The Archive
About
Stories of the PNW is an interactive horror anthology. Every story is told through a single recovered phone — you sign in as its owner and live their last days in real time: the texts, the calls, the photos, the things on the map that shouldn't be there.
Play the timeline forward and the phone comes alive on schedule. Scrub it backward and the device resets to that exact moment — answer the call you missed, reread the message you shouldn't have opened.
The Team
The archive is maintained by a small records and reconstruction team. No personal names are published here; staff roles are kept functional so the focus stays on the cases and the people still missing from them.
A Public Records Requestor tracks disclosure packets, case-file releases, redaction notes, and chain-of-custody summaries before any material is added to the archive.
Digital Forensics staff prepare the device reconstructions, reviewing message databases, call histories, media libraries, location artifacts, voicemails, voice memos, and other recovered phone records for interactive playback.
The Stories
The cases presented here have been made available through disclosure of digital records connected to active missing persons cases in the Pacific Northwest. Released phone records, photographs, call logs, notes, recordings, and related public materials are compiled into a chronological viewing format.
Each reconstruction preserves the feeling of moving through a recovered device: messages arrive when they were logged, calls interrupt the timeline, and media appears alongside the records that produced it. These stories are assembled for viewing, not presented as investigative findings.
Contact
For records questions, corrections, accessibility issues, or requests to review sensitive material, contact the archive through the role most closely related to your request.
PUBLIC RECORDS REQUESTOR - [email protected]
DIGITAL FORENSICS REVIEW - [email protected]
Resources
For real missing-person cases or urgent safety concerns, contact local law enforcement or emergency services first. The links below are public resources for missing persons information, family support, and regional case awareness.