The disappearance of 15-year-old Thomas Medlin of St. James, Long Island, has taken a troubling turn as investigators highlight a critical four-minute window that they say remains unexplained — a gap that could be key to understanding what happened to the missing teen.

Có thể là hình ảnh về Cầu Brooklyn, cầu Queensboro và văn bản

Thomas has been missing since January 9, 2026. According to police, he left his school that afternoon and traveled into New York City on public transportation, eventually arriving at Grand Central Terminal. Surveillance video confirms he was inside the station before making his way toward Lower Manhattan.

Authorities later located footage placing Thomas on the Manhattan Bridge pedestrian walkway, marking the last confirmed sighting of the teen. The video shows him walking up the incline of the bridge, alone, carrying his backpack and wearing the clothing described earlier by family and police.

However, investigators say he was never seen leaving the bridge through any of the walkway exits — neither on the Manhattan side nor the Brooklyn side. Police describe the lack of exit footage as a major concern.

What has intensified the urgency of the investigation is a newly revealed detail:
the final activity recorded on Thomas’s phone occurred at 7:09 PM.

Just one minute later, at 7:10 PM, a nearby camera — positioned with a partial view of the East River below the Manhattan Bridge — captured what authorities describe as a splash in the water.

Police have not confirmed whether the splash is connected to Thomas, but they acknowledge that the timing is “highly significant” and that no person is seen reappearing on camera afterward.

Investigators have been unable to determine what transpired during the four minutes between Thomas’s last known movement on the bridge walkway and the recorded splash.

Authorities say they are reviewing:
— additional surveillance angles
— pedestrian and cyclist traffic at the time
— lighting and visibility conditions
— environmental factors on the bridge
— digital data tied to Thomas’s phone movements
— any witnesses who may have been near the walkway

Police have not stated whether any belongings were recovered from the bridge or the surrounding areas.

The lack of exit footage continues to puzzle investigators, who note that while bridge cameras do not cover every inch of the walkway, Thomas should have appeared on at least one camera if he had exited normally.

Family members, who have been anxiously awaiting updates, describe the situation as “unbearable” and say they are desperate for clarity. They have pleaded for the public to come forward with any information, even if it seems insignificant.

Authorities have not classified the case as criminal, but they confirm that all possibilities remain under review. Search efforts around the East River, the shoreline areas, and nearby structural sections of the bridge have been ongoing.

Investigators emphasize that the four-minute window — from 7:06 PM to 7:10 PM — is now considered the most critical gap in Thomas’s timeline. It is during this period that the teen’s trail goes dark, his digital footprint ceases, and the unexplained splash is recorded.

For now, the unanswered questions remain at the center of the investigation:

— Why was Thomas on the Manhattan Bridge?
— Why is there no footage of him leaving?
— What happened in the one minute between 7:09 and 7:10 PM?
— And does the splash relate to his disappearance?

As the search enters its next phase, authorities continue to urge the public to provide any detail that could help bridge the gap in a timeline that has left investigators, family, and the wider community seeking answers.

Thomas Medlin remains missing.