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The horrifying last two words spoken by teenager on the phone to his parents while he walks home in the dark – before he disappeared forever

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A teenager who mysteriously disappeared after he disappeared in the dark while driving home, said two last hair -raising words to his parents on the phone before the line died.

Brandon Swanson, from Marshall, MinnesotaStarted to walk home after his car got stuck in a ditch after he took a wrong turn on a country road while in 2008 he was on his way home of a spring party of the end of the semester.

Just before 2 o’clock ‘the 19-year-old his parents became to pick him up, but was so lost that he sent them in the wrong direction.

Brandon tried to find somewhere where they would both know, they told them that he thought he could see the lights of Lynd, a nearby city, and decided to take a shortcut through an abandoned farm field.

There, while he is still on the phone to his parents, Brandon expressed his last words – ‘Oh S ***’ – before the line died, and he was never seen again.

The parents and friends of Brandon searched all night while they called his phone, but there was no answer.

His mother, Annette, reported him missing to the police the next morning. Sniffer -dogs led the police to the Yellow Medicine River, but lost the scent.

His case has become one of the greatest unsolved mysteries of America and, although some believe that he fell into the river and died, his body and possessions never discovered.

Brandon Swanson, from Marshall, Minnesota, disappeared mysteriously after he disappeared in the dark while driving home from an end of the spring emester's party in 2008

Brandon Swanson, from Marshall, Minnesota, disappeared mysteriously after he disappeared in the dark while driving home from an end of the spring emester’s party in 2008

Brandon’s evening started in the nearby city of Lynd, about seven miles southwest of his house in Marshall.

After leaving the party early, he went to Canby 35 miles northwest to meet another friend.

It was a route that Brandon had driven to the university every day, but this time it was assumed that he decided to take the back roads instead of drinking at the party. However, his friends confirmed that they did not believe he had been overly intoxicated.

If he had taken the main road, it would have only been 30 to 40 minutes to get home.

After he was lost in the back roads and then held in the ditch, Brandon told his parents that he was somewhere on the road between Lynd and Marshall – although it is now assumed that he was about 25 miles away.

When his father Brian and mother Annette arrived, they could not see his car.

They still flashed their headlights on the phone and although Brandon said he was doing the same thing, it remained pitch black.

Brandon became increasingly desperate to come home safely and began to honk his car horn – which again could not be heard by his parents, except the phone.

The 19-year-old was so lost that he sent his parents in the wrong direction while he was on the ehoen

The 19-year-old was so lost that he sent his parents in the wrong direction while he was on the ehoen

Brandon's evening started in the nearby city of Lynd, about seven miles southwest of his house in Marshall (Brandon Swanson with his sister Jasmine Swanson)

Brandon’s evening started in the nearby city of Lynd, about seven miles southwest of his house in Marshall (Brandon Swanson with his sister Jasmine Swanson)

Frustrated, Brendan decided to leave his car and walk to what he thought was a nearby city and they all agreed to meet each other in a parking lot of the bar.

Brain stayed on the phone to his son for 47 minutes while he makes his way through fields, about fences and along water flows.

Around 2.30, Brandon suddenly shouted “Oh S ***!” And broken the phone. Brian immediately called Brandon back six times in a row, each of which received no answer.

His parents remained looking for their son until the next morning when they could report him missing to the police, who initially declined their claims and said that “teenage boys are missing all the time.”

According to Annette, an officer directly said “as an adult, Brandon has the right to miss if he wants to be.”

It took hours of Annette to argue with officers before they took Brandon’s disappearance seriously.

Authorities managed to follow his phone and it turned out that Brandon was 25 miles away, between the cities of Porter and Taunton, from where his parents were looking for.

The search for the Taunton area moving, the authorities quickly found Brandon’s abandoned car that was in a ditch on the side of the road, just as he said.

The Brandon law was passed in Minnesota later that year in 2008 and it requires the police to start an immediate search for missing adults under the age of 21. Brandon is depicted as a child

The Brandon law was passed in Minnesota later that year in 2008 and it requires the police to start an immediate search for missing adults under the age of 21. Brandon is depicted as a child

Ground and air search assignments have been placed in the coming days for Brandon and rescue dogs were brought in to follow Brandon’s scent from his car.

The dogs followed his path over an abandoned farm and then along the Yellow Medicine River, on the edge of the river, the dogs lost the smell of Brandon, which indicated that he might have gone into the water.

The dogs, however, took his path up again on the other side, suggested that he was coming back.

After the first reaction to the disappearance of her son, Annette successfully campaigned for the introduction of ‘Brandon’s Law’ in the state.

The Law of Brandon was passed in Minnesota later that year in 2008 and it requires the police to start an immediate search for missing adults under the age of 21, as well as older adults who miss under suspicious circumstances.

If you have information, contact Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office 507-694-1664.

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