The disappearance of 15-year-old Thomas Medlin, which initially appeared to be a routine missing-teenager story, has taken a horrifying and irreversible turn. On January 29, 2026, the New York Police Department released a portion of surveillance footage from the Manhattan Bridge that has left the city—and the entire nation—in stunned silence. The four-minute clip, timestamped just before dawn on January 15, 2026, captures what authorities now believe are the final moments of Thomas’s life.

Thomas, a sophomore at a Brooklyn high school, was last seen leaving his home in Park Slope at approximately 4:30 a.m. He told his mother he was going for an early walk to clear his head before school. His phone last pinged near the Brooklyn entrance to the Manhattan Bridge at 5:12 a.m. When he failed to return or respond to calls, his family reported him missing within hours. Initial searches focused on parks, subway stations, and social-media leads, including rumors of a Roblox-related meet-up or an online stranger luring him. Those theories collapsed the moment the bridge footage surfaced.

The grainy black-and-white video shows a lone figure matching Thomas’s description—hoodie up, backpack on—walking purposefully along the pedestrian path toward Manhattan. At the 2:47 mark, he stops near the midpoint of the bridge, leans against the railing, and appears to stare down at the East River for nearly 90 seconds. Then, in one fluid motion, he climbs over the safety barrier and jumps. The fall is not captured directly, but the timestamp and trajectory align perfectly with the time and location where his body was recovered by NYPD Harbor Unit divers later that morning.

Medical examiner’s preliminary findings confirm death by drowning and blunt-force trauma consistent with a high fall into water. No signs of struggle, restraint, or third-party involvement were found on the body or in the surrounding area. Toxicology results are pending, but investigators have ruled out foul play at this stage.

The footage has triggered an avalanche of grief, anger, and painful questions. Thomas was described by classmates, teachers, and neighbors as quiet, kind, and deeply involved in gaming communities—particularly Roblox—where he was known by the username “TommyM_07.” In the days leading up to his death, friends say he had been increasingly withdrawn, posting cryptic messages about “not fitting in” and “wanting to disappear.” A close friend told reporters: “He never said anything about hurting himself. We just thought he was stressed about exams and family stuff.”

The release of the video has reopened wounds for many families who have lost loved ones to suicide on New York City bridges. The Manhattan Bridge alone has seen multiple incidents in recent years, prompting renewed calls for higher barriers, better lighting, crisis-intervention signage, and mental-health outreach. Mayor Eric Adams addressed the footage in a brief statement: “This is a heartbreaking tragedy that reminds us how fragile life can be, especially for our young people. We are doubling down on suicide-prevention resources in schools and public spaces.”

Thomas’s parents, speaking through a family spokesperson, asked for privacy while they grieve. “He was our light,” the statement read. “We had no idea he was in so much pain. Please hug your children tonight. Check in on your friends. You never know what someone is carrying inside.”

The four fatal minutes captured on camera have become a national wake-up call. What began as a missing-person search has ended in the most tragic way possible, forcing a city—and a country—to confront uncomfortable truths about teenage mental health, the isolating power of online worlds, and the signs that too often go unnoticed until it is far too late.

Thomas Medlin is no longer missing. But the questions his death leaves behind will haunt New York—and every parent who watches that footage—for a very long time.