Disturbing Last Found Footage of Missing Persons

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These are the last seen videos of people just before they went missing. Featured in this video are 5 missing persons cases.

This video is for educational, artistic, and documentary purposes.

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Idk, two kids who aren’t sober sailing in the middle of the night going missing, while it was tragic, nothing to me sticks out as pointing to foul play

jesswarner
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No intro, no outro, straight to the content… I love it ! Super awesome channel

freshavocado
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0:01 bro DID NOT waste a second of our time before starting the story 💀

arinapashkun
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Patricia was very likely suicidal. Her making a therapist appointment doesn't mean anything... There are people who will go grocery shopping, make a whole meal plan for the week, and then do it. It's often an impulsive moment of feeling hopeless. Very, very sad. She probably was overthinking her life, feeling bad about it, decided fuck it and tried to get in an accident, and then either got head trauma or was in such shock that she left and abandoned her life instead.

Newest_editsjustbecause
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For the Katelyn Lauder case, that REALLY sounds like untreated schizophrenia. My aunt was perfectly functioning, happy, brilliant English professor at Texas A&M for 15 years and then one day she accused the staff of placing a lookalike of her dead sister in the room across from her to spy on her.
That was the first incident that indicated she was having some kind of mental health situation.

She refuses to get treatment and to this day, she hears things that no one said by people who aren't there. She has full conversations with herself. She fully believes the hallucinations and her kids, my 1st cousins, refuse to get her any kind of help or treatment.

My biggest fear is something like the Lauder case happening to my aunt. Schizophrenia is a horrible, horrible, heartbreaking affliction.

rosenbaum
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The Nancy Ng case still fucks me up, somebody on that retreat knows something. It's so frustrating.

xSevenDevilsx
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Nancy's case needs WAY more attention

brandonroyal
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Schizophrenia typically develops between the ages of 18-25, and a person who is seemingly completely normal will suddenly be extremely paranoid, delusional, and have a different personality. I wonder how many of these stories can be explained by understood mental health diagnoses rather than scary or creepy reasons.

reiddutchess
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The kayak incident of 'she hopped off her boat and that's how she died' makes zero sense. If that were the case, all of them would have been screaming for help once they got back to land, and would've called the cops immediately. Innocent people sound the alarm asap, guilty people keep their mouths shut and flee.

engeldernacht
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On Kayelyn Louder, I lived with a schizophrenic once who would hear voices outside and believed someone was going to break in and get him. He came to my door late at night more than once, genuinely terrified. It would take time and patience to convince him that what he was hearing was not real. If I wanted to go outside to show him no one is there he'd beg me not to go outside. I would go out anyway and walk around the house, opening the side gate and everything. I'd be telling him there's nobody out here at regular intervals. Then I'd go back in and assure him that what there was no one out there and what he was experiencing was not real. I reasoned with him until he calmed down. You need to understand this is not someone who's merely imagining things, they're having (in the case of my friend) auditory hallucinations and to them its completely real. One problem for him was that, even knowing he had a mental illness, the things he experienced were things you don't want to be wrong about. What if this time there really is someone trying to break in and you're ignoring it because you're reasoning with yourself that this is your schizophrenia? If hallucinations are not wildly out of touch with reality, there is that uncertainty.

I don't know what happened to Kayelyn but wandering around outside in the rain in her state without someone who could help her was a terrible situation and the outcome was a terrible tragedy for her and her family. 😢

ContemplativeCat
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As someone who has experienced months long psychosis, Kayelynn's story seems pretty similar to what I experienced. It is terrifying and everything feels 100% real. You never get a break from the delusions, it was the most awful thing I have ever lived through. It also made me extremely suicidal.

manda
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0:00 Sofia McKenna
6:03 Nancy Ng
11:47 Patricia Meehan
17:33 Kayelyn Louder
26:14 Dale Kerstetter

christinavernon
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Witnessing these last footage videos of people that went missing completely in a very unknown way is truly a very terrifying experience, what makes it even more scarier is sometimes the people themselves in these footages act really eerie.

Risyaranks
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Nah justice for nancy her retreat group should've just been transparent instead of making themselves look sketch asf

rey.
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With the Patricia story there's a high chance she was a mental breakdown and the accident throw her over the edge and now she's basically either forgotten who she was all together or is extremely paranoid and delusional right now... oddly enough it happens a lot.

akiraliliphen
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This is the first spooky content channel that doesn’t have a narrator voice that is beyond annoying. Thank you for that!!!

ابراهيم_محمد_الازهر
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There is something extra spooky about a person's last known photograph being them standing infront of a "No Trespassing" sign.

frankreads
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Second last one: "Doesn't have a history of mental health issues" doesn't mean she doesn't have them, and clearly she did. The "family and friends say she was fine and normal" thing tends to not be overly reliable for many cases. Of course family and friends will say that; either the person who went crazy masks a lot, or due to simple bias the family and friends don't notice anything wrong.

MegaAstroFan
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Kayelyn sounds like a case of a schizo-affected illness. Anyone is susceptible to mental disorders like bipolar disorder and the reason for her being let go from her teaching position might give more clues. Even though schizophrenia typically shows up in the early 20's, can still happen later ... also, it's possible she ended up where she did in the river because she went there herself and was hiding from whoever she thought was following her. The fear might have been so great that she thought she had no choice but to stay there and ended up passing out from exhaustion and drowning. If someone has no history of mental illness, it's likely they and the people around them would not recognize it when it starts to happen. She should have been evaluated right after she made that 911 call considering there was no evidence to support what she said she saw.

illibrium
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I live in Connecticut and the disappearance of Sophia is not considered a mystery.

They were out doing dumb shit, after getting high, in a boat not meant for this.

They drifted off, drowned, and the little boat, more like a dinghy, washed up on LI Spund.

His body was recovered; hers was not.

There are many things that can become of a dead body in the open seas.

I could write you a list, but you can use your imagination.

They were just kids, and it’s really, really sad and a tragic loss, but boating drunk is even more dangerous than driving drunk, and EVERY KID in a costal community is made aware of this by the time he/she is in third grade.

Plus, it’s kinda common sense.

The entire state mourn Sophia and Spence’s loss, but few consider this a mystery.

Thanks for covering this sad event.

JaimeMesChiens