Her Brother Disappeared 4 Years Ago And She Just Got A Mysterious Call From A Woman Claiming To Know What Happened To Him But She Isn’t Sure If It’s Just A Scam

A woman has a brother who’s close to her age, and they’re about 26-years-old. When her brother turned 22-years-old, he moved out of their family’s house and completely vanished.
Although she tried to call him and text him, he wouldn’t reply. She later suspected his phone number was then changed.
“We had gone years without knowing where he went or what had happened to him,” she explained.
“Obviously it made me, his sister, and our mom very upset. At times we considered the possibility that he died and we won’t ever see him again, and that sucked.”
“Literally, nobody was ever able to find him or find a way to contact him.”
Recently, she got a call from a number she did not recognize, and it was from a different state than the one she lives in.
She figured it was a spam call and didn’t pay any attention. But then, a voicemail popped up on her phone from this same number so she played it.
The mysterious voicemail was from a woman she didn’t know, and this woman stated that she bet she already knew what had happened to her brother.
The woman continued to say it was important that she speaks to her, and asked to get a call back.

foxyburrow – stock.adobe.com
Sign up for Chip Chick’s newsletter and get stories like this delivered to your inbox.
The voicemail left her concerned, and she immediately called this woman back. She bombarded her with a ton of questions, but this woman just got quite guarded and insisted that they meet up in person to discuss things.
“We need to schedule a time to meet in person, anywhere you feel comfortable,” the woman told her before saying, “trust me please when I say it will all come together and I will answer everything.”
The woman refused to tell her who she was or how she knew her brother.
She wasn’t sure if this was some sort of scam, so she asked the woman to text her photos of her face before requesting a video call.
“She sent some pictures, and said she was “more than happy to video call”, gave me her Skype, and we had roughly the same convo over video call as when we first talked,” she said.
“She just kept insisting we meet in person, saying that she would be driving from her state to come here… I literally just asked “will my brother be with you?” and she just said, “it’s complicated” like wtf does that mean?”
She still isn’t convinced that this woman is a scam artist, and she’s struggling with whether to trust this stranger or not.
Should she meet up with her in real life?
You can read the original post on Reddit here.
If true crime defines your free time, this is for you: join Chip Chick’s True Crime Tribe.
More About:Human Interest