After a night out with friends in Columbus, Ohio, Brian Shaffer was captured on surveillance cameras entering the Ugly Tuna Saloona near Ohio State University. It was April 1, 2006, and Brian—then a 27-year-old medical student—had spent the evening bar-hopping following dinner with his father earlier that day. What makes this case especially unsettling is what never appears on camera: Brian is never seen leaving the bar. Despite extensive review of the available footage, no confirmed exit is documented. No verified sightings occur afterward. Brian Shaffer effectively vanishes from a crowded public space, surrounded by people, cameras, and multiple exits—yet without a clear explanation for how he disappeared. This episode reconstructs the verified timeline of Brian’s final known hours, focusing on confirmed facts rather than speculation. Using police reports, CCTV analysis, and witness statements, it examines what is known about Brian’s movements before entering the bar, what the surveillance footage does and does not show, and how investigators attempted to account for every possible exit scenario. The episode also explores how early assumptions, physical layout limitations, and incomplete video coverage contributed to long-standing uncertainty in the case. Key points explored in this episode include: Brian Shaffer’s background, personal circumstances, and plans at the timeThe timeline of events leading up to the night at the Ugly Tuna SaloonaSurveillance footage showing Brian entering the bar and interacting with othersKnown gaps in CCTV coverage and why they matterWitness accounts from friends, staff, and nearby patronsInitial police theories and how they evolved over timePhysical searches, follow-up leads, and evidence that failed to produce answers Rather than presenting a single explanation, this episode focuses on process and documentation—how investigators analyzed the footage, why certain possibilities were ruled out, and which questions remain unresolved. It highlights the challenges of relying on surveillance evidence that appears comprehensive but contains critical blind spots. Brian Shaffer’s disappearance remains one of the most frequently discussed missing-person cases in the United States, not because of what was captured on camera, but because of what wasn’t. A man enters a bar. Cameras roll. And yet, no definitive record explains how—or if—he ever left. By revisiting the established facts and the known limitations of the evidence, this episode aims to clarify what can be confirmed, what cannot, and why the case continues to resist resolution years later. This episode includes AI-generated content.