Where Is Asha Degree? Questions Loom Decades After Girl’s Suspicious 2000 Disappearance

Questions remain more than 26 years after a 9-year-old North Carolina girl vanished under suspicious circumstances.

Asha Degree, who vanished from her Shelby home in 2000, was last seen being pulled into a 1970s green Lincoln Thunderbird or a similar vehicle. To elicit more leads, the FBI and the State Bureau of Investigation announced last May that they are offering more money for information on Degree — bringing the total reward to $100,000.

The reward was increased more than a month after officials searched empty buildings in Lincoln County. The buildings were on property which previously belonged to Roy Dedmon, 80, who is considered a suspect in Degree’s unsolved disappearance. A previous search, conducted in September 2024, spanned five properties across Cleveland, Lincoln, and Mecklenburg counties. According to WCNC, the investigators zeroed in on a home and an AMC Rambler possibly linked to Degree’s disappearance.

In 2001, Degree’s items were discovered in double-bagged garbage bags on the side of Highway 18 in Burke County. One item of interest was Degree’s undershirt, which contained a hair stem sample.

DNA from two items in Degree’s backpack was linked to AnnaLee Dedmon Ramirez and Russell Underhill. Dedmon Ramirez is Roy and Connie Dedmon’s daughter, who was 13 when Degree vanished. The couple’s other daughters are Lizzie Dedmon Foster and her younger sister, Sarah Dedmon. Dedmon Foster was 16 when Degree vanished.

Underhill lived at two properties owned by Roy Dedmon and Connie Dedmon around the time of Degree’s disappearance. Underhill died in 2004.

The September 2024 search occurred the same month a man allegedly told Cleveland County police that he attended a house party in the mid-2000s with Dedmon Foster and Sarah Dedmon. He claimed Dedmon Foster was intoxicated and crying when she said, “I killed Asha Degree” — leading her younger sister to grab her head and tell her to “shut the f**k up.”

Reports indicated that Connie Dedmon and their three daughters were also named as suspects.

The man reportedly passed a polygraph test regarding his statements to Cleveland County police. Dedmon Foster initially refused to speak to investigators, but she did take a polygraph test. According to the Shelby Star, the test determined she was being deceptive about concealing information in Degree’s case.

Sarah reportedly told police she would take a polygraph test at a later date. At some point, she allegedly told police that her father gave her a vehicle resembling the one Degree was last seen in.

Weeks earlier, police obtained a search warrant for Dedmon Foster iCloud account. Detectives said they had discovered messages in which she and Sarah Dedmon talked about a shirt.

“They think it’s our shirt. It’s not her shirt,” Sarah allegedly wrote. “Dad is probably going to be a huge suspect.”

In documents, police indicated that the text messages may be evidence of felony obstruction. They also stated that if the three Dedmon girls abducted and killed Degree, assistance from their parents was “necessary in the execution and/or concealment of the crime.”

Last July, Skip Foster, a spokesperson for the Dedmon family, denied allegations that they were involved in Degree’s suspected abduction. He said the AMC Rambler which Cleveland County investigators said is connected to the case was not registered or titled to the Dedmons until a month after Degree’s disappearance.

“There’s a courtroom — and then there’s the courtroom of public opinion,” Foster told WCNC. “And there’s only been one side of this story told.”

Degree, who would be 35 today, was described as standing 4 feet, 6 inches tall, weighing 65 pounds, and having brown hair and brown eyes. Anyone with information regarding this case is asked to call Cleveland County police at 704-484-4888. 

Asha Degree’s case is being covered as part of Crime Online’s “Finding the Lost: Black and Missing” series, which will feature a missing Black person every day in February. The full series can be read here.