Authorities and family members seek information regarding the whereabouts of 47-year-old Jennifer Remillard after months without contact.
AUBURN, MA — Police in Auburn are asking for the public’s help to locate a 47-year-old local woman who has not been seen or heard from by her family since November 2025 at her home on Leicester Street.
The disappearance of Jennifer Remillard has triggered a multi-month investigation as local authorities exhaust initial leads in the quiet residential neighborhood. While the report was filed recently, the gap in time between her last confirmed sighting and the public alert has intensified the urgency for fresh information. Investigators are currently treating the case as a missing person investigation, focusing on her last known movements and any digital or financial footprints left behind since late autumn.
Family members told investigators that Remillard was last seen at the residence she shared with relatives on Leicester Street. Since that day in November, she has not reported to work or contacted her inner circle, which relatives describe as highly unusual behavior for her. Auburn Police Department officials noted that there were no immediate signs of a struggle or foul play at the home, but the extended duration of her absence remains a primary concern for her safety. “We are looking for any piece of information, no matter how small it may seem to the public,” an Auburn police spokesperson said during a briefing on the case status. The department has entered her description into national databases used to track missing persons across state lines.
Remillard is described as a white female, approximately 5 feet 6 inches tall, weighing about 150 pounds. She has brown hair and hazel eyes, according to the physical description provided by her family to the responding officers. Detectives have spent several weeks interviewing neighbors and checking surveillance footage from businesses near the Leicester Street area, though they have not yet identified a specific vehicle or direction of travel associated with her departure. Local search efforts have been complicated by the winter weather conditions that moved through Central Massachusetts shortly after she was last seen, potentially obscuring outdoor evidence or tracks that might have been visible in the immediate aftermath of her disappearance.
The neighborhood where Remillard lived is a mix of residential properties and wooded areas near the town line. Auburn, a town of roughly 16,000 people located just south of Worcester, rarely sees long-term missing person cases of this nature. Records show that local police have checked with area hospitals and shelters throughout Worcester County, but no one matching Remillard’s description has been admitted or processed under her name since November. Community members have begun sharing her photo on social media platforms, hoping to reach someone who may have encountered her in a different municipality or state during the intervening four months.
The procedural focus has now shifted toward a forensic review of her communications and potential sightings in other parts of New England. Police are asking anyone who lived or traveled through the Leicester Street corridor in November to check any personal dashcam or doorbell camera footage they may have archived. There are currently no active searches of the surrounding woods planned unless new evidence suggests a specific location, according to department officials. The District Attorney’s office is being kept apprised of the investigation, which is standard procedure for long-term missing person cases in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Friends and family held a small gathering recently to keep her name in the public eye, expressing deep worry about her well-being as the months pass. They described her as a woman who was generally predictable in her routines and close with her family members. “We just want to know she is safe and to bring her home,” a family representative said during a community meeting. Officers are continuing to follow up on several tips that arrived following the initial public broadcast, though none have yet led to a confirmed location for the missing woman.
The investigation remains active as detectives wait for additional records from cellular service providers and financial institutions. Authorities state that any new credible leads will be followed immediately by field investigators. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Auburn Police Department Detective Bureau at 508-832-7777.
Author note: Last updated March 7, 2026.