Mother of British vacationer lacking for almost a YEAR after vanishing on stroll hits out at Italian police
The mother of a British man who has been missing for nearly a year after vanishing on a walk in Sardinia says she feels ‘completely let down’ by Italian police.
Michael Frison, 25, from Chard, in Somerset, disappeared in rural Luras on July 13.
He had extended his stay on the island to meet up with pal Niomi Orlandini, 27, from Jersey, who was the last person to see him alive.
Michael’s heartbroken mother, Cristina Pittalis, 49, said the pair had met online in July 2023 and had seen each other in person just once before Niomi asked to join him on his trip to the Italian island.
Italian-born Cristina says she feels ‘completely let down’ by her own country’s police force and said she wished it was British authorities who were involved in his disappearance.
She said she had to preserve her own son’s belongings in a bag and criticised authorities for giving his friend’s passport back.
‘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,’ she told The Sun.
‘I can communicate with the police and they have done absolutely nothing — they have been useless.’

Michael Frison, 25, (left) from Chard, in Somerset, disappeared after going for a trek in rural Luras on July 13. Pictured here with his mother Cristina Pittalis

Mr Frison, who grew up in Bristol, had been visiting his grandparents while volunteering in the northern side of the Mediterranean island at the time

He had extended his stay on the island to meet up with pal Niomi Orlandini, 27, (pictured) from Jersey who was the last person to see him alive
According to Cristina, Italian police have failed to provide her with a family liasion officer and have not contacted her since they upgraded the case to a criminal investigation.
Cristina said the last message she received from her son was the night before he went missing saying he would call her tomorrow and ended it with a ‘I love you emoji’.
Mr Frison, who grew up in Bristol, had been visiting his grandparents while volunteering in the northern side of the Mediterranean island at the time.
He had celebrated his 25th and grandmother’s 70th birthdays while there, but Cristina says he wasn’t as chatty or smiley when Niomi arrived.
He and Niomi left his grandparents’ house on July 12 to ‘volunteer on a farm in the Gallura hinterland’ – a remote area with ‘imperious terrain’.
But two days later Cristina received a Facebook message from Niomi telling her to call the German landowner saying he had gone for walk but returned in a ‘confused state’.
‘After resting he ventured out again and did not return,’ she said.
‘She [Niomi] found his clothes but personal belongings were all left behind.’
Cristina says they never contacted emergency services about her son and when she flew out to assist in the search they told her he disappeared ‘wearing only his pants’.
Just two weeks into his disappearance, Italian authorities suspended their search.
Cristina says she has had no response from Niomi since she left the island but insists ‘I’m not accusing her of anything’.
Niomi has links to Thailand with it being her mother’s native country and Cristina believes she may have travelled there and is ‘hiding somewhere’.

Michael’s mother shared a picture of him taken in July in a plea for help in local searches

Mr Frison, (pictured) who grew up in Bristol, had been visiting family while volunteering in the northern side of the island

Mr Frison went missing in northern Sardinia in July as authorities began their searches

Niomi told Cristina that Mr Frison (pictured) he had gone for walk but returned in a ‘confused state’ before venturing out again wearing only his pants
The mother revealed in October it was ‘out of character’ for her son to vanish without contacting his family. At the time she had travelled to the island six times in a bid to find him.
She has previously pleaded to Niomi, as she believes the woman may have details regarding his whereabouts.
‘I need you, Niomi. I need your help. You’ve done nothing wrong,’ Cristina pleaded in October: ‘However, you were the last person to be with Michael.’
A fundraiser has been set up to try and raised funds to get volunteers out to Sardinia in the search for Mr Frison’s. It has raised more than £8,000 so far.
Organiser Evie Baker wrote: ‘Michael had recently arrived at a volunteer site in Sardinia and set up his tent upon arrival.
‘Feeling unwell and unaccustomed to the intense 40°C heat, he was given water and decided to rest. After waking, Michael mentioned he was going for a walk but tragically never returned.
‘When he woke he said he was going for a walk and now sadly he is missing.
‘I can’t tell you how genuinely lovely this family is I’m absolutely heartbroken for them.’