New video footage surfaced almost one month after Teleka Patrick, a Michigan doctor, went missing without a trace, CNN reported.
Authorities discovered Patrick's abandoned car in a ditch off of I-94 in Indiana on Dec. 5, one night before colleagues realized she did not show up for work in Kalamazoo where she was completing her medical residency.
Though investigators began a search immediately, no clues seemed to be left behind.
"We looked everywhere," Sgt. Rick Strong of the Indiana State Police said to CNN.
Now, nearly one month after she went missing, home surveillance and uploaded YouTube videos discovered by officials are providing more insight into the days leading up to Patrick's disapperance.
In the YouTube videos uploaded in November, Patrick is seen talking and singing to an unidentified person in a romantic way.
"Hi, baby," Patrick says in one. "I am just coming to you to say 'hi' and tell you about my day." In a second video, she is shown setting a table for two with pancakes and omelets and says ""If you were here, this is what would be your plate."
However, Patrick's mother said she didn't know of any relationship her daughter may have been in.
The third video is surveillance footage from a hotel in Kalamazoo on the night of December 5 -- hours before officials found Patrick's car in a ditch.
Around 7:30, she shows up at the local hotel dressed in all black and begins talking with employees at the reception desk. About ten minutes later, Patrick is seen leaving the hotel.
The video provides no audio and gives no insight to why she did not book a room, or why she was there to begin with.
At 7:48 p.m., she boarded a hotel shuttle bus, ending all appearances caught on tape.
Patrick's disappearance has come as a shock to her family, friends, and co-workers. She was described in Internet comments as "wonderful," "beautiful," and "talented" and called "part of our family of medical professionals" by her hospital colleagues.
Though authorities do not have evidence of foul play, they have not ruled out that Patrick's actions on December 5 were voluntary.
"We have scoured, searched and looked at everything we could possibly look at -- all the exits, all the businesses, all the hotels," Strong said. "We posted fliers; we talked to neighbors (who live near the highway). We did a full-blown, on-the-ground search in the wooded area north of where the car was."