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Sister Iroz
January 31st, 2009, 10:49 PM
DALLAS — Advocates for missing children want Texas' Department of Public Safety to reconsider its policy for issuing Amber Alerts after the agency refused to send one out for a missing 11-year-old girl believed to have run off with a convicted felon.

Police in Tyler, about 100 miles east of Dallas, requested the alert after the girl's mother reported her missing. She was last seen Jan. 24.

The girl's mother, Maira Macias, was at police headquarters late Friday when her daughter called her and told her she was in Mexico, police said. They believe the girl is with 23-year-old Enrique Vasquez, who was convicted of burglary in 2006.

"Investigators and the family are happy to learn that she is still alive," police said in a statement.

They told Tyler television station KLTV they are working with the U.S. State Department and Mexican authorities to reunite the girl with relatives in Mexico.

Police issued an arrest warrant for Vasquez on charges of kidnapping and violating probation.

The girl's friends have described Vasquez as her boyfriend. Her parents told police that Vasquez played soccer with her father, but they were unaware of any relationship between the two and he did not have permission to take their child.

The criteria in Texas to issue an Amber Alert is similar to those recommended by the Justice Department, but adds a provision requiring that the child be "unwillingly taken from their environment without permission" of a parent or guardian.

Child advocates say the policy is too narrow.

"People who prey on children more often use seduction rather than ropes," said state Rep. Garnett Coleman, a Houston legislator who has focused on children's issues.

Marilyn Ward, executive director of the Houston-based National Missing Children's Center, said: "In this case, even if she went willingly, she's 11 years old. An 11-year-old can be coerced to do all kinds of things, especially with an older man like that."

DPS spokeswoman Tela Mange said the Amber Alert, created in response to the 1996 kidnapping and murder of 9-year-old Amber Hagerman in Arlington, was primarily intended for use in stranger abduction cases.

If overused, the system could become less effective, Mange said, adding that about 7,000 people are reported missing in Texas each year, most of them runaways.

"This guy is not a stranger," Mange said. "As horrible as it is, he's not a stranger."

Although the Amber Alert program is coordinated by the U.S. Department of Justice, states are allowed to set their own procedures on how and when it should be used. Local law enforcement agencies can still issue regional and local Amber Alerts using their own criteria, but only the DPS alerts are displayed on electronic highway signs and with the National Weather Service.

Of the 236 requests to the state agency for Amber Alerts since 2002, only 42 were activated, according to agency records. Two alerts have been requested so far this year and both were denied.

"It makes me feel a bit uncomfortable," Macias told The Associated Press on Friday afternoon.

"But I think they (the Tyler police) are doing everything they can," she said in Spanish.

The governor's office said Friday that it was open to revisiting the criteria if law enforcement thought changes should be made.

"These are some of Texas' most vulnerable, our children," said Katherine Cesinger, a spokeswoman for Gov. Rick Perry. "So we certainly would be open to ensuring their safety in any way that we can."


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,486259,00.html

Nell
January 31st, 2009, 10:55 PM
1) Because if they run away they aren't kidnapped? Even at 11.
2) Because she isn't white so they don't care?


I think it is one of the 2 above.

Sister Iroz
January 31st, 2009, 10:56 PM
1) Because if they run away they aren't kidnapped? Even at 11.
2) Because she isn't white so they don't care?


I think it is one of the 2 above.

Or both

Shellie435
February 1st, 2009, 05:04 AM
Amen! Nell n Special....My thoughts exactly. If she was a pretty lily white burbs girl they would have had an APB on the car, HIS family, and searching backgrounds on everyone she knew. But noooo...she's a gorgeous hispanic girl of 11. Yeah, I don't approve of her choice in men, but shit..SHE'S A KID!!!! I thought that's why we had Amber Alerts..to look for kids. The mom reported her missing which should have been the go ahead for an Amber Alert. Vasquez is a soccer pal of the dads and Julissa told her friends he was her "boyfriend" (Shit, I use to tell my gf's that David Cassidy was my bf!) I really don't know if she went voluntarily or was abducted..regardless..there should be an alert for this child. Just the thought of her being in Mexico gives me the chills...kids how are abducted to there usually come home in a pine box unfortunately. I just pray she is found and in good health, and he gets whats comin to him.

blue_zombie
February 1st, 2009, 06:42 AM
I don't care what the situation is, if a child is GONE they should be FOUND! My child is 11 y/o, and no way in hell would I ever think that she would go willingly with someone, even if she DID know them! Not for something like that. WTF????!!!! This is just absolutely ridiculous, they need to change their damn criteria.

Dakota Valkyrie
February 1st, 2009, 11:54 AM
SoUncool already had this going:
http://www.dreamindemon.com/forums/showthread.php?t=12939

BUT I don't think it had anything to do with color. It had to do with the rules for issuing an Amber Alert. This didn't meet the state requirements. Advocates are asking for them to re-think some of the requirements.

They need to add some common sense to the rules, but we also don't want an Amber Alert issued for every runaway that has a worried parent (NOT the case here). In order for AAs to be effective, they have to remain urgent.

Sister Iroz
February 1st, 2009, 01:52 PM
An 11-year-old East Texas girl believed to have run away with a 23-year-old convicted felon was in the care of a relative in Mexico on Saturday, police said.

Tyler police said a family member in Monterrey, Mexico was now caring for the girl.

Meanwhile, investigators are working with U.S. and Mexican authorities to apprehend Enrique Vasquez. Vasquez was last seen in Monterrey, Mexico, said Officer Don Martin, a Tyler spokesman.

The girl's friends have described Vasquez as her boyfriend.

Her parents say Vasquez played soccer with the father, but they were unaware of any relationship between the two. They say Vasquez did not have permission to take their child.

Vasquez was convicted of burglary in 2006. Police issued an arrest warrant for him on charges of kidnapping and violating probation after the girl went missing early Sunday. He could face additional charges, Martin said.

Police in Tyler issued an Amber Alert for the area after the girl's mother reported her missing. The Texas Department of Public Safety did not issue a statewide alert because its policy is to call Amber Alerts only when children are abducted by strangers or taken unwillingly.

Police said the girl's family was at police headquarters when the mother, Maira Macias, received a call from her daughter around 7:30 p.m. Friday. The girl told her she was in Mexico.

The girl and her parents are from Mexico. Macias told The Associated Press they had known Vasquez for less than a year and believe he is from the Mexican state of San Luis Potosi.

The car officials believe Vasquez was initially driving was involved in a hit-and-run accident in Irving on Tuesday afternoon.

http://cbs11tv.com/local/tyler.missing.girl.2.923391.html

Pete Bondurant
February 1st, 2009, 02:33 PM
The authorities should concentrate their efforts and resources on finding the missing white children, then they may look for the other ones, if they have the spare time.