celis remains

That remote location put Clements under suspicion for two child murders. He ended up with a life sentence for kidnapping and killing 13-year-old Maribel Gonzales. Her remains were found near where Clements pointed out Isabels remains. A partial DNA match to Clements from Maribel and cellphone tracking that placed Clements phone in the area were part of the evidence in the older girls death.

Jurors in this latest trial were not allowed to hear of the conviction in the Maribel Gonzales case or Clements history as a sex offender. They were told of Clements collection photos of young girls provocative poses.

But there was no DNA to connect Clements to Isabels remains or the Celis house. And Clements lawyers questioned the validity of cell phone tracking that said the day after Isabel disappeared Clements phone was near where her body would be found five years later.