Top 50 Creepiest Disappearance Stories

- The Princes in the Tower
- Eloise Worledge
- Dennis Martin
- Emma Fillipoff
- Dorothy Arnold
- Louis Le Prince
- Barbara Follett
- Jim Thompson
- Benjamin Bathurst
- Bobby Panknin
- Gordon Page Jr.
- Glen & Bessie Hyde
- Susan Powell
- The Yuba County Five
- Andrew Gosden
- Jimmy Hoffa
- Shelly Miscavige
- Lord Lucan
- Ben Padilla & John Mutantu
- The Crew of the Mary Celeste
- Jayme Closs
- Monica & Michael Bennett
- Johnny Gosch
- Amy Lynn Bradley
- Ronald Tammen
- Tara Calico
- Timmothy Pitzen
- Brian Shaffer
- Asha Degree
- The Beaumont Children
- Ryan Chambers
- The Fort Worth Missing Trio
- Brandon Swanson
- Bobby Dunbar
- Margaret Fox
- George Mallory & Andrew Irvine
- Marjorie West
- Frederick Valentich
- Evelyn Hartley
- He Jiankui
- The Sodders
- Lauren Spierer
- Lars Mittank
- Maura Murray
- The Springfield Three
- Rebecca Coriam
- Zebb Quinn
- Harold Holt
- D. B. Cooper
- Amelia Earhart
#50: The Princes in the Tower
People go missing all the time - but seldom royal figures. One of the most enduring mysteries of English history involves The Princes in the Tower - King Edward V and his younger brother, Prince Richard. The boys were taken to the Tower of London in the spring of 1483, and Richard III took the throne from Edward that June following a manipulative power grab. After that, the two princes were seen less and less, until they were never seen again. The idea of children disappearing within the heavily guarded Tower feels deeply sinister, almost gothic, and the lack of explanation only adds to the eeriness. To this day, no one knows what exactly happened to the princes, but it’s widely believed that Richard had them murdered.
#49: Eloise Worledge
At 7:30 AM on the morning of January 12, 1976, the Worledge family of Melbourne, Australia woke up without eight-year-old Eloise, who was not in her bed. The police were called, and the girl’s younger brother told them that he heard “robbers” take Eloise in the night but that he was too scared to intervene. Neighbors also reported hearing a child’s scream and saw a dark green car speeding away from the area around 2 AM. Some neighbors also saw a suspicious man loitering outside the Worledge house around midnight. An extensive search was launched for the young girl, but neither she nor the man seen outside her house that night have ever been found.
#48: Dennis Martin
The most extensive search in the history of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park occurred in the summer of 1969, when six-year-old Dennis Martin went missing. Dennis was camping with his family when he went into the bushes with some other kids. They had hoped to jump out and scare the adults who were walking along the trail. Unfortunately, Dennis was not with the other kids when they all came out. Up to 1,400 people helped look for Dennis over 56 square miles, and they found nothing but child-sized footprints leading to a stream. Dennis’s father always believed that he was abducted, but park officials think that he wandered off and perished from exposure, as the immediate area was marked by steep ravines.
#47: Emma Fillipoff
On the evening of November 28, 2012, 26-year-old Emma Fillipoff was seen walking barefoot outside Victoria, B.C.’s Fairmont Empress Hotel and appearing distressed. Police spoke with her but eventually let her go. She was never seen again. In 2018, a man named William said he’d given a distressed young woman matching Emma’s description a ride to nearby Colwood early on the morning of November 29. Police searched the area but found nothing. A man in a green shirt was also observed tearing down a missing persons poster of Emma. When confronted, he said that Emma was his girlfriend and that she wasn’t missing, but that she had run away. As of 2023, police are still trying to find this man for questioning.
#46: Dorothy Arnold
Born and raised in Manhattan, Dorothy Arnold was a wealthy socialite hoping to become a writer. On December 12, 1910, Arnold left home to do some shopping. Witnesses say that she appeared cheerful, and Arnold ran into a friend, telling her that she was going to walk home through Central Park. But Arnold never made it home. Her family wanted to avoid drawing attention to themselves, so they hired private detectives rather than calling the police. Unfortunately, they were unable to find any leads, and the police weren’t contacted until six weeks had already passed. By then it was far too late, and Arnold was never found. Some suggest that she was depressed, as evident by burned manuscripts that were found in her bedroom.
#45: Louis Le Prince
Considered the Father of Cinematography, Louis Le Prince invented one of the earliest motion picture cameras, but his work was largely overshadowed by his mysterious disappearance in September 1890. After visiting his brother in Dijon, France, Le Prince boarded a train to Paris carrying critical films, camera equipment, and documents. But when the train arrived, neither he nor his luggage were found. In fact, no witnesses ever recalled seeing Le Prince aboard the train despite his tall, distinctive appearance at about 6’4”. To this day, no one knows what happened to the inventor, although numerous conspiracy theories exist - like the idea that Thomas Edison had him murdered in order to claim the invention of motion picture technology for himself.
#44: Barbara Follett
Considered a child prodigy, Barbara Follett was a remarkable storyteller, publishing her first novel when she was just twelve years old. But her writing career petered out as she aged and she entered into an unhappy marriage, resulting in a period of depression. On December 7, 1939, Follett and her husband, Nickerson Rogers, got into an argument, and Follett stormed out. After two weeks of not hearing from her, Rogers contacted the police. Unfortunately, she was never found. In 2019, writer Daniel Mills argued that Follett’s remains were actually found back in 1948 but were misidentified at the time. If true, then Follett likely took her own life, as a bottle containing traces of a barbiturate was found at the scene.
#43: Jim Thompson
A Princeton-educated architect, Jim Thompson worked as an intelligence officer in World War II before moving to Thailand and reviving the country’s silk industry. He became a prominent expatriate figure in Bangkok, known for his luxurious lifestyle and deep interest in Southeast Asian culture. In March of 1967, Thompson was vacationing at a friend’s bungalow when he went for a short afternoon walk. He never returned. Despite massive search efforts - including soldiers and local tribesmen - no trace of Thompson was ever found. The case has drawn countless conspiracy theories owing to Thompson’s work in intelligence circles, like the fact that he was abducted or murdered while out on his walk. His Bangkok home is now a museum, drawing tourists and conspiracy enthusiasts alike.
#42: Benjamin Bathurst
For centuries now, the disappearance of Benjamin Bathurst was viewed as an almost supernatural occurrence. The British diplomat was in Prussia during the Napoleonic Wars, traveling with his courier, Herr Krause. The story goes that Bathurst and Krause stopped at an inn to wait for new horses. When told that they were ready, Bathurst left the inn, followed shortly behind by Krause. But when Krause got outside mere seconds later, Bathurst was gone. His disappearance quickly became fodder for speculative fiction, the sudden nature of it leading to many fanciful ideas. However, modern historians believe that this story is highly exaggerated and that it’s very likely that Bathurst was murdered. Prussia was plagued by highway thieves at the time, and the diplomat wore expensive clothing.
#41: Bobby Panknin
In August 1963, four-year-old Bobby Panknin was camping with his family in Stevens County, Washington, near the Canadian border. Bobby, his mother Edna, and his two older brothers were walking on an isolated logging road when Edna took the oldest brother, Bill, down to a creek. She told the middle child, six-year-old Jim, to watch Bobby. Jim listened at first but soon got bored and left Bobby to join his brother and mother. When Edna saw Jim, she was angry and went back to get Bobby, but he was already gone. A massive search was undertaken, and bloodhounds traced Bobby’s scent to a fork in the road about two miles away. Unfortunately, young Bobby was never found.
#40: Gordon Page Jr.
In March of 1991, 28-year-old Gordon Page Jr. was placed in a Grand Rapids home that specialized in autism. On May 21, Page became highly distressed while saying goodbye to his father following a visit. Six days later, a caretaker was conducting a midnight check when they discovered that Page had escaped through a window. Around one hour later, a firefighter reported seeing a man matching his description hitchhiking on I‑96 exiting Grand Rapids. About six weeks later, a series of baseball cards were found under an I-96 overpass, and as Page was extremely passionate about baseball cards, many believe that they belonged to the missing man. Unfortunately, he has never been found, and Page’s father passed away in 2018 without receiving closure.
#39: Glen & Bessie Hyde
In 1928, Bessie Hyde attempted to become the first woman in history to run the Grand Canyon rapids. She tried accomplishing this feat with her new husband, Glen, an experienced river runner who built a custom scow for the trip. The couple were last seen on November 18, 1928 below Hermit Rapid. When they failed to arrive at their scheduled destination, a search was conducted, and their boat was found with all of their belongings still onboard. It showed no signs of struggle or damage, hinting that whatever happened to the newlyweds may have been sudden and unexpected. They were eventually declared dead by drowning, but without definitive proof of what happened, their fate remains one of the Grand Canyon’s most enduring mysteries.
#38: Susan Powell
28-year-old Susan Powell lived in Utah with her husband and their two sons, and she was reported missing on December 7, 2009 after not showing up for work, kickstarting a remarkably tragic story. Authorities found Powell’s blood in their home, but Powell herself was never found. She had earlier reported domestic troubles at home and even wrote a will claiming, “If I die, it may not be an accident.” Indeed, authorities quickly zeroed in on Susan’s husband Joshua, believing that he conspired with his brother Michael in killing Susan, but they were never formally charged. In a devastating turn of events, Joshua took his own life and that of their two children in February 2012, and Michael followed his brother one year later.
#37: The Yuba County Five
Five men, each with an intellectual disability or psychiatric condition, attended a Chico State basketball game on the night of February 24, 1978. Police were notified after they failed to return from the game, and the group’s car was found miles off course in remote Plumas National Forest. It was drivable and showed no mechanical issues. When the snow finally melted in June, the remains of four of the five men were found scattered around the area. The fifth man, Gary Mathias, has never been found. It seems like they got lost, left the car, and perished, but a local man also reported seeing two vehicles and suspicious flashlight activity near his own stuck car that same night, leading some to suspect foul play.
#36: Andrew Gosden
On September 14, 2007, 14-year-old Andrew Gosden left his home in Doncaster, England and bought a one-way ticket to London. He arrived at King’s Cross Station at 11:20 AM and was captured on CCTV leaving the train. And that was the last that anyone saw of him. To this day, no one knows what happened to Gosden or even why he traveled to London in the first place. Some suspect that he skipped school to do some sightseeing, others think that he was attending a concert. A break in the case seemed to occur in 2021 when two men were arrested on speculation of kidnapping and human trafficking, but they were later cleared of all wrongdoing. As of now, the case remains open.
#35: Jimmy Hoffa
Union leader Jimmy Hoffa has endured in the public consciousness since he went missing in 1975. Hoffa led the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and had powerful links to organized crime throughout the late ‘50s and ‘60s, but he ultimately resigned from the position in 1971. Hoffa was last seen around 2:45 PM on July 30, 1975, in the parking lot of a Bloomfield Township restaurant. He was allegedly there to meet mobsters Anthony Giacalone and Anthony Provenzano, and he was never seen again after entering their vehicle. The leading theory is that Hoffa was murdered by the mob, supposedly after threatening to expose their involvement in the union. His body was then disposed of, ensuring that it would never be found.
#34: Shelly Miscavige
Back in 1982, Shelly Barnett married David Miscavige, the future leader of the Church of Scientology. David Miscavige has run the controversial Church since 1986, and Shelly often worked behind-the-scenes as his assistant. However, she has not been seen since 2007, leading many to believe that something nefarious is going on. In 2012, attorneys claimed that she was devoting her time to Scientology and no longer wished to appear in public. And the following year, ex-Scientologist Leah Remini filed a missing persons report, but it was closed within hours when the LAPD supposedly found and spoke with Miscavige. Regardless, many continue to question the narrative, and the Church has continuously refused to comment on her whereabouts.
#33: Lord Lucan
British aristocrat Lord Lucan was well connected in high society, but he struggled with gambling debts and a troubled personal life. Things fatally escalated in 1974 during a bitter custody battle between Lucan and his estranged wife, Veronica Duncan. On November 7, the family’s nanny was bludgeoned to death and Lady Lucan was injured. She ran to a pub and claimed that her husband had attacked her. Meanwhile, Lucan fled and wrote a number of defensive letters protesting his innocence. His abandoned car was later found near the Newhaven coast, complete with bloodstains, a bottle of vodka, and a pipe similar to the one that was used to kill his nanny. Lucan was never seen again, despite extensive search efforts and warrants for his arrest.
#32: Ben Padilla & John Mutantu
Between March 2002 and May 2003, a Boeing 727 sat idle at Angola’s Quatro de Fevereiro Airport. On May 25, 2003, while the plane was in the process of being converted, it was hijacked by two men, Ben Padilla and John Mutantu. And while Padilla was a pilot, he was not certified to fly a Boeing 727. Air traffic control desperately tried to contact the now-moving plane, but they were unsuccessful, and the aircraft flew away in a northwest direction, towards the Atlantic Ocean. It never landed. Despite an enormous worldwide search consisting of multiple intelligence agencies, no trace of the plane or the two men have ever been found.
#31: The Crew of the Mary Celeste
In December 1872, the Mary Celeste was found floating by herself in the Atlantic Ocean, quickly becoming one of the most famous ghost ships in the world. The ship was seaworthy and there were no signs of a struggle. The crew’s belongings were also completely intact, and the food stores were left undisturbed. There was nothing alarming about the ship, but its passengers were nowhere to be found. To this day, no one knows what happened to the crew of the Mary Celeste. The most likely explanation is that they were scared into abandoning the ship, likely the result of some natural phenomenon or maybe even a small explosion from the alcohol in the cargo hold. But as it stands, we can only guess.
#30: Jayme Closs
In the early hours of October 15th 2018, police responded to a 911 call at the home of James and Denise Closs in Barron, Wisconsin. Inside, they discovered a horrible scene: the couple had been murdered, and their teenage daughter, Jayme, was missing. For 88 agonizing days, authorities searched for Jayme, but were unable to come up with any leads. Then, on January 10th 2019, Jayme mysteriously turned up in the woods, where she encountered a local woman who took her to a neighbor’s house. Investigators later learned that Jake Thomas Patterson had killed her parents that night and abducted her for his own sexual gratification. Patterson was arrested that same day and sentenced to two consecutive life terms, plus 40 additional years.
#29: Monica & Michael Bennett
The last time anyone saw half-siblings, Monica and Michael Bennett, was on June 21st 1989 in Brunswick, Georgia. The two shared a mother, but had different fathers. On the day they vanished, Michael’s father, Robert, picked them up, reportedly to help him pack for his move to Alabama. That was the last anyone saw of them. When questioned, Robert gave conflicting accounts, claiming at one point that they ran away from his apartment and, at another, that he dropped them off at their mother’s house. Despite these discrepancies, police classified the siblings as runaways and failed to carry out a thorough investigation. It wasn’t until the 2000s that they were reclassified as “endangered missing” and added to the government’s missing person database.
#28: Johnny Gosch
On September 5th 1982, Johnny Gosch, a paperboy in West Des Moines, Iowa, disappeared during his morning paper route. Multiple witnesses reported seeing him speak with a mysterious man in a blue car shortly before he vanished, while another claimed they saw a silver car speeding away near the spot where Gosch’s paper wagon was left. The case has since gained widespread publicity, but authorities have made no headway in determining who took Gosch or what became of him. In 1997, his mother, Noreen, alleged that Gosch visited her briefly with an unidentified man, but left without revealing where he was going. The validity of this claim remains in doubt, and despite other unconfirmed sightings, Gosch is still officially missing.
#27: Amy Lynn Bradley
In 1998, Amy Lynn Bradley had just graduated from college and was preparing to start a new job when she joined her family on a celebratory Caribbean cruise to Curaçao. At around 6am on March 24th, Bradley’s father discovered she was missing from the balcony where she had fallen asleep. All efforts to find her on the cruise ship proved futile, as the crew delayed announcing her disappearance until after most passengers had disembarked. Over the years, various theories have emerged, including that she was abducted and trafficked, fell overboard and drowned, or that she deliberately ended her own life. There have also been possible sightings of Bradley in Curaçao, but none have led to her being reunited with her family.
#26: Ronald Tammen
Ronald Tammen, a 19-year-old sophomore at Miami University in Ohio, vanished mysteriously on the night of April 19th 1953. The last person who saw him was his residence hall manager who gave him new bed sheets around 8pm after someone placed a fish in his bed as a prank. By 10:30pm, when his roommate returned, Tammen was gone, leaving behind his coat, wallet and car keys. Although his roommate reported the disappearance the next day, school authorities delayed taking action for several days. One woman in a nearby town claimed that on that night, a disoriented, dirty man resembling Tammen knocked on her door asking for directions. This, alongside other reported sightings, still haven’t helped authorities figure out what happened to Ronald Tammen.
#25: Tara Calico
On June 15th 1989, a woman found a Polaroid photograph at a Florida convenience store. The picture showed a young woman and a boy, both bound and gagged, seemingly in the back of a van. Many believed the woman to be Tara Calico, who had vanished nearly one year earlier during her routine bike ride near her home in Belen, New Mexico. Neither she nor her bike were found, and authorities only recovered pieces of her Sony Walkman and a cassette tape along the trail. While Scotland Yard identified the woman in the picture as Calico, an FBI analysis proved inconclusive. Her whereabouts remain a mystery, but in 2023, the Valencia County Sheriff’s Office announced new leads in the case.
#24: Timmothy Pitzen
On May 11th 2011, James Pitzen dropped his son, Timmothy, off at school, but when he returned later that day, he discovered the boy was missing. Shortly after 8am, Timmothy’s mother, Amy Fry-Pitzen, had picked him up and taken him on a trip to amusement parks, resorts and zoos. He was last seen two days later on security footage. On May 14th, Fry-Pritzen’s body was discovered in a motel room. She had taken her own life and left a note stating that Timmothy was safe, but would never be found. True to those words, no trace of him has ever emerged. In 2019, hope briefly resurfaced when a teenager in Kentucky claimed to be Timmothy, but sadly, that turned out to be a hoax.
#23: Brian Shaffer
Ohio State University medical student Brian Shaffer went out with friends to celebrate the start of spring break in 2006. As the night progressed, Shaffer got separated from the group, and his friends assumed he had gone home without telling them. But when he failed to show up in the subsequent days, and missed a long-planned flight, he was reported missing. Security footage from the bar’s entrance captured Shaffer briefly interacting with two ladies, but showed no evidence of him leaving. The only other way out was through a construction zone, which would have been difficult for him to navigate, especially if he was intoxicated. This puzzling series of events has raised several questions about Shaffer’s fate that authorities haven’t been able to answer.
#22: Asha Degree
After putting their daughter, Asha, to bed on February 13th 2000, Harold and Iquilla Degree woke up the next morning to find her missing. There were no signs of forced entry, and Asha’s brother, O'Bryant, was asleep in his own bed. Strangely, it seemed she had packed a bag and simply walked out of the house. Around 4am, several motorists spotted her walking along a highway alone, and when one approached her, she fled into the woods, never to be seen again. Months later, Asha’s bag was found at a construction site, containing items that didn’t belong to her. For years, the case yielded no significant leads, until September 2024 when authorities classified her disappearance as a homicide, and named two suspects.
#21: The Beaumont Children
It remains one of the most chilling mysteries in Australian history. On January 26th 1966, three siblings – Jane, Arnna and Grant Beaumont – left their home in Adelaide to visit the nearby Glenelg Beach alone. Witnesses reported seeing them playing with a tall, thin sun-tanned man, and later, walking away with him. When the children failed to return home that afternoon, their alarmed parents contacted the authorities. But despite extensive searches in and around the beach, no trace of the kids was ever found. Over the decades, there have been countless suspects and theories surrounding their disappearance, but none have led to any concrete answers. Sadly, both parents passed away without ever knowing the fate of their three children.
#20: Ryan Chambers
In June of 2005, Ryan Chambers embarked on a spiritual journey to India with his friend John Booker. However, after a while, Booker noticed that Chambers wasn’t getting much sleep and was beginning to act strangely. Then, early in the morning of August 24th, the 21-year-old Australian simply walked out of his ashram wearing nothing but a pair of shorts. He left behind all his belongings and an eerie note reading, “If I'm gone, don't worry. I'm not dead, I'm freeing minds. But first I have to free my own.” No one has seen or heard from him since. An exhaustive search was launched, but after turning up nothing for years, Chambers was legally declared dead in 2023.
#19: The Fort Worth Missing Trio
Rachel Trlica, Renee Wilson, and Julie Ann Moseley were Christmas shopping in the Fort Worth, Texas Seminary South Shopping Center when they went missing. The girls failed to return to their respective homes, prompting their families to conduct a search. They found Trlica’s car in the parking lot and it contained multiple gifts, indicating that the girls had returned to the vehicle at some point. Nevertheless, the trio were nowhere to be seen. Trlica’s husband later received a letter presumably written by her, stating that they were “going to Houston” to “get away” and they’d be back in about a week. But they never showed up and have remained missing ever since. The families have since cast doubt on the letter’s authenticity.
#18: Brandon Swanson
On May 14th 2008, Brandon Swanson of Minnesota was driving home following a night out partying. After veering off into a ditch, the 19-year-old student phoned his parents and asked them to pick him up. Swanson’s parents remained on the phone with him for the next 47 minutes, but couldn’t seem to find him at his supposed location. Still on the call, Swanson asked his dad to meet him at a local bar but soon after, he yelled out a curse word and went silent. Investigators later found that the young man was actually about 25 miles away from where he thought he was. It is believed that he inadvertently fell into the Yellow Medicine River and drowned, hence the sudden cursing.
#17: Bobby Dunbar
The story of Bobby Dunbar is a bizarre one. Dunbar disappeared on a family fishing trip on August 23, 1912. Authorities then found a boy matching his description with a man named William Walters. Walters insisted that the kid was actually named Bruce Anderson, which was corroborated by Anderson’s mother Julia, who claimed that she allowed her son go on a trip with him. The case went to trial and Anderson was eventually handed to the Dunbars, with whom he lived the rest of his life. Unable to afford a lawyer, Julia lost her case and had her reputation soiled in the media. However, a future DNA test proved that the kid was, in fact, not Dunbar, lending further credence to Julia’s story.
#16: Margaret Fox
In 1974, Margaret Fox advertised her services as a babysitter, attracting the attention of one “John Marshall.” Marshall contacted Fox and told her to meet him in Mount Holly, New Jersey. The young girl traveled there on a bus and was never seen again. The authorities were immediately contacted and they traced Marshall’s number to a supermarket pay phone, which raised suspicions. The Fox family also received a phone call from a stranger, demanding $10,000 for their daughter’s safe return. Unfortunately, this call could not be traced and the man was never identified. Despite investigators’ efforts, the case eventually fizzled out, with no one finding Fox or figuring out the identity of Marshall ever since.
#15: George Mallory & Andrew Irvine
The story of George Mallory and Andrew Irvine captures the horror of mountain climbing and the endless allure of Everest. Both men took part in the ill-fated British Mount Everest Expedition of 1924, hoping to be the first people to reach the top. They were last spotted about 800 feet from the summit but promptly disappeared. The men were soon presumed dead and publicly mourned as heroes of Britain. Their whereabouts remained a mystery for the next 75 years until the Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition located Mallory’s preserved corpse in 1999. It was found with a puncture wound in the forehead, suggesting that he had fallen and accidentally struck himself with his ice ax. It wasn’t until 2024 that partial remains of Irvine’s body were found.
#14: Marjorie West
Called “the great unsolved mystery of the missing” by The Guardian, the story of Marjorie West is a fascinating one. West was picnicking with her family on May 8, 1938 when she went missing. The story goes that West’s sister Dorothea left her unattended to, but upon her return, the young child was gone. A massive search was undertaken involving thousands of people, but the effort was unsuccessful. Then-police commissioner P. W. Foote believed that West had been playing hide-and-seek when she got lost. However, a man named Harold Beck later wrote a book positing that West was kidnapped and grew up with her captors as Sylvia London. Beck claimed that London eventually confessed to being West, but she passed away in 2009.
#13: Frederick Valentich
Australian pilot Frederick Valentich was a student in the country’s Air Training Corps. In the evening of October 21, 1978, Valentich was flying over the Bass Strait, which separates mainland Australia from Tasmania. During the flight, Valentich contacted Melbourne Flight Service to report an unidentified aircraft that was following him. The craft had bright lights and seemed to be hovering right above him. Just after telling Flight Service that it wasn’t an aircraft, a loud scraping noise was heard over the radio. Valentich was lost, and his plane was never recovered. Ufologists believe that the pilot was abducted by a UFO, while others posit that he was unknowingly flying upside down and saw his own reflection in the water before crashing.
#12: Evelyn Hartley
Teenager Evelyn Hartley was tasked with babysitting the daughter of Viggo Rasmussen, one of her parents’ colleagues. Hartley arrived at the house as planned, but when she failed to check in later that evening, her father Richard gave her a call. There was no response, so he traveled to the Rasmussen house himself. He found a wild sight, as items were thrown everywhere and the furniture had been moved. There were also signs of a break-in, including a torn-off window screen, pry marks, footprints, and blood. The baby was found unharmed upstairs, but there was no sign of Hartley. A witness reported seeing two men driving away with a young girl, adding credence to the theory that Hartley was kidnapped in a break-in.
#11: He Jiankui
In November 2018, this Chinese biophysicist made world headlines when he announced he’d created the first genetically-edited human babies. His claim was met with widespread condemnation due to serious ethical issues with his experiment. His research was suspended, he was fired from SUSTech, and then...he disappeared. In December it was reported that he was sequestered in an apartment under guard. In December 2019, it was announced that Jiankui had been sentenced to three years in prison, but there remain unanswered questions regarding his whereabouts and well-being. He was released from prison in April 2022, and is now working on gene therapy for rare genetic diseases.
#10: The Sodders
A devastating fire erupted in the Sodder household on Christmas Eve, 1945. The Sodder parents and four of their nine children escaped, but the other five weren’t so lucky. The easy theory is that the children died in the fire, but the story contains many twists that cast some doubt. No evidence of the bodies were ever found. Furthermore, patriarch George Sodder spoke negatively about his then-fascist native Italy, prompting a theory that the Sicilian Mafia had burned the house and kidnapped the children. Years later, a photo of an older man was mailed to the Sodders, purportedly depicting a now-grown Louis. They agreed that the man harbored a resemblance to their missing child, and they both held onto this hope until their deaths.
#9: Lauren Spierer
In 2011, 20-year-old Lauren Spierer was attending Indiana University and studying textiles merchandising. On the night of June 2, 2011, Spierer went out with some friends to Bloomington’s Kilroy’s Sports Bar. She left the bar around 2:30 AM, and was last seen leaving a friend’s apartment at 4:30. She remains missing to this day. Various theories have been put forth, including abduction and a fatal overdose, as Spierer had reportedly consumed alcohol and drugs. Despite thousands of tips and attempts by police to tie her disappearance to other crimes in the area, Lauren Spierer’s whereabouts remain unknown.
#8: Lars Mittank
One of the strangest and creepiest stories involving a disappearance has to be that of 28-year old German man Lars Mittank. In June 2014, Mittank was vacationing at Bulgaria’s Golden Sands seaside resort with friends. When it was time to leave, Mittank was left in the country owing to a ruptured eardrum, which prevented him from flying. He checked into the Hotel Color Varna by himself, where he reportedly began to act paranoid. He even called his mother and told her that four men were looking to get rid of him. The last time anyone saw Mittank, he was running through Varna Airport in fear, hopping a fence, and fleeing into the nearby woods. He hasn’t been seen since. The source of his fear, and his current whereabouts, remain unknown.
#7: Maura Murray
On February 9, 2004, Murray, a nursing student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, emailed her professors claiming that there’d been a death in the family. Her parents have since stated that no such death occurred. She looked into hotels in Vermont, loaded her car with clothing and toiletries, and packed up her belongings in boxes. After leaving campus, she purchased alcohol and withdrew $280 from an ATM. Murray crashed her car around 7:00 that night, and when police arrived at 7:45, she was nowhere to be found. The responding officer found a few suspect items in the car, including driving directions to Vermont and blank accident report forms. Of Murray herself there was, and has been, no trace.
#6: The Springfield Three
This missing persons case, in which Sherrill Levitt, Stacy McCall, and Suzie Streeter all disappeared, has remained unsolved since 1992. The story begins at Levitt’s home in Springfield, Missouri, where the women spent the night after attending high school graduation parties. When a friend arrived at the house the next morning, all three were missing - despite their cars being parked outside. The friend found a broken porch light and she reportedly received an obscene phone call while there. Levitt’s dog was also visibly agitated. When McCall’s mother later arrived to investigate, she found a “strange” message on the answering machine, but this was accidentally deleted. Unfortunately, the crime scene was so badly contaminated that it prevented a proper investigation.
#5: Rebecca Coriam
When this 24-year old British woman disappeared the morning of March 21, 2011, she was working for the Disney Wonder cruise ship. Coriam was last seen on CCTV footage, talking to someone on one of the ship’s internal phones at 5:45 AM. She was clad in extra large clothing and appeared visibly distressed by the call. She hung up, walked away, and was never seen again. Investigators believe that Coriam went overboard, but how she went overboard remains a mystery. Some believe she jumped, others believe she was pushed by a rogue wave, and her parents believe that she was thrown into the ocean. The official investigation has received loads of criticism, and Disney Wonder has even been accused of covering up her disappearance.
#4: Zebb Quinn
On January 2, 2000, 18-year-old Zebb Quinn met up with his friend Robert Owens. After Quinn received a notification on his pager, however, he appeared frantic, and allegedly sped away in his car. Two days later, after being treated at the hospital for injuries, Owens called in sick for Quinn. On January 6, Quinn’s car was found abandoned with bizarre lipstick drawings on the back windshield and a live puppy stuck inside. In July 2017, Owens was charged with first degree murder in the death of Quinn, but ultimately pleaded guilty to accessory after-the-fact. He is also serving life in prison for ending the lives of the Food Network’s Cristie Schoen and her husband, J.T. Codd in 2015. As for Quinn, his remains still haven’t been found.
#3: Harold Holt
In December 1967, Harold Holt was serving as the 17th Prime Minister of Australia. Holt was an avid outdoorsman but nearly 60 years old, and his personal doctor had recently advised him against swimming. On the afternoon of December 17, 1967, Holt went for a swim at Australia’s Cheviot Beach, despite rough waters. He was quickly swept out to sea, and a massive search was undertaken in the area. Despite the country’s best efforts, no one was able to find any trace of Holt. A governmental inquiry was never launched owing to the wishes of Holt’s family. This detail, among other factors, has led to numerous conspiracy theories. Despite countless claims to the contrary, the official ruling stands that Holt died in a tragic drowning.
#2: D. B. Cooper
The story of D.B. Cooper is one of the most famous unsolved mysteries of all time, a story involving air theft, a cinematic escape, and an ambiguous outcome. Cooper is the pseudonym of a man who hijacked a Boeing 727 in 1971 and extorted $200,000 in ransom. After securing the money Cooper opened the door mid flight and jumped out into the cold, dark night - never to be seen again. The only trace of Cooper remains a small cache of ransom bills that was recovered in 1980. The rest of the money, and D.B. himself, remains missing. Many FBI agents claim that Cooper likely died in the jump, but then again, they could just be trying to save face.
#1: Amelia Earhart
If there’s one unsolved story more popular than that of D.B. Cooper, it’s that of Amelia Earhart. Earhart was a popular and renowned aviator and the first woman to fly solo over the Atlantic. In 1937, she and navigator Fred Noonan attempted to circumnavigate the globe. However, they disappeared over the Pacific near Hawaii and were never heard from again. Countless theories have been put forth regarding their ultimate fate, but no consensus has ever been made. It’s most likely that Earhart and Noonan ran out of fuel and crashed into the Pacific while desperately looking for Howland Island. It’s a boring answer, but the most realistic often are.
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