Spring has brought a renewed sense of urgency for one family in the Rockaways: With more people out and about around New York City, they’re hoping to garner more information about their missing teenage son.
Jafet Jemmott, 15, has not been seen or heard from in more than five months. Police said he left his parents’ house on Burchell Avenue and Beach 72nd Street in Arverne early on the morning after last Thanksgiving.
“We have the sense and the belief that he is alive and somebody has him,” his father Federico Jemmott said in an interview this week. “We're going to continue the search until he is found. We're not going to give up on him, ever.”
Federico Jemmott said he was at work early on the morning of Nov. 28 when he received a surprising alert from Life360, a popular app many parents use to help keep track of their children. It showed Jafet Jemmott at a local bus stop on Beach 73rd Street and Rockaway Beach Boulevard, with his phone battery at 7%.
The app continued to report Jafet Jemmott's location as he apparently rode the Q52 bus over the Cross Bay Bridge over Jamaica Bay, his father said. But the teen’s phone died shortly after, he said.
“That was the last information that we have of his location,” Federico Jemmott said.
He added that his son never told anyone he was leaving the house and did not reach out to say where he was going. It was the first time Jafet Jemmott ever did something like that, according to his father.
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The 15-year-old is one of about 120 kids currently in New York state’s Missing Persons Clearinghouse, which works with local organizations and law enforcement agencies to issue public alerts. He falls within the 1%-2% of teens NYPD officials estimate go missing for more than a few weeks. Many turn up or return home in just a few hours or days.
Police officials from the NYPD's Missing Persons Squad said Jafet Jemmott’s disappearance is unusual because of how thoroughly he vanished — leaving behind few indications of where he could have gone. They said the last possible image they have of him is a silhouette of someone standing on the Cross Bay Bridge, captured by a camera on a passing MTA bus.
The officials said Jafet Jemmott’s phone last pinged a local cell tower from that location, but went silent shortly after that — and there’s been no trace of him anywhere since.
Federico Jemmott said he believes his son may have met someone online who lured him away from home, based on conversations the family has since had with Jafet's friends, and interactions with the teen leading up to his disappearance. It’s a phenomenon experts say is increasingly common among missing youth.
“There's so much technology now, they could easily fool a 15-year-old into believing that they're actually talking to the person that they see,” said Michael Alcazar, a professor at CUNY’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice who spent years as an NYPD detective.
NYPD investigators said they have not yet confirmed whether Jafet Jemmott was talking to anyone online before he vanished, and so far do not suspect any criminality in his disappearance.
Jafet Jemmott's family said he doesn’t fit their impressions of a kid who would run away from home. His teachers at Midwood High School in Brooklyn, where his family says he’s still enrolled, know him as a top student, according to his father. Federico Jemmott said his son also has many friends and would often meet them in local parks to play soccer.
But weeks before Jafet Jemmott went missing, Federico Jemmott said, his mother noticed he was staying up unusually late on his phone, often for hours after he’d finished his homework.
The couple sat him down and warned him about the perils of meeting strangers online, the father said.
“He was just quiet. He sat down, he listened. He smiled sometimes, like he acknowledged that what we were saying is true,” Federico Jemmott said.
He said he and his wife went to the local police precinct just a few hours after the teen left their home on Nov. 28. Officers there told them to wait until that evening to call 911 and report him missing, so the couple followed those instructions, and police came to their home that night to start the investigation.
“They checked the footage. They did everything they were supposed to do, and that was it,” Federico Jemmott said.
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The NYPD follows specific protocols in missing-persons cases, according to officials. The local precinct handles such cases for the first seven days, interviewing witnesses, reaching out to city hospitals, searching social media, canvassing for surveillance footage and conferring with local schools and the city Administration for Children’s Services.
As precinct officers pursue those efforts, the department’s Missing Persons Squad begins to build its own case, officials said. If the preliminary weeklong investigation uncovers no signs of criminality, as in Jafet Jemmott’s case, the Missing Persons Squad takes over.
A spokesperson for the Administration for Children’s Services said that by law she could not comment on whether a family is involved with the agency. She added that, in general, the agency becomes involved only when it has to investigate a case of suspected abuse or neglect, and works with the NYPD when a child in such a case is missing.
Federico Jemmott said the detective in charge of his son’s case interviewed some of his friends from school, and he contacted T-Mobile to check if his son’s phone had made or received any calls since he disappeared. Both efforts came up nearly empty.
At some point, one of Jafet Jemmott’s friends pointed the family toward a possible online profile of someone they think he may have been talking to before he left home, but the account was no longer active, Federico Jemmott said.
The father said he busied himself with media interviews and outreach to missing-persons organizations into the fall and winter. He hung flyers around the Rockaways until the frigid temperatures made his hands freeze.
Federico Jemmott said police have been helpful in looking for his son, but his own motivations to find him run deeper.
“For them, it's a case. For me, it's much more,” Federico said. “If they will go 10 miles, I will go 100.”
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As the search for Jafet Jemmott continues, his father said, he misses so many of their habits and interactions, like car rides to school together, coaxing him out of bed in the morning and sharing meals as a family.
”At the beginning, it was so hard to even go into his room. We waited months before we went in there and started putting things away and clearing up, because he had his clothes on the bed,” Federico said.
The teen’s dumbbell set now sits untouched, and his desk is eerily quiet. Federico said he eventually decided to put on his son’s gold-cross chain.
“I said to myself, ‘I'm not taking it off until Jafet comes home.’”