Missing 15-year-old Long Island boy found dead in Brooklyn waters nearly two months after vanishing
The body of Thomas Medlin, a 15-year-old Long Island student who disappeared in January after leaving school and catching a train into Manhattan, was recovered from the waters off Red Hook, Brooklyn, on March 7. Suffolk County police confirmed the grim discovery in a news release, closing one chapter of a case that had haunted his family for nearly two months.
Medlin was last seen on surveillance footage walking across the Manhattan Bridge the night he went missing. The camera captured a splash in the water. He was never seen leaving the bridge.
A Trail That Went Cold Fast
The timeline is as brief as it is devastating. On Friday, Jan. 9, Medlin left Stony Brook School at about 3:30 p.m. and ran to the Stony Brook Long Island Rail Road station, where he seemingly caught a train into Manhattan. By nightfall, he was walking across the Manhattan Bridge. And then he was gone.
His mother, Eva Yan, told News 12 that she believed her son was heading into the city to meet someone he had become friends with through Roblox, the massively popular online gaming platform. For any parent, that detail alone is enough to stop your heart, as WABI 5 reports.
But police said they hadn't found any proof supporting that theory. Suffolk County investigators obtained subpoenas and search warrants to dig into the digital trail Medlin left behind. Their statement laid out the scope of the effort:
"Under the issuance of subpoenas and search warrants, an examination so far of multiple social media/online gaming profiles and forensic examination of electronic devices associated with Medlin was conducted."
The conclusion was definitive: those platforms "are not connected to his disappearance." Police also said there was no indication of criminal activity.
The Question Every Parent Is Asking
What drove a 15-year-old to leave school in the middle of the afternoon, sprint to a train station, and ride alone into one of the largest cities on earth? We may never get a complete answer. The facts released so far don't tell us why Medlin made the decisions he made that Friday, only that he made them quickly and alone.
The Roblox angle, even though police found no evidence connecting the platform to his disappearance, will resonate with millions of American families. It speaks to a fear that is no longer hypothetical for most parents: that their children inhabit digital worlds with strangers whose intentions are unknowable. That a child can build a relationship with someone online and act on it in the physical world before any adult has a chance to intervene.
In this case, investigators cleared the gaming platform. But the instinct Yan had, that her son might have been drawn into the city by an online contact, reflects a reality that parents across the country live with every day. Children are more connected to strangers and less supervised by adults than at any point in American history. The tools exist to monitor, restrict, and guide. Whether families have the resources, knowledge, and cultural support to use them is another matter entirely.
A City That Swallows People
There is something uniquely terrible about a child disappearing into New York City. The sheer density of cameras, transit systems, and human traffic means that a person can be tracked block by block, frame by frame, and still vanish. Medlin appeared on surveillance footage. His movements were reconstructed with reasonable clarity. None of it was enough to save him.
The Manhattan Bridge, where he was last seen alive, spans the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn. Red Hook, where his body was recovered, sits along the Brooklyn waterfront south of the bridge. The geography tells its own story.
Suffolk County police released their findings on Jan. 26, just over two weeks after the disappearance, noting the lack of criminal evidence and the dead end on the Roblox theory. For the next six weeks, the case waited for the water to give back what it had taken.
What Remains
Thomas Medlin was 15 years old. He left school on a Friday afternoon, boarded a train, crossed a bridge, and never came home. His mother searched for answers in the digital spaces her son inhabited. Investigators followed every lead they could compel through legal process. In the end, there was a body in the water off Red Hook and a family left to grieve without a clear explanation.
No criminal charges. No online predator. No satisfying narrative that assigns blame and offers a lesson. Just a boy who is gone and a silence where the answers should be.
For every parent reading this tonight, the lesson isn't complicated. Know where your children are. Know who they're talking to. Know what trains they can catch and what bridges they can walk across. The world does not wait for you to be ready.




