🚨 TWO YEARS OF AGONY: TONIGHT MARKS THE EXACT ANNIVERSARY… A 15-YEAR-OLD BOY WENT TO BED IN HIS TENNESSEE HOME—AND VANISHED INTO THIN AIR BY MORNING 😱💔🕯️
Sebastian Rogers was last tucked in by his mom Katie Proudfoot on February 25, 2024. She heard a mysterious THUD from his room around 10 p.m., told him to settle down… but when she went to wake him the next morning—his bed was empty. No trace. No note. No explanation.
Now 17, Sebastian—diagnosed with high-functioning autism—has been gone for 730 brutal days. No confirmed sightings, no major breakthroughs. His mom vows she’ll search “until my last breath.” His dad is publicly begging the FBI to take over, crying out “I love you, son” in fresh pleas.
The full timeline, mom’s emotional interview, dad’s desperate call for federal help, and how YOU can help are in the link below.
Don’t scroll past—share this far and wide. Someone knows something. Bring Sebastian home. 🙏

Exactly two years after 15-year-old Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers vanished from his bedroom in this quiet Sumner County suburb, the case remains one of the Southeast’s most baffling unsolved missing persons mysteries. No arrests, no confirmed sightings, and no definitive answers have emerged despite exhaustive searches, media attention, and a $50,000 FBI reward.
Sebastian was last seen the evening of February 25, 2024, in the home he shared with his mother, Katie Proudfoot, and stepfather, Chris Proudfoot, on Stafford Court near Beech High School. According to his mother, she checked on him before bed and heard a thud from his room around 10 p.m. She instructed him to go to sleep. When she returned the following morning, February 26, to wake him for school, his bed was empty. His bedroom window was unlocked, but there were no signs of forced entry or struggle.
Authorities issued an AMBER Alert within hours, describing Sebastian as 5 feet 11 inches tall, weighing about 150 pounds, with brown hair and hazel eyes. He was last seen wearing a black sweatshirt and black sweatpants. The teen has high-functioning autism, which investigators said influenced search strategies, accounting for potential tendencies toward wandering or sensitivity to routine disruptions.
The Sumner County Sheriff’s Office, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI), and FBI quickly mobilized. Ground searches covered nearby woods, creeks, and fields. Drones, K-9 units, and volunteers scoured the area. Tips flooded in—some claiming sightings in Clarksville (where Sebastian had family ties), others speculating about runaways or foul play—but none panned out.
In interviews marking the two-year anniversary, Katie Proudfoot told WSMV and WVLT that she remains committed to the search. “I’ll keep going until my last breath,” she said, describing sleepless nights and the emotional toll of uncertainty. She has maintained that Sebastian had no known reason to run away and emphasized his vulnerability due to autism.
Sebastian’s biological father has grown increasingly vocal, publicly urging federal authorities to assume primary control. In a recent statement reported by WKRN, he expressed frustration with the pace of the investigation and pleaded, “I love you, son,” while calling for FBI intervention to bring fresh resources and perspective.
Community response has intensified around the milestone. Protests in Hendersonville have demanded authorities “do something,” with demonstrators holding signs and sharing Sebastian’s photo. Social media groups dedicated to the case boast thousands of members, circulating theories ranging from voluntary departure to abduction or involvement by those close to him. Some online speculation has focused on the family’s dynamics, though no evidence supports foul play allegations against relatives.
The FBI continues listing Sebastian on its Kidnappings & Missing Persons page, offering up to $50,000 for information leading to his whereabouts. The agency notes his ties to Clarksville and urges tips via the Sumner County Sheriff’s Office at (615) 451-3838, TBI at 1-800-TBI-FIND, or [email protected].
Investigators have not ruled out any possibilities, including runaway, accident, or criminal act. Early theories explored Sebastian leaving voluntarily—perhaps influenced by online communities or personal struggles—but his mother’s accounts and lack of digital trail (no unusual activity on devices) complicated that narrative. Searches of nearby waterways and abandoned structures yielded nothing.
The case has drawn comparisons to other long-term missing teen disappearances, highlighting challenges in cases involving neurodivergent youth. Autism can affect communication and behavior in ways that make patterns harder to predict, prompting adjusted search protocols but also prolonging uncertainty.
As the anniversary passed, local media outlets aired emotional segments with family members. Proudfoot reiterated her hope, while acknowledging the pain of marking two years without resolution. “He’s still out there somewhere,” she told reporters. Community vigils and candlelight events were held, with participants refusing to let public interest fade.
Critics, including some family advocates, have questioned initial response times and resource allocation. The father’s call for FBI primacy reflects a broader sentiment among supporters that local efforts, while diligent, may benefit from federal oversight in what has become a cold case.
Sebastian would now be 17. His description has been updated minimally, but the reward and alerts remain active. Officials stress that even small details—unusual vehicles in the area that night, odd online interactions, or post-disappearance sightings—could break the case open.
For the Proudfoot family and Sebastian’s loved ones, the passage of time has not dulled the ache. Two years of unanswered questions have tested resilience, fueled determination, and kept a community’s focus on one missing boy. As searches shift from active to investigative, the plea remains the same: If you know anything about Sebastian Rogers, come forward.
The mystery endures in Hendersonville—a suburban street where a teen went to sleep one night and was gone by dawn.
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