The Vanishing of Tyler Bojanowski: A 25-Year-Old with Brain Injury Disappears After Telling Mom He’s Heading to a Friend’s House
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The quiet streets of Wyandotte, Michigan, hold secrets that no family should ever have to uncover. On the evening of Wednesday, February 4, 2026, Nicole Dillon exchanged what seemed like a perfectly ordinary phone call with her 25-year-old son, Tyler Bojanowski. He told her casually that he was going to a friend’s house. Nothing in his voice raised alarm. No hint of distress. Just the everyday rhythm of a young man living his life after years of recovery from a traumatic brain injury. That conversation would be the last time Nicole heard from him.
By the early hours of Thursday, February 5, Tyler had disappeared without a trace.
What followed was a cascade of chilling discoveries that turned a routine night into every parent’s worst nightmare. Tyler’s truck was found abandoned on Enterprise Drive in Allen Park, near a Best Western hotel. The airbags had deployed, suggesting a collision. Inside the vehicle: his phone and wallet sat untouched, as if he had simply walked away mid-journey. Security footage captured the most haunting image yet—Tyler, coatless in sub-freezing Michigan temperatures, walking away from the truck into the darkness. No one has seen him since.
Even more perplexing: his passport turned up separately at Dingell Park in nearby Ecorse, miles from the crash site. Why would he have it with him? Was he planning to leave the country? Or did confusion from his brain injury lead him to wander aimlessly, dropping items along the way? The questions multiply with every passing hour.
Tyler Bojanowski is no stranger to fighting for his life. A devastating car crash several years ago left him with a severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). The injury affected his memory, impulse control, executive functioning, and emotional regulation. Nicole, a devoted mother and his primary caregiver, has guided him through countless therapies, doctor’s appointments, and small victories. Tyler, with his blonde hair, blue eyes, glasses, 5’9″ frame, and approximately 200-pound build, worked hard to regain independence. He stayed positive, dreamed of returning to full-time work, and leaned on family support while living at home in Wyandotte—a close-knit Downriver community just south of Detroit.
His disappearance has ignited widespread fear for his safety. People with TBIs are especially vulnerable when disoriented: they may not recognize danger, struggle to ask for help, become easily confused in unfamiliar surroundings, or wander without purpose. In winter temperatures dipping below freezing, without a coat or phone, the risk of hypothermia, exposure, or secondary injury is terrifyingly real.

Nicole Dillon’s anguish is palpable in every public statement she has made. On February 8, she posted a raw, emotional message on Facebook, thanking everyone who helped search and pleading for continued shares to spread Tyler’s information. She called it the hardest thing she had ever had to post and begged for prayers that he would be found safe.
In interviews with local media, she spoke directly to her son, her voice breaking as she urged him to call or come home if he was watching or listening anywhere. The family launched an immediate search. Allen Park Police Department officers responded quickly after the abandoned truck was discovered around 2:30 a.m. on February 5. Wyandotte Police took the lead on the missing persons case. Drones scanned parks and wooded areas. Ground teams combed neighborhoods, riverbanks, and potential routes Tyler might have walked. Flyers with his photo—smiling, glasses slightly askew—blanketed the community.
Social media erupted. Posts on Facebook groups, Nextdoor, and Instagram used hashtags to rally support. Strangers shared the missing-person bulletin, offered tips, and joined volunteer searches. Neighbors who barely knew the family stepped forward, moved by Nicole’s visible heartbreak and the vulnerability of a young man already fighting invisible battles.
As of February 10, 2026—five full days since he vanished—the trail remains cold. No credible sightings. No phone pings. No credit card activity (he had his wallet in the truck anyway). Investigators continue reviewing surveillance footage from surrounding businesses, interviewing potential witnesses, and following every lead. Foul play has not been ruled out, but the primary concern is welfare: a man with a brain injury, possibly confused, possibly injured, exposed to brutal winter conditions.
The mystery deepens with every unanswered question. Did Tyler reach his friend’s house? What caused the crash—mechanical failure, distraction, impairment from his injury, or something else? Why walk away from his phone and wallet? Why carry (and then abandon) his passport? Was he experiencing a medical episode related to his TBI—seizure, confusion, or disorientation—that led him to wander?
Traumatic brain injuries can cause exactly these kinds of unpredictable behaviors. Survivors may forget where they are, lose track of time, or act on impulses without understanding consequences. In freezing weather without proper clothing, survival time shortens dramatically.
The community response has been overwhelming. Colleagues, friends, and strangers have donated time, shared posts, and prayed. A makeshift command center formed at a local church where volunteers organized search grids. Churches held prayer vigils. Restaurants offered free meals to search teams. The Downriver area has rallied in a way that reminds everyone of the power of collective compassion.
Yet beneath the support lies growing dread. Each passing day increases the likelihood of worst-case scenarios. Nicole remains at the center of the storm—coordinating with police, updating supporters, clinging to hope. She has spoken of Tyler’s resilience, his kindness, his determination to rebuild after the crash. Now she begs the public to help bring him home.
Authorities urge anyone with information—sightings in Wyandotte, Allen Park, Ecorse, Lincoln Park, or anywhere in the metro Detroit area—to contact Wyandotte Police Department immediately. Even the smallest detail could be the key.
Tyler’s disappearance is a stark reminder of how quickly life can fracture. A young man recovering from one tragedy, a routine evening phone call, a simple plan to visit a friend—and then silence. In the quiet suburbs of Michigan, a family waits for the sound of footsteps on the porch, for the phone to ring, for the nightmare to end.
If you are reading this, Tyler—hear your mother’s voice. Feel the love of an entire community searching for you. Come home.
And to everyone else: keep sharing his photo. Keep your eyes open. Sometimes the difference between tragedy and reunion is one person who notices something out of place.
The search for Tyler Bojanowski continues. A mother’s plea echoes through every street, every screen, every heart.
Bring him home.















