The disappearance of 27-year-old Harrison Schreurs from Lincoln, Nebraska, has deepened into a perplexing mystery with a troubling new detail revealed by his brother: Harrison’s phone last pinged near Ceresco at approximately 10:03 a.m. on January 28, 2026—about 20 minutes late for his usual arrival at work and in a location with no apparent reason for him to be there.

Harrison left his apartment near 27th Street and Old Cheney Road that morning, dressed in a navy blue suit, black tie, and tan dress shoes, driving his navy blue 2017 Ford Edge (Nebraska plate ARF611). He was headed to his job at Sandhills Global, an information processing company where he was known as dependable and well-liked. He never arrived, and his phone has remained off ever since—an abrupt silence that family members insist is completely out of character for the reliable son, brother, and friend they describe.

The timeline of his final movements, pieced together by Lincoln Police Department investigators and shared publicly, begins with Harrison leaving home around 7 a.m. Surveillance footage first captures him around 9 a.m. at a Phillips 66 gas station near 14th Street and Highway 2 (Nebraska Parkway). Roughly 20 minutes later, at 9:20 a.m., he pulls into a JetSplash car wash near 27th and Superior streets. In the chilling last confirmed video, Harrison reaches out his driver’s side window to take something—possibly a wash code, receipt, or item from an attendant—before driving away. That brief exchange marks the final visual trace of him or his vehicle.

What happened next has family members and investigators baffled. Instead of continuing directly to work, Harrison’s phone registered a final ping near Ceresco, a small town roughly 18-20 miles northwest of Lincoln and about 20 minutes from Sandhills Global’s location. His brother, John Schreurs, shared this critical detail with the Lincoln Journal Star, noting that Harrison had no known reason to detour to Ceresco. The town lies off his typical route north from Lincoln toward his workplace, raising immediate questions: Was he meeting someone? Did he stop for an unexpected reason? Or did something force him off course?

Family searching for missing Lincoln man

The 10:03 a.m. ping—delayed by roughly 20 minutes beyond his expected work arrival—suggests he was still active and moving at that point, but then everything stopped. No further cell activity, no social media posts, no financial transactions, no sightings of his car. John has emphasized how this anomaly troubles the family deeply; it deviates from Harrison’s routine and offers no logical explanation, fueling fears that foul play or an unforeseen emergency may have intervened.

Harrison is described as 5 feet 10 inches tall, around 175 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. He typically appears clean-shaven but had facial hair on the day he vanished. Police have stressed that he has no known enemies, mental health issues, or history of going off-grid. The Lincoln PD, working with the Nebraska State Patrol and other agencies, continues an active missing persons investigation. They have released his description, vehicle details, and the timeline widely, urging the public to review dashcam footage, private security cameras, or any memories from that morning along routes between Lincoln, the car wash, and Ceresco.

Family and friends have mobilized aggressively. A GoFundMe campaign, “Help Bring Harrison Home,” launched by relatives including his sister Shay, has raised support for search efforts, outreach, and family needs during this ordeal. Community members organized search parties in the days following his disappearance, scouring areas around his last known locations and potential routes to Ceresco. Online discussions on Reddit (r/lincoln), Facebook groups, and Instagram have amplified pleas for information, with many expressing shock at how a routine workday commute could end so abruptly.

Nebraska man missing after leaving home in Lincoln - PANHANDLE - NEWS  CHANNEL NEBRASKA

John Schreurs and other family members have been vocal in media appeals, sharing photos and heartfelt messages that highlight Harrison’s kind nature, his close family ties, and the void his absence has created. The “Where’re you going, come home” sentiment from earlier family posts has evolved into a persistent, anguished call for answers, especially with the Ceresco ping adding an inexplicable detour to the puzzle.

As of early February 2026, no vehicle has been recovered, no new sightings reported, and no suspects named. Authorities continue to encourage tips via the Lincoln Police non-emergency line or Crime Stoppers, noting that even minor details could prove vital. The case remains open and active, with hope pinned on public vigilance—perhaps someone in Ceresco or along nearby highways saw the navy blue Ford Edge that morning.

For Harrison’s loved ones, the late phone ping near Ceresco stands as a haunting clue: proof he was alive and moving just minutes after his last visual confirmation, yet heading somewhere without reason. It transforms a simple no-show at work into a full-scale enigma, leaving family, friends, and a concerned community desperately seeking closure and his safe return.