Deaf Guyanese disappears in NY shortly after arrival

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A Queens family is desperately searching for a deaf relative who vanished hours after arriving in New York.

According to NY1 News, Damon Mootoo.disappeared around 10 o'clock on Wednesday morning, just a few hours after arriving from Guyana.

Relatives said he went for a walk near their home on 152nd Street and 123rd Avenue, but never returned.

"We've been all over the neighbourhood," said Navin Mootoo. "We're further away from the neighbourhood. We're putting fliers everywhere hoping somebody will see him", the TV channel reported.

"He don't have no ID," added a friend. "He don't have no money no nothing, and he don't know his way around anywhere." Mootoo was last seen wearing dark blue jeans, a light hooded sweat shirt, a navy blue jacket, and a gray wool cap.
 
Happy ending?

NYC newcomer gets lost for five days - Yahoo! News

NYC newcomer gets lost for five days
Mon Jan 22, 8:49 PM ET

A newcomer to the city became hopelessly lost for five days after going for a walk. Damon Mootoo was staying at his brother's house in South Jamaica, Queens, when he decided to go for the stroll last Wednesday, 12 hours after arriving in New York for the first time, the Daily News reported Monday.

The 32-year-old man quickly got disorientated by the confusing streets of Queens.

On Sunday night, after a good Samaritan came to his aid, he was recovering at Jamaica Hospital from dehydration and frostbite.

Mootoo, who is hard of hearing but can communicate in English, said he didn't ask for directions because he was afraid he'd be deported and because he had heard many scary stories about New York. He recently had received his permanent resident card.

The Samaritan, Michael Bharath, was walking home from church when he spotted Mootoo shivering on the street. After he and his wife made him a sandwich, Mootoo opened up and told them his story.

Luckily, Mootoo found a piece of paper with his stepmother's address in his pocket, and Bharath drove him there.

"When I see people in need, I try to help them," Bharath told the News. "He was in need, and I'm pretty sure that within a couple more hours he would have been a dead man."

Mootoo had begged for water, but was too ashamed and shy to ask for food or directions, his worried brother, Roger Miller, told the News. He slept in an abandoned car or sought shelter under a piece of wood in a stranger's yard. Temperatures dropped into the low 20s on some nights.

"When we saw him, he was just crying," said Miller, who had plastered flyers with Mootoo's photo all over South Jamaica.

"He said he was trying to find his way back," Miller said. "He said he was just walking all over. He was scared. He heard all the stories about New York."

"I want to go home," Mootoo told the paper. "I'm thinking about going back to Guyana."

Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Copyright © 2007 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
 
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