AtNight Creative Intelligence
07/16/2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
15 JULY 2026
————————————
When AtNight came into Sebastian’s case in August 2024, the request was painfully simple: help a father find his son.
Nothing that followed was simple.
We expected the work to involve searching for information. Most of our time was actually spent figuring out whether the information arriving every day deserved to be believed. That difference became the whole job.
Anyone who worked this case knows the feeling. A message comes in late at night and your heart starts moving before your mind has caught up. There is a photograph, a vehicle, a person who swears they saw him, or a detail that seems to fit something you read weeks earlier. You call somebody. Another person wakes up. Laptops open. Maps come back onto screens. For an hour, perhaps longer, the whole case feels alive in a new way.
Then you locate the original photograph and discover that it is old. The timestamp is wrong. The vehicle is a different model. The supposed witnesses all heard the story from the same person. What looked like five confirmations becomes one unverified statement passed around until nobody remembers where it began.
Nobody celebrates when that happens. You make the note, close the lead and sit there for a minute before opening the next one.
That was the roller coaster. Hope never arrived gently. It came crashing through the door, made everybody believe the night might end differently, and sometimes disappeared before sunrise.
There were periods when we honestly felt close to something. There were also days when the archive grew by hundreds of files and we understood Sebastian’s disappearance no better than we had the day before. That is difficult to explain to anyone who has never worked inside a case like this. A person can spend an entire day doing careful, necessary work and finish with nothing except proof that one more possibility did not happen.
The public usually saw the arguments, interviews and personalities surrounding the case. Our view was less dramatic. It was folders full of photographs with no dates, video clips missing the minutes around them, tips that had traveled through several people, maps covered in places someone believed had been searched, and thousands upon thousands of messages written by people who ranged from deeply sincere to completely detached from reality.
Behind those files were real people trying to make sense of them. People lost sleep. Families had their evenings interrupted. Food sat untouched beside computers. Somebody would notice one strange word in an old message and send everyone back through material they thought they had finished months earlier.
The work changed people. We became more cautious, sometimes more cynical than we wanted to be, and then something genuinely promising would arrive and all of that hope came rushing back anyway. You need hope to continue opening the files. You also need enough discipline to admit when the thing you hoped for is not there.
We did not always handle that pressure perfectly. There were bad days. Frustration got into conversations. People defended work they had poured themselves into. Opinions changed as new information arrived. Things that once seemed important became less important; material initially dismissed sometimes deserved another look.
That belongs in the story too.
AtNight’s account of this case should not read as though we floated above it, calm and correct at every turn. We were in it. We made decisions with the information available at the time. We dealt with the same noise, urgency and emotion that affected everyone else. Any honest review has to be willing to look at us with the same seriousness that it applies to every other person and institution discussed in the record.
What stayed constant was Sebastian.
Even that sounds too easy to say, because the case surrounding him became enormous. His name became attached to broadcasts, theories, feuds, fundraisers, searches, tip lines, private investigators, public officials and an online world that seemed capable of producing a new certainty every morning.
A missing child can slowly disappear behind all of that.
People begin talking about the mother, the father, the investigators, the neighbors, the creators and one another. Sebastian becomes the name at the beginning of a conversation that eventually has almost nothing to do with Sebastian.
We watched that happen, and at times we became caught inside it ourselves.
He should have been growing up while the rest of us were arguing. He should have been collecting the ordinary days that most people never think to appreciate until somebody is denied them. Instead, the public version of his life remains fixed at the last point where the record can reliably place him.
That is the part of this case no theory can make easier.
As this is being written, the people who previously led AtNight’s private intelligence effort for Sebastian have begun the last phase of our role. The active operation has reached its end, and the record is now being prepared for the Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers Intelligence Commission Report.
We would be lying if we described that transition as an accomplishment.
The only ending that would have felt like an accomplishment was finding Sebastian.
We did not find him.
Thousands of pages cannot soften that sentence, and a beautifully produced report will never be a substitute for the answer his family and the public have waited for.
Still, walking away and leaving the archive as an enormous collection of disconnected files would be wrong. Too many people contributed too much time. Too many statements changed as they traveled. Too many original sources became buried beneath reposts and summaries. Too many questions remain open because the documents needed to answer them were never obtained, no longer exist or have never been made public.
Someone has to put the road back in order.
That is what the Commission report is meant to do.
The current index and structural draft are already approaching 300 pages. Very little of that is finished narrative. Those pages are the framework needed to hold the chronology, source register, search record, tips, sightings, communications, photographs, video, audio, public statements, private intelligence products, institutional actions, corrections, contradictions and unanswered questions without mixing them together.
The projected report may ultimately run between 2,000 and 5,000 pages. We understand how absurd that number sounds. It sounded absurd to us too, until we began indexing what actually exists.
A single video is one file until every relevant frame, statement and timestamp has to be examined. One rumor can generate hundreds of posts, screenshots and discussions while still originating from a single person. The same photograph may appear in dozens of folders under different names. An interview can be clipped, reposted and described so many times that the public version eventually bears little resemblance to what was originally said.
Once every photograph, recording, document, message, tip, derivative copy and public discussion is counted, the material reaches into the hundreds of thousands and potentially millions of individual items.
The report’s job is to make that material understandable. It should allow a reader to see where information began, how it changed, what supported it and where the record simply stops.
This will be a civilian and independent undertaking. It has no subpoena power, cannot replace law enforcement and will not decide anyone’s guilt. Its value will depend entirely on whether the people doing the work remain honest about the evidence and honest about its limits.
That honesty may frustrate people. There will be places where the answer is uncertain. Some records conflict. Others are missing. Privacy and the continuing investigation will prevent certain material from being published. A responsible report cannot expose a minor, identify a confidential source or compromise sensitive information simply to satisfy public curiosity.
There may also be conclusions that make nobody happy.
That is fine.
The purpose is not to leave every faction feeling vindicated. It is to leave behind a record that can survive after the factions have moved on.
The attached pages are the only portion being shown now. They offer a first look at the cover, mission, preamble and purpose. The underlying working draft remains open because the underlying record remains open. What you are seeing is the beginning of the structure, not a tease of accusations or conclusions.
Invitations to prospective Commission members will begin moving out as the formation process advances. If that work stays on course, we hope to begin sharing semi-regular updates around September and continue them until the complete report is released.
Those updates will come when there is something worth saying. We have no interest in turning the construction of this report into another content cycle. Much of the work will be boring from the outside. A corrected date may take days to establish. Tracing a widely repeated claim back to its source can consume an entire week and end with one footnote.
That is still progress.
Maybe the report uncovers a detail that was overlooked. Maybe it helps a future investigator understand why a particular lead went cold. Maybe it prevents a false story from hardening into history. Perhaps it will simply show, with painful clarity, where the surviving evidence ends and what would be required to go farther.
We cannot honestly promise more than that.
I wish this post could announce that we found the missing piece. I wish these attached pages were leading to a final chapter in which Sebastian walks through a door and all of this noise suddenly becomes irrelevant.
They are not.
They represent the last thing AtNight can responsibly do with nearly two years of work: preserve it, examine it without protecting ourselves, and pass it forward in a form that may still be useful to the people who retain the lawful authority to find him.
If you have direct information about Sebastian, give it to the Sumner County Sheriff’s Office, TBI, FBI or NCMEC. AtNight is no longer accepting tips.
Maybe one day this report can end with a different sentence.
For now, Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers is still missing, and that remains the only fact large enough to contain everything else.
06/28/2026
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06/28/2026
🚨💢 𝗧𝗪𝗢-𝗙𝗨𝗚𝗜𝗧𝗜𝗩𝗘 𝗔𝗟𝗘𝗥𝗧 💢🚨
🚩 CHILD MOLESTER SOUGHT
𝗞𝗘𝗡𝗡𝗬 𝗔𝗥𝗦𝗘𝗡𝗘 𝗠𝗔𝗥𝗜𝗘-𝗟𝗢𝗨𝗜𝗦𝗘 𝗥𝗢𝗟𝗔𝗡𝗗
• California driver’s license
• Could be anywhere
• ⚠️ 𝗘𝗫𝗧𝗥𝗘𝗠𝗘𝗟𝗬 𝗗𝗔𝗡𝗚𝗘𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗦 ⚠️
• Do 𝗡𝗢𝗧 approach, confront, or apprehend him yourself.
𝗔𝗔𝗥𝗢𝗡 𝗞𝗬𝗟𝗘 𝗘𝗔𝗦𝗧
• Currently wanted
• May be traveling with a Florida driver’s license
• Could be anywhere
• ⚠️ 𝗖𝗢𝗡𝗦𝗜𝗗𝗘𝗥𝗘𝗗 𝗗𝗔𝗡𝗚𝗘𝗥𝗢𝗨𝗦 ⚠️
• Do 𝗡𝗢𝗧 approach or attempt to detain him.
📞 𝗧𝗜𝗣 𝗟𝗜𝗡𝗘: 808-354-3034
📧 [email protected]
💰 A substantial cash reward is available for credible information leading to Kenny Arsene Marie-Louise Roland’s location and for information leading to Aaron Kyle East’s location and arrest.
🔒 All legitimate tips will remain confidential.
❗️𝗜𝗠𝗣𝗢𝗥𝗧𝗔𝗡𝗧
This line is reserved strictly for legitimate fugitive tips. Anyone spam calling, prank calling, flooding the line without helpful information, or intentionally disrupting investigations will be 𝗕𝗟𝗢𝗖𝗞𝗘𝗗 immediately.
For all other inquiries 𝗡𝗢𝗧 related to these fugitive cases:
📧 [email protected]
📧 [email protected]
Your information could make the difference. Help us bring them in safely.
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06/25/2026
STATEMENT FROM
ATNIGHT CREATIVE INTELLIGENCE
24 June 2026 | 10:11 PM EDT
AtNight Creative Intelligence will transmit a short segment concerning Sebastian Rogers and Summer Wells on our official YouTube channel by or around 8:00 p.m. PST / 11:00 p.m. EST tonight.
This unscheduled late-evening release is intended to sustain focused public awareness.
𝑈𝑛𝑢𝑠 𝑀𝑢𝑛𝑑𝑢𝑠.
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