Crime Junkie - MISSING: Zelig Williams
Episode Date: November 27, 2025A rising Broadway star. A mysterious SOS alert. And a car left abandoned at a trailhead wrecked by Hurricane Helene. When 28-year-old Zelig Williams vanishes on October 3rd, 2024, there’s no sign of... a crash, his phone, or him. Is this the result of a mental health emergency, a tragic accident or did someone lure Zelig into the woods, never intending to let him leave?If you have any information on the disappearance of Zelig Williams, you can contact the Richland County Sheriff’s Department at 803-576-3000. If you’d like to remain anonymous, you can call the Crime Stoppers of the Midlands at 888-274-6372.If you or someone you know is struggling with thoughts of suicide or self-harm, call or text 988 or visit 988lifeline.org. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/missing-zelig-williams/Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/fanclub/ to view the current membership options and policies.Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hi, crime junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers. And I'm Britt.
And the story I have for you today is about a 28-year-old Broadway star leaving home on a seemingly normal day.
And the only alert that something is wrong is an SOS crash alert sent from his phone.
Except there is no crash scene. His phone is nowhere to be found. And neither is he. This is the story of Zellig Williams.
It's around 10 o'clock in the morning.
3, 2024, when Kathy Williams' phone starts buzzing with a New York number that she doesn't
recognize. Now, it's not all that weird. She's in South Carolina, but her 28-year-old son Zellig
used to live in New York. She knows it's not him because he'd recently moved back to South
Carolina and is living with her. I mean, she just saw him less than 20 minutes ago, leaving
with his headshots in hand. She thought he was going to make copies. So she answers the phone
anyways, and it is one of her son's friends asking if he's okay.
And she's like, what do you mean?
And they tell her, they just got an SOS notification that he had been in a wreck.
Now, she doesn't need to hear anything more.
She hangs up and she is out the door immediately,
heading straight for the Staples five miles up the road where she thinks he was going to make copies.
But she gets there and there's no sign of him.
So she gets back in touch with that friend that called her and they tell her,
no, no, no, no, no.
The SOS ping didn't come from nearby the house or Staples or whatever.
The location that came through was from 20,
minutes away on a road outside of a place called Angel's Diner.
And why are friends in New York getting these notifications when he's in South Carolina?
Well, like I said, he'd just moved back there and he had been living in New York working on
Broadway before.
And truly, he was in some huge musicals, Hamilton, MJ the musical, Hugh Jackman's World Tour,
but he came back because his grandmother had recently passed.
So he'd been staying with his mom.
I'm assuming he just hadn't, like, updated his emergency contacts in his phone yet.
So anyways, she drives over to this diner next, expecting to pull up to a crash scene.
Right.
But there is nothing, no sign of Zellig, his car, or any crash at all.
Kathy doesn't even know what to make of this.
So she goes into the diner and talks to somebody inside asking them if they had seen her son.
No one has.
She's worried.
She's confused, but Kathy doesn't know what else to do.
All the calls she's making to his phone are going unanswered.
So she feels like her best bet is to just go back home and wait for him to show up.
But the afternoon passes and then evening comes.
And Zellig still isn't home.
At this point, Kathy is already thinking about reporting him missing.
Now, she doesn't know if she needs to wait 24 hours,
but when 11 p.m. rolls around, she doesn't care.
She's calling police.
But it is not the potential 24-hour waiting period that trips things up.
As soon as they hear that Zellig just turned 28,
They're like, oh, well, you know, he's probably just out celebrating his birthday.
He's fine.
And she's like, no, no, no, you're not understanding.
His birthday was back in September.
He's not just like some young adult out partying.
Like, something happened to him.
I mean, are they not concerned about the SOS ping?
Well, no, because there was no accident where it pinged.
So they're sure this is just a mistake.
He's out having a good time.
And they tell her to just wait it out, call him back if he doesn't show up.
Which is exactly what she does.
The very next day on October 4th, she calls police again to report Zellig missing,
and now police actually take the report.
Our records request to the Richland County Sheriff's Department got denied,
but they did answer some questions, which is how I know that police began searching local areas for Zellig that same day.
And around 11 p.m., they do find a vehicle matching the description of the one that Zellig drove off in.
It was his mom's car, a red Ford escape.
It had seemingly been abandoned in this little parking lot off a trailhead called Palmetto Trail.
And when police run the plates of this car, sure enough, it's Zellig's moms, and they confirmed that's the car that he left her house in.
Now, this trailhead is like 30 minutes from where Zellig and his mom live.
And there is at least one route to get there from his mom's house that takes you right past Angel's Diner, where that phone did the SOS thing.
Now, there's no sign of a struggle at this car.
There's no blood or anything.
But the idea that he just came here for a nice leisurely hike doesn't sit well with anyone.
Because when police contact his mom to tell her that they found the car, she says that wasn't a place that like she knew him to go to.
I mean, sure, he enjoyed being outdoors, but like he wasn't known to visit this trail specifically.
Right, like this wasn't his place to go to be outdoors.
And honestly, the trail isn't even in hiking condition at that point.
Hurricane Helene had just come through the week before.
And so there is a ton of flooding and down to trees.
But if he did try and hike, okay, like, again, we don't know what's going on at this point.
They're willing to try anything.
They're like, okay, maybe he did.
He got in trouble.
He stuck out there somewhere.
So police find a park ranger who had been patrolling the area the day before.
He was out checking for, like, damages and basically trying to get the trail open and manageable for people.
And they talked to him.
And while he didn't find anyone injured or come in contact with anyone who matched Zelig's description,
he did have a really interesting story that could be relevant.
He tells police that around noon the day before he was unloading his four-wheeler in the parking lot
when this guy flags him down and this guy's like coming back in from the trail.
And the guy on the trail tells the ranger that he had been driving toward the trailhead
when he passed this red sedan on the road.
The car turned around, followed him into the trail's parking lot,
And when he parked, a guy got out of the car, a guy that they're thinking is Zellig.
And he started following the man down the trail.
But not just like walking behind him.
He was acting super erratic, dancing as he stripped off all of his clothes and threw them around.
By the time they reached this bridge over the watery river on the trail, the guy was, the guy behind him was like fully naked, dancing on the railing.
Which, by the way, the way that like men get to operate in the world is super.
so foreign to me. Like, not even the naked dancing part. Like, this guy who is being followed by a
naked dancing guy, this bridge is like less than a mile to the trail, but still, like, the fact
that he's just like, okay, I'm just going like, keep going. I wouldn't even get out of my car if a car
followed me in the parking lot after turning around. Absolutely not. Yeah, so he's followed
it all the way to this bridge. And then I guess he, at that point, just has enough because he said he
just turns around and comes back. And I don't know if he was waiting for someone else to show up
to report this incident or like the timing was just perfect or what. But that's when he like runs
into the Ranger. Yeah. Like if he didn't run into the Ranger, like right now, would he have said
anything to anyone? Would we even know that Selig was in the park at all outside the car being
found at that trailhead parking lot? Yeah. Again, is this happenstance? Is the timing perfect? Or was he
waiting for him? Right. I don't know. So the Ranger says that he,
He gets this story. He decides to go down to the trail and see what he can find.
He goes directly to the bridge to see where this naked dancing guy was, but he doesn't see any sign of him, like, at all, not even the clothes that he's supposedly been throwing.
He did see another downed tree, though. So he's on a mission. He like takes care of that. And then about an hour later, so it's now around 1 p.m., he went back to the parking lot.
And that guy who flagged him down originally was still there, just like sitting in his car.
So the ranger went up to him, tells him, like, listen, I didn't find the guy.
I don't know how much more of a conversation they had.
But the ranger noted that there was one other car in the parking lot, the Red Ford Escape.
And the witness is like, oh yeah, that is the car that he got out of.
Probably like, you know, he must be out there somewhere, right?
Like his car is still here.
But there really wasn't much for anyone to do.
The ranger didn't feel like it was urgent enough to run the plate or anything because he wasn't thinking much of it at the time.
But he did snap a picture of the car and then he left to do some more trail maintenance.
Now when he comes back to the parking lot at around 2 o'clock, both cars are gone.
So for him, in that moment, even more confirmation that this was a Big Nothing Burger.
Wait, so was that Zellie's car or not?
Oh, it was definitely his car because they looked.
look at the picture that he took, and it's his mom's license plate.
So Zellig is there at noon, not there at two, and comes back at TBD time at some point for the car to be found there at like 11 p.m. on the 4th.
Did he come back or did just his car?
We know his car day.
Now, it doesn't seem like there's any surveillance in the park or anything like that that could say exactly when the car came back or who was driving.
But here's the wild part.
If it was him who came and went and came back, he might have done it all buck naked.
Because here's the thing I haven't told you.
The Ranger never found Zellig's clothes on the trail, right?
But police did.
When they found his car on the fourth, they found his shoes inside on the driver's side floorboard.
And they found the clothes that he had been wearing when he left the house folded neatly on the driver's seat.
I don't even know what to make of that.
So he goes back, collects all of his clothes back up,
and then puts them back on, drives around,
comes back, gets naked again, and goes off into the woods.
Or like I said, he's naked the whole time.
But then where was he between leaving the trailhead
and then his car arriving back there?
And all of this is assuming that the witness's account from the trail
is 100% accurate.
And he actually did remove all of his.
close the first go around.
I don't know, it's so weird
and nobody knows what to make of it
at the time. Now, without police
records, we have to rely
on his family's recollection of what
happens next. But the family
says that investigators download
Zellig's car data, and they
get his cell phone data from the phone
company, and they also check surveillance
cameras in the area. And they
use it all to create
a timeline that
just adds to the mystery.
We know that Zellig left home on October 3rd at 9.52 a.m. wearing the clothes that police found in his car.
His mom said that he was dressed very casually, like in a t-shirt and slides.
But she did say that this wasn't his typical attire. Like usually he was a dress-up kind of guy.
According to phone records that police got at around 10 a.m., that's when the phone gives off that S-OS alert of a crash, the one that his mom says the friend calls about, so that's confirmed.
And then an hour after the SOS ping, at 11 o'clock, investigators find surveillance footage that puts Zellig at a gas station somewhere near the diner.
He's pumping gas.
And in the footage, Zellick appears fine.
No bruising, no bleeding.
He doesn't appear to have been in any kind of accident.
And I don't think his car is easily seen in the footage.
So they don't know the state of that in the footage, but like they find it later.
I was going to say, what was it damage when they found it in the parking lot?
Was there any evidence of an accident, like, on the actual car?
No, which makes the SOS alert confusing for everyone.
And does he have his phone in this surveillance footage?
Not that anyone has mentioned.
So he might have it on him, but I don't think it's actually seen.
He's not like using it or whatever.
Right.
Now, the next sighting of Zellig is at noon from that guy on the trail.
But here's the weird thing.
At the exact same time, noon, Bone Data places Zellig's phone an hour and a half away
in a town called Walterboro.
What was his phone doing between 10 and noon?
I don't know.
Police have not released that information to anyone.
But one thing that I'm thinking is that it's possible Zellig and his phone were separated
when that 10 a.m. SOS alert happened because there's nothing indicating, like I said,
they don't see it with him.
I said it theoretically could be with him.
But even that doesn't make a ton of sense.
And they don't think it was with him at the park at all.
So after the gas station, he drives to the park, follows the guy into the parking lot.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
But then here's the even weirder part.
Police told us that the data on his car shows that it leaves the parking lot at a round two.
So makes sense with what the ranger saw.
It's not there.
But then it just drives in loops on like the same road for two hours until it returns at 4 p.m.
And then police find it the next day.
Right.
Did his phone ping anywhere else that day?
We don't know, because like I said, like police won't tell us.
Besides that, being in another city, there's no other data they'd share.
And by the way, his phone has never been found.
And that is where the trail of Clues ends.
Right back at the Palmetto Trailhead.
So after the fifth, authorities do an all-out search of the park.
Even though his phone didn't ping there, his car being there, that guy who said he saw someone matching his description,
they're all pointing to this being where a zealig could have gotten out of his car.
So they get a ton of volunteers out in the area, but the park is still not in the safest condition.
So, I mean, they bring out ATVs and drones.
They try to find evidence of Zellig in the area by any means possible.
But the one place they can't search is the river, which is one of the places that they think he most likely could be just based on that guy's sighting of him dancing on the bridge railing.
They're wondering if maybe he jumped or he slipped into the water because it was super high at the time.
But they can't bring divers in because of the high water levels.
I mean, do they think there's a possibility that this was intentional?
Well, his family did tell us that they were concerned that he was in a vulnerable state before he disappeared.
Because after he went missing, his family members found his medication in the house, like meds that he usually takes daily for his mental health.
And they say that it seems like he had stopped taking it.
And they note something else odd.
Very early in the morning, like the day he disappeared.
This would have been at 2.30 in the morning.
Apparently, he went into his mom's room and woke her up to ask her if she was okay.
And she found this odd.
She asked him what was going on.
He told her he thought he heard something and he wanted to make sure she was all right.
But that was apparently the first time ever in his life that he'd done that.
So knowing, right, like in hindsight and what has happened, like it stands out and it's
concerning to them.
And I mean, let's be honest.
If what the guy in the trail saw was real, him stripping down and dancing on the bridge
railing. I mean, that's not normal behavior. But his family told us it was something that had happened once before when he had a mental health emergency.
Did it come on that quick the time before? Like his mom sees him leave in the morning. Everything's fine. Everything's good. And then boom.
I mean, anything can happen, but the timeline feels even shorter than that.
Because, I mean, when he's pumping gas at 11 o'clock, everything seems fine.
I don't know.
And the thing I'll say is that his family told us that the one other time that he was in trouble, he had asked for help.
Like, he knew what was happening to him.
So if that's what this was, why wouldn't he ask for help again?
And they say that the one other time that this happened, where he did end up naked, he didn't neatly fold.
his clothes. So they think that's even super odd. Yeah, that's weird to me too. Like, if you're having a
mental health crisis, the guy's story about seeing him strip down and throws clothes, like,
that feels like what I imagine that would manifest like, right? My thoughts, too, but who's to say?
And who's to say multiple things can't be true at once? What if he was having a crisis and he
encountered foul play? Again, they weren't able to send divers into the river. So I don't think we can
disproved that he jumped or maybe had an accident and fell.
But I don't know.
I can't shake the feeling that we are missing pieces.
Yeah.
Did they ever get any more from the guy on the trail who basically was like the last
person to likely have seen Zellig?
Like, I feel like he can definitely fill in some gaps like after this initial like,
it's barely a report.
I don't want to call it report to the Ranger.
So this is the thing.
I haven't used a name for this guy because they have no idea who this guy is.
The Ranger, when he, like, got this story, he didn't get this guy's information before the guy left.
And when we talked to the Ranger, he was like, you know what?
Like, the witness did seem kind of off.
Like, he seemed shook up over something.
Which, again, like, someone falling you naked into the woods.
It's a weird situation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But he said, like, he just kept getting the impression that this guy wasn't telling him the full story.
He felt like more happened between him and Zelig than he was letting on.
And he can't pin down exactly.
why. But he just kept saying, like, he just felt like there was more to this situation.
Maybe they had an argument or maybe they'd been in some kind of disagreement. That's just his gut
feeling. Does he remember what this guy looked like, like a description? A little bit. So he said
this guy had an accent. He thinks he maybe spoke Spanish, dark hair, olive skin. And he remembered
that he was driving a silver or dark gray mini station wagon. And I'm sure he gives that
information to police, but it's not clear what they're able to do with that. It's a little wild
me that they never found this guy because so much of what we know about the timeline in Zelig's last
movements, it revolves around this sighting. Like, what if none of it is real? Or at least, it's not
the complete picture, right? I think it's a good question. I mean, even when I was thinking it over,
like, there's just some things that rub me the wrong way. Like, my immediate question is, what is this
guy doing out there in general? Like, was his plan to go hiking after a hurricane? Well, and him, like,
sitting in his car waiting when the ranger comes back an hour later after the ranger's just doing
his job. What are you waiting for? That seems odd to me. Same. So maybe this guy is a total rando
who happened to be at the right place or wrong place at the right or wrong time, depending on how you look at it.
And maybe he just doesn't know police have been looking to speak with him again. I mean, I bet this
story is going to be new to a lot of crime junkies who hear it. So maybe word will spread and the message will finally get to him.
But on the other hand, Zellig's family wonders if this wasn't a random encounter at all.
Now, this is just a guess of theirs and a bit of a reach.
But they told us that Zellick had an audition for a Spanish-speaking role back in July.
And so they kind of wondered if maybe he met up with somebody to like rehearse or to practice his Spanish.
This specific guy aside, coming to the park felt intentional when they learned more about his car data.
I mean, it showed that Zellig had actually been driving around the park area the day before he went missing.
So maybe he was scoping out the area for a meetup.
Because, I mean, it's off a major road, but it's just like this small lot with trees around it, not necessarily open.
I mean, I certainly wouldn't go there to meet a stranger, but maybe someone I knew.
It may be a bit of a stretch, but when you have so little to go off of, you really can't dismiss anything.
Yeah, but you also could be scoping it out if you were considering.
harming yourself. I mean, like you said, it's not out in the open. It's kind of off the beaten
path. Well, true, but that doesn't line up with a mental health crisis that just comes quick
out of nowhere. Like, this is the problem with this case. Like, nothing totally fits. Yeah, and I
keep coming back to, like, I'm really hung up on the SOS of it all. Like, that feels like...
I know. It's important because it kind of kicks his whole thing off, but also, what does it mean?
Because it doesn't seem like Zellig was in any kind of actual crash. Nothing was wrong with the car.
Right. And we know for sure. He's near the down.
or pumping gas at 11 o'clock.
So going back to that,
like so witness sighting of him on the trail aside,
the problem I have with like the phone
and the siting and the SOS,
he could not have gotten an hour and a half away
by noon for his phone to ping in Walterboro
if he's seen at 11 o'clock.
If he has his phone at that 11 o'clock.
Right, which is why earlier I said,
I have a feeling that when his phone does the SOS
at 10 o'clock, that he gets separated from it.
Yeah, it either isn't with him or isn't with him after that point.
Yeah, but we know that there wasn't a crash.
So I looked up what could cause a phone to send out that alert without an actual crash happening.
And I guess it happens sometimes in cases where phones like fall off of cars or dropping your phone from a significant height.
So I think your phone falling or like huge movements or some kind of like any kind of fast movement and a quick stop or whatever.
Yeah.
It can trigger that type of alert.
And actually I found out it's been affecting 911 centers across the country because some people have that emergency like set not to call their friends, but to dial nine.
9-1-1 automatically.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, that would be...
A problem.
Yeah.
But talk about all the ways that this SOS alert could trigger,
makes me wonder if he threw his phone or, like, ditched it,
and maybe someone picked it up.
That's how it got to that, like, hour and a half away distance.
I mean, whatever happened at 10, he was fine after at 11 o'clock.
And, listen, let's say he was in crisis.
Like, could that explain him throwing his phone out the window
or acting erratically and then leaving the park before coming back?
and sadly maybe hurting himself or accidentally falling.
Okay, you go down that route.
Sure, stuff can make sense.
But the folded clothes still throw me off in that scenario.
And what the family said, that if he was in that state,
he would have known it.
He would have asked for help like he'd done before.
Well, in that situation, you're saying it's planned
and he knew what he was doing.
Okay, why fill up your tank before going to die?
Like, that doesn't work for me.
So, well, we either have a mental health crisis or, I don't know, I keep coming back to the guy on the trail knows more.
But I think that's far from the only two options.
It seems like there was a lot going on in Zellig's life leading up to his disappearance.
But this is where the details get a little fuzzy.
But where the truth might actually lay.
Zellig's family says that he was a really spiritual person and he was looking into different church.
where he could find belonging.
And he was also consistently going to a Wednesday night men's group before he disappeared.
And after he was gone, they had found a bunch of journals in his room and read through them all.
Now, they didn't want to share them with us, but they said that the only thing Zellig was talking about was his search for God's guidance.
So in the days leading up to his disappearance, his family says that they think he was fasting, influenced by one of the churches that he was attending.
But this fast may have had a specific goal because in some of Zell's,
Selig's other stories, ones that he was sharing online publicly, he was tagging the Covered by God Church.
And some of their preachings include encouraging people to fast to heal their bodies and heal their need for medication by working with the, quote, great physician.
Which could maybe be Wieselig possibly had stopped taking his medication.
Yeah, I'm not sure if he had started fasting already, but if he stopped taking his meds, that could be why.
And to me, I mean, that's just generally concerning.
I mean, like, it's a pretty dangerous teaching to be telling people who struggle with mental illness to go off their medicine.
And that wasn't all.
Zellig was also talking online about, quote, being delivered from homosexuality, end quote.
We actually found a clip of him talking about his testimony online.
He posted it on Instagram, less than a year before he disappeared.
And I actually want to play it for everyone.
Hello, everyone.
This is Zellig.
I wanted to hop on here and just let you guys know a testimony on my side.
I've been delivered from homosexuality.
I am thankful to be where I'm at right now.
My journey hasn't always been easy.
When I was messing up sometimes, y'all, I was in prayer.
Jesus, Lord, help me in this moment.
Whoever listens, I hope you can.
and tune in, and I'm looking forward to it to share with you guys and to just, maybe it might be a Bible study.
It could be dance.
There's a lot of things.
But yeah, sending love to all of you and whoever listened and tuned in to this live, I thank you.
And I pray we all just keep moving towards Christ and what he's done for all of us.
His family told us that they supported Zellig regardless of his sexuality.
So he wasn't facing pressure from them.
But without knowing the complete and full beliefs of all of the churches that he was going to,
my interpretation is that he was feeling a lot of pressure from other outside forces to change things out of his control.
Again, I don't know these churches specific doctrines.
But, Britt, I think we can speak to our own experiences growing up.
Specifically, like, mental health struggles were framed as a byproduct of a bad relationship with Jesus.
Oral failing.
Yeah.
Like, your relationship with God isn't strong enough if you are depressed.
You are not relying on God if you feel anxious.
Medications for mental health was framed to us like a way to mask a deeper problem you had with your Christianity.
Yeah, and like a crutch almost.
Yeah.
And this is just my little PSA to anyone out there.
Like, you might have heard the same message that we did growing up.
Like, you're not broken.
You're perfect.
The human brain is a wild machine that we are still trying to figure out.
And finding what works for you is a.
blessing and a win, not any kind of failure. And I believe that if we are happy and we can be kind
to others, that is what whoever or whatever put us on this earth wants us to do. But unfortunately,
not everyone has that outlook. But there might be a silver lining here. If Zellig was feeling a lot
of pressure, there is also a world where he left intentionally and is still out there alive. That's
at least what one PI believes. Now, this PI got to work with Zellig's family for like a week.
Basically, they were made to choose between the PI or working with police. And this early on,
they wanted to stay close to the official investigation. But from a week of work, this PI
walked away with a theory that Zellig was pressured to going to conversion therapy. She said it was
clear that he was on the hunt for something. He was visiting a ton of different churches and
groups and she spoke to people throughout her investigation that specifically said Zellick had been
talking to some people about conversion therapy. And just knowing that he was in a vulnerable
position was enough for her to think that he decided to check into one. Plus, she says that
she specifically thinks he was planning on leaving because I guess he was super diligent about filling
out his calendar, like down to each day he would write things out. And the month of October
was completely empty, which was just super out of the ordinary.
for him. And did she have any names of specific people or churches?
No, not that she gave us. Richland County Sheriff's Office did tell us that they spoke to some of
his church groups, but they didn't tell us like what came of that, if anything. Now, I wonder if
there weren't more names in his journal or something. Like, I still feel like answers are there
somewhere because he was definitely talking to people that his family didn't know leading up to his
disappearance. And if nothing else, I feel like those people have more information on
his state of mind. And maybe there aren't names in his journals. But again, I know there are people
out there who knew him, who I would love to talk to. Like, Zellig's mom said that before he
disappeared, she walked into his room and he was talking to this guy on his computer. And I guess
he got super upset when she walked in. Now, she has no idea who this guy is. She just described
him as like an older man with like salt and pepper hair and a beard. So, I mean, if you're out there
listening, please reach out to me, to his family, to police. And same goes for Zellig.
Your family doesn't feel like your spirit is gone from this world. And I hope that's the
case. I hope you're okay. I hope you're happy. And I hope you know that your family misses you
and they're worried about you. So if you are out there, please call home. But if he's not anymore,
I want him to know that people are still fighting for him and they won't stop looking until they
know what happened. When we were speaking to Zellig's family, they told us that Zellig was
Kathy's only remaining child because her two daughters, Zellig's older sisters, died in a car crash
around 20 years ago. They were actually the ones who inspired Zellig to dance and get into
Broadway. He always said that he felt closer to them when he was dancing, and he was always
dancing. He had so much light and energy and passion, and he wanted to share that with
others. He had another show coming up in New York that January, and he was really looking forward
to it. He was also holding a class in South Carolina before he disappeared for other students
who were interested in learning about Broadway and dance. But listen, you guys, you never really
know what's going on in someone's life. And there are struggles beyond the curtain that you just
can't see. We just passed the one-year anniversary of Zellig's disappearance, and there are still
so many questions. But I believe that one piece of information,
The right information can crack this case wide open.
So if you have that, you can contact the Richland County Sheriff's Department at 803-576-3,000.
Or you can submit a tip anonymously through Crime Stoppers of the Midlands at 888-274-6372.
And if you knew Zellig from church, or if you were the witness on that trail, reach out to police or to us, tips at audiochuk.com.
And if you or a loved one is struggling with thoughts of suicide or self-harm, you can call or text the Crisis and Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988 or visit 988 lifeline.org.
We'll have all the source material for this episode on our website, crime junkie.com.
And you can follow us on Instagram at Crime Junkie Podcast.
Crime Junkie is an audio Chuck production.
I think Chuck would approve.
