Dark Downeast - STILL MISSING: The Disappearance of Reina Carolina Morales Rojas (Massachusetts)
Episode Date: November 27, 2025November 26 marks three years since Reina Carolina Morales Rojas disappeared after getting into a car in East Boston, Massachusetts. She was later dropped off in nearby Somerville and that was the las...t time anyone saw or heard from her.Despite being reported missing soon after, information about her disappearance didn’t reach the public for nearly two months. It was only after community advocates spoke out that her story began to get the attention it deserved.Today, Reina Carolina Morales Rojas is still missing. There have been no new developments in her case, and her family – who once spoke to her every day – continue to wait and hope for answers. As we mark the anniversary of her disappearance, we’re re-releasing this episode to renew attention on her story, to keep her name in the public eye, and to remind listeners that she is still out there somewhere. If you have knowledge that could help bring Reina home, please contact the Massachusetts State Police assigned to the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office at (781) 897-6600. Anyone with information regarding her whereabouts is advised to contact 911 or A-7 Detectives at (617) 343-4324. If you would prefer to share information anonymously you can do so by calling the CrimeStoppers Tip Line at 1-800-494-TIPS or by texting the word 'TIP' to CRIME (27463).View source material and photos for this episode at: darkdowneast.com/stillmissing-reinarojas 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 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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November 26, 2025 marked three years since Raina Carolina Morales-Rohas disappeared after getting into a car in East Boston, Massachusetts.
She was later dropped off in nearby Somerville, and that was the last time anyone saw or heard from her.
Despite being reported missing soon after, information about her disappearance didn't reach the public for nearly two months.
It was only after community advocates spoke out
that her story began to get the attention it deserved.
Today, Raina is still missing.
There have been no new developments in her case
and her family who once spoke to her every day
continue to wait and hope for answers.
As we mark the anniversary of her disappearance,
we are re-releasing this episode to renew attention on her story
to keep her name in the public eye
and to remind everyone that she is still out there somewhere.
I'm Kylie Lowe and this is the case of Raina Carolina Morales-Rohas on Darkdowneast.
41-year-old Raina Morales-Rohas came to the United States from El Salvador just after Mother's Day.
making her home in East Boston.
She is a mother of two children, but Raina had to leave the kids behind with their aunt,
Raina's sister Alicia Morales, to find work and a better life in Massachusetts
until she could be together with her children again.
She'd been a police officer back in El Salvador, but in Boston,
Raina worked in food services and catering at Logan International Airport.
Being so far away from her family, Raina stayed in touch.
with her sister and children almost constantly.
November 26th, 2022 was no different for Raina and Alicia.
They had a long conversation earlier in the day, as they usually did.
But when Alicia tried to contact her sister the next morning, she didn't hear back.
It immediately struck her as odd.
Alicia tried everything to get in touch with her sister that day.
Texts, WhatsApp, phone calls, but Raina was radio silent.
According to reporting in the Boston Globe by Hannah Kruger and Tiana Woodard,
Raina had two cell phones, one she got for her birthday in October and her old phone
that she still kept active and on despite having a new one.
Raina always wanted to be reachable, so the fact that she wasn't responding to texts
or picking up call after call was unusual.
Alicia couldn't shake the feeling that something was off,
So she reached out to Raina's boyfriend, as well as her landlord.
According to Boston Globe columnist Marcella Garcia, who spoke to WBUR's The Common podcast,
Raina's boyfriend hadn't heard from her since the night before, and he couldn't get in touch
with her either.
When Alicia spoke to Raina's landlord, he told her that Raina never returned home on the night
of November 26th.
Being in El Salvador and unable to travel to the United States, there was a little bit of a
little Alicia could do to track down her sister herself other than keep trying to reach her.
But finally, after almost a full day of no contact, Raina's boyfriend and landlord went into the
Boston Police Department to report Raina Morales Rojas missing on November 27, 2022.
Although Raina was reported missing in November of 2022, her disappearance wasn't made public until
January 12, 2023. When Boston police did release a missing person alert, Rana's name was at first
spelled incorrectly. In the alert, Rana is described as a Hispanic female, 5 foot 5 inches tall,
145 pounds with black hair and brown eyes. They included several photos of her, each one showing
Rana looking slightly different. She liked to play with her appearance. She had different makeup,
hairstyles and hair colors in each one. Also in the alert, Boston police disclosed that
Raina was last seen getting into a car in the area of Bennington Street in East Boston on the
evening of November 26th and was later dropped off on Alston Street in Somerville. That's about an
eight and a half mile distance between each last known location. The first 48 hours after someone
goes missing are the most critical. But 46 days passed before,
Boston police circulated that missing persons alert. Raina's sister Alicia tried to get police to
respond and search for Raina sooner. They just told her to let them know when she heard from
Raina. But that was the entire issue. Alicia hadn't heard from Raina and she didn't know how else
to get police to understand or care that not hearing from her sister for so long, not even a text
to check in on her kids, was extremely unusual and concerning.
Something was wrong, and no one seemed to give a damn.
As Alicia Morales fought to get any attention and answers from Boston police,
Telemundo Boston, a Spanish-language Boston news outlet owned by NBC Universal,
picked up the story.
That's how Lucy Panetta first heard about Raina's disappearance.
Lucy, who is also from El Salvador like Raina, is an activist.
and the executive director of Latinos Unitos and Massachusetts,
also known as Luma.
Luma contributes to the development of the Latin American community
with their mission of protecting the rights,
educating, organizing, and empowering the immigrant community in Massachusetts.
Two days after Lucy heard the Telemundo news report about Raina's disappearance,
a different news outlet contacted her for comment.
One of the English media they called me and they asked,
What is Luma doing regarding Raina's case?
So I asked them if any organization is already involved in the case.
So they told me that no one was working on the case.
So when they told me that we talked to our members and I said,
listen, we need to do something about this case.
Lucy reached out to Raina's family to learn more about her.
where she was from, where she lived and worked. Lucy also contacted the chief of police in the city
of Everett where Luma is based. She contacted state representatives and other local leaders to see if
anyone knew anything about Rana's disappearance, but no one had even heard her name.
Raina's name hadn't even been added to NAMIS yet, the National Missing and Unidentified
Person System database. So Lucy called the Luma Community to Action. They started posting
posting live videos on social media,
alerting their followers about Raina's disappearance,
and they took to the streets looking for her themselves.
We went to look for Raina on those places that we read in the news,
in the news that she was from East Boston.
They picked up her on East Boston, and they left in Somerville.
So we started looking for her.
We organized and we mobilize our members,
our volunteers, and our world community.
And we start making live videos and we make a press release to demand to our authorities to take actions in the case of Reina Morales-Rohas.
The state of Massachusetts has a one-page info sheet available online detailing the recommended missing persons protocol.
The first step is to contact local law enforcement and communicate the risks to police so that any urgency is understood.
This step includes the parenthetical comment, advocacy may be required for police action.
Advocacy is what Lucy Panetta does best.
She wrote two letters to the Boston Police Department.
According to the Boston Globe, her first one sent on January 17th received no response from BPD.
She sent the second on January 21st.
It reads, in part,
It is of grave concern to our community that the authorities have,
have done little to move forward with the investigation of this case until now and without pressure
from organizations such as ours. Those letters were accompanied by social media posts and a vigil
held in Rana's honor outside the District A7 East Boston Police Station. Luma members held signs
with Rana's face and waved their words on neon posters. Police silence is police complicity
and Latino Lives Matter, they read.
Finally, Lucy got the attention of Boston Police, and detectives agreed to meet.
She planned to attend their scheduled January 25th meeting with attorneys from lawyers for civil
rights, working pro bono on Lucy and Luma's behalf. But the attorneys later told the Boston Globe
that police nearly canceled the meeting when they showed up, not wanting to lose the opportunity
to learn more about what was happening with Raina's case,
Lucy spoke to police without that legal representation.
Lucy challenged Boston police on their response to Raina's disappearance
and asked why it took so long to publicize her case.
When I talked to the detective from East Boston,
and I asked, why are you guys released this case 47 days after?
When you guys supposed to release this information,
24 hours after or 48 hours after.
So why you did this 47 days after?
The answer was, oh, because Raina, she don't have no family in here.
So it was hard for us to ask for information about her family, her, what kind of friends or whatever she has in the state.
But in a public statement to the Boston Globe, the Boston Police Department's Chief of Communications,
Mary Ellen Burns alluded that the search started immediately, even if the public wasn't notified
for almost two months. The statement reads in part, quote, in our focused efforts to identify her
whereabouts, our investigative team, regrettably, did not share her information publicly until
January 12th, end quote. Later, in an email statement to Mass Live, Burns said, quote,
it could have and should have been done sooner, end quote.
None of this sat well with Lucy.
Within the same few weeks that Raina's disappearance was publicly announced,
the disappearances of other Massachusetts women received ample police attention and press coverage.
Anna Walsh from Cohasset, Massachusetts was reported.
Missing by her co-workers on January 4, 2023.
The very next day, Cohasset Police announced their search for Anna, with Massachusetts State Police
joining the effort days later.
The story made national headlines and took over the news cycle.
Brittany T. from Brookfield, Massachusetts, was reported missing by her family on January 13,
2023.
Within three days, her disappearance was made public, and state police joined the search effort
within the same week.
Another Massachusetts woman, Lori Baxter, was last heard from on December 28, 2022.
Though her case does not appear to be nearly as widely publicized as Brittany T. or Anna Walsh,
the first public announcements of the search for Lori Baxter were made public within
two weeks of her last known contact.
One clear difference between the cases of these three women and Raina Morales-Rohas?
The three women are white.
You know, I feel like this is racist because the way they treat the people when they went to report Raina, I think they feel like, oh, okay, she's a Latino.
She isn't documented.
Nobody's not what's going on with her or whatever.
In the same month, four women was missing.
Three women was white and one was a Latino.
And I said, thank you because you're doing a good job with the three white women's.
But I want to see the same actions with Raina.
Why are you guys used drums, helicopters, use statured, dogs, everything, all the resources
to find these three women and you forget about Raina?
Lucy Panetta and Luma's efforts brought attention not only to Raina's disappearance,
but also to the glaring inconsistencies in how missing persons cases are handled
within Boston Police and Massachusetts as a whole.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and Police Commissioner Michael Cox met with Lucy and Raina's sister
Alicia via Zoom in late January.
According to reporting by Marcella Garcia in the Boston Globe, Commissioner Cox explained
in that meeting that the police were committed and had been committed to finding Raina since day one.
Mayor Wu told the globe that she was looking closer at the delay between Raina's disappearance
and the public notice.
Quote, what I know is that when a person is officially designated as missing,
there are a number of things that BPD does to investigate,
and some of that is the direct interviews and conversations with context
and those in the area where a person might last have been seen, end quote.
What should also be included in those efforts is informing the public,
but Wu acknowledged that there was no formal procedure for when that should happen.
Quote, we need to evaluate our larger procedures for when a public.
call goes out." End quote.
On February 26, 2023, the three-month mark since Raina disappeared, six Boston City Council
members penned a letter to Mayor Wu and Commissioner Cox calling out the dismissive treatment
in the case of Raina Morales-Rohas. The letter reads, in part, quote,
Unfortunately, the type of response Ms. Morales-Rohas' case received reflects a nationwide pattern.
missing cases of women of color are often unmet with the same urgency as their white counterparts.
In this case, Raina is not only a woman of color but also an immigrant, which further makes
her susceptible to dismissive treatment, end quote.
Although Raina is an undocumented immigrant, Boston Police Department Chief of Communications
Mary Ellen Burns told Boston.com that immigration status is, quote,
not something Boston police officers ask about or are concerned with in any way, end quote.
But the fact that Raina is an immigrant is important contacts for understanding the larger issues at play in her case.
Lucy explained to me that as it is, immigrant women lack trust in police, stemming from experiences in their home countries.
Raina's case has done nothing to quell those fears.
You know, I feel sad, sad because I am a woman, I am a mother, I have child, and as an activist, has a woman, that we have a group of women, empowering women, that we educate them every single day, that we need to trust in our authorities, that we need to call 911 if we have any emergency.
How can we trust in them?
How can they build trust?
if we see cases like this one.
We flee, these women like myself and from El Salvador,
we flee from different Latin American countries
because we're coming from a dangerous country.
We don't believe, we don't trust in police,
we don't trust in the military because women, they're missing
and you never know what's going on with them.
So now it looks like, I feel like I am in 1980s,
I feel like I am going back like I am in El Salvador again from 1980s that women's missing and nobody's care what's going on.
On March 8, 2023, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healy proposed a new missing and unidentified person's coordination unit to support local law enforcement agencies in their response to missing persons cases.
She called for $300,000 of the 2024 fiscal year budget to fund.
the unit, saying, quote, this initiative is important for local law enforcement and the communities
they serve as it provides the resources needed to assist these complex investigations and help
reunite missing people with their loved ones, end quote. The proposal is a testament to just how
hard Lucy Panetta and Luma have advocated for the case of Raina Morales-Rohas and bringing
attention to police response when a person and when a person of color goes missing.
But the most important fact remains. Four months later, Raina still isn't home.
I talk to them every day with the kids and also I went to El Salvador. I met with the kids and
it's sad, it's, you know, because especially in this moment, now,
every, every day count.
We're going to have under 26, four months that Raina was missing.
And we don't know anything.
We don't have nothing new.
Everything's still the same.
As of this episode's original release date,
it has been four months since Raina Morales-Rohas was last seen in Somerville, Massachusetts.
The Boston Police Department said via a statement to Mass Live in late February,
2023, quote, we have shared information and photos of Ms. Rojas widely with other law enforcement
agencies. We have conducted dozens of interviews, utilized other investigative tools,
and followed up on all leads that we have received or uncovered as of this writing, end quote.
As the investigation continues, Lucy Panetta continues to advocate for Raina and her family.
It's hard because we've been talking to them.
every you know I always send them message emails we have meetings and I'm tired with the same
information oh this case is open we cannot give more information about this case because it's
open and I say listen I already know that I don't want to hear the same history I already
know that the case is open it's under investigation I'm not asking you for names
address, phone numbers, I just want to know what's going on.
I will make sure, I will know that are you guys doing your job
when you find Raina and you return Raina to us
and we can return Raina to her kid.
But right now, I will still thinking that are you guys not doing anything
and you not care for this case.
Between phone calls with detectives,
and the media and dedicating her time and energy to keeping Reina Morales Rojas in the public eye,
Lucy stays in constant contact with Reino's family in El Salvador.
The conversations with Reina's children weigh heavy on her heart.
They're still waiting and they still are missing and they still thinking that they will receive
a phone call from their mom and something that made me so, you know, sad because
They have that hope that I will find their mom.
And Kimberly, that I've been talking, I talk to her every single day.
And she said, Lucy, I know.
I know you will find my mom.
And, you know, it's hard.
It's hard for me because I don't have that power to do that,
to find their mom.
You know, I just try to do the best I can't.
Everything is in my possibility.
Anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of Raina Morales-Rohas
is advised to contact A7 detectives at 617-343-4-3-24.
If you would prefer to share information anonymously,
you can do so by calling the Crime Stoppers tip line
at 1-800-494 tips.
or by texting the word tip to crime 27463.
All contact and tip line information is included in the show notes of this episode.
Raina has two children, a sister, an entire family who wants to bring her home.
Please, if you know anything, don't keep it to yourself.
I never knew Raina before.
I don't know anything about her, her family.
And when I met her child, I can see that she was a good mother.
She raised a good kid.
And we need to continue fighting for justice and equality
to make those changes that everyone we deserve in this life.
And we not give up.
We will continue looking for reina.
There's been very little new information regarding Raina's disappearance
since that original episode was released on Darkdowne East in 2023.
But Boston Globe columnist Marcella Garcia has stayed with the story since then
and even traveled to El Salvador to meet Raina's family.
At the time of my original reporting, source material used,
the name Raina Morales Rojas, but her full name is Raina Carolina Morales Rojas.
Raina's family and friends in El Salvador call her Carolina, and the nicknames Caro and Carito.
They said she is the kind of person everyone loves. She is a hard worker, who bought a plot of
land, and despite the doubts of some people close to her, she built a home on that land,
where her children stayed after she moved to Massachusetts.
Leaving El Salvador became a necessity for Raina.
Although she had a job she really enjoyed guarding municipal buildings and public spaces
in her city, she had to leave it after she reported co-workers for sexual harassment.
Court orders prevented those co-workers from contacting her,
but after that she was reassigned to a different position,
and it made her feel like she was being punished.
Not only that, Raina faced more harassment in the new position,
and she knew it was time to take action on something she was.
she'd always thought about, going to the U.S. She could make more money and provide a better life
for her two children. According to Marcella Garcia's column, not long after her arrival in the
States, Raina rented a room in a two-bedroom apartment. The landlord previously talked about
was also technically her roommate. He last saw her on November 26, 2022, in the kitchen
of their shared apartment. The landlord said that Raina told him she was going out that night but didn't
say where. Security footage showed her getting into a silver car on Bennington Street, which was
where their apartment was located. So that's new. It was a silver vehicle. The same vehicle
dropped her off in Somerville where she was last seen. But that's about it. The Middlesex District
Attorney's Office and Massachusetts State Police have since joined the investigation. So has the
Somerville Police Department, given the last known sighting of Raina was in that city.
As far as I can tell, though, there have been no new updates specifically regarding the
status of the investigation from any of these four agencies in a long time.
In media coverage published since my original coverage of this case, Boston Police
acknowledged that the weight between Raina's missing persons report and actually going public
with information about her disappearance was a misstep. That never should have happened.
The department has since updated its protocols regarding missing persons reports.
However, a Boston Police Department representative explained that the investigation was active
from the beginning, despite the significant delay in public notification.
Investigators reportedly used search dogs and a drone in their efforts to locate Raina
and had also canvassed neighborhoods with her photo.
As of April 2023, there had been, quote,
no substantive leads since the disappearance was publicly announced.
While they wait for answers, Rana's family have been targeted by cruel scammers in the last few years.
Her sister received a call from some unknown person stating that Rana was the victim of human trafficking
and demanded money to release her, even threatening to harm Rana if she did not comply with the demand.
Other callers claimed Rana was in the hospital or was detained by immigration,
officials. None of these have turned out to be true, and her sister was advised not to send money
to anyone who calls with these threats or promises. But there has been at least a small glimmer
of hope in all this. In early 2024, an advocacy nonprofit called Lawyers for Civil Rights began
helping Rain as children apply for a U visa. The visa officially called the U non-immigrant status
is a form of immigration relief for someone who's been a victim of a qualifying crime,
has experienced substantial physical or mental abuse because of it,
and has been helpful or is willing to be helpful in investigating or prosecuting that crime.
In short, it's meant to protect crime victims who cooperate with law enforcement
and give them a legal way to stay and work in the U.S.
and in some cases eventually adjust to permanent resident status.
As of January 2024, the Middlesex County District Attorney's Office was assisting with the necessary information and paperwork for the U visa process.
D.A. Marion Ryan was in full support of Raina's children getting to the United States as the search for their mother continued.
Quote, any of us, if we were unfortunate enough that a family member went missing in another country,
we would certainly feel that even being on the phone or zooming, we weren't necessarily close enough to the investment.
For Raina's children, the opportunity to apply for a U visa means being able to go to the police station, to talk to investigators in person, and be available for communication with the agencies handling her case in ways that are more effective than doing it from afar.
But it's more than that, too.
It's the promise of maybe making their mother's dream for them come true, to attend college and have a better life.
With additional agencies joining the investigation since the original release of this episode,
there are now additional ways to share information and tips relating to the disappearance of Raina Carolina Morales-Rohas.
If you have knowledge that could help bring Raina home, you can also contact the Massachusetts State Police assigned to the Middlesex District Attorney's Office at 781-897-660.
Thank you for listening to Darkdowneast.
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 Audio Check.
I think Chuck would approve.
