🚨 Cold Case – 15 Years Missing: Trever Andrews Vanished from London, Ontario in 2009
On the night of October 28, 2009, 26-year-old Trever John Andrews left a friend’s house on Oakville Avenue near Huron Street and Clarke Road in east London, planning to catch the No. 21 Huron Heights bus home to his father’s apartment. He never arrived. No one has seen or heard from him since.
Trever was the definition of outgoing – gregarious, talkative, the guy who lit up a room. Friends say disappearing without contact was unthinkable. He had a young son he adored and would never abandon. Yet fifteen years later, his family still has no answers.
Despite extensive searches, neighbourhood canvasses, and countless appeals, the trail went cold almost immediately. Tips have dried up. The candlelight vigils the family held for years have ended. Only Trever’s mother Debbie Harding, his sister Kelly, and a handful of friends keep his memory alive – and keep asking the question: What happened to Trever?
His son, now a teenager, still wonders why his dad never came home. The family’s pain is renewed every time someone asks, “Have they found him yet?”
After fifteen years, someone out there still knows something. A conscience can only stay silent for so long.
Description (2009)
- Name: Trever John Andrews
- Born: August 8, 1983 (would be 42 today)
- Gender: Male
- Height: 5′10″–6′0″ (183 cm)
- Weight: ≈ 170 lbs (77 kg)
- Hair: Short, light brown, straight
- Eyes: Green
- Distinctive: Red birthmark on left cheek
- Last Seen Wearing: White zip-up hoodie, white T-shirt, white Reebok running shoes with black trim
- May Have Had: Yellow No Frills shopping bag containing beer bottles
- Last Seen: ~11:30 p.m., October 28, 2009 – Oakville Ave near Huron St / Clarke Rd, London, ON
How to Help
Even the smallest detail from 2009 could break this case open. Contact:
- London Police Service: 519-661-5670 (Case #2009-124797) | majorcrime@police.london.ca
- Crime Stoppers: 1-800-222-8477 or online (anonymous + cash reward)
- RCMP National Centre: canadasmissing-disparuscanada@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Sources
What You Can Do
Fifteen years is a long time, but cold cases are solved every year when someone finally decides to speak. Trever’s son deserves to know what happened to his dad. Share this post – someone in London still remembers that night.
Visit CanadaMissing.ca for more long-term missing persons cases.
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