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When demolition crews broke through the concrete foundation at Point Haven Lighthouse in August 2012, six feet below ground level, they discovered a red metal toy truck sealed in a plastic bag. The toy belonged to eight-year-old Timothy Morrison, the lighthouse keeper's son who had vanished from the isolated island fifty years earlier in October 1962. Inside the sealed bag with the toy was a handwritten note in a child's block letters: "I'm in the walls. Dad can't hear me. I've been calling for 3 days. Please help. October 17, 1962." The note was dated three days after Timothy disappeared. But forensic analysis of the concrete surrounding the toy confirmed something impossible—that foundation wasn't poured until 1975, thirteen years after Timothy vanished and thirteen years after he wrote the note asking for help. The toy truck had been buried under six feet of concrete that didn't exist when the child who owned it disappeared. The investigation revealed disturbing details about Timothy's final days. His father, lighthouse keeper Robert Morrison, had documented in his official logs that he heard Timothy calling from inside the walls for two years after the boy vanished. The Coast Guard in 1962 dismissed this as grief-induced hallucinations, but Robert's descriptions were specific and consistent—he heard his son's voice behind the walls, below the floors, muffled but definitely Timothy, calling for help from spaces that appeared empty when Robert tore apart wall panels and pulled up floorboards searching. The note found in 2012 confirmed Robert had been telling the truth: "I'm in the walls." Timothy was exactly where his father heard him, just not in the walls that existed in 1962. He was trapped in the concrete foundation that wouldn't be poured until 1975. Handwriting analysis confirmed the note was written by Timothy Morrison. Paper analysis, ink analysis, and degradation patterns all verified the note was created in October 1962. The plastic bag was confirmed as early 1960s manufacturing. But the concrete encasing everything was definitively poured in September 1975 during a renovation project, thirteen years after the note was written and sealed. The toy truck was found in the exact location that had been Timothy's bedroom in the keeper's quarters—the northwest corner, where his bed stood against the wall, directly above where the toy would be discovered fifty years later. Historical research uncovered a disturbing pattern. Between 1921 and 1962, four other children of lighthouse keepers had vanished from Point Haven under identical circumstances—disappearing overnight from a half-acre island with nowhere to hide, never found despite extensive searches. All five children were under age ten. All vanished from the same lighthouse. All disappeared without leaving any trace except Timothy, who left proof of where he went. The demolition was completed in September 2012, with crews excavating all the way to bedrock searching for additional evidence. They found nothing else—just the one toy truck, just the one note, written on October 17, 1962, buried under concrete poured in 1975, discovered in 2012. The timeline makes no scientific sense, but every piece of physical evidence has been authenticated and verified. Timothy Morrison wrote a note three days after vanishing, sealed it with his toy in a location that would be buried under concrete thirteen years in his future, and that evidence waited fifty years to surface during demolition. His father heard him calling from walls that wouldn't be built for over a decade. The note still exists in Coast Guard archives, preserved as documentation of something that violates known physics but happened anyway. #crimestory #unsolvedmystery #coldcase #heartbreakingstory