Brit, 25, missing for 250 DAYS after vanishing on family holiday with ‘woman he met online’ & sending final text to mum
A HEARTBROKEN mum whose British son has been missing in Italy since July last year says she feels “completely let down” by cops.
Michael Frison, from Chard, Somerset, went missing in Sardinia on July 13, 2024, the day he was originally due to return to the UK.
He had extended his trip to stay with Niomi Orlandini, from Jersey, whom he’d met online, for an extra week after she travelled to join him on his holiday.
Following his disappearance, Niomi, the last person to see him alive, went off the radar after a catalogue of Italian police blunders.
Michael’s devastated mum, Cristina Pittalis, 49, says she now “relates” to Jay Slater’s mum Debbie Duncan – as the search for her son passes 250 days.
Italian cops have since launched a criminal probe following Michael’s disappearance, but have had limited contact with his mum.
Cristina explained that Michael flew from Bristol Airport to Olbia on July 2, before driving to his grandparents’ home in Sassari to celebrate his 25th birthday and his grandma’s 70th.
Niomi, 27, who Cristina says met her son online in July 2023, asked to join him on the trip, which he agreed to, and he cancelled his return trip to the UK, scheduled for July 13, to stay with her for an extra week.
Michael was allegedly told by Niomi that her father was due to join her in Sardinia the following week, and he didn’t feel it was right to leave her alone, given she had nowhere to stay.
Sardinian-born Cristina told The Sun: “They only met in person once before she asked Michael if she could join him in Sardinia while he was with his grandparents.
“He was really happy to be there and was celebrating his 25th and his grandma’s 70th – but his demeanour changed when she arrived.
“He wasn’t as chatty or smiley when she arrived. He was always in contact with me almost on a daily basis.”
“She asked Michael if he could stay with her and he said to me ‘Mum I will stay a bit longer and will keep her company until her dad arrives in Sardinia’”, she added.
‘SINISTER’ BEHAVIOUR
According to Cristina, the pair left Michael’s grandparents’ home on July 12, and went to volunteer on a farm where they would work in exchange for food and accommodation.
It is located in Luras, a barren and remote area that the mum-of-two said is surrounded by “rugged terrain and deep vegetation” which is where Michael was last seen.
She added that the trip there from her parents’ home was about 70 miles.
The pair arrived at the farm, owned by a German couple, on the same day they left, staying in a tent about “100 metres away” from the owners, who were in a camper van.
Cristina said that was the last time she heard from Michael.
She said: “He texted me saying he was going to sleep and that he’d call me tomorrow – around 8pm he sent that. He ended it with ‘I [love emoji] you.”
On July 14, two days after last hearing from her son, Cristina received a Facebook message from the landowner’s account — written by Niomi — telling her to contact the landowner.
Cristina said: “She said Michael went for a walk in the morning of the 13th and returned in a confused state of mind possibly due to heatstroke.
“After resting he ventured out again and did not return.
“She found his clothes but personal belongings were all left behind.”
“They didn’t raise the alarm, didn’t call an ambulance when he was unwell, didn’t call the police, didn’t even call nearby people,” the devastated mother added.
She noted how the area is incredibly remote and has rugged terrain that would immediately make her check with neighbours about the welfare of a missing person.
“But they didn’t raise an alarm. Not cared about his safety – it’s very sinister,” she said.
‘GUT FEELING’
Cristina, who was widowed several years ago, quickly flew out to assist the search for her son.
But she felt frustrated about the lack of clarity she received from Niomi and the landowner, with her “gut feeling as a mum” telling her something untoward had happened.
She said: “Their story was that my son essentially left the place wearing only his pants. [Niomi] said he was barefoot — it’s impossible!
“It’s dry and imperious land full of stones and dry vegetation. It’s difficult to move with no shoes.”
The search for Michael began around 6pm on July 14, with fire service crews and volunteers springing into action, though cops didn’t get involved until July 19.
It’s destroyed our lives – I’m going through an unimaginable mix of emotions.
Cristina Pittalis
This left Cristina “frustrated” given the closing window of opportunity to gather evidence.
She said she even had to keep her own son’s belongings in a bag to preserve any potential forensic evidence.
The search was called off after just two weeks.
Cristina said she feels “let down” by Sardinian authorities following multiple police blunders that could have hindered the case.
This included advice she gave them from British police to withhold the passport of Niomi, who also has links to Thailand, in order to further their enquiries.
The Italian-born mother told The Sun: “I really wish the British authorities were involved – I feel completely let down by my own nation.
“I can’t even imagine how Jay Slater’s mum would have felt when her son went missing and she couldn’t communicate in Spanish.
“I can communicate with the police and they have done absolutely nothing — they have been useless.”
Cristina explained that police in Britain advised her to tell the Italian authorities to seize Niomi’s passport, which they did not do, and that they got offended when she tried to tell them how to do their jobs.
The crucial passport error may have allowed Niomi to vanish with a raft of questions left unanswered.
She added that she has also not been given a family liaison officer, and claims Italian police have kept her in the dark.
‘UNIMAGINABLE’
The worried mother additionally raised her concerns about Niomi, saying she has not spoken to her sisters since she left, though they keep telling her that she is a “lovely girl”.
However, Cristina claims she has heard “a completely different story” from others living in Jersey who knew the 27-year-old.
“I’m not looking for a culprit, I’m looking for my son – I’m not accusing her of anything,” she said.
“But the fact she is not responding is quite mysterious and very strange.”
The mother has been left questioning why Niomi would not respond to her appeals for help or check in for an update on the search.
With Niomi’s mother coming from Thailand, Cristina believes the girl may have fled there to go into “hiding”, adding that she is suspicious of her behaviour and that of the farm owner.
Cristina, who lost her husband seven years ago and is now juggling the search for Michael with looking after her youngest son, 11, said she’s going through an “unimaginable mix of emotions”.
“It’s destroyed our lives – I’m going through an unimaginable mix of emotions,” she said.
“Not knowing where Michael is and what happened is unbearable.
“Feeling the worst and holding onto hope for the best – it’s an overwhelming sense of helplessness.”
The devastated mother detailed how she feels “drained” by the emotional and physical toll his disappearance.
“I am determined to find him, even in my grief I will not stop fighting for him,” she vowed.
In her desperate efforts, Cristina has “given up everything”, abandoning her promising career in social work in order to dedicate her time to finding Michael and downsizing her home.
“I am leaving the house because I can’t afford to live here and balance going between here and Italy,” she said, adding that her second son is home educated and has developed separation anxiety.
She praised Michael as “such a kind and truly special soul” adding that “he feels so deeply not just for himself but for others – he notices when someone is struggling.
“He offers a kind word and a helping hand.”
A friend of Cristina set up a GoFundMe page to help find Michael.
At the time of writing, it has raised over £8,000 towards search efforts.