Hannah Kobayashi, a missing Hawaiian woman who was found last week in Mexico, dashed her family’s hopes of being reunited.
Kobayashi, 38, whose disappearance sparked a police investigation before being found to have left the country voluntarily, told relatives he did not want to return to his hometown, according to his family.
Her sister, Sydni, wrote on her Facebook page that she and her mother have never seen Hannah, but have spoken to her on the phone.
“We have no proof of his whereabouts, except that he is somewhere in Mexico,” his sister wrote, adding that Kobayashi does not want to return home. “The last 30 days have been absolute hell for us, and I feel they will be there for a while, even as we try to get back to some sort of timeline.”
Kobayashi went missing in November at Los Angeles International Airport, where his father died days later of what family members said was a “broken heart.”
“Each day brought unbearable uncertainty as to whether my sister was alive or dead,” she wrote. “Losing my father to suicide during this crisis was more than my soul and heart could bear. I am human.”
Hana had sent the last message to her loved ones, which caused concern and theories on the Internet all over the world.
“Deep Hackers wiped my account, stole all my money, and considered me fk since Friday,” he texted one of his friends. New York Post.
“I was tricked into giving all my money… To someone I thought I loved,” he wrote in one text.
But after three weeks of searching for him, the police to be served packing Kobayashi as a “voluntarily missing person” after video evidence shows that he was alone, unharmed, and had crossed into Mexico on foot.
His sister also criticized him in saying how he treated his aunt, Larie Pidgeon, and he doesn’t think about his family anymore.
“There were many times when my mother and I asked Larie to respect our feelings and keep down what he was writing and interviewing. Our priority was to find Hannah, not create a media circus. “