Linda Varela Adams knew something was very wrong when her son didn’t call on her birthday in July. 

The Billings, Montana mom said that’s just who Jance Varela is: the kind of son who calls his mom for Mother’s Day, her birthday and the holidays. The kind of son more worried more about others than himself. 

Adams reported Varela missing right away. Nine months later, he’s still missing.

Though police opened a missing persons file and assigned an investigator in July, they’ve never launched an active search for Varela. 

So what happens when your only son goes missing and the police decide not to pull out all the stops to find him?

If you’re Adams, you take charge of the search yourself. 

Last confirmed sighting in June

The last confirmed sighting of Varela was at a bowling alley on June 1 in Fort Collins, Colorado, about 50 miles north of Denver and the area he moved to from Montana in 2018.

Adams’ 60th birthday was July 1, something she said her son wouldn’t have missed. 

She told police that her son had been diagnosed with a brain tumor in May and that may be affecting his cognitive function. Varela also struggled with homelessness and opioid addiction following a surgery, Adams said. 

Adams also told them that her son is not the type of person to abandon his family.

“He was a very loving person,” she said. “He was the one that made sure people had a place to stay and food to eat.”

Jance Varela has been missing in Colorado since July.

Police response

From the beginning, police determined that an active search for Varela wasn’t warranted, said Kate Kimble, a spokeswoman for the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office. 

“There was no indication of foul play, there was no indication of any imminent risk to safety, and he’s an independent adult,” she said. “We have to balance those things … Sometimes people decide to make a change in their life and cut ties with family or friends.”

She said there was no evidence that Varela was cutting ties with family.

On Tuesday, nearly nine months after Varela disappeared, the department issued its first news release about his case, saying that new information investigators received about Varela has raised “concern about his wellbeing.”

Kimble declined to elaborate but said the news release is intended to cast a wider net and drum up new leads.