LATEST UPDATE — TIMMY CASE STILL UNRESOLVED

LATEST UPDATE — TIMMY CASE STILL UNRESOLVED
No signal restored as monitoring continues under open, uncertain conditions
A case without closure
As of the latest monitoring update, there is still no confirmed GPS signal from Timmy.
Tracker status: no signal restored
Last confirmed position: ~70 km off Skagen
No verified sightings reported since release
Last known condition: weak and heavily stressed after prolonged exposure in the Baltic Sea

- Potential tracker malfunction during or after release
- Uncertainty about signal activation and transmission reliability
- Lack of real-time data continuity after deployment
These factors remain unconfirmed but are central to why the case is still unresolved.
Two remaining working scenarios
Without updated telemetry, experts are relying on environmental and behavioral ᴀssumptions:
Scenario 1: Deep offshore movement
Timmy may be traveling further into open waters of the North Sea, where signal transmission becomes unreliable or impossible due to depth and distance.
Scenario 2: Loss of tracking capability
The device may no longer be functioning, leaving the animal unmonitored regardless of its actual condition.
At present, neither scenario can be confirmed.

Importantly:
- No final outcome has been confirmed by authorities
- No evidence has verified survival or loss
- The case is still considered open and under observation where possible
“Without data, we cannot conclude,” a marine monitoring specialist notes. “We can only describe uncertainty.”
Why the next signal is critical
In wildlife tracking systems, a single transmission can immediately reshape understanding:
One signal → confirms activity
One position → restores tracking
One update → redefines the entire case
Until then, interpretation remains limited.
Conclusion: unresolved and still unfolding
Timmy’s journey has not reached a confirmed ending.
It currently exists in a space defined by:
- Missing data
- Technical uncertainty
- And ongoing observation limits
The case remains open and uncertain.
And somewhere beyond the last known point,
the ocean continues to hold answers that have not yet returned as data.
