As the investigation into the disappearance of 30-year-old Brazilian clinical psychologist Vitoria Figueiredo Barreto enters its third week, an unverified social-media claim has begun circulating: a supposed witness who allegedly saw her “appearing perfectly calm” while getting off the number 87 bus in Brightlingsea, only for her distinctive white tote bag to later be discovered “several streets away.” As of 16 March 2026, no Essex Police statement, mainstream news report from BBC, ITV News Anglia, Sky News, or any other credible outlet has published or corroborated any such eyewitness account describing her demeanour or linking the bag’s location in a way that suggests discrepancy. The verified evidence relies entirely on CCTV and doorstep cameras — not personal sightings — and the bag’s recovery aligns with her known path toward the waterfront.

Brightlingsea Hall to Colchester | First Essex 87 | Realtime
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Brightlingsea Hall to Colchester | First Essex 87 | Realtime

Barreto, from Fortaleza in Ceará, Brazil, had been in the UK since early February 2026 following a conference in Morocco. She was conducting research at the University of Essex and staying with friend Liliane Silva. On Tuesday 3 March she met Silva at the Wivenhoe campus, where Silva later described her as unusually quiet. Around 1pm Barreto boarded the number 87 bus from Boundary Road, Colchester. CCTV inside the bus captured her during the 30-minute journey, and she alighted at Bellfield Avenue in Brightlingsea shortly after. Doorstep footage in the nearby Hurst Green residential area placed her there around 2.35pm. No independent witness has come forward in official channels to describe her state of mind or appearance at the bus stop.

Hurst Green, Brightlingsea - Stoneridge Estates
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Hurst Green, Brightlingsea – Stoneridge Estates

She was reported missing the following day. The critical breakthrough came from private CCTV at a boatyard near the Aldous Heritage Smack Dock. At 00:16 on 4 March, footage shows a woman believed to be Barreto climbing a fence into the yard while carrying a white shoulder tote bag printed with “People Over Profit.” Between 00:16 and 00:36 she disappears from view; in that same window a small rowing boat was untied and later recovered adrift near Bradwell-on-Sea. Police have confirmed the vessel was examined back in Brightlingsea and noted a missing horseshoe-shaped buoyancy aid.

On 9 March a member of the public found the exact tote bag on Copperas Road — a road running directly toward the waterfront and close to the boatyard fence, not “several streets away” in any contradictory sense. Friends and family also located a coffee cup and paperwork they believe belonged to her in nearby bushes during private searches. These discoveries have sharpened the timeline but have not produced any named witness statements matching the circulating claim.

Detective Superintendent Anna Granger, leading the inquiry, has repeatedly emphasised the bag’s significance. “We are now able to confirm a bag matching that description has been located on a greenspace, close to Copperas Road,” police statements read. Officers have appealed directly to boat owners: check your vessels for anything unusual, and review private CCTV or doorbell footage from the harbour area between 3 and 4 March. The focus remains on the possibility that Barreto entered the small boat, though police stress they keep an open mind on all lines of inquiry.

The search operation has been extensive and multi-agency. Marine units, helicopters, and land teams have covered the River Blackwater, Dengie peninsula, River Crouch, and 2.5 km of Mersea Island’s southern coast. Land searches now include Bradwell-on-Sea, where the drifting boat was first spotted. On 14 March police announced the recovery of a laptop believed to be Barreto’s in the same Brightlingsea vicinity near the boatyard. Digital specialists are examining it for any insight into her final movements or state of mind.

Colne Smack Preservation Society, Essex | National Historic Ships
nationalhistoricships.org.uk

Colne Smack Preservation Society, Essex | National Historic Ships

Barreto’s family and friends have spoken publicly of their anguish while acknowledging she may have been struggling. “We know she was probably not in a good place,” a relative said. “She’s probably out of her mind, upset, struggling — we don’t really know why and we don’t want to judge it.” Silva described her friend as normally “talkative, happy and funny,” making the subdued behaviour on 3 March particularly alarming. In a recent appeal, Barreto’s mother Gleyz added: “I know Vitoria would tell us, ‘don’t give up, please keep going’, so that is what we are doing.”

Brightlingsea, a historic sailing town on the Colne estuary, is home to working boatyards, yacht clubs, and the Waterside Marina. The Aldous Heritage Smack Dock and surrounding moorings are busy with traditional smacks and modern vessels. On a calm night the water can appear serene, yet the estuary’s tides and currents are notoriously strong — a reality investigators are acutely aware of when considering anyone stepping into an untethered small boat without safety equipment.

Social media has played a dual role: helping spread official missing-person posters featuring Barreto’s photograph — a smiling young professional with dark hair and glasses — while also amplifying unverified anecdotes. The “perfectly calm” bus sighting and the bag’s supposed distant location appear to originate from Facebook groups and informal posts that reference the correct bus route and bag slogan but lack any named witness or police corroboration. Official appeals continue to ask for verified doorbell, dashcam, or harbour CCTV rather than second-hand recollections.

Essex Police and Brazilian authorities remain in close contact with Barreto’s loved ones in Fortaleza. The discovery of the laptop has injected fresh momentum, with officers hoping messages, search history, or location data might provide clarity. Meanwhile, volunteers from the local community and the Brazilian diaspora in the UK have walked shorelines, checked private cameras, and shared information under hashtags such as #FindVitoria.

The human story at the centre remains heartbreaking. A dedicated psychologist who devoted her career to helping others is now the subject of one of the largest searches Essex Police has undertaken in recent years. Whether the circulating claim of a calm bus sighting ever receives official backing or remains anecdotal, the physical evidence — bus CCTV, doorstep footage in Hurst Green, boatyard images, the bag on Copperas Road, the adrift vessel, and the recovered laptop — continues to guide the investigation toward the water’s edge.

Police have reiterated their appeal: anyone with information about Barreto’s movements after 2.35pm on 3 March, any harbour footage from the early hours of 4 March, or details about the missing buoyancy aid should contact them immediately on 999 or via the Essex Police website. “Our searches are continuing… we remain determined to do all we can to find Vitoria.”

Until concrete answers emerge, the people of Brightlingsea, her family in Brazil, and friends across the UK continue to hope that the woman last confirmed on CCTV near the docks will be found safe and returned home. The calm surface of the estuary that night may still hold the key — but only verified evidence, not unconfirmed social-media claims, will unlock it.