đš FIVE WORDS⊠AND EVERYTHING CHANGED AFTER HIS WIFE DISAPPEARED IN THE BAHAMAS, BRIAN HOOKER REPORTEDLY SENT A TEXT WITH JUST FIVE WORDS. đ¶ NOW, THAT SHORT MESSAGE IS UNDER INTENSE SCRUTINY. đ SOMETIMES, THE SMALLEST DETAILS CAN SPEAK THE LOUDEST. đŹ WHAT DID THOSE FIVE WORDS REALLY REVEAL?

The day after his wife disappeared during a nighttime boat ride in the Bahamas, Brian Hooker told a friend that she tried swimming back to the sailboat following her apparent fall overboard, but strong winds pushed them apart âpretty quickly,â according to messages reviewed exclusively by CBS News.
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Lynette Hooker, who is from Michigan, has been missing since Sunday. Bahamian officials arrested her husband Wednesday night and are holding him for questioning in connection with her case, but he has not been charged with a crime, according to his attorney, Terrel Butler. Hooker can be held for 48 hours until he has to be either charged or released, Butler said, noting that officials can extend the period to 96 hours if deemed necessary.
Brian Hooker denies any wrongdoing. He previously told authorities that his wife fell from their dinghy Saturday night while the couple sailed from Hope Town to Elbow Cay in the Bahamas. He said powerful currents swept her away, along with the keys to their boat, which cut power to its engine and prevented him from reaching her.
He shared a similar account of what happened in Facebook messages to Daniel Danforth, a friend of the Hookers since 2023. Danforth told CBS News he met them because of their shared interest in boating.
The messages show that Danforth reached out to Brian on Monday after seeing news coverage of his wifeâs disappearance.
âThe wind blew me away from her and she swam towards the sailboat and we lost sight of each other pretty quickly as it was just about sundown,â Brian wrote in reply. âI drifted and tried to paddle with one oar for the next 7 hours until I washed up behind the shore of the next Island over and was able to get some help finally.â
Bahamian police have said Brian Hooker arrived at the Marsh Harbor Boat Yard on the island of Abaco at 4 a.m. Sunday morning, after paddling the dinghy to shore. They said he told someone his wife was missing once he made it there, and that person informed authorities.
In the messages, he told Danforth his family was âin hellâ as search crews failed to locate his wife.
When Danforth checked in again the next morning, Hooker said he had moved his boat to Marsh Harbor and had been sleeping there, but planned to relocate âfor a night or twoâ to stay with his sister and brother-in-law, who were flying in to meet him. He told Danforth that he planned âon heading back out to the siteâ after that âand continuing search.â
âI will most likely definitely need help in the future but I just donât know what it is yet Iâm trying to take it a day at a time and keep the faith,â he told Danforth, before congratulating him on his recent sailboat purchase.
âThe stories donât really match upâ
Danforth told CBS News that he first met the Hookers three years ago, while sailing in the New Orleans area. A Facebook notification from Brian over the weekend initially reminded him of the couple, before he started seeing headlines about Lynetteâs disappearance, Danforth said.
He received the notification because Brian had liked his comment on a post that Danforthâs wife had shared about boating. In retrospect, Danforth said the fact that his friend was scrolling social media and liking posts at that time raised some questions for him.
âYou know, my wifeâs missing, Facebookâs the last thing Iâm worried about. Youâre going to find me on the water riding around,â Danforth told CBS News.
Danforth said he was concerned that Brian moved his boat from Elbow Cay, where it was anchored, shortly after Lynette went missing. He also noted that, in comparing Brianâs s retelling of Lynetteâs disappearance with emerging media reports, âthe stories donât really match up.â
While police have said Hooker recalled his wife being swept overboard and out to sea, Danforth said his messages reflected âshe was casually swimming back toward the sailboat.â
He also said the Hookers âalways had their phones with themâ and frequently posted videos online, so he wondered why Brianâs âphone didnât work or why they didnât have their phones in the boatâ the night Lynette went missing.
Danforth said his wife was friends with Lynette and he didnât have concerns about the coupleâs relationship, although there had been a period where Brian and Lynette âhad separated for a while,â he said.
âYou know, most of the time people do get back together and you donât want things to be awkward,â he said. âSo we didnât â I donât really get into a whole lot of personal business because of those reasons.â
Lynette Hookerâs daughter, Karli Aylesworth, told CBS News in a separate interview that her mother and Brian Hooker had broken up and gotten back together in recent years. Aylesworth said she is seeking answers about the circumstances surrounding her motherâs disappearance and has said she doubts the sequence of events described by Brian Hooker.
âFor one, I donât understand how she got the key,â Aylesworth said. âBrianâs always driving. So he basically is in charge of the key. So the fact that my mom had it doesnât make any sense.â

In an earlier statement, Butler, Hookerâs attorney, said he denied the allegations made by Aylesworth, and added, âHe has been cooperating with the relevant authorities as part of an ongoing investigation.â
Butler has spoken to Hooker on the phone and told CBS News that he was focused on continuing the search for his wife.
âThatâs all heâs been talking about,â Butler said. âYesterday⊠he made arrangements to go back out and search for her.â
The whereabouts of the boat key was also an issue for Danforth, who said pictures and videos the Hookers took while on the dinghy never show either of them with the key, which is usually attached to a lanyard. But he said itâs possible that Lynette Hooker would âreach out in desperationâ to grab hold of something as she fell overboard, and âthatâs the closest thing.â
Ultimately, Danforth said he didnât fully believe strong winds and ocean currents could separate Hookerâs small dinghy from his wife so rapidly. And, if she were swimming toward the dinghy, as Brian Hooker said in his messages, Danforth asked: âWhy didnât he try to go get her?â
Brian Hooker told his attorney he fell into the water during his arrest
In their first in-person meeting late Thursday, Brian Hooker told his attorney he almost drowned after falling in the water as police were taking him into custody.
âHe [Brian Hooker] had a really traumatic experience being transported here to Grand Bahama,â Butler told CBS News on Thursday. âHe was taken to his vessel for a search, and when he went there, he was handcuffed and was told he could have a change of clothes and he was requested to disembark while handcuffed.â
According to Butler, thatâs when Brian Hooker went overboard.
âWhen he fell overboard, he had to be rescued by officers,â Butler said.


