Im not a know it all, but I did realize w/cellphones some 911 can't find you, so I wrote down and have in all the phones the business numbers to get better attention.. they know exactly where you are in their town . It's a good and sometimes better alternative way for help .
Stay strong friend. Please tell someone what you're going through. You need people to help you beat it. Even if you don't think so. Much respect and strength to you .
Be cool if Mike would of actually commented on this one 😔 U know he read this. . .he's not an alcoholic I don't think but I LIKE TO SEE REAL, DOWN TO EARTH ETC STILL A FAN tho 😅
The policeman in Chelsea’s case approached her like a legend. The type whose demeanour alone could save lives. He truly serves to help the people, Thankyou for you service, sir
I'm highly suspicious of the officer. I am curious to know if his whereabouts after he spoke to her that night have been looked into. The things stolen from her included her Debit card but no attempt to use it is known because it would immediately flag and ATM info would be gained. The stolen items were just taken to make it look like something else.
My husband one time went out with friends, got drunk and tried walking back home which is only 5 mins walk from the bar he went to. Unfortunately he was so drunk that he went past our apartment building and got lost. I woke up at 4 am and panicked when i realized he didnt get home. Thankfully we share locations with each other and i saw he is at a random corner of an intersection few mins away from our place. I drove over following the location and thankfully found him passed out on the side walk. The first story really scares me and makes me think if i hadnt gotten up to check on him, what might have happened. 😢
You know it blows my mind, I’ve subscribed to you when you had maybe a few thousand subscribers and now seeing you at 2 million blows my mind. Your success is well deserved. Keep up the good work!
@@HardWhereHero I don’t agree that it’s necessarily foul play, as it could be an accident or a mental health crisis. My heart breaks for her family & loved-ones. No knowing must be an awful kind of torture to endure. 😔
@HardWhereHero I'm from NM & it sounds like she succumbed to the elements in the desert. It's both extremely hot during the day & extremely cold at night, u wldnt survive for long especially unprepared
@@SuziMonkey2The whole episode, with the bizarre late night crying sessions in the middle of nowhere, suddenly so emotional @ soldiers(?), her pet bearded dragon, getting profoundly sidetracked, etc, etc. - points toward mental health crisis.
Not only do we love the longer videos for the stories, but, We are grateful to have more time with just you Mike.. just hanging out listening to you. Thank you.
@@taylorfausett177 Mike does create a very "hang out" time energy to his videos so the parasocial feels are strong. We do just feel like we're hanging out with him because of that.
@@thehorrorwasforlovedefinitely! It's pretty rare to find a creator quite like Mike. It's unique and i love it. I also enjoy the podcast, the banter etc with Keith! Proper chill guys with great sense of humour
So terrible I heard one mother with a missing child say she could kill her child herself because she imagines the child is still alive and is being tortured.
I’m so lucky that I’ve never gone missing. Back in the day I was heavily into drugs and alcohol. I used to pop Xanax, and drink until I blacked out. My dad had to come up to where I lived. Which was a 3 hour drive because I had called my parents in the middle of the night, blacked out, lost in some woods by where I lived. Now… When I woke up that morning, I didn’t remember any of that. And I woke up in my bed. But my clothes were all torn and full of mud like I was in a forest. My dad had drove up that morning and was worried sick , I told him I was OK, and he told me that I needed to clean up. He stayed with me that week to make sure I was OK. I have such great parents… Every day, I regret the crap that I put them through…
@@user-kw7mr6xt9n lmao I wish. It was a fked up night. I remember taking Xanax all that day, and then I went to my buddies house where they were having a get together. I started drinking whiskey. And I was chillin…. Until boom. Black out. All I remember from the rest of that night are like small flashes of consciousness, I semi remember parts of when I was in the woods. I remember trying to untangle myself out of bushes, I remember screaming about something, I remember trying to run away. I don’t remember calling my parents, but I did see. I called them like 20 times throughout the night. I was asleep when my dad came, he was banging on the door, and I woke up, startled, and my clothes were all torn up, and I was filled with mud, and a little bit of blood on my shoulder. When I answered, he gave me a hug despite how dirty I was, he looked at me, and he told me “Son, you’re gonna end up dead. Please, just take a break for me” and then he stayed with me that week. That was back when I was like 18 or 19. I’m 36 now. Unfortunately I didn’t get cleaned up at that time. It would take another eight years of insanity for me to finally get clean from opiates, benzos, alcohol, and everything else under the sun. But yeah, I’m lucky I didn’t fall into a sinkhole, or the lake or something. And then I would have gone missing. I don’t even want to think about that. The pain it would’ve caused my parents.
My parents couldn’t care less about me when I was a child, teen and young adult, ect, which made me be too independent (I was because even though I was a perfect daughter, perfect student and I got lots of awards to make my parents proud of me and tell me they love me, which they never did, instead, they were hyper critical of me and demanded that I quit school to get a job instead of graduating so I could pay them rent (I was only 14 years old, but they only cared about money, never me or my future) I finally realized they never would care about me let alone love me so I moved away, which was the best decision, but my mother followed me at my apartment when I was only 17 years old, working and attending college and paying all of my own bills and expenses) and my mother stayed with me rent free. She never paid a penny and stole from me all my life, but what can I do? She’s my mother and the Bible clearly tells us to respect our mother and father. 💜🙏
I'm a couple years older than Anthonette Cayedito, and at the time she disappeared, we didn't have 911 in the area where I lived (in the US south). The sheriff's office and the fire department had regular phone numbers, and you'd get a sticker with those numbers on it to stick on your rotary dial phone. The sticker would go right underneath where the center of the receiver would sit, so you saw the numbers as soon as you lifted it. It was a bright fluorescent color so you couldn't miss it. Everyone had that same style of phone, and everyone had the same sticker on it. Every so often, the county would send you a new sticker in case the old one had gotten worn and you couldn't read it anymore.
You are absolutely right! In fact, before 1972, if you needed an ambulance in the rural South, you phoned your local funeral home and a hearse gave you a ride to hospital! My father actually designed and implemented the first EMT program with new ambulances in rural Tennessee areas. Dad was affiliated with Vanderbilt Medical School. He designed and outfitted the very first Peter Pan Van to take newborns to Vanderbilt NICU. Ironically, the very first newborn passenger to be transported was MY baby son, named after my father.
Even after we got the push button phones there was a card on them to write in police/fire/etc. If someone took their phone from that local area and moved to ABQ it's possible she just dialed the police number on the phone. People need to remember that 911 was only available to half the population at this time.
911 was in the south before it was in every other part of the country. The first 911 call was in Alabama in 1968. Georgia implemented 911 in 1979. Just because you didn't know you could call 911 doesn't mean it wasn't the emergency number, because it was. Florida made 911 statewide in 1977. The south had 911, you just had no clue it was so
I once walked home from a friends house which was a mere 15 mins from my house. I was very drunk and it was winter. It took me 3 1/2 hours to find my way home. I know this because my ex wife was really worried. I was so lost I almost gave up and fell asleep in the snow. Very dangerous.
Being from Massachusetts almost happened to me.I was found by my father passed out on the front Porch And it started snowing. I was already covered and snow
🌸 I've been watching your TH-cam channel for quite some time now couple of years..... my children are young adults and grown, I am a widow, and I have to admit that every time at the end of your videos that you say" cuz I love you", it makes me cry. in a good way and so I want to tell you that you have affected at least one person out here ... in a positive way. thank you for what you do.🤍
I have a close friend that is missing out of Atlanta Georgia. His name is Craig Shelton and he went missing on November 8, 2023. He was last seen getting his paycheck from work that day and didn’t show up for his shift later in the evening and was never seen or heard from again. He is also a world champion Brazilian Jiu Jitsu blackbelt on one of the top teams in the Atlanta area. 😢
Chelsea's last days feel like one of those bad dreams you're grateful to wake up from. Travelling to a wedding, but never getting nowhere near, with a totally impossible schedule. The weird cop interaction. Trying to use Euros in remote small-town Arizona- thinking they are somehow 'less traceable' than dollars(?). It's just deranged behaviour for a 32YO; she seems to have completely & utterly lost it mentally.
And on top of that, refusing to take a flight to the wedding, which would have been the most common choice, because of a BEARDED DRAGON that could very well have stayed with her parents for two or three days?! 😳
yea i hate leaving my cat. But it would be better to just go away for 3 days than drive with my cat for 2 weeks. Maybe she knew she might not come back to her life for a while@@a.mie.533
@@thecatatemyhomeworkCould have memorised it. Back in the 80’s we had to remember all of our friends and family members numbers as well as the important phone numbers that were listed next to the phone.
Makes sense, but she was quite abit away from home... it could have been a spoof to confuse the investigation... and it sounded like a woman that pulled her away from the phone... very bizarre and so sad! @@jadeybaby007
@@lainiwakura1776 They did but in rural and regional areas it was still common practice to call the local police station, hospital or fire department for an emergency in the 80’s. If you have a quick scan through the comments you’ll come across confirmations of this from people who lived in similar areas at that time. 🙂
The lack of curiosity from police in these stories never ceases to amaze me. A car found backed into a house like that but no attempt to find the owner of the car. If they had then they would have learned that she didn’t get home from work and kicked off the investigation several days earlier.
@@kimberlyhood4095 Their job is to ‘investigate’, not make lazy assumptions. Unfortunately most of them just want to issue tickets for traffic violations/ minor infringements and have zero interest in what’s going on in their community. Honourable exceptions of course.
@@robsengahay5614 this is true, but one must also consider the meager resources most of those rural police/sheriff departments have. If they investigate every single remotely suspicious thing, they'll waste time and resources before an actual case comes around, which is probably once in a blue moon. They're forced to think with "occam's razor" and a stupid drunk is a lot more likely than a girl vanishing into thin air. Admittedly, I will never understand why so many cops are too lazy to take photos of scenes like that, or worse mock the rookie who takes his job (perhaps a bit too) seriously and makes them all look lazy in comparison, somehow forgetting that being a cop should never be a cushy job and always carries enormous responsibility, but... well let me sum it up this way: if the pay and the funding for the police is not made to fit the importance of their job, then they will inevitably perform their duties to the tune of their paychecks and/or the resources at hand. Going above and beyond and sacrificing themselves for the greater good is not only a rare thing to see, it is often actively punished and mocked in a capitalist society. If you do hard work for shit pay, you're a sucker. If you do more than what's necessary when there's no real opportunity for "upward mobility" or a significantly higher salary, you're a sucker. And if you follow the letter of the law "when everybody else is taking shortcuts" you're a sucker and a loser. That's why these morons think Trump is a badass for dodging tax and defaulting on payments for people who have worked for him. Take what you can, screw everybody else, that's America, and has been for a very, very long time.
How’s he doing his job when he lets a woman who admitted using drugs (he could smell it) go without any field sobriety tests to make sure she WAS ok to drive. She’s also clearly distressed and he just says yeah, I’m the same way…?!?! No. Something VERY strange about that whole interaction. He didn’t even ask for her license/registration and insurance 😮 I’d take a deep dive in his direction.
@@LoremLipsumz You are telling lies. He did ask for her license. Rewatch the video and pay very close attention this time. Anything to spread cop hate, right?
I get the feeling that the missing girl that was taking photos was depressed and decided to end her life. Maybe she was at the cemetery thinking about the end of herself but found being buried to be too sad of a destination and decided not being found would be better. The last photo, flowers, open doors, they're pretty representative images.
Yeah and where was her dragon? Did she leave the doors open so it could get out and go be free? Only thing I can think of why all the doors would be open like that
Yeah, I agree. She told the officer you was interested in the ‘lost and forgotten’ people’s of this county. Crying and hanging at a grave yard. I think she had a plan to end her life. And I agree. She probably left the doors open for the bearded dragon. And I bet she went out there to drop him off in a place that she thought he could survive without her
Agree as well. Sounded like it was more a final journey planned. Took her lizard to a desert to release him. Visited graveyard. Crying at side of road. The last photo. Seems like her way of leaving a goodbye message. Flat tires may have altered her plans some and so where she went from there to finish what she started who knows but perhaps she didn't want to be found.
this reminds me of a case where a son went missing abandoned car on the road near his home door open engine idling. POLICE searched area and nothing was found. MONTHS passed and a psychic detective showed up contacted the family got permission to get a copy of the police file and at no charge look for the young man. 2 days later a body was located a mile from where the car was left. The police were skeptical the area had been thoroughly covered twice. it was the missing son who died by his own hand. The parents were in denial MY SON HAD A PERFECT LIFE ...A nice home a beautiful wife a new baby wonderful career and he disappeared on his commute home from work. THEY CONCLUDED he saw his life as not worth living.
@@tasselskeep3385Smoking is not illegal, friend. There are dispensaries on every street corner in most States. We _need_ more cops like him to stop giving good people criminal records over marijuana. After all, it’s a herbal plant legalized to treat a variety of conditions.
@@tasselskeep3385To piggy back off your statement, I do *not* condone smoking and driving. Anything that impairs a person’s judgment is dangerous. The smoking itself could’ve very well triggered paranoia or psychosis causing her to panic and/or flee. I hope Chelsea did not stumble upon a bad person w/evil intentions.
Seems a bit odd that Chelsea would decide to drive for a week or more to get to a friend's wedding. She would be exhausted and then have to make the same return journey. Also why take Euro's on the journey? And in three days she only traveled 6 hours. I think she was not in a good place mentally. Especially that crying at the cemetery and talking about lost and forgotten people
I just received a picture from my cat sitter. When she walked up to my house two little faces were in the window looking out sadly. So good at laying a guilt trip!
Wow I'm amazed it's the first time I've seen an officer interact with someone who has smoked some weed and is in the drivers seat of the car that hasn't been arrested on trumped up charges of impaired driving etc kudos to that officer for having integrity wish there were more like him...
You are so good at telling stories, Mike. There is no other storyteller on TH-cam that captivates me more than you. It’s too bad TH-camrs don’t qualify for an Emmy or even a Golden Globe. Because you deserve BOTH! Don’t ever stop, you are a blast to listen to.
"TH-cam Creator Awards, commonly known as TH-cam Play Buttons or TH-cam Plaques, are a series of awards from the American video platform TH-cam that aim to recognize its most popular channels. They are based on a channel's subscriber count but are offered at the sole discretion of TH-cam." - Wikipedia and more....
It's been awhile (I think) since I've heard you say, "Bits and bobs." It never ceases to make me smile. That and "Manson lamps." We all love 'ya, Mike! Thanks for being you and doing what you do!!
I when to high school in Williams. All the police are like that. I used to deal with insomnia as a teen linked to my cptsd from my sociopath ex police officer stepfather so I would walk run the loop from 3 or 4 to 6 am. Williams is right off of I-40 so the police would spend their night shift checking on me over and over. Camping all over is common and locals will always tell you the best spots. In general I don’t trust the police after spending my childhood in a different Arizona town with the sociopath but I do trust the William police to keep me safe.
He could have been awesome, but he could also be a suspect, if he was the last to see her. Police commit crimes too. There are many stories of police and security guards ending up being the bad guy, instead of the good guy. Just saying keep an open mind. In life, there can be many scenarios.
I remember when u would wear a rotation of like 5 shirts on the regular. Thought it would always be your thang. Almost 4 yrs ago my Mom & I were visiting my Papa in GA, it was bedtime in twin beds. Of course I was lulling myself to sleep w/ YT, when your voice came on. Mom who doesn’t really watch YT, asked “who is that?” I told her Mike, I follow him. Then she says she understands why:) Memories
I can’t imagine letting my 17 year old daughter move away to live on her own no matter how mature and independent she was. You just don’t have enough life experience yet. 😢
When they leave at 18 anyway (most ppl) it’s not bad to get a little head start. I left home at 17 and there was definitely some trial and error and some learning experiences but I’m also a 6’3 guy. A little different world for solo female
@baalgaang1925 why is height important here??? Could be six foot seven and skinny as a rail and be an easy target. Always curious why height is misconstrued as strength or fighting ability. I'm five foot nine but a 235lb weight lifter... a six foot man at 160lbs without trainings is not going to do well.
I agree, and yet my parents let me move out at 17 to live with a boyfriend for the summer and then become a live in domestic. I thank God that nothing horrible happened to me; you are so correct in that a 17 year old doesn't have a clue about life.
Hi there. I met Tyler Davis' sister (I think it was his sister) at Crime Con III. She was sitting on the floor outside the banquet rooms handing out fliers. Begging anyone to listen and help. So sad. Makes you wonder how someone just disappears.
I’m especially devastated about the last story. I can’t imagine what horrors that sweet girl endured. I think if she was still alive she would have attempted to get in touch with someone. She was quite young and there could be someone connected to the older couple still holding her. Whether she was murdered or she’s still held captive, my heart hurts for that child. Thank you for this video as continues to keep all of these disappearances current. I hope someone comes forward with any information about any of the cases ❤
For Antoinette’s case and the 911 call issue, it seems obvious to me that she was kidnapped by someone local, who kept her in a basement and lied to her that she had been transported to Albuquerque. If she was never allowed out, she wouldn’t have seen a newspaper or any landmarks, and if she had been knocked unconscious at any point, there’s no way for her to know that she didn’t wake up in Albuquerque.
That is very possible, but also in 1986 there were a lot of issues with 911 and long distance carriers. If you still had a previous address registered with your long distance carrier, your 911 calls might be sent to that area's operator. My family had this issue in 1987, when my brother egged a passing car and the driver attacked him. We called 911 and were connected to an operator in the city we lived in a few months before.
Another possibility is how phone books were just dropped off at your house whether you wanted them or not back before cell phones. Even if she was taken to another city, I think it would be possible for her to have found the phone number within a year's time and either memorized it or torn a page out. There are some stories of truly ingenious thinking done by kidnapped kids who you wouldn't necessarily believe would have that amount of wherewithal unless you knew them better. Your option is probably more likely (or the second comment), but i think this is quite plausible, too. When I was that age I knew you use the phone book if I needed to find an important number, and which ones I should look for. Mostly I used them to make forts for star wars figures, though lol
911 didn't even exist in a lot of places back then and wasnt reliable anyway. We didnt get 911 in my area until well into the 90s. We all knew our local police numbers in the 80s. We had to. So it makes perfect sense for her to call the Gallup police and not Albuquerque anyway.
@@MariaAbrams That tracks as well, because they answered the phone "Gallup Police Department", not "911" or "Emergency Services". I live in Washington State and we didn't get 911 until 1983, even though it had been around since the 60s. I think a lot of areas just didn't have the resources yet. Most phones had a little piece of paper under plastic that listed emergency numbers. If it hadn't been updated since Gallup, it would still have that information.
I can’t imagine what these families go through when their loved ones go missing. It’s hard enough to have a family member pass away, especially young, but to not know what happened and not have closure would be an absolute nightmare.
I think Chelseas picture with the flowers and the open car doors is her having lost her beardy. She probably searched the car high and low, then gathered flowers as sort of a roadside grave.
Man I wish all cops were like the one that found Chelsea. Didn’t hound her for the weed because she didn’t seem impaired, didn’t harass her for not having a place to stay and even offered a safe place
@@serendipitystarlighttrue, but like the above comment says, she wasn't missing at the time... And she wasn't impaired, he saw no reason to arrest her, he clearly didn't want to make things worse for her potentially, as she was obviously going through something and sounded fed up. He was amazing with her. U just can't always tell with these types of situations. Cos if he did arrest her and kicked up a fuss, who knows what may have happened, could've provoked her even more... Its just nice to see a cop being so understanding and helpful and caring. You just can't look at it like if only he'd done this or that, cos fact is he didn't, and what matters about the situation and the hard facts of it is how kind he was, it says a lot about him as a person and as a cop, u can't look at what may have been
@@serendipitystarlightbut that wasn’t the last time she was seen, so even if had arrested her , once released what would have happened because something with her was off kilter, sadly.
It is like I tell everyone - all it takes is one brief moment for something to go wrong, or get kidnapped. Being a former Law Enforcement officer I have seen it and it is so sad when missing people are not found, or are found too late. You have to be careful in this world now that it has become so much more dangerous with criminals who have nothing to lose. I pray these people are found and still alive, though doubtful they are still alive, but I never give up hope until I reach the end of everything from searching, to anything. Never give up on hope people, no matter how bleak it may seem.
As a mom, I can’t imagine anything worse than having a child missing. To never know if they’re alive or not and what they might be enduring/suffering for years on end would be a living hell for me! My heart goes out to all the families of these victims; I hope & pray you finally get the answers you so desperately want & need!💞
Drunk people get lost easily. Maybe he wanted to walk some more and got lost. Drunk people should not be left alone, if there are friends near, but I mean, he was an adult. I would like to know how close to the hotel he was when they split up. Anyway, smoking kills and alcohol is bad for you.
I've live in this town and the only thing I can think of is someone offered to take him back since he was lost then robbed him and ended up killing him. I live around there and it is not a place someone would get lost. It is, however very close to less savory areas. Yes, there is a decent sized state park and a freeway right next to Easton, but the airport is also very close and a high crime area less than 5 miles from that industrial park his GPS reflected as being at.
@@MissaPality That's the only thing you can think of? Not everything is a crime. There aren't monsters under every bed. A lot of people go missing without any crime taking place. This guy was under the influence, in unfamiliar surroundings, and at night. The most LIKELY scenario is not that a boogeyman harmed him, it's that he got lost, had an accident of some kind, and is yet to be found. It's sad, I hope he is found, but you're inventing an entire narrative to make it more sinister than there is any reason to believe it would be. I think you need to cut down on true crime videos, they're affecting your perceptions of the world.
Brianna story. Something is off about the parents saying there were "no stressors at home that made her move out" at what, 16, MAYBE 17? 99 percent of the time Ive heard of kids leaving that young, its NOT because they are "just independent ". Its physical /emotional/sexual/financial abuse, its alcoholic/addict parents, its multiple numbers of generally negative things, but almost NEVER cause they WANTED to go get a job,pay bills and all the other nasty crap that adults have to do. Its generally because it was their last/only option
I also feel like they kind of glossed over the whole part where she was flirting with another woman's bf at a party where her *OWN BF* was as well. Now, I listen to this in the background while I do other things, so maybe I missed something, but maybe her bf had some type of feelings about it seeing as how "no intentions of going further" doesn't mean much to someone who is jealous.
I lived in Columbus at one point, and the "woods" or "forest" as it were, near Easton, are easily navigated. I'm talking no more than a 5 ish minute walk straight through one side to the other. It's more of a thick tree line if anything. Barely big enough for the local homeless to have a place to set tents, which they often do, but it's so small that they're often caught and forced to relocate. This is super bizarre, even for someone who's not from Columbus.
That story sounds like so many from Missing 411: A Sobering Coincidence. Also these young men disappearing from solo car wrecks that just wander off into nowhere, never to be seen again. Super unsettling, freaks me right out.
i lived in Columbus at the time and remember this case...that area is isnt exactly a bed of crime...dude just poofed out of air...even cameras in the area cant find him on theit cctv
@jacobeilerman303 same!!!! It's still a pretty chill area, and it's changed so much since then. Those "woods" aren't even there anymore, I don't think. I dont remember seeing them last time I was in Columbus, but I also wasn't looking. Went to Adobe Gillas with my sister and nephew.
@robinmcinarnay7827 yoooo!!!! Right?! Makes me wonder about organ harvesters and such... My heart goes out to the families... I cant begin to imagine what that would feel like to lose someone without a trace.
Yeah, I worked at Easton in 2019. I honestly don’t understand how someone can go mysteriously missing from Easton Town Center. Like into thin air. I am a little confused why he was in one of the office/possible call center parking lots though. Like that’s a weird area to wind up in even by accident. But weirdly this is the first I’ve heard of the case.
She may have been prodromal for schizophrenia for a while. She was having bad reactions to the marijuana, it happens, as it happens to me. Some people simply shd not smoke.
@@HumanimalChannelI'm allergic to it. So are my children. It's hell now that it's legal. Our neighbors on both sides smoke so much we can't go outside unless they are gone. We break out in hives just from them.
@@HumanimalChannel My nephew has a personality disorder and heavily relies on Mary Jane and we watched while he worked up to a psychotic break that did seem to imitate schizophrenia. We are in another country, so we're helpless. But he ended up going from "hearing from God" that he (nephew) was going to save the world, to starkers in the middle of the road, screaming that he was God it's just that everyone didn't know it yet. He was locked up in a facility for 3 months and, I think, has had to have constant psych sessions since. I'm not sure if he still goes, but he's supposed to.
Mile Higher podcast does a REALLY amazing episode on her. They regularly do more of deep dives, which is where I head after a video from Mike if I'm interested enough to find more info. They also film their episodes and show pictures, clips, info if you're more of a visual listener too!
She was incredibly mentally ill and confused. There's so much evidence that she was not well mentally. She brought that poor bearded dragon with her, which she would've never done in a healthy state of mind.
Your content is very interesting. It’s good that you put the names & photos out there so they won’t be forgotten. Hopefully it may help at least some of them to be found. I pray the loved ones will find answers-and peace. Keep up the good work!
Chelsea is the same age as my only daughter. I just can’t stop crying 😢 and to think that the Officer was so nice to her, he was her salvation, but, Chelsea did not know that.
The thought of my son disappearing and never knowing what happened is unbearable. He’s an adult now but that wouldn’t matter. The phone call from “Antionette” is horrifying, rather it’s her or not. My sympathy to loved ones of those missing. Great work Mike , I love ya too !
I found your videos from coffeehouse crimes! I watched so much my husband woke up one night and said 'can you turn mikes voice down a bit?" 😅 Anyway you're very good at storytelling, happy im (semi) early for the first time! 😁👍
I’ve dealt with a lot of death in my life but never someone missing. Can’t imagine how each party feels. The waiting and waiting… or the wandering one who may have met their demise
Nomad here. I regularly boondock/wildcamp in our National Forests. However, I don’t do it without “protection” because you don’t know what or whom you may run into. I don’t know what the young lady’s intentions were going into the forest, but if you are going just to camp, do what you have to do to stay safe, y’all. I hope she’s found soon.☮️
I remember Anthonette's case so clearly, she was just a little older than me, and it was everywhere. I was the oldest sibling who had too much responsibility....it hit home. What I can tell you is that back in the 80s, we were all taught our local police station number from a young age--in rural areas, 911 was not as reliably available as it is now. I have this incredibly clear memory of sitting on the bench seat of my mom's pickup (no seat belt--the guvmint won't tell her how to raise her kids 🙄) and seeing a poster explaining that 911 was coming to our area, and asking my mom what it meant. Based on where we were living, it would have been 1-2yrs after Anthonette went missing--and while we were very very rural, this was still in the California Central Valley. It was not an instant thing across the U.S. by any means (as many fabulous commenters have pointed out; I am so grateful for the backup I made an edit!) When you lived in the middle of Bumfuq, No.Where places like I did, even once we did have 911, that routed to a dispatch more than 45min from our house. Depending on the time of day, I'd be way better off calling Jimmy's Bar in town where all the volunteer firefighters hung out all the time. I also remember when I first started babysitting, the parents would always leave the number of the local police for me....and by that point it was the 90s. Living far away from cities with dispatch centers, knowing all the numbers (police, fire, hospital & poison control were the big ones) was pretty normal.
EXACTLY!, I remember in the 80's knowing the local police # too. Many ppl don't know the 911 system was only implemented in 1968 as a result of the Kitty Genovese murder of 64'. Mostly big cities first but it took awhile to reach smaller communities.
That's what I was thinking. 911 didn't come to my county until the late 90s. In my hometown, houses didn't even have numbers unless they had a mailbox. If you had a PO box, you didn't have one. They had to take care of that problem before implementing the 911 system. Also before cell phones, we memorized numbers like it was nothing. We were walking phone books.
The Chelsea case regarding that creepy photo of her holding flowers with all the car doors open, many speculate that her beloved pet dragon had passed away & that's why she took this ominous last photo.
The first time I heard her story, I found it odd to be driving around with a bearded dragon and taking it inside a hotel. They need to have a certain number of hours per day at a high temperature or they cannot digest their food. You can't just be carrying them around with you like a dog, they won't survive.
I feel like it could have been a breaking point, plus possible mental health issues. Wandering off into the desert/national park, it’s extremely hard to survive without the correct things. Eventually lack of water would make you delusional and you will then pass. I feel she is still in that park somewhere, and her parents ignored her mental health issues or played them down.
@@MountainCrytotally agree especially with bearded dragons being ectothermatic how was she making sure it was warm enough/cool enough whilst stuck in a car? Knowing she was already going through something mental health wise I think it's a fair assumption that if her bearded dragon did pass away this could have been the catalyst for her disappearance. It's only my opinion obviously.
Mike, I've been following you for years and have told anyone I know about you... I am so happy to see you're over 2 million followers now... Keep doing YOU!!! Cuz, I luv ya...
I discovered your channel recently and it's my absolute favourite now! I'm obsessed with true crime and mysteries and love how you tell these stories. Your accent makes it extra pleasant to listen to, it's so familiar to me as I'm from Co. Louth 🥰
Tyler’s case reminds me horribly of the case where the fellow was wandering around in the staff corridors of a hotel and ended up in some giant air conditioning machine or something. 😢
Antoinette Caysdeito... I think that was her on the phone. It sounded too real & kids aren't good at acting. I think she only believed she was in Albuquerque. Maybe she was lied to, was moved, or didn't understand travel times. When I was 9 yes old, I had not great concepts of driving....because I'd never done it.
Highly highly recommend everyone to listen to the excellent The Lady Vanishes podcast which covers the case of Marion Barter. So many of the developments were uncovered in real time through the podcast, including the discovery of the conman known as Ric Blum. Been following since the beginning of the podcast upto the Coroner's Inquest, definitely one of the most unbelievable cases i've ever heard.
@@jeeperscreepers251 you’re reaching massively… this woman was acting erratically for days and had a history of depression. To insinuate a random police officer could be responsible in the circumstances is laughable. Everything in this case suggests suicide.
I can still remember many phone numbers from back in the day. What's even crazier is I don't know anyone's number now even though they are right there in my phone. We dial names now. Actually we don't even have to dial 🤪
Sending love - I had 3 surgeries this year, last one was hip replacement -tough immediately after and I had NO help! Hope you heal quickly, and well!!!🎉❤
Tyler's story makes me feel so much better about being an anxious, paranoid and over protective person 🥺😟 If everyone's getting sloshed, I've got to be the one to sober up so I can watch over them. This is literally my biggest fear, something bad happening to my loved ones after hanging out.
Isn't the chick who punched her in the face, then was probably incensed by the subsequent Criminal charges and fines a prime suspect? Not a mention of her as such! 🤔🙊
I agree. Her car is like that because she was trying to get away from someone. More than likely, Keely and her friends or even just her boyfriend trying to prove his loyalty to her.
one theory.....antoinette somehow got her hands on her own missing poster. did it have the local police number? what if her kidnappers taunted her with it, and the clever girl memorized the number quickly? sad story
In the 80’s, kids were taught to memorize their home phone number, the police, and the fire department. Then 911 became a thing, and this teaching faded and was forgotten.
Yep, you used to get a sticker that came with the phone book every year to write the local police and fire numbers on to stick right on or near the phone. I remember many people putting them right on the handset or using that paper insert that was under the little plastic window to write those numbers.
Do a story on shayna bayner. I was friends with her in Albany, NY. Went missing in a arizona state park like 6 months ago. 2 suspects for her murder. I think they arrested
That’s cute you rely on anecdotal evidence. Truth is, it doesn’t work the same for everyone. Some people are predisposed to psychosis and weed can trigger it, for some people, it may help alleviate symptoms. It’s like any substance, it doesn’t react the same with everyone. Take birth control or depression meds, the common brands are used by millions of people and it’s fine- but some people get fked up from them, some react so badly they die. Big shock that people are different, I know.
For the little girl in "Albuquerque" 911 was not 100% in use in 1986. I remember growing up in chicago land and not having 911 until 1988. Before that, we were taught to memorize the local police station number.
That is odd in Chicago. I am 70 and we had 911 in Oklahoma since 1970 at least. Did check hospitals and police in case of person missing but 911 if you had a burglar or such.
@@Friendofstfrank Yeah, I distinctly remember the day at school when officer friendly made a visit and announced that we had the real 911 in our area now. He made a point to tell us to always use 911 instead of our local police number in case of emergencies.
now we just need to look up whether 911 was used during her lifetime in her town and we could answer the question of whether it was her or not with more confidence
So weird to hear Easton Town Centre on Mike's channel! A little info on the area...the mall itself is very ritzy and nice, but the Easton area is known for sh00tings and the like. It's actually quite easy to get lost at the mall if you're not familiar with the layout and it's dark out. While there isn't a woods in front of the Hilton, there is a little woodsy walking trail a stone's throw from it near Easton Oval. I'd bet any money that's where he was.
It's sketch as hell. I work at Easton. Last year we had 4 cars stolen out of our parking garage in a 1 month period. I don't hang out there at all. I leave right after work.
I love "slow your roll". Even though we are many years apart in age (trust me!) and thousands of miles away in geography, We use some of the same phrases and it never fails to make me smile.
Long, nonsensical drives are a semi-common occurrence in bipolar mania. We don’t hear about it often since, obviously, it more often has a positive outcome vs a death by “misadventure”/disappearance. It explains why she didn’t cover the expected distance in 3 days and ended up in such random places.
It sounds like she was having mental heath issues. If you’re in the middle of a crisis, any choice you “make” isn’t your own. Her story doesn’t make sense from a rational frame of mind. I have bipolar myself, and this could’ve been mania, or a mixed episode. I feel badly for her.
@mustangnawt1 Yea, but if that had been the case, you'd be complaining about how mean cops are and how they never give anyone a break and blah blah blah.
That Arizona police officer who stopped that woman was probably the friendliest, most professional cop I’ve ever seen. Seemed like a great guy.
Im not a know it all, but I did realize w/cellphones some 911 can't find you, so I wrote down and have in all the phones the business numbers to get better attention.. they know exactly where you are in their town . It's a good and sometimes better alternative way for help .
@Michael-br6kw I think you meant to post this as its own comment and not a reply? Doesn't seem relevant to WQ's comment, really.
Thank you so much for covering Tylers case! He is my fiancee best friend and we miss him dearly everyday.
❤❤❤
❤ so sorry
My condolences to you all ❤🙏
❤❤❤❤
"Tyler's case" and "...my fiancé's best friend"...you're welcome
Mike I just wanna say I’m struggling with alcoholism and you have helped me one day at a time not poison myself. Your stories are infectious
Stay strong friend. Please tell someone what you're going through. You need people to help you beat it. Even if you don't think so. Much respect and strength to you .
Good luck, friend. I know what you’re going through.
Keep at it! ~Wishing you the best
Cheers to the road of recovery
Be cool if Mike would of actually commented on this one 😔 U know he read this. . .he's not an alcoholic I don't think but I LIKE TO SEE REAL, DOWN TO EARTH ETC STILL A FAN tho 😅
The policeman in Chelsea’s case approached her like a legend. The type whose demeanour alone could save lives. He truly serves to help the people, Thankyou for you service, sir
😂😂😂🤡
😊😊
P
I don't agree matter-of-fact the policeman should been cleared for the fact that he was easy on her.
I'm highly suspicious of the officer. I am curious to know if his whereabouts after he spoke to her that night have been looked into. The things stolen from her included her Debit card but no attempt to use it is known because it would immediately flag and ATM info would be gained. The stolen items were just taken to make it look like something else.
My husband one time went out with friends, got drunk and tried walking back home which is only 5 mins walk from the bar he went to. Unfortunately he was so drunk that he went past our apartment building and got lost. I woke up at 4 am and panicked when i realized he didnt get home. Thankfully we share locations with each other and i saw he is at a random corner of an intersection few mins away from our place. I drove over following the location and thankfully found him passed out on the side walk. The first story really scares me and makes me think if i hadnt gotten up to check on him, what might have happened. 😢
Your a top wife!! Your husbands lucky ❤❤
He’s lucky to have you 🙏
Wow your second sense or whatever you want to call it is impressive! Glad he was okay and had you
That's scarey asf
Ask him not to drink so much.
You know it blows my mind, I’ve subscribed to you when you had maybe a few thousand subscribers and now seeing you at 2 million blows my mind. Your success is well deserved. Keep up the good work!
The way the cop is so empathetic with Chelsea always makes me emotional 🙏🏼 i hope she is found
I hope she comes home but all the evidence points to foul play.
Great example of policing! 😊
@@HardWhereHero I don’t agree that it’s necessarily foul play, as it could be an accident or a mental health crisis. My heart breaks for her family & loved-ones. No knowing must be an awful kind of torture to endure. 😔
@HardWhereHero I'm from NM & it sounds like she succumbed to the elements in the desert.
It's both extremely hot during the day & extremely cold at night, u wldnt survive for long especially unprepared
@@SuziMonkey2The whole episode, with the bizarre late night crying sessions in the middle of nowhere, suddenly so emotional @ soldiers(?), her pet bearded dragon, getting profoundly sidetracked, etc, etc. - points toward mental health crisis.
Mike this 70 year old lady loves you and your content. Addicted to your channel.
Me tooooooo!!❤🇨🇦❤️
But how? I thought they didnt have internet back in your days? How can you write a comment??
Not only do we love the longer videos for the stories, but, We are grateful to have more time with just you Mike.. just hanging out listening to you. Thank you.
You want to marry Mike! Lol. JK but I love him more ❤
@@taylorfausett177 Mike does create a very "hang out" time energy to his videos so the parasocial feels are strong. We do just feel like we're hanging out with him because of that.
Agree, 100%. He's good company and his work is top notch.
@@thehorrorwasforlovedefinitely! It's pretty rare to find a creator quite like Mike. It's unique and i love it. I also enjoy the podcast, the banter etc with Keith! Proper chill guys with great sense of humour
Simp
It must be horrific torture, not knowing what’s happened to your child, day after day, week after week…😢
Agreed. Anyone loved one for that matter. Disappearing is even worse than death imo. Terrible 😢
I would not survive that. Already broken from life. I could never be as strong as these parents.
It’s crazy to have a child who is an addict, they disappear. Sometimes for years. It’s absolutely awful.
As a mom, that is the purest definition of hell that I can imagine
So terrible I heard one mother with a missing child say she could kill her child herself because she imagines the child is still alive and is being tortured.
Congratulations on 2 MILLION SUBS!
I’m so lucky that I’ve never gone missing. Back in the day I was heavily into drugs and alcohol. I used to pop Xanax, and drink until I blacked out. My dad had to come up to where I lived. Which was a 3 hour drive because I had called my parents in the middle of the night, blacked out, lost in some woods by where I lived.
Now… When I woke up that morning, I didn’t remember any of that. And I woke up in my bed. But my clothes were all torn and full of mud like I was in a forest. My dad had drove up that morning and was worried sick , I told him I was OK, and he told me that I needed to clean up. He stayed with me that week to make sure I was OK.
I have such great parents… Every day, I regret the crap that I put them through…
Been there mate, glad you're doing better. Never forget why you stopped.
Are you sure you aren't a werewolf
@@user-kw7mr6xt9n lmao I wish. It was a fked up night. I remember taking Xanax all that day, and then I went to my buddies house where they were having a get together. I started drinking whiskey. And I was chillin…. Until boom. Black out. All I remember from the rest of that night are like small flashes of consciousness, I semi remember parts of when I was in the woods. I remember trying to untangle myself out of bushes, I remember screaming about something, I remember trying to run away. I don’t remember calling my parents, but I did see. I called them like 20 times throughout the night.
I was asleep when my dad came, he was banging on the door, and I woke up, startled, and my clothes were all torn up, and I was filled with mud, and a little bit of blood on my shoulder. When I answered, he gave me a hug despite how dirty I was, he looked at me, and he told me “Son, you’re gonna end up dead. Please, just take a break for me” and then he stayed with me that week.
That was back when I was like 18 or 19. I’m 36 now. Unfortunately I didn’t get cleaned up at that time. It would take another eight years of insanity for me to finally get clean from opiates, benzos, alcohol, and everything else under the sun.
But yeah, I’m lucky I didn’t fall into a sinkhole, or the lake or something. And then I would have gone missing. I don’t even want to think about that. The pain it would’ve caused my parents.
❤
My parents couldn’t care less about me when I was a child, teen and young adult, ect, which made me be too independent (I was because even though I was a perfect daughter, perfect student and I got lots of awards to make my parents proud of me and tell me they love me, which they never did, instead, they were hyper critical of me and demanded that I quit school to get a job instead of graduating so I could pay them rent (I was only 14 years old, but they only cared about money, never me or my future) I finally realized they never would care about me let alone love me so I moved away, which was the best decision, but my mother followed me at my apartment when I was only 17 years old, working and attending college and paying all of my own bills and expenses) and my mother stayed with me rent free. She never paid a penny and stole from me all my life, but what can I do? She’s my mother and the Bible clearly tells us to respect our mother and father. 💜🙏
I'm a couple years older than Anthonette Cayedito, and at the time she disappeared, we didn't have 911 in the area where I lived (in the US south). The sheriff's office and the fire department had regular phone numbers, and you'd get a sticker with those numbers on it to stick on your rotary dial phone. The sticker would go right underneath where the center of the receiver would sit, so you saw the numbers as soon as you lifted it. It was a bright fluorescent color so you couldn't miss it. Everyone had that same style of phone, and everyone had the same sticker on it. Every so often, the county would send you a new sticker in case the old one had gotten worn and you couldn't read it anymore.
You are absolutely right! In fact, before 1972, if you needed an ambulance in the rural South, you phoned your local funeral home and a hearse gave you a ride to hospital! My father actually designed and implemented the first EMT program with new ambulances in rural Tennessee areas. Dad was affiliated with Vanderbilt Medical School. He designed and outfitted the very first Peter Pan Van to take newborns to Vanderbilt NICU. Ironically, the very first newborn passenger to be transported was MY baby son, named after my father.
I remember those stickers! You saw it so often that it wasn't uncommon to know it by heart.
Even after we got the push button phones there was a card on them to write in police/fire/etc. If someone took their phone from that local area and moved to ABQ it's possible she just dialed the police number on the phone. People need to remember that 911 was only available to half the population at this time.
911 was in the south before it was in every other part of the country. The first 911 call was in Alabama in 1968. Georgia implemented 911 in 1979. Just because you didn't know you could call 911 doesn't mean it wasn't the emergency number, because it was. Florida made 911 statewide in 1977. The south had 911, you just had no clue it was so
Before 1972? The first 911 call was in Alabama in 1968, so before 1972 almost nowhere had 911. That's totally irrelevant information
I once walked home from a friends house which was a mere 15 mins from my house. I was very drunk and it was winter. It took me 3 1/2 hours to find my way home. I know this because my ex wife was really worried. I was so lost I almost gave up and fell asleep in the snow. Very dangerous.
Being from Massachusetts almost happened to me.I was found by my father passed out on the front Porch And it started snowing. I was already covered and snow
🌸 I've been watching your TH-cam channel for quite some time now couple of years..... my children are young adults and grown, I am a widow, and I have to admit that every time at the end of your videos that you say" cuz I love you", it makes me cry.
in a good way and so I want to tell you that you have affected at least one person out here ... in a positive way.
thank you for what you do.🤍
Keep your chin up Hope! ♥
I have a close friend that is missing out of Atlanta Georgia. His name is Craig Shelton and he went missing on November 8, 2023. He was last seen getting his paycheck from work that day and didn’t show up for his shift later in the evening and was never seen or heard from again. He is also a world champion Brazilian Jiu Jitsu blackbelt on one of the top teams in the Atlanta area. 😢
The blacks.
Omg I’m so sorry 😢 I pray he is found safe and sound ❤
Praying for his safe return, my friend 🙏
@@Tom-6502something you clearly believe in
Judging by ur effin profile pic
@@Tom-6502maybe fictional, maybe not, Hell idk, what's more neither do you, either way it certainly can't hurt anything.
Chelsea's last days feel like one of those bad dreams you're grateful to wake up from. Travelling to a wedding, but never getting nowhere near, with a totally impossible schedule. The weird cop interaction. Trying to use Euros in remote small-town Arizona- thinking they are somehow 'less traceable' than dollars(?). It's just deranged behaviour for a 32YO; she seems to have completely & utterly lost it mentally.
And on top of that, refusing to take a flight to the wedding, which would have been the most common choice, because of a BEARDED DRAGON that could very well have stayed with her parents for two or three days?! 😳
Sooo true!
yea i hate leaving my cat. But it would be better to just go away for 3 days than drive with my cat for 2 weeks. Maybe she knew she might not come back to her life for a while@@a.mie.533
@@a.mie.533 the dragon: “gurl leave me at home I’m not about to travel that far 😭”
I think she sadly committed suicide.
Mike makes so many videos, he feels like a friend, he's like a good drinking buddy telling me a good criminal-justice story.
' i hear ya barking big dog' gets me everytime 😂
Same but it's because growing up I had a Labrador and his name was Big Dog. Always think of him when Mike says that.
❤😊
“You hear me barking in the middle of the night big dog?” Best thing someone’s ever said to me on a job site 🤣
My fav will always be the life insurance damce
The insurance scam montage gets me going!
That phone call sounds super legit to me. The way the girl screamed I dont think thats just a hoax / acting situation. damn, sad stuff.
She might have looked up in a phone book the local police number.
@@thecatatemyhomeworkCould have memorised it. Back in the 80’s we had to remember all of our friends and family members numbers as well as the important phone numbers that were listed next to the phone.
Makes sense, but she was quite abit away from home... it could have been a spoof to confuse the investigation... and it sounded like a woman that pulled her away from the phone... very bizarre and so sad! @@jadeybaby007
@@jadeybaby007 Thy had 911 in the 80s though.
@@lainiwakura1776 They did but in rural and regional areas it was still common practice to call the local police station, hospital or fire department for an emergency in the 80’s. If you have a quick scan through the comments you’ll come across confirmations of this from people who lived in similar areas at that time. 🙂
The lack of curiosity from police in these stories never ceases to amaze me. A car found backed into a house like that but no attempt to find the owner of the car. If they had then they would have learned that she didn’t get home from work and kicked off the investigation several days earlier.
They thought it was a drunk and figured the person would come back to get it. They basically wiped their hands of it then and there.
@@kimberlyhood4095 Their job is to ‘investigate’, not make lazy assumptions. Unfortunately most of them just want to issue tickets for traffic violations/ minor infringements and have zero interest in what’s going on in their community. Honourable exceptions of course.
@@robsengahay5614 Hm, I clearly agree with you, I was being sarcastic.
Also, the civilians that saw the car there with it's hazard lights on.. They should have called the police.
@@robsengahay5614 this is true, but one must also consider the meager resources most of those rural police/sheriff departments have. If they investigate every single remotely suspicious thing, they'll waste time and resources before an actual case comes around, which is probably once in a blue moon. They're forced to think with "occam's razor" and a stupid drunk is a lot more likely than a girl vanishing into thin air. Admittedly, I will never understand why so many cops are too lazy to take photos of scenes like that, or worse mock the rookie who takes his job (perhaps a bit too) seriously and makes them all look lazy in comparison, somehow forgetting that being a cop should never be a cushy job and always carries enormous responsibility, but... well let me sum it up this way: if the pay and the funding for the police is not made to fit the importance of their job, then they will inevitably perform their duties to the tune of their paychecks and/or the resources at hand. Going above and beyond and sacrificing themselves for the greater good is not only a rare thing to see, it is often actively punished and mocked in a capitalist society. If you do hard work for shit pay, you're a sucker. If you do more than what's necessary when there's no real opportunity for "upward mobility" or a significantly higher salary, you're a sucker. And if you follow the letter of the law "when everybody else is taking shortcuts" you're a sucker and a loser. That's why these morons think Trump is a badass for dodging tax and defaulting on payments for people who have worked for him. Take what you can, screw everybody else, that's America, and has been for a very, very long time.
Mike, this video made me call all my kids and tell them I love them. It really got me. Prayers, for all of these people and their families
Weird coincidence! I also called them to say I loved them!
A cop doing his job protecting citizens and not escalating a non-situation. Kudos.
How’s he doing his job when he lets a woman who admitted using drugs (he could smell it) go without any field sobriety tests to make sure she WAS ok to drive. She’s also clearly distressed and he just says yeah, I’m the same way…?!?! No. Something VERY strange about that whole interaction. He didn’t even ask for her license/registration and insurance 😮 I’d take a deep dive in his direction.
@@LoremLipsumz hmm i didnt consider this lol idk the laws around driving while high on weed... (i don't smoke though so don't worry im not.)
@@LoremLipsumz You are telling lies. He did ask for her license. Rewatch the video and pay very close attention this time. Anything to spread cop hate, right?
Cops are damned if they do, damned if they don't for everyone. Must be absolutely exhausting
You are correct. ACAB people are usually awful @@CuriousMess61
Gallup NM resident here. A. Cayadito went missing when I was in 1st grade. Been obsessed since. The rumors continue to swirl.
I get the feeling that the missing girl that was taking photos was depressed and decided to end her life. Maybe she was at the cemetery thinking about the end of herself but found being buried to be too sad of a destination and decided not being found would be better. The last photo, flowers, open doors, they're pretty representative images.
Like that M cave guy. Everyone thinks the government killed him. More then likely just killed himself.
Yeah and where was her dragon? Did she leave the doors open so it could get out and go be free? Only thing I can think of why all the doors would be open like that
Yeah, I agree. She told the officer you was interested in the ‘lost and forgotten’ people’s of this county. Crying and hanging at a grave yard. I think she had a plan to end her life. And I agree. She probably left the doors open for the bearded dragon. And I bet she went out there to drop him off in a place that she thought he could survive without her
Agree as well. Sounded like it was more a final journey planned. Took her lizard to a desert to release him. Visited graveyard. Crying at side of road. The last photo. Seems like her way of leaving a goodbye message. Flat tires may have altered her plans some and so where she went from there to finish what she started who knows but perhaps she didn't want to be found.
this reminds me of a case where a son went missing abandoned car on the road near his home door open engine idling. POLICE searched area and nothing was found. MONTHS passed and a psychic detective showed up contacted the family got permission to get a copy of the police file and at no charge look for the young man. 2 days later a body was located a mile from where the car was left. The police were skeptical the area had been thoroughly covered twice. it was the missing son who died by his own hand. The parents were in denial MY SON HAD A PERFECT LIFE ...A nice home a beautiful wife a new baby wonderful career and he disappeared on his commute home from work. THEY CONCLUDED he saw his life as not worth living.
That was a super nice cop in Arizona she ran into. I wish all police were that kind and understanding and cool. Big shout out to him!!
But if he had arrested her for drug driving like he should have she would probably still be alive
@@tasselskeep3385Smoking is not illegal, friend. There are dispensaries on every street corner in most States. We _need_ more cops like him to stop giving good people criminal records over marijuana. After all, it’s a herbal plant legalized to treat a variety of conditions.
@@tasselskeep3385To piggy back off your statement, I do *not* condone smoking and driving. Anything that impairs a person’s judgment is dangerous. The smoking itself could’ve very well triggered paranoia or psychosis causing her to panic and/or flee. I hope Chelsea did not stumble upon a bad person w/evil intentions.
Right! To even tell her she could stay for longer. They usually push you along
Hilarious propping of cops..you people disgust me. He let a druggie live her best life because of her gross privilege.
As a new mum, Chelsea’s disappearance pierced my heart. A parent’s worst nightmares come to light. May all the missing be found 🤲
Seems a bit odd that Chelsea would decide to drive for a week or more to get to a friend's wedding. She would be exhausted and then have to make the same return journey. Also why take Euro's on the journey? And in three days she only traveled 6 hours. I think she was not in a good place mentally. Especially that crying at the cemetery and talking about lost and forgotten people
Further, she said she wanted to go off the grid. Using euros seems strange.
very suspicious indeed, I don't trust her at all...
Maybe Officer Friendly wasn't so friendly?
She seems like a candidate for self deletion
@@cdes1776Also u hv to pay a fee every time u exchange USD/EUR so it makes no sense
My cat meowing for treats:
"i hear ya barkin big dog"
I have the same kind of cat , she is my baby. 😊❤
@@LisaMattie-rn4bw 💕💕
I just received a picture from my cat sitter. When she walked up to my house two little faces were in the window looking out sadly. So good at laying a guilt trip!
Wow I'm amazed it's the first time I've seen an officer interact with someone who has smoked some weed and is in the drivers seat of the car that hasn't been arrested on trumped up charges of impaired driving etc kudos to that officer for having integrity wish there were more like him...
I've rarely seen that happen myself
You are so good at telling stories, Mike. There is no other storyteller on TH-cam that captivates me more than you. It’s too bad TH-camrs don’t qualify for an Emmy or even a Golden Globe. Because you deserve BOTH!
Don’t ever stop, you are a blast to listen to.
"TH-cam Creator Awards, commonly known as TH-cam Play Buttons or TH-cam Plaques, are a series of awards from the American video platform TH-cam that aim to recognize its most popular channels. They are based on a channel's subscriber count but are offered at the sole discretion of TH-cam." - Wikipedia and more....
Nominate him for a Streamy or whatever it's called.
@@cdes1776 That's for volume not substance or talent.
Between Mike and MrBallen, they're truly the only two storytellers that are just .... idk, so easy to get lost into.
It's been awhile (I think) since I've heard you say, "Bits and bobs." It never ceases to make me smile. That and "Manson lamps." We all love 'ya, Mike! Thanks for being you and doing what you do!!
Yeah but we need more life insurance cases!
Manson lamps always fcks me up lmao
One flat tire okay two flat tires sabotage did they offer her a ride out?
The cop who told Chelsea Grimm where she could safely go sleep, without judgement, was awesome.
That's an extremely rare cop.... any other cop would try to escalate the situation
Oh shut up. Trifling. Cops are awesome. @ShannonDove-sy7ye
Maybe if he had judged and asked more questions, she wouldn't be missing.
I when to high school in Williams. All the police are like that. I used to deal with insomnia as a teen linked to my cptsd from my sociopath ex police officer stepfather so I would walk run the loop from 3 or 4 to 6 am. Williams is right off of I-40 so the police would spend their night shift checking on me over and over. Camping all over is common and locals will always tell you the best spots. In general I don’t trust the police after spending my childhood in a different Arizona town with the sociopath but I do trust the William police to keep me safe.
He could have been awesome, but he could also be a suspect, if he was the last to see her. Police commit crimes too. There are many stories of police and security guards ending up being the bad guy, instead of the good guy. Just saying keep an open mind. In life, there can be many scenarios.
I remember when u would wear a rotation of like 5 shirts on the regular. Thought it would always be your thang.
Almost 4 yrs ago my Mom & I were visiting my Papa in GA, it was bedtime in twin beds. Of course I was lulling myself to sleep w/ YT, when your voice came on. Mom who doesn’t really watch YT, asked “who is that?” I told her Mike, I follow him. Then she says she understands why:) Memories
I can't believe you're covering my friend Chelsea. Thanks 🙏🏻 I really appreciate it. I've been watching you forever. 🦋
I can’t imagine letting my 17 year old daughter move away to live on her own no matter how mature and independent she was. You just don’t have enough life experience yet. 😢
When they leave at 18 anyway (most ppl) it’s not bad to get a little head start. I left home at 17 and there was definitely some trial and error and some learning experiences but I’m also a 6’3 guy. A little different world for solo female
Not necessarily I mean a kid can move out at 18 so they moved out at 17
@baalgaang1925 why is height important here??? Could be six foot seven and skinny as a rail and be an easy target. Always curious why height is misconstrued as strength or fighting ability. I'm five foot nine but a 235lb weight lifter... a six foot man at 160lbs without trainings is not going to do well.
I moved out when I was 17. Had a great time but struggled to pay all the bills and moved back home after a year.
I agree, and yet my parents let me move out at 17 to live with a boyfriend for the summer and then become a live in domestic. I thank God that nothing horrible happened to me; you are so correct in that a 17 year old doesn't have a clue about life.
Hi there. I met Tyler Davis' sister (I think it was his sister) at Crime Con III. She was sitting on the floor outside the banquet rooms handing out fliers. Begging anyone to listen and help. So sad. Makes you wonder how someone just disappears.
Poor woman. My heart breaks for his loved ones
I’m especially devastated about the last story. I can’t imagine what horrors that sweet girl endured. I think if she was still alive she would have attempted to get in touch with someone. She was quite young and there could be someone connected to the older couple still holding her. Whether she was murdered or she’s still held captive, my heart hurts for that child. Thank you for this video as continues to keep all of these disappearances current. I hope someone comes forward with any information about any of the cases ❤
For Antoinette’s case and the 911 call issue, it seems obvious to me that she was kidnapped by someone local, who kept her in a basement and lied to her that she had been transported to Albuquerque. If she was never allowed out, she wouldn’t have seen a newspaper or any landmarks, and if she had been knocked unconscious at any point, there’s no way for her to know that she didn’t wake up in Albuquerque.
That is very possible, but also in 1986 there were a lot of issues with 911 and long distance carriers. If you still had a previous address registered with your long distance carrier, your 911 calls might be sent to that area's operator. My family had this issue in 1987, when my brother egged a passing car and the driver attacked him. We called 911 and were connected to an operator in the city we lived in a few months before.
Exactly what I came here to say.
Another possibility is how phone books were just dropped off at your house whether you wanted them or not back before cell phones. Even if she was taken to another city, I think it would be possible for her to have found the phone number within a year's time and either memorized it or torn a page out. There are some stories of truly ingenious thinking done by kidnapped kids who you wouldn't necessarily believe would have that amount of wherewithal unless you knew them better. Your option is probably more likely (or the second comment), but i think this is quite plausible, too. When I was that age I knew you use the phone book if I needed to find an important number, and which ones I should look for. Mostly I used them to make forts for star wars figures, though lol
911 didn't even exist in a lot of places back then and wasnt reliable anyway. We didnt get 911 in my area until well into the 90s. We all knew our local police numbers in the 80s. We had to. So it makes perfect sense for her to call the Gallup police and not Albuquerque anyway.
@@MariaAbrams That tracks as well, because they answered the phone "Gallup Police Department", not "911" or "Emergency Services". I live in Washington State and we didn't get 911 until 1983, even though it had been around since the 60s. I think a lot of areas just didn't have the resources yet. Most phones had a little piece of paper under plastic that listed emergency numbers. If it hadn't been updated since Gallup, it would still have that information.
The story about Brianna has haunted me since i first heard about it. You provided a lot of new details I've never heard.
Mike I love the way you tell these stories, I could listen to you all day. It’s such a tragic topic but keeping their voices alive might just help.
I can’t imagine what these families go through when their loved ones go missing. It’s hard enough to have a family member pass away, especially young, but to not know what happened and not have closure would be an absolute nightmare.
The picture of Brianna's car backed into the dutchburn house is so ominous and gray, wish I could un-see it sometimes
It's a remarkable photo if it wasn't so eerie. Same with Chelsea's.
It's a thousand words for sure.
I think Chelseas picture with the flowers and the open car doors is her having lost her beardy. She probably searched the car high and low, then gathered flowers as sort of a roadside grave.
What if her beardy died on the trip? Not her fault but she thought maybe it was?
Man I wish all cops were like the one that found Chelsea. Didn’t hound her for the weed because she didn’t seem impaired, didn’t harass her for not having a place to stay and even offered a safe place
If he would have arrested her for impaired driving or possession, she might not be missing today.
@@serendipitystarlight while that may be true, the dude obviously did not have the gift of hindsight
@@serendipitystarlighttrue, but like the above comment says, she wasn't missing at the time... And she wasn't impaired, he saw no reason to arrest her, he clearly didn't want to make things worse for her potentially, as she was obviously going through something and sounded fed up. He was amazing with her. U just can't always tell with these types of situations. Cos if he did arrest her and kicked up a fuss, who knows what may have happened, could've provoked her even more... Its just nice to see a cop being so understanding and helpful and caring. You just can't look at it like if only he'd done this or that, cos fact is he didn't, and what matters about the situation and the hard facts of it is how kind he was, it says a lot about him as a person and as a cop, u can't look at what may have been
@@serendipitystarlightbut that wasn’t the last time she was seen, so even if had arrested her , once released what would have happened because something with her was off kilter, sadly.
What victimless crime did she commit for the cop to even approach her?
Can I just say I appreciate you’re explanation of an iceberg. I feel like people always take way too long explaining.
Very disturbing stories. Some I’ve heard before some not. So sad for the families too. Thanks Mike.
Don't let your friends walk drunk alone
THIS!
It is like I tell everyone - all it takes is one brief moment for something to go wrong, or get kidnapped. Being a former Law Enforcement officer I have seen it and it is so sad when missing people are not found, or are found too late. You have to be careful in this world now that it has become so much more dangerous with criminals who have nothing to lose. I pray these people are found and still alive, though doubtful they are still alive, but I never give up hope until I reach the end of everything from searching, to anything. Never give up on hope people, no matter how bleak it may seem.
Violent crime is down across the US. Has been falling for years. You'd think a cop would know that
@@clon76uh yup ❤
As a mom, I can’t imagine anything worse than having a child missing. To never know if they’re alive or not and what they might be enduring/suffering for years on end would be a living hell for me! My heart goes out to all the families of these victims; I hope & pray you finally get the answers you so desperately want & need!💞
The first case is so baffling
Drunk people get lost easily. Maybe he wanted to walk some more and got lost. Drunk people should not be left alone, if there are friends near, but I mean, he was an adult. I would like to know how close to the hotel he was when they split up. Anyway, smoking kills and alcohol is bad for you.
I've live in this town and the only thing I can think of is someone offered to take him back since he was lost then robbed him and ended up killing him. I live around there and it is not a place someone would get lost. It is, however very close to less savory areas. Yes, there is a decent sized state park and a freeway right next to Easton, but the airport is also very close and a high crime area less than 5 miles from that industrial park his GPS reflected as being at.
@@MissaPality That's the only thing you can think of?
Not everything is a crime. There aren't monsters under every bed.
A lot of people go missing without any crime taking place.
This guy was under the influence, in unfamiliar surroundings, and at night. The most LIKELY scenario is not that a boogeyman harmed him, it's that he got lost, had an accident of some kind, and is yet to be found. It's sad, I hope he is found, but you're inventing an entire narrative to make it more sinister than there is any reason to believe it would be.
I think you need to cut down on true crime videos, they're affecting your perceptions of the world.
@ct5625 perhaps but that search was extensive, dogs, grid search, huge radius....bodies dont just evaporate into thin air in a matter of days
Missa, I think your possible scenarios sound very plausible.
Brianna story. Something is off about the parents saying there were "no stressors at home that made her move out" at what, 16, MAYBE 17? 99 percent of the time Ive heard of kids leaving that young, its NOT because they are "just independent ". Its physical /emotional/sexual/financial abuse, its alcoholic/addict parents, its multiple numbers of generally negative things, but almost NEVER cause they WANTED to go get a job,pay bills and all the other nasty crap that adults have to do. Its generally because it was their last/only option
I left home at 16. Absolutely no abuse. My parents were and are legends. I just needed my own space.
I agree, Rachel. Second comment, your situation is extremely rare, especially if you are female.
I also feel like they kind of glossed over the whole part where she was flirting with another woman's bf at a party where her *OWN BF* was as well. Now, I listen to this in the background while I do other things, so maybe I missed something, but maybe her bf had some type of feelings about it seeing as how "no intentions of going further" doesn't mean much to someone who is jealous.
@@RightTurnClydeyou got extremely lucky.
ur case is rare .. 9/10 it’s some form of abuse
I lived in Columbus at one point, and the "woods" or "forest" as it were, near Easton, are easily navigated. I'm talking no more than a 5 ish minute walk straight through one side to the other. It's more of a thick tree line if anything. Barely big enough for the local homeless to have a place to set tents, which they often do, but it's so small that they're often caught and forced to relocate. This is super bizarre, even for someone who's not from Columbus.
That story sounds like so many from Missing 411: A Sobering Coincidence. Also these young men disappearing from solo car wrecks that just wander off into nowhere, never to be seen again. Super unsettling, freaks me right out.
i lived in Columbus at the time and remember this case...that area is isnt exactly a bed of crime...dude just poofed out of air...even cameras in the area cant find him on theit cctv
@jacobeilerman303 same!!!! It's still a pretty chill area, and it's changed so much since then. Those "woods" aren't even there anymore, I don't think. I dont remember seeing them last time I was in Columbus, but I also wasn't looking. Went to Adobe Gillas with my sister and nephew.
@robinmcinarnay7827 yoooo!!!! Right?! Makes me wonder about organ harvesters and such... My heart goes out to the families... I cant begin to imagine what that would feel like to lose someone without a trace.
Yeah, I worked at Easton in 2019. I honestly don’t understand how someone can go mysteriously missing from Easton Town Center. Like into thin air.
I am a little confused why he was in one of the office/possible call center parking lots though. Like that’s a weird area to wind up in even by accident.
But weirdly this is the first I’ve heard of the case.
Seems like Chelsea might have had a psychotic break.
She may have been prodromal for schizophrenia for a while.
She was having bad reactions to the marijuana, it happens, as it happens to me. Some people simply shd not smoke.
@@HumanimalChannelI'm allergic to it. So are my children. It's hell now that it's legal. Our neighbors on both sides smoke so much we can't go outside unless they are gone. We break out in hives just from them.
Bullshit
@@HumanimalChannel My nephew has a personality disorder and heavily relies on Mary Jane and we watched while he worked up to a psychotic break that did seem to imitate schizophrenia. We are in another country, so we're helpless. But he ended up going from "hearing from God" that he (nephew) was going to save the world, to starkers in the middle of the road, screaming that he was God it's just that everyone didn't know it yet. He was locked up in a facility for 3 months and, I think, has had to have constant psych sessions since. I'm not sure if he still goes, but he's supposed to.
@@bunnymad5049nightmare 😢
We 're going to need more information on Chelsea. No one, and I mean no one, is driving around the US with Euros.
She wanted to disappear🤔
@@altonyoung3734Yea,but using Euros would make you stand out.
Mile Higher podcast does a REALLY amazing episode on her. They regularly do more of deep dives, which is where I head after a video from Mike if I'm interested enough to find more info. They also film their episodes and show pictures, clips, info if you're more of a visual listener too!
@@boathousejoed1126maybe she planned on going to Europe after idk
She was incredibly mentally ill and confused. There's so much evidence that she was not well mentally. She brought that poor bearded dragon with her, which she would've never done in a healthy state of mind.
Your content is very interesting. It’s good that you put the names & photos out there so they won’t be forgotten. Hopefully it may help at least some of them to be found. I pray the loved ones will find answers-and peace. Keep up the good work!
Chelsea is the same age as my only daughter. I just can’t stop crying 😢 and to think that the Officer was so nice to her, he was her salvation, but, Chelsea did not know that.
The thought of my son disappearing and never knowing what happened is unbearable. He’s an adult now but that wouldn’t matter. The phone call from “Antionette” is horrifying, rather it’s her or not.
My sympathy to loved ones of those missing.
Great work Mike , I love ya too !
Had Oral surgery on Monday. Jaw incredibly sore and havent been resting. Mike keeping me sane. 👍
Hope you feel better soon.
I found your videos from coffeehouse crimes! I watched so much my husband woke up one night and said 'can you turn mikes voice down a bit?" 😅
Anyway you're very good at storytelling, happy im (semi) early for the first time! 😁👍
I've been watching since 2019. His channel just keeps getting better and better
I got recomended coffeehouse being a sub of Mike
Have you seen those headband headphones you can buy for listening to music, podcasts and audiobooks in bed. They are so cool!
Don't you know "Coffee House Crime" is a totally different channel and host?
Nooooooo i haven't! Where do you get them ? @SassySlater thank you
Love the iceberg style videos Mike. Thanks so much for your hard work. Much love
I’ve dealt with a lot of death in my life but never someone missing. Can’t imagine how each party feels. The waiting and waiting… or the wandering one who may have met their demise
Nomad here. I regularly boondock/wildcamp in our National Forests. However, I don’t do it without “protection” because you don’t know what or whom you may run into. I don’t know what the young lady’s intentions were going into the forest, but if you are going just to camp, do what you have to do to stay safe, y’all. I hope she’s found soon.☮️
Hermit here, 7 year monk. The worst wild animals are the two legged kind.
@@redneckroy8947 Agreed.
I remember Anthonette's case so clearly, she was just a little older than me, and it was everywhere. I was the oldest sibling who had too much responsibility....it hit home.
What I can tell you is that back in the 80s, we were all taught our local police station number from a young age--in rural areas, 911 was not as reliably available as it is now.
I have this incredibly clear memory of sitting on the bench seat of my mom's pickup (no seat belt--the guvmint won't tell her how to raise her kids 🙄) and seeing a poster explaining that 911 was coming to our area, and asking my mom what it meant. Based on where we were living, it would have been 1-2yrs after Anthonette went missing--and while we were very very rural, this was still in the California Central Valley. It was not an instant thing across the U.S. by any means (as many fabulous commenters have pointed out; I am so grateful for the backup I made an edit!) When you lived in the middle of Bumfuq, No.Where places like I did, even once we did have 911, that routed to a dispatch more than 45min from our house. Depending on the time of day, I'd be way better off calling Jimmy's Bar in town where all the volunteer firefighters hung out all the time.
I also remember when I first started babysitting, the parents would always leave the number of the local police for me....and by that point it was the 90s. Living far away from cities with dispatch centers, knowing all the numbers (police, fire, hospital & poison control were the big ones) was pretty normal.
EXACTLY!, I remember in the 80's knowing the local police # too. Many ppl don't know the 911 system was only implemented in 1968 as a result of the Kitty Genovese murder of 64'. Mostly big cities first but it took awhile to reach smaller communities.
That's what I was thinking. She "helped" mom out with her siblings. She would have been in charge of learning those numbers.
The rotory dial phones had the paper disc holder in the center of the finger plate, where you could copy it's and emergency contacts.
That's what I was thinking. 911 didn't come to my county until the late 90s. In my hometown, houses didn't even have numbers unless they had a mailbox. If you had a PO box, you didn't have one. They had to take care of that problem before implementing the 911 system. Also before cell phones, we memorized numbers like it was nothing. We were walking phone books.
Her case terrified me as a kid on "Unsolved Mysteries".
People accusing the cop? I mean I'm pretty jaded, but i highly doubt he did anything to her.
The Chelsea case regarding that creepy photo of her holding flowers with all the car doors open, many speculate that her beloved pet dragon had passed away & that's why she took this ominous last photo.
The first time I heard her story, I found it odd to be driving around with a bearded dragon and taking it inside a hotel. They need to have a certain number of hours per day at a high temperature or they cannot digest their food. You can't just be carrying them around with you like a dog, they won't survive.
I feel like it could have been a breaking point, plus possible mental health issues. Wandering off into the desert/national park, it’s extremely hard to survive without the correct things. Eventually lack of water would make you delusional and you will then pass. I feel she is still in that park somewhere, and her parents ignored her mental health issues or played them down.
@@MountainCrytotally agree especially with bearded dragons being ectothermatic how was she making sure it was warm enough/cool enough whilst stuck in a car? Knowing she was already going through something mental health wise I think it's a fair assumption that if her bearded dragon did pass away this could have been the catalyst for her disappearance. It's only my opinion obviously.
Antoinette's story is heartbreaking. May God have mercy.
Mike, I've been following you for years and have told anyone I know about you... I am so happy to see you're over 2 million followers now... Keep doing YOU!!! Cuz, I luv ya...
Man Mike, this one makes me so sad. The never ending grief these families must experience just is heartbreaking. So, thanks?!!
Still love ya!
I discovered your channel recently and it's my absolute favourite now!
I'm obsessed with true crime and mysteries and love how you tell these stories.
Your accent makes it extra pleasant to listen to, it's so familiar to me as I'm from Co. Louth 🥰
That door knocking got me.
Got my cat too. He was like, "Who's here?"
Me too, I had headphones in and it made me jump and my coffee went everywhere.
@@kathyjones3320😂
This is my only channel I hit the like button before I even watch. Thanks for another fantastically presented give it a go!
A goo* 🇮🇪
Tyler’s case reminds me horribly of the case where the fellow was wandering around in the staff corridors of a hotel and ended up in some giant air conditioning machine or something. 😢
Loving this new format of having multiple stories in each episode 😊
Antoinette Caysdeito... I think that was her on the phone. It sounded too real & kids aren't good at acting.
I think she only believed she was in Albuquerque. Maybe she was lied to, was moved, or didn't understand travel times. When I was 9 yes old, I had not great concepts of driving....because I'd never done it.
Highly highly recommend everyone to listen to the excellent The Lady Vanishes podcast which covers the case of Marion Barter. So many of the developments were uncovered in real time through the podcast, including the discovery of the conman known as Ric Blum. Been following since the beginning of the podcast upto the Coroner's Inquest, definitely one of the most unbelievable cases i've ever heard.
Good morning Mike...
Sending love from Fiji Islands...
I love watching your videos....
17:00 wow, that was the most friendly and understanding police officer ive heard in a long time. Kudos officer.
The officer that spoke with Chelsea in the cemetery was so awfully kind.
@jeeperscreepers251 Definitely not weird. This 💯 why Men are afraid to help or be nice to women now, they get call creeps or weird.
He was merely decent. Cops being decent makes them look like saints in comparison to the rest of the time when they're being awful.
@@jeeperscreepers251 Sad, but very true.
@@jeeperscreepers251what a load of rubbish. You’ve watched one too many true crime docs, nice people do exist you know.
@@jeeperscreepers251 you’re reaching massively… this woman was acting erratically for days and had a history of depression. To insinuate a random police officer could be responsible in the circumstances is laughable. Everything in this case suggests suicide.
In the pre cell phone era, people remembered many phone numbers they needed
I can still remember many phone numbers from back in the day. What's even crazier is I don't know anyone's number now even though they are right there in my phone. We dial names now. Actually we don't even have to dial 🤪
I’ve been bed bound for a few weeks after a car crash. I would have gone completely mental if you hadn’t kept me entertained. Thank you.
Sending love - I had 3 surgeries this year, last one was hip replacement -tough immediately after and I had NO help! Hope you heal quickly, and well!!!🎉❤
Get well soon!
hope your recovery is quick and smooth
Best Wishes 🙏😊
Hope you're comfortable and recover fully very soon.
Please do an update video for any cases you covered that didn’t have a full resolution. Please & thank you. 🙏✨
Tyler's story makes me feel so much better about being an anxious, paranoid and over protective person 🥺😟 If everyone's getting sloshed, I've got to be the one to sober up so I can watch over them. This is literally my biggest fear, something bad happening to my loved ones after hanging out.
Isn't the chick who punched her in the face, then was probably incensed by the subsequent Criminal charges and fines a prime suspect? Not a mention of her as such! 🤔🙊
This is exactly what I thought! I don't think Keely was finished expressing her anger.
I agree. Her car is like that because she was trying to get away from someone. More than likely, Keely and her friends or even just her boyfriend trying to prove his loyalty to her.
Keeley did it.
These “short story” episodes have been really great Mike. But then pretty much everything you do is.
Mike, you are so good at this. Telling these stories with so much care and compassion. Thank you!
51 minutes of That Chapter! A blessing for this "big dog"
I love this channel, I used to watch the videos while studying.
one theory.....antoinette somehow got her hands on her own missing poster. did it have the local police number? what if her kidnappers taunted her with it, and the clever girl memorized the number quickly? sad story
In the 80’s, kids were taught to memorize their home phone number, the police, and the fire department. Then 911 became a thing, and this teaching faded and was forgotten.
90's too.
I used to know every friends' number,now with "smart phones" I couldn't tell you what my kids numbers are!
Yep, you used to get a sticker that came with the phone book every year to write the local police and fire numbers on to stick right on or near the phone. I remember many people putting them right on the handset or using that paper insert that was under the little plastic window to write those numbers.
60's too.
@@boathousejoed1126 heck I forget my own phone number some days and have to double check.
Mike=GOAT
You continue to make THE BEST true crime content, day in and day out. Blessings to you, my dear Mike.
Do a story on shayna bayner. I was friends with her in Albany, NY. Went missing in a arizona state park like 6 months ago. 2 suspects for her murder. I think they arrested
Her name is Shayna Feinman.
@Gandolphtheveteran your right thank u I couldn't remember her last name. That is what her Facebook said
I’ve been partaking in the devils lettuce for over 20 years and the only thing it’s “made me do” is eat to much garbage food.🙄
Im more sensible on it. Things Id normally just do without thinking Ill actually contemplate first when smoking. See how Ill feel about it later…👍
Yeah, it’s not a motivation for violence, or much else for that matter 😂.
Better to quit
Idk sometimes it’s forced me to have a nap.
That’s cute you rely on anecdotal evidence. Truth is, it doesn’t work the same for everyone. Some people are predisposed to psychosis and weed can trigger it, for some people, it may help alleviate symptoms. It’s like any substance, it doesn’t react the same with everyone.
Take birth control or depression meds, the common brands are used by millions of people and it’s fine- but some people get fked up from them, some react so badly they die.
Big shock that people are different, I know.
I am watching because of your fabulous storytelling, Mike. I usually won't watch unsolved cases, only the ones you present.
For the little girl in "Albuquerque"
911 was not 100% in use in 1986. I remember growing up in chicago land and not having 911 until 1988. Before that, we were taught to memorize the local police station number.
That is odd in Chicago. I am 70 and we had 911 in Oklahoma since 1970 at least. Did check hospitals and police in case of person missing but 911 if you had a burglar or such.
Damn that's wild. Never knew that. It's hard to imagine not having 911 now.
@@Friendofstfrank
Yeah, I distinctly remember the day at school when officer friendly made a visit and announced that we had the real 911 in our area now. He made a point to tell us to always use 911 instead of our local police number in case of emergencies.
now we just need to look up whether 911 was used during her lifetime in her town and we could answer the question of whether it was her or not with more confidence
@@thehorrorwasforlove
That's a really good point!
So weird to hear Easton Town Centre on Mike's channel! A little info on the area...the mall itself is very ritzy and nice, but the Easton area is known for sh00tings and the like. It's actually quite easy to get lost at the mall if you're not familiar with the layout and it's dark out. While there isn't a woods in front of the Hilton, there is a little woodsy walking trail a stone's throw from it near Easton Oval. I'd bet any money that's where he was.
It's sketch as hell. I work at Easton. Last year we had 4 cars stolen out of our parking garage in a 1 month period. I don't hang out there at all. I leave right after work.
It's a bizarrely random place for a Mike video.
That Walmart across the street is super sketchy
It's definitely possible to get lost in a big mall, especially if you're unfamiliar and there are many exits out.
@jaydenramirez1920
Take care out there guys, it sounds real sketchy round there, sadly ..
I love "slow your roll". Even though we are many years apart in age (trust me!) and thousands of miles away in geography, We use some of the same phrases and it never fails to make me smile.
With all due respect, I think Chelsea made some choices 😢
most definitely
Facts. So many refuse to bring up uncomfortable, life-saving facts within this genre. Props to you 👍🏼
Long, nonsensical drives are a semi-common occurrence in bipolar mania. We don’t hear about it often since, obviously, it more often has a positive outcome vs a death by “misadventure”/disappearance. It explains why she didn’t cover the expected distance in 3 days and ended up in such random places.
Like sewer slide?? Or made poor choices that led to being harmed?
It sounds like she was having mental heath issues. If you’re in the middle of a crisis, any choice you “make” isn’t your own. Her story doesn’t make sense from a rational frame of mind. I have bipolar myself, and this could’ve been mania, or a mixed episode. I feel badly for her.
That was a cool ass cop in Arizona
Kinda wish he had been slightly uncool though, she might have been in custody instead of missing:(
@mustangnawt1 Yea, but if that had been the case, you'd be complaining about how mean cops are and how they never give anyone a break and blah blah blah.
@@spacemanspliff7983 accurate
Poor Sally. She's worked so hard for so long to get answers about her Mum.