Dark Downeast - REMEMBERING: The Disappearance of Kristopher Bryan Lewis
Episode Date: June 19, 2025On this date two years ago, I released an episode about the disappearance of Kristopher Bryan Lewis. Kris was just 13 years old when he seemingly vanished after school one day. In February of 2025, ma...rking the 11-year anniversary of his disappearance, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children created a new age progression photo and missing poster depicting what he might look like now at 24 years old. If you have any information about the disappearance of Kristopher Bryan Lewis, please contact the Boston Police Department at 617-343-4687.View source material and photos for this episode at: darkdowneast.com/episodes/remembering-kristopherbryanlewis Dark Downeast is an audiochuck and Kylie Media production hosted by Kylie Low.Follow @darkdowneast on Instagram, Facebook, and TikTokTo suggest a case visit darkdowneast.com/submit-case
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Hey, Darktowneasters, this is an off week for the show, but I didn't want to leave your
feet empty when there are so many cases still awaiting answers and so many families waiting
for their loved ones to return home.
On this date two years ago, I released an episode about the disappearance of Christopher
Brian Lewis.
Chris was just 13 years old when he seemingly vanished
after school one day.
In February of this year, 2025,
marking the 11-year anniversary of his disappearance,
the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
created a new age progression photo and missing poster
depicting what he might look like now at 24 years old.
The photo and poster are linked
in the description of this episode.
I'm Kylie Lowe, and we're remembering the case
of Christopher Brian Lewis on Dark Down East.
I first learned the name Christopher Brian Lewis on Facebook.
Part of this line of work is staying informed of active and ongoing cases and keeping an
eye out for under-reported stories.
Social media, as rotten as it can be for some things, has proven to be a valuable tool for
sharing and finding information about disappearances far beyond what the flyers on telephone poles strategy
provided in the past.
Christopher's name and photo were posted
in a Facebook group dedicated to bringing awareness
to missing people in Massachusetts.
The post summarized the known details
about his case at the time,
date of disappearance, last known location,
a physical description,
and a tip line for the Boston Police Department.
I was struck by Christopher's age, just 13 years old.
I started digging deeper, hoping to learn that he returned home safe, or that police
had a lead, or at the very least, I'd find that his disappearance received ample coverage
throughout the years.
But that's not what I found. Instead, there was just a handful
of news articles about Christopher, and it had been years since any mainstream media picked up
the story and shared Christopher's name and photo. I wanted to change that, but I couldn't
and wouldn't tell Christopher Brian Lewis's story without contacting his mother, Nina Cancel Rogers
first.
I found her on Facebook and sent her a message knowing it would be filtered to her message
requests folder.
A few months passed, but Nina eventually saw it and responded.
After a phone call with her, she agreed to share Christopher's story.
She'll do anything that might help bring Christopher home.
Nina, tell me about your son, Christopher.
Christopher was an AB student.
He was awesome at school.
He was, I can't even think of the word.
He was a trier.
I like to say he was a trier.
He tried e-sport until he found the one that he wanted.
So he did try baseball.
And when he got hit with the ball, he said, nope, that's not for me.
And he walked off the field.
Thought it was the cutest thing ever.
He was just like, yeah, no, that's not it.
I was like, no, he played one game and mommy spent all his money on the uniform.
And he was like, no, that's just not it.
That's no.
He was just like, no.
Christopher did eventually find a sport that he wanted to play.
He was a professional.
He was a professional.
He was a professional.
He was a professional.
He was a professional. He was a professional. He was a professional. He was a professional. He was a professional. You know, he played one game and mommy spent all the money on the uniform and he was like, no, that's just not it.
That's no, it's just like no.
Christopher did eventually find a sport he loved, much to Nina's dismay.
He did play football.
I didn't want him to play football.
Chris was my first son and I was being a little overprotective about the football thing because, you know, you get hit and it's a wrap.
He begged me for, I want to say two years,
he begged me to play and I finally let him play
and he loved it.
Chris played up until he was 13 when he went missing.
Nina told me that Christopher was always independent
and wanted to handle things on his own.
He kept to himself, but had a close group of friends too.
Chris never liked people,
but he had friends and that's the thing that killed me.
How do you not like people when you've got friends?
Everyone who came in contact with Chris or anyone who knows Chris,
loved Chris.
Everyone will tell you Chris is good,
he's well-mannered,
he like, he does everything for himself, he's helpful, you know, he was awesome at
school, everything that he did he excelled at it. Chris never really got
into any trouble, but Nina remembered one day when some kids were picking on him
at school and Chris stood up for himself.
Chris never got into trouble.
I mean, it was like this one time where he got in trouble at school.
And when I went up to the school, I was more mad than anything because it was, you know,
some kids that were teasing him because he was passing his classes.
He ended up getting pushed or hit or something.
And the teacher stood right there and didn't say anything.
But then because Christopher had said something back, he wanted to discipline Christopher.
So that's the only time Chris has ever gotten trouble in school. That was major.
It's like when I went to the school, the teacher was like, yeah, I did.
I seen them hit him, but I didn't feel like I should jump in because boys will be boys.
And I'm like, but you're disciplining him now for saying something out of character
because he was hit on and you did nothing.
So yeah, the teacher ended up getting in trouble for that,
but I didn't get punished crisp or anything.
I didn't take anything from him because of that,
because of the situation.
What made Christopher unique?
I would say his character on how he just carried himself.
He carried himself as the king that he is.
Like, he always had his head up high,
but he never down-talked anybody.
You know, he was always there to help
anybody who wanted help.
Chris wanted to help his mom, too.
He wanted to make it big as a pro football player someday so he could repay everything she'd given him.
Well, he wanted to play football. That's what he wanted to do.
But me being me, I'm like, I know, you can be a scientist.
Because he knew numbers like right off his head and it was safer than being a football player. But he really wanted to play football and you know his big thing was he wanted
to make the big dollars to take care of his mom. That was his his thing that's
what he wanted to do and I just wanted him to do something safe like a
scientist. Nina is a wonderful mother, and her kids recognize that.
Christopher wasn't the only one who wanted to grow up
and take care of his mom.
My youngest does it now.
Like, he plays golf.
So he's like, I'm going to be a golfer.
So mommy doesn't have to work so hard no more.
And you know, it makes me like, OK,
so I'm doing something right, that they notice
that I work hard for everything that I do and, you know, everything that they have. So for them to know that I work
really hard to make sure that they don't have to struggle, you know, it makes me feel like I'm
happy inside because, you know, I didn't did my part. I had made sure that they're not struggling
for anything. Nina always made sure Christopher and all of her children had everything they needed.
And she let them know that she was a safe space for them.
No matter what, her kids could turn to her.
I mean, like usually, I usually let them feel out
what it is that they're going through.
And I always tell them, no matter what,
you can always speak to me, you know, no matter. Nina and Christopher were as close as a mother and firstborn son could be.
He had his moments, what young teenager doesn't, but they had a special bond from the day Chris
was born.
Yeah, he was my baby.
You know, everyone used to say that was my mini me.
He looked just like me.
I didn't see it at all.
I've seen his dad and everything that he did.
And he was just like, he was my baby.
And he was just like, he was my baby.
And he was just like, he was my baby.
And he was just like, he was my baby. And he was just like, he was my baby. And he was just like, he was my baby. And he was just like, he was my baby. And he was just like, he was my baby. You know, everyone used to say that was my mini me. He looked just like me. I
didn't see it at all. I've seen his dad and everything that he did. Yeah, he was just,
he is my guy. He was my guy. And he still is my guy.
It was February 4, 2014. Nina and 13-year-old Christopher, her husband and her other sons, all lived on West Selden
Street in the Mattapan neighborhood of Boston.
Christopher was a student at Lee School and that morning started out like any other weekday
morning.
Nina remembers it vividly.
I remember everything about that day.
He got up from school, walked into his bus stop. That was the day
he was just like, Mom, you need to stop walking me to the bus stop. I'm too big for this.
And I was just like, what? You know, it was just, it just threw me off. And so we talked
about that as we walked to the bus stop. He got on the bus, he went to school. He went
and he did his whole day in school.
I didn't get any phone calls from school that day, so he had a good day.
Nina expected Christopher home by his usual 5 p.m. or soon after.
When it's time for him to get off the school, I was already home because I had just started a new job.
And, you know, we were supposed to celebrate that day
because it was the job that I really, really wanted.
And we were supposed to celebrate.
So since Chris got home first, before his brothers,
Chris got to decide what we had for dinner.
So we had made up that rule, like whoever gets home first
gets to pick up dinner when we're doing something special.
And you know, since Chris was home first,
so I'm like, okay, Chris will be home in a little bit,
time to pull out the menus,
let me finish cleaning up this mess,
because I actually cleaned up the whole house.
And when I looked at the clock and he wasn't home yet,
I went outside, I stood outside on the main road,
and like when you stand on the main road
and you look down the main road and you
look down the street, you can see his bus stop from the street. So I really didn't have to walk him or
anything. I didn't see him. So I'm like, okay, well maybe he walked home with his little friend.
It was 5 30 p.m. at that point. The walk home from the bus stop would have only taken him 10
minutes tops, five minutes if he hurried straight there.
But Christopher's friend lived just a short walk
down a side street,
and it wouldn't have been unusual for him
to go to his house after school.
So I was like, okay, so let me call.
And they said, no, Chris wasn't with him.
He said, Chris had walked up the street already.
And I'm like, okay, well, Chris isn't home.
Nina hung up the phone and considered who to call next.
She contacted the school bus company to confirm that Chris had actually gotten on and off the bus at his stop.
Then I called the transportation to make sure.
And they're like, no, he got off the bus and the bus driver remembers Chris because Chris always talks to him. So then I called my husband,
and I told my husband that he wasn't home,
and he was like, I'm on my way home.
And we started looking for him.
It was early February.
The sun sets early that time of year in the Northeast.
It was already dark and getting cold.
Not wanting to lose a single second, Nina called the police.
But she didn't get the response she expected when she told them her 13-year-old child hadn't
returned home from school yet.
I know when I called the police, the police were really, really at night. They were jerks
and it was just crazy. The whole police situation was crazy.
An officer responded to Nina's West Seldon Street home.
When they came, the cop didn't want to come into the house
because we had a pit bull.
And even though I put the dog up,
he still refused to come in the house.
He handed me a paper and was like,
fill this out.
And I'm like, okay.
So I filled out the paper,
giving description of what Chris looked like,
what he was wearing, where he was.
And then he just took the paper and he left.
He never spoke to me.
He never physically took a report.
He didn't do anything.
He just handed me a paper,
told me to fill it out, and that was it.
Nina didn't know if police planned
to take immediate action to locate her son,
but she and her family couldn't just sit still
and wait out the night.
You know, we had all my family had came by the house
and they were like, well, we're gonna go out
and look for him.
And we went out looking, we couldn't find him.
The sun rose the next morning
and there was still no sign of Christopher.
Nina remembers Boston police checking in with her
the next day and she'll never forget how they talked about her son.
And the only thing that they said to me when they came to the house the next day, because Crystal wasn't found, was that, oh, you sure that?
He said, did you guys get in an argument over anything? And I'm like, no, I don't argue with my children.
I said, that's the way you guys mess up at their children.
And I don't argue with children.
And then he was like, okay, well, is he in a gang?
And I'm like, no, he's not in a gang.
Then they were like, well,
that's the problem with some of these parents.
They don't know when their children are in gangs.
And, well, they don't know where they are half the time,
he said, so he's probably just mad at you about something.
He'll be back in a few days.
I'm like, what?
Nina was stunned.
The detective that was on his case,
he was so rude and so disrespectful,
and I swear, if I was dying,
his bedside manner was ridiculously poor.
Like it was horrible.
It was like the worst experience I ever dealt with.
Like, I was like, not only is my son missing, but you're coming here disrespecting me in
my house about my son, you know, calling him a drug dealer, saying that he's in gangs.
And you know, I was just like, he's 13.
He's 13.
You know, like, what can he do at 13?
Like, there's no way.
And they, sure enough, he, oh, you know,
maybe you were just being too rough on him
and didn't get on what he wanted.
So he'll be back soon.
And I was just like, oh my God, this is crazy.
Feeling dismissed by law enforcement, Nina decided to reach out to media outlets. She'd
seen reports of missing persons on the news before, and she wanted Christopher's name
and face to be broadcast far and wide too.
When he still wasn't home, we were trying to call the TV stations and trying to get
them to put Chris on the news so that people would know he's missing.
And they told us that they don't put missing people on the news.
Nina was incredulous.
She knew that wasn't true.
She saw reports of missing kids on the news all the time.
In fact, the same day she was turned down by a local news
station, she watched as the face of a missing white child flashed on the screen.
If people didn't know Christopher was missing, they wouldn't know to be on the lookout for
him. So she started posting on social media, until finally, local media did take notice. So I posted on social media, I posted on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and we were, like I said,
we were trying to get a hold of the news station and then we finally did get a hold of the
news station so they finally did a story on him.
We reached out to missing and exploited children.
There was like a whole bunch of missing people sites that we also reached out to missing and exploited children. There was like a whole bunch of missing people sites
that we also reached out to.
So much of that early awareness and search effort
was on the shoulders of Nina and her family.
This is often the reality
for the loved ones of missing people.
It was a lot of work trying to get it out there.
On one hand, it was kind of hard, on the other hand it wasn't.
I mean we made our own flyers, we put everything out ourselves,
social media, all that, we did it ourselves which was pretty easy.
But getting the police to get the report right,
which they didn't get right, and to get the news
to actually put it on so that it was out
there was even harder you know and I don't think it should be that hard when
someone's kid goes missing it shouldn't take it shouldn't take a village just
to talk to one person it should be that parent and that person
and say, listen, this is what happened.
We contacted the police.
You can look up with them police report and go from there.
I don't feel that it should have taken
like 10 different people to call the news station
and be like, hey, listen, this kid is missing.
What are you gonna do about it?
Christopher was a young black boy.
It was evident to Nina from the earliest moments of his disappearance, with the comments about
Chris being in a gang or wrapped up in drug dealing, that he wasn't being seen for what
he was, a missing child.
The favoritism of the race is another thing that, you know, factors in as well.
You know, and it doesn't factor in just with the news station,
but it factors in with the police as well.
Like, the first thing that you say is gang.
And that's not what it should be.
It should be a child, no matter what the race is.
And it's not.
In the last nine years, the case has changed hands
within the Boston Police Department multiple times.
Boston PD Detective Kevin McElmoyle now has the case. Despite her early negative interactions
with the detectives on Christopher's case, Nina has renewed confidence in Detective McElmoyle.
I reached out to him to get deeper insight into the work that was done on Christopher's
case and the work that's going into it now.
But unfortunately, he wasn't able to speak with me because the case is still open and
considered active.
But Detective McElmoyle directed me to Boston Police Media Relations and Sergeant Detective
Boyle.
He just stepped out of the office.
Can I take a message or do you want to call him back or an email?
Message would be fine.
Okay, what is it?
Detective McElmoyle told me to reach out to him for comment on the Christopher Brian Lewis case.
It's a missing persons case from 2014.
The detective wasn't able to speak to me
and he referred me to media relations.
Okay, so you haven't spoken to Sergeant Boyle
at all about this?
Not yet, nope.
I was referred to him by Detective McElmoyle.
Okay, all right.
So you want to send him an email then with that message so everything can be in writing.
It's a request.
So I did that and I didn't hear back.
So I followed up and I still haven't heard back.
I delayed the release of this episode several times in hopes of speaking with someone within
the Boston Police Department, but it's the day before I intend to release this episode and I
still haven't heard back. I understand. They're busy, they have a lot on their plates, but I really
wanted to be able to ask what's happening in Christopher Lewis's investigation now and whether
there was any indication that Christopher was involved in gang activity or if he ran away,
as the early detectives were quick to assume. I wanted to ask if there have been any recent developments, or if Boston Police had anything
new to share.
I know that because the case is open and still considered active, they probably wouldn't
have given me much.
They have to protect the entirety of the investigation, I get it.
But I still would have liked the opportunity to ask, had anyone called me back."
So without comment from Boston police, I'm left with the available public information
about the case.
And the circumstances known to the public at this point really don't narrow down what
could have possibly happened to Christopher in such a small window of opportunity.
If this was a random, isolated act, if Christopher was taken by an unknown perpetrator, for example,
the distance between the bus stop and his home was so short and the route so heavily
populated that it seems unlikely not a single person saw what happened.
If witnesses have come forward in the previous nine years, that's not public information.
Nina had never worried about Christopher when he got off the bus before.
She felt safe in their neighborhood,
and he walked the same short route
every single day without issue.
The biggest threat to safety in the area at the time
appears to have been the busy two-way street.
A resident of the street told the Boston Globe in 2015,
quote, there's no problem with the neighbors or crime.
The problem is with speeding, end quote.
That year, an eight-year-old girl and her 12-year-old cousin
were hit by a car while riding their bikes together
at their grandmother's birthday party
near the 100 block of West Selden Street.
According to the Boston Globe's reporting,
the driver attempted to flee the scene on foot before he was ultimately apprehended.
The eight-year-old girl died from her injuries, and the driver was charged with leaving the
scene of a motor vehicle accident and motor vehicle homicide.
If Christopher was the victim of a hit-and-run on that busy street, surely there would have
been evidence of such an accident.
But there isn't
anything in the publicly available information that points to this being the case.
Nina firmly dismisses the idea that her 13-year-old son was involved in gang activity or other
criminal behavior and that that is what led to his disappearance. It has never been a working
theory in Nina's mind, despite how detectives first tried to
categorize his case.
Another theory that has been floated is whether Christopher ran away.
Some media reports mention that Christopher had previously run away and was found in the
Fields Corner area of Dorchester Avenue.
But this, too, Nina denies.
Christopher never ran away or disappeared
before, she says.
Nina is constantly working to dispel these rumors that only further distract from the
most important detail. Her son was just a kid when he disappeared. He is still missing,
and she is still searching.
["The Last Supper"]
Despite the years without answers and still no sign of Christopher Lewis,
Nina is hopeful that Detective McElmoyle might actually be able to learn some new information.
Still, Christopher's disappearance
continues to impact Nina's every waking moment.
So there's a new detective on his case
and he's actually pretty good.
He calls me, he gives me updates.
You know, he's pretty good.
But moving forward, I really haven't. I'm pretty f**ked up. I hate to say it,
but I'm pretty f**ked up. You know, it's hard for me to move forward. It's hard
for me to let the kids I have now go. My son who's 19, Jason, he's in Boston right now and that's hard for me for him to
be there and for me not to be there. So it's just like, is he okay? What is he doing? You
know, and Jayden has a field trip that's in Virginia next week and I'm just like, no,
he can't go. But it's just like, I'm trying not to shelter them because losing Chris was like the worst
experience of my life.
And it still hurts.
Every day it hurts.
Nina has endured all kinds of treatment and judgment by those who cannot possibly know
what it's like to walk through any parent's worst nightmare.
And then people talk about what kind of mom I am. You moved out of state and you don't even have your son.
You know, I had to move to get sanity for me and my other kids.
But I still look for my son.
I'm still in Boston.
I go to Boston twice a year.
I go the days he went missing, and I go for his birthday.
Like I said, I stay in contact with the detective, the detective that's on his case now.
He's amazing.
He's like the best.
He calls me, he texts me, he makes sure I'm okay.
So it's not easy.
It's hard.
And people think it's easy and be like, oh, she went all her life.
She just got married.
You know, she just had a,
she got pregnant and it's not easy.
It's, you know, I'm sitting here with a new husband.
We did get pregnant, but we didn't have the baby,
but it was hard.
And I think because of me stressing out being pregnant
all over again and not having Chris here
was stressing me out a lot. After nearly 10 years, not knowing what happened to her firstborn son still weighs just as
heavy as the very first night without him.
Nina and Christopher's entire family deserve answers.
It's time for Christopher to come home.
If you have any information about the disappearance of Christopher Brian Lewis, please contact the Boston Police Department at 617-343-4687.
You can find pictures of Christopher Brian Lewis and missing posters at darkdowneast.com.
Thank you for listening to Dark Down East. You can find all source material for this case
at darkdowneast.com.
Be sure to follow the show on Instagram at darkdowneast.
This platform is for the families and friends who have lost
their loved ones and for those who are still searching for answers. I'm not about to let
those names or their stories get lost with time. I'm Kylie Lowe and this is Dark Down
East.
Dark Down East is a production of Kylie Media and AudioChuck.
So what do you think Chuck?
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