🚨💢 𝗧𝗪𝗢-𝗙𝗨𝗚𝗜𝗧𝗜𝗩𝗘 𝗔𝗟𝗘𝗥𝗧 💢🚨
🚩 CHILD MOLESTER SOUGHT
𝗞𝗘𝗡𝗡𝗬 𝗔𝗥𝗦𝗘𝗡𝗘 𝗠𝗔𝗥𝗜𝗘-𝗟𝗢𝗨𝗜𝗦𝗘 𝗥𝗢𝗟𝗔𝗡𝗗
• California driver’s license
• Could be anywhere
• ⚠️ 𝗘𝗫𝗧𝗥𝗘𝗠𝗘𝗟𝗬 𝗗𝗔𝗡𝗚𝗘𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗦 ⚠️
• Do 𝗡𝗢𝗧 approach, confront, or apprehend him yourself.
𝗔𝗔𝗥𝗢𝗡 𝗞𝗬𝗟𝗘 𝗘𝗔𝗦𝗧
• Currently wanted
• May be traveling with a Florida driver’s license
• Could be anywhere
• ⚠️ 𝗖𝗢𝗡𝗦𝗜𝗗𝗘𝗥𝗘𝗗 𝗗𝗔𝗡𝗚𝗘𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗦 ⚠️
• Do 𝗡𝗢𝗧 approach or attempt to detain him.
📞 𝗧𝗜𝗣 𝗟𝗜𝗡𝗘: 808-354-3034
📧 [email protected]
💰 A substantial cash reward is available for credible information leading to Kenny Arsene Marie-Louise Roland’s location and for information leading to Aaron Kyle East’s location and arrest.
🔒 All legitimate tips will remain confidential.
❗️𝗜𝗠𝗣𝗢𝗥𝗧𝗔𝗡𝗧
This line is reserved strictly for legitimate fugitive tips. Anyone spam calling, prank calling, flooding the line without helpful information, or intentionally disrupting investigations will be 𝗕𝗟𝗢𝗖𝗞𝗘𝗗 immediately.
For all other inquiries 𝗡𝗢𝗧 related to these fugitive cases:
📧 [email protected]
📧 [email protected]
Your information could make the difference. Help us bring them in safely.
Attention East Coast
We are currently looking for Aaron East
Jacksonville Florida
We have another location, it's been forwarded for follow-up.
If you see him, call ASAP
Molested a little girl.
America became “the United States” because people rose up, again and again, and demanded a better system than the one they were handed. Politicians exist because the people tolerate them. Civility exists because the people insist on it. Accountability exists because the people refuse to let silence win.
That’s the point of this post. Not politics. Responsibility.
So here is what we are asking you to do, wherever you live — high-rise or holler, city block or back road, born here or newly arrived:
Look at Sebastian’s face on the poster. Don’t scroll past it like it’s another sad story. Take ten seconds and actually look.
Then share the poster. Save it. Send it to a group chat. Print it if you can. Put it on a community board. Put it in a breakroom. Put it where people move: hotels, gas stations, grocery stores, hospitals, restaurants, truck stops, transit hubs. The smallest exposure can be the moment somebody recognizes him.
And if you know something — anything — come forward.
Not “I’m sure.” Not “I have proof.” Just: “Here is what I saw.” “Here is what I heard.” “Here is what I remember.” “Here is the message I never sent.” “Here is the screenshot I kept.” “Here is the name I didn’t want to say.” “Here is the vehicle that stuck with me.” “Here is the thing that didn’t make sense until now.”
A teenager is missing. A father is living inside a question. A family is still waiting.
If you believe you see Sebastian or have urgent, real-time information: dial 911.
For tips and information, use the contacts on the official poster, including:
• Sumner County Sheriff’s Office: 615-451-3838
• Tennessee Bureau of Investigation: 1-800-TBI-FIND or [email protected]
• FBI tips: https://t.co/rLsbhHvmuR
• Call/Text: 844-922-3236
• Email: [email protected]
Sunday is when Americans like to say we’re grateful.
If you want to turn that into something real, do this: share the poster, keep his face in your mind, and refuse to let this be normalized.
Bring Sebastian home.
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Thank you for your continued support.
Your tips fuel our fight for truth. Keep them coming via secure channels. We won’t stop until he’s home.
Sebastian Rogers remains missing. He disappeared from Hendersonville, Tennessee, on February 25, 2024. If you have a real-time sighting or urgent information, dial 911, 1-800-CALL-FBI, or 1-800-THE-LOST (NCMEC).
To submit tips 24/7, please call or text Dog & AtNight at +1 (844) 922-3236 or email [email protected]. Tips can remain anonymous.
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Sunday, February 22, 2026 — Day 728.
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America does “Sunday” in a thousand different dialects.
In the cities it’s the quiet between sirens, the first coffee run, the bodega stop, the laundromat, the church down the block with the folding chairs and the hymns you can hear through the door.
In the hills of Tennessee it’s dew on the grass, two-lane roads, a porch light still on because someone always comes by, the sound of a screen door closing, a meal that feels like a promise: we’re together, we made it through another week.
For families who moved here from somewhere else, Sunday can carry two homes at once. A video call to grandparents in another time zone. A recipe done “the way my mother taught me.” A child answering in English while a parent answers in the language they grew up in. The same hope in every version of it: that this country is different because you can speak, you can stand up, you can demand better, and your voice can matter.
For families who have been here for generations, Sunday is still the same thing under different names: the day you check on people. The day you reset. The day you look your kids in the face and think, without even saying it, “I’ve got you.”
And that’s why this case should land in every home, in every neighborhood, with every kind of accent and every kind of story.
Because for Seth Rogers, Sunday is not a reset. It’s a reminder of what was taken.
Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers has been gone for 728 days.
Not a headline. Not “a situation.” A life.
A 17-year-old American high school student who should be waking up to an ordinary Sunday: complaining about tomorrow, asking what’s for dinner, getting lost in a game or a song, thinking about the next thing. A kid with a real smile, real habits, real quirks, real routines. A kid whose absence isn’t abstract — it’s physical. It’s the quiet where a voice should be. It’s the space at the table that nobody stops noticing.
And then there’s the part people don’t understand until it happens: Sunday nights.
Sunday night is when America feels Monday coming. Lunches get packed. Clothes get set out. Alarms get set. We brace for the week like it’s a nuisance.
For Seth, Monday isn’t a nuisance. Monday is a wound that reopens on schedule.
Because “Monday morning” used to mean school and the simple, exhausting, normal job of raising a teenager. Now Monday morning means waking up into the same unanswered question, again, with the world acting like this is something a family can learn to live with.
You can’t.
You can survive it. You can keep breathing. You can keep moving. But you don’t “get used” to your child being missing.
Here is the truth that doesn’t get said enough, and it matters:
Answers don’t come from law enforcement. Answers come to law enforcement.
Investigators can’t follow what they don’t have. They can’t knock on the door they can’t see. They can’t subpoena the conversation nobody reports. They can’t chase the memory you never share because you talked yourself out of it.
Cases like this move when ordinary people decide they will not be passive.
That is not a criticism of law enforcement — it’s a statement of how justice actually works in a free country. In America, the public is not supposed to sit quietly and hope someone else fixes it. We are allowed to speak. We are allowed to organize. We are allowed to insist that a child matters.
Most people on earth do not have that luxury.
In North Korea, people live under a level of state control where a wrong word can cost you everything. In places torn up by war and instability, families are focused on survival more than search posters. In countries where dissent is punished and information is managed, there may be a façade of normal life — but not the same ability for neighbors, communities, and strangers to unite openly and pressure institutions to act.
FDC was honored to welcome Duane “Dog the Bounty Hunter” Chapman and his wife, Francie Chapman, for a visit focused on prison ministry and rehabilitation.
We appreciate our dedicated staff for making this visit a success and thank the Chapmans for their kindness and support.
Do this while you’re doing everyday chores. While you walk the dog or wait at the school bus stop take ten minutes to look from the public sidewalk or your car. Notice boarded, blacked-out, or permanently covered windows and vents. Notice extra locks, heavy chains, bars, covered porches, false façades, or obvious attempts to conceal occupancy. Notice people coming and going at odd hours, many short visits, constant deliveries, or a single adult who controls all interactions. Notice children who never go outside, who seem withdrawn, or who behave like they’ve been coached.
If you see anything suspicious record the exact street address, date and time, vehicle descriptions and license plates, number and appearance of people, and specific behavior you observed. Do this from a safe public distance. Do not enter the property or confront occupants. If someone appears to be in immediate danger call 911 and give the address and concise facts. If it is not an emergency call your local police non-emergency number or contact the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888 or text 233733.
Use this quick script when you call: “My name is [first name]. I live near [address]. I believe someone may be held against their will. I observed [brief facts, date, time]. Please send officers to check.” For non-emergency reporting say the same facts, include times and vehicle info, and note you do not want to confront anyone.
It only took one man in Cleveland to free three victims. If one million people take ten minutes and remain alert while doing ordinary tasks we could help disrupt a large portion of trafficking using nothing more than open-source public assistance and timely reporting. Your eyes and your call can save lives.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: [email protected]
Date: November 7, 2025
AtNight Creative Intelligence Statement on Recent Remarks by Chris Proudfoot
AtNight Creative Intelligence has reviewed recent comments made publicly by Chris Proudfoot regarding our client, Seth Rogers — the biological and only father of Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers. We categorically reject Mr. Proudfoot’s characterization and any attempt to distort the motives or integrity of those leading the search for Sebastian.
“Chris Proudfoot’s public outburst was nothing short of disgraceful,” said Cynthia Lee of AtNight Creative Intelligence. “He’s attacking the only father this boy ever had while sitting on a mountain of unanswered questions about his own household. Every minute he spends raging on camera instead of helping the investigation tells the public exactly where his priorities lie.”
Mr. Rogers has acted solely as a father desperate to find his missing son. Personal attacks, profanity, and public outbursts do nothing to serve the truth or to bring Sebastian home.
AtNight is also aware of circulating rumors suggesting that Katie Proudfoot was pregnant by Sebastian. We strongly urge the public and all online creators to stop spreading or monetizing these unverified claims. Anyone in possession of evidence, audio, or digital files related to this allegation must immediately turn them over to law enforcement. Each day such material is withheld for views or clicks is another day that critical evidence is kept from investigators — and another day that this child remains in danger.
Finally, we call on all parties, including Mr. Proudfoot, to engage responsibly. Public panic and misinformation only deepen the damage already done to this investigation. AtNight remains committed to transparency, lawful cooperation, and the protection of every child connected to this case.
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REWARD: Up to $20,000 USD—call or text 844-922-3236 and select option 2. Verified tips may qualify for rewards of $10,000 to $20,000.
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Dog the Bounty Hunter and his partners in Philadelphia have begun reviewing preliminary data, notes, and findings in the case of Ellen Rae Greenberg, the 27-year-old teacher murdered in 2011 in what was officially ruled a suicide—a determination disputed by her family and multiple renowned experts.
Additional information will be released by Dog within the next 10 days.
In the meantime, individuals with relevant information are encouraged to contact Dog’s tipline at 844-922-3236 and select option 2. Verified tips may qualify for rewards of $10,000 to $20,000.
This update is from the official account of Dog’s High Risk Recovery Task Force.
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Ellen Rae Greenberg, a 27-year-old first-grade teacher in Philadelphia, was found dead on January 26, 2011, in the kitchen of her Manayunk apartment at 4601 Flat Rock Road, Apt. 603.
She had sustained 20 stab wounds (including 10 to her neck and back, with one penetrating her spinal column) from a kitchen knife, along with 11 bruises on her arms, legs, and face.
Her fiancé, Sam Goldberg, discovered her body after reportedly breaking into the apartment during a snowstorm and called 911, claiming she had "stabbed herself" and "fell on a knife."
The autopsy by Dr. Marlon Osbourne initially classified her death as a homicide due to the wounds' severity and defensive appearance, but weeks later, under pressure from Philadelphia police—who claim that they found only Ellen's DNA on the knife and no signs of forced entry—it was reclassified as suicide.
Police treated the scene as a suicide from the outset, noting Ellen's history of managed anxiety and no prior suicidal ideation, though her family described her as happy and stable.
Suspicion arose from inconsistencies: wounds to hard-to-reach areas like her back, blood evidence suggesting possible movement of the body, missing surveillance footage, an intact lock despite Goldberg's entry claim, and bruises inconsistent with a fall.
Forensic experts like Dr. Cyril Wecht and Dr. Henry Lee reviewed the case and deemed it "strongly suspicious of homicide," citing wound patterns and bloodstains.
Ellen’s parents, Joshua and Sandee Greenberg, rejected the ruling and pursued justice through lawsuits against the Medical Examiner’s Office, appeals to the Pennsylvania Attorney General (who upheld suicide in 2019), and independent analyses showing no suicide-related searches on her devices.
In February 2025, a settlement prompted Dr. Osbourne to amend his opinion, stating new evidence (including neuropathology) led him to conclude the manner should be "something other than suicide."
However, in October 2025, Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Lindsay Simon's 32-page review reaffirmed suicide, citing mental health factors and dismissing contradictions, which the family called "deeply flawed."
The case remains officially a suicide, but the family continues advocating for a homicide investigation, with public interest fueled by documentaries like Hulu's “Death in Apartment 603.”
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Reward: Up to $20,000 USD—call or text 844-922-3236 and select option 2. Verified tips may qualify for rewards of $10,000 to $20,000.
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