New Hampshire

Jury selection begins in Harmony Montgomery murder trial

Adam Montgomery is charged with second-degree murder, falsifying physical evidence and abuse of a corpse in connection with his daughter's death

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Editor’s note: Some of the details included in the story below may be disturbing for readers.

A New Hampshire father charged with killing his 5-year-old daughter in December of 2019 by repeatedly striking her in the head with a closed fist is set to go on trial this week.

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Jury selection in the murder trial of 34-year-old Adam Montgomery began Tuesday morning, and the trial could get underway as early as Wednesday. He is charged in the death of his 5-year-old daughter, Harmony Montgomery. The trial is expected to last three weeks.

On Tuesday, a pool of 27 potential jurors was identified, but it will need to be cut down to 17, so the trial can begin.

Adam Montgomery has been awaiting trial for more than a year now. He is charged with second-degree murder, falsifying physical evidence and abuse of a corpse between December 2019 and March 2020, in connection with the death of his daughter Harmony. He also is charged with tampering with a witness by attempting to cause his wife Kayla Montgomery to provide false testimony. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Adam Montgomery was sentenced to serve 32-and-a-half to 75 years in a gun case as he awaits a murder trial in the disappearance of his daughter.

'I did not kill my daughter...'

A Hillsborough County jury found Montgomery guilty of six felony weapons charges in a separate case in June of 2023 and he was sentenced to 30-60 years in prison. He has since appealed that conviction. At his sentencing in that case, he denied killing his daughter and asked the judge not to consider the murder case when sentencing him.

“I did not kill my daughter Harmony and I look forward to my upcoming trial to refute those offensive claims,” he said, acknowledging that he was an addict and would use his time in prison to “change things about myself”

“I could have had a meaningful life but I blew that opportunity through drugs,” he continued. “I loved my daughter unconditionally and I did not kill her.”

Police first became aware that Harmony might be missing after receiving a call from her mother, Crystal Sorey, in November 2021. She had been trying to locate the girl for months and had last seen her during a phone video coversation around Easter of 2019.

The case drew national attention and unleashed public grief and anger as it highlighted cracks in the child welfare system.

Adam Montgomery arrested

Adam Montgomery was arrested in October of 2022, two months after authorities said the case had become a homicide investigation. They have said they believe Harmony was killed in Manchester in early December 2019. Her body has not been found. Investigators announced a new tip line late last year.

Police said they contacted Montgomery, who had custody of Harmony, and other family members by the end of December 2021. According to court documents, police told him that Harmony had not been seen in more than two years and there was concern over whether she was still alive.

Harmony’s father and stepmother, who have since pleaded not guilty to charges related to her well-being, told police that Adam brought Harmony to be with Sorey in Massachusetts around Thanksgiving 2019.

Newly unsealed documents paint a gruesome picture of the alleged murder of 5-year-old Harmony Montgomery at the hand of her father.

Gruesome new details emerge

According to a police affidavit released last summer, Adam Montgomery spent months moving and hiding Harmony's body before disposing of it.

According to the affidavit, Kayla Montgomery told police that Adam Montgomery killed Harmony on Dec. 7, 2019, while the family lived in their car. Kayla, who was Harmony’s stepmother, said he was driving to a fast food restaurant when he turned around and repeatedly punched Harmony in the face and head because he was angry that she was having bathroom accidents in the car.

“I think I really hurt her this time. I think I did something,” he said, according to Kayla Montgomery.

The couple noticed Harmony was dead hours later when the car broke down, at which time Montgomery put her body in a duffel bag, Kayla Montgomery said.

For the next three months, investigators allege, Adam Montgomery moved the body from container to container and place to place. According to his wife, the locations included the trunk of a friend’s car, a cooler in the hallway of his mother-in-law’s apartment building, the ceiling vent of a homeless shelter and an apartment freezer.

At one point, the remains were kept in a tote bag from a hospital maternity ward, and Kayla Montgomery said she placed it in between her own young children in a stroller and brought it to her husband’s workplace. An employee at the now-closed restaurant told police he saw it there but never questioned Montgomery “since he knew he had children.”

Investigators allege that Adam Montgomery disposed of the body in early March 2020 using a rented moving truck. Toll data shows the truck in question crossed the Tobin Bridge in Boston multiple times, but the affidavit has no other location information to indicate the location Harmony’s body. In April of 2023, police searched a marshy area in Revere, Massachusetts.

There was a new search in Revere, Massachusetts, in relation to the investigation into the murder of Harmony Montgomery.

Harmony was born in Massachusetts in 2014. Her parents were unmarried, were no longer together and had a history of substance use, according to a report this year by the Massachusetts Office of the Child Advocate. Adam Montgomery was in prison when she was born.

She was blind in one eye and had behavioral needs, and went into the custody of child protective services in Massachusetts when she was 2 months old. She was moved between the homes of her mother and her foster parents multiple times, the report said, causing “significant trauma and harm.”

Adam Montgomery was awarded custody of Harmony in February 2019.

Harmony’s case led to vigils and the creation of social media sites. Police offered cash rewards for information and dedicated a 24-hour tip line to the case.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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