Ross County Sheriff George Lavender said he is not ruling any possibilities out after the body of Tiffany Sayre was found this weekend.

Even the fact that a serial killer could be behind the deaths of four women in the area.

“When you do you miss something, and we don’t want to miss anything,” he said. “We need answers on who brought them out here. Someone brought them and put them here.”

Lavender said teams from multiple agencies were searching on land and by air for any other bodies and evidence after Sayre, 26, was found in rural Highland County. She had been missing since May 8.

Authorities haven’t said how she died; her body was found just a few miles from where Tameka Lynch’s body was found last year.

“This is such a remote area,” said nearby resident Norris Carpenter. “Some deranged person, if they wanted to get rid of a body they couldn’t find anywhere more remote than this.”

That brings to four the number of women who have been found dead from the Chillicothe area since May of last year. Two other women remain missing.

Investigators say they don’t know if the cases are connected. One death was a homicide, another was ruled a suicide and the other was an overdose authorities called suspicious.

“We’ve got too many women missing in our community,” Lavender said. “And it’s time to get some answers.”

Family members say they wish it would have ended differently.

“I thought if we bring her home, thought if we bring her home, she could’ve made better choices here. She loves her little girls,” Shelly Hehr, Tiffany’s aunt said.

Tiffany’s father Thomas Kuhn attended the press conference today.

“She was daddy’s girl,” Kuhn said. “If I could get my hands on who did this, it would end the same way probably.”

Tiffany was grandchild number one for Rosemary Elder.

“I’m numb,” Elder said. “(They) dropped her off on the side of the road. Whoever did this is dirt, scum.”