JerseyGirl
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Luis Guillen took his phone, computer and passport when he left the apartment he shares with his father in the early morning hours of Sept. 29. His cellphone has been shut off since he went missing.
He was supposed to board the bus to Fitchburg High School on Sept. 29, but his mother said he never made it to school. When Guillen's 13-year-old sister returned home from school that afternoon she found a note written in Guillen's handwriting in Luis' father's third-floor apartment, who lives in a first-floor apartment.
The note said he'd left to go to Canada with some friends, and told his family not to worry. The note indicated Guillen planned to be there for "a couple months."
His mother drove to New York three days after her son went missing. She knew that one of her son's friends, a girl he met playing computer games online, lived there. She managed to speak with the girl, who said she hadn't talked to Guillen in over a year. But the girl told her they had a mutual friend in Canada whom she and Guillen played computer games with online.
His mother recalled the note stating her son was bound for Canada. She reached out to the Canadian friend via text message. Unwelcome news returned. Guillen wasn't with the second friend, who told the mother that her son, known only online, would not have known his Canadian address.
Guillen, a high school senior, played piano, and is described by his mother as a understated music-lover who made strong friendships with a few people he held close. Guillen volunteered in the audio control room at Seventh-day Adventist Church in Billerica, where he and his father attended services each Saturday. He went to the Seventh-Day Adventist high school South Lancaster Academy until the end of his sophomore year, when his family decided it was too difficult to arrange transportation from his home in Fitchburg to the school in Lancaster.
His mother teaches at Busy Bee Preschool Center on Harugari Street. She and her other children had already left home for the morning by the time Guillen was supposed to board the bus that Friday morning.
Police say, he's a 17-year-old male that left home under his own free will; other than the fact that he's never done this before, it's not completely suspicious in nature.
he father of 17-year-old Luis Guillen went to the Canadian on border Friday searching for his son, who then had been missing for one week.
Agents on the border in Vermont told Guillen's father, also Luis Guillen, that his son could not have passed the border, Minors under the age of 18 must present their birth certificate, passport, and a letter of consent signed by both parents to cross the northern border, according to travel guidelines issued by the Canadian government.
Read more: http://www.sentinelandenterprise.co...een-missing-since-sept-29-after#ixzz4v6mnuuz0
He was supposed to board the bus to Fitchburg High School on Sept. 29, but his mother said he never made it to school. When Guillen's 13-year-old sister returned home from school that afternoon she found a note written in Guillen's handwriting in Luis' father's third-floor apartment, who lives in a first-floor apartment.
The note said he'd left to go to Canada with some friends, and told his family not to worry. The note indicated Guillen planned to be there for "a couple months."
His mother drove to New York three days after her son went missing. She knew that one of her son's friends, a girl he met playing computer games online, lived there. She managed to speak with the girl, who said she hadn't talked to Guillen in over a year. But the girl told her they had a mutual friend in Canada whom she and Guillen played computer games with online.
His mother recalled the note stating her son was bound for Canada. She reached out to the Canadian friend via text message. Unwelcome news returned. Guillen wasn't with the second friend, who told the mother that her son, known only online, would not have known his Canadian address.
Guillen, a high school senior, played piano, and is described by his mother as a understated music-lover who made strong friendships with a few people he held close. Guillen volunteered in the audio control room at Seventh-day Adventist Church in Billerica, where he and his father attended services each Saturday. He went to the Seventh-Day Adventist high school South Lancaster Academy until the end of his sophomore year, when his family decided it was too difficult to arrange transportation from his home in Fitchburg to the school in Lancaster.
His mother teaches at Busy Bee Preschool Center on Harugari Street. She and her other children had already left home for the morning by the time Guillen was supposed to board the bus that Friday morning.
Police say, he's a 17-year-old male that left home under his own free will; other than the fact that he's never done this before, it's not completely suspicious in nature.
he father of 17-year-old Luis Guillen went to the Canadian on border Friday searching for his son, who then had been missing for one week.
Agents on the border in Vermont told Guillen's father, also Luis Guillen, that his son could not have passed the border, Minors under the age of 18 must present their birth certificate, passport, and a letter of consent signed by both parents to cross the northern border, according to travel guidelines issued by the Canadian government.

Read more: http://www.sentinelandenterprise.co...een-missing-since-sept-29-after#ixzz4v6mnuuz0