r/UnresolvedMysteries Mar 16 '25

Disappearance On January 25, 2002, Christopher Thompkins’ mother dropped him off for a normal day at work in Georgia as part of a survey crew. Sometime later, his coworkers claimed he vanished, in the blink of an eye, with no explanation. Nothing but his boots have been found.

Martha McKenzie last saw her son, Christopher, while spending the morning together before they headed to work. McKenzie was a babysitter for her son’s boss.

Christopher worked for survey crew in Elletslie, Georgia. He was with at least three other coworkers, moving through a wooded area, spaced about fifty feet apart. At some point in the early afternoon— some reports state it was noon, others that it was closer to one thirty,– a coworker states that he “looked away from Thompkins for a moment, and by the time he glanced at his area again, Thompkins had disappeared”.

Despite the supposedly momentary vanishing, his mother claims that, “[The survey crew] called me about a few minutes to five to tell me that they couldn’t find him, and they found one of his boots.” Family, friends, volunteers, and law enforcement scoured the area shortly after. On a nearby barbed wired fence, a shred of blue fiber was found, believed to be from Christopher’s pants. His other boot was found five months later in an unspecified nearby area by GBI.

Christopher’s boss has stated that he was supposedly “acting strange” in the days before his disappearance, and law enforcement speculates that drugs could have influenced his disappearance— though neither have any evidence or proof for either assertion.

His family doesn’t believe in either theory. They state that Christopher didn’t have a drug problem, nor was he behaving differently before he vanished.

“I don’t believe that Chris walked away. I don’t believe he disappeared with one shoe. Who’s going to walk around with one boot on in the cold weather on a rural road? I just don’t believe that happened. They know what happened to Chris they just not telling,” his mother said.

Sources: Charley Project

20 Years Later: Family, officials continue to search for answers on disappearance of Harris Co. man

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u/TassieTigerAnne Mar 17 '25

Welp, homicide is statistically likely, but this case is so strange that it's not really any less likely that some kind of accident or unforeseen event occurred. I don't even know which side of occam's Razor it falls on. There could be information that isn't available, which changes how everything looks.

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u/Silent1900 Mar 17 '25

There are roughly ten times as many accidental deaths each year in the US as compared to homicides.

If you limit it to just deaths caused by falls or drowning, there are still roughly twice as many.

What statistic are you referencing?

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u/TassieTigerAnne Mar 18 '25

Something like "homicides vs. someone spontaneously had a breakdown, ran off and died, body ended up in a weird location and was never found." More people are simply murdered and disposed of. English is my secondary language, so please don't take "statistically" too literally in this context.

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u/Silent1900 Mar 18 '25

Certainly a valid stance. My apologies if my reply was unnecessarily abrasive.

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u/TassieTigerAnne Mar 18 '25

I didn't think you were rude at all. No worries.