The mother of an autistic boy missing in Tennessee says she believes someone must have her son, after four weeks of searching.
Katie Proudfoot told Crime Stories with Nancy Grace that she couldn’t understand how Sebastian Rogers, who is 15, couldn’t have been found yet otherwise.
“I feel like if he had been close to the house, or had walked off, that we would have found him by now with as many people as have been searching,” Ms Proudfoot told the podcast on Monday.
Sebastian, who has high-functioning autism, disappeared on 26 February in Hendersonville, Sumner County. His mother had gone to wake him up for school and found his bedroom empty.
Sebastian is believed to have wandered off in the middle of the night with a flashlight, barefoot and alone.
Since then, authorities have searched for him using drones, helicopters, search-and-rescue dogs and teams on foot, but with no luck.
Now, four weeks on, a volunteer organisation, The United Cajun Navy, has stepped in to help with the search.
The group had helped in the effort to find Riley Strain, a university student who disappeared in Nashville two weeks ago. His body was found on Friday.
Investigators still following up on tips
In an update on Friday 22 March, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said its officers were still going over and reviewing information related to Sebastian’s case.
“Much of the work being done to track down information about where Sebastian may have gone is not something you will necessarily see in the public. But we want you to know that every day, work is being done to find Sebastian,” the TBI said in a statement.
The Bureau urged locals to check their property, outbuildings, decks and vehicles for any signs of the 15-year-old.
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 22:09
Sebastian’s mom heard ‘noise’ coming from his room
“He was doing something in his room because about an hour later, I heard some noise, and I was like, ‘I don’t care what you’re doing in there, but go to sleep,”’ Katie Proudfoot, Mr Roger’s mother, recalled the channel.
“[At] six o’clock, I went to wake him up for school Monday morning, and that’s when he wasn’t there.”
Ms Proudfoot scanned the entire house, as she said it’s typical for him to get up and rummage for snacks or will dip behind the walls and playfully scare her.
“I didn’t see him in his room. I looked all over. I ran through the whole house. I looked out all the doors and windows, and I was like hollering his name,” she said.
“I jumped in my car, and I drove around the neighborhood, and I drove over by the school, and … like, at this point, I was like hysterical, and I was crying, I was screaming.”
It was at that point that her husband phoned law enforcement, but “20 days later, we haven’t found him”.
Amelia Neath & Andrea Cavallier25 March 2024 20:23
Volunteer rally announced by UCN
The United Cajun Navy has asked for volunteers who want to help with the search for Sebastian to use a new rallying point in Hendersonville.
The group has asked for people to use a spot at 90 Volunteer Drive, but added that the property owner has asked to not be disturbed.
UCN’s rallying point is around 6 miles from where Sebastian was last seen on Stafford Court, on 25 February.
Daniel Gooding25 March 2024 19:23
United Cajun Navy asks other search groups to stand down
After announcing that it will be assisting in the search for Sebastian, the United Cajun Navy said on Monday that it needed other volunteer groups to “stand down” for 24 hours.
The group says that will allow organisers to come up with a plan and proper permissions of where and how they can search, especially on private land.
They also asked for people to not live stream search efforts, saying this situation is about finding Sebastian and not getting likes and shares.
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 18:55
A month-long search
Sebastian Rogers vanished overnight between 25 and 26 February.
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 18:03
Dad says it’s his job to bring son home
Speaking to News 2 in Tennessee, Sebastian’s father Seth Rogers said he had called in the new volunteers.
“I just want to find my son,” he told the outlet. “All I know is that he has disappeared out of his mama’s house, and it’s my job to find him and bring him home.”
He was filmed last week searching woodland, calling his son’s name:
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 17:02
What is the United Cajun Navy?
The United Cajun Navy, which has sent a team to help search for Sebastian, is a nonprofit organisation which usually offers up search-and-rescue teams following natural disasters.
However, they also help in the search for missing persons.
The group boasts some 4,890-plus volunteers across over 19 US states.
UCN gained widespsread recognition following Hurricane Katrina nearly 20 years ago. Its teams gather supplies from across the country and direct them to where they are needed.
That also applies to missing persons searches, with the group having its own search-and-rescue dogs, drones and other resources.
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 16:16
Amber Alert remains active for Sebastian
There is a national Amber Alert active for Sebastian Rogers, one of only two currently.
The alert describes him as being white, 5’5” tall, weighing 120lbs., with brown hair and brown eyes.
He was last seen wearing a black sweatshurt, black sweatpants and glasses. He may have been barefoot.
Anyone with information on his location is asked to contact the Sumner County Emergency Communications Center at 615-451-3838 or the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation at 1-800-TBI-FIND.
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 15:10
Sebastian’s parents speak out
In an interview in early March, Sebastian’s stepfather Chris Proudfoot and his mother Katie Proudfoot told WSMV that they were “on a constant rollercoaster ride oh helpless and hopeless”.
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 14:04
United Cajun Navy joins search
On Saturday morning, nearly one month on from Sebastian’s disappearance, the United Cajun Navy announced it was directing volunteers to the search.
Speaking at a briefing in Nashville, David Flagg, the national director of operations for the volunteer organisation, said they could not share too much on the active invetigation.
“First and foremost, we’d like to see Sebastian found safe and sound,” Mr Flagg told WKRN. “I think everybody’s hoping, that’s always our hope, is to find, regardless of what the evidence and circumstances might point to to the contrary, our hope — and we always hold onto that hope until we find out we can’t anymore — that that person will be found safe and sound, returned to their family.”
Dan Gooding25 March 2024 13:39