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Sheriff & Detroit Police form joint task force dedicated to
finding missing & exploited kids
- New unit to tackle 1,300-case backlog in Wayne
County
- Agencies to use successful Fugitive Apprehension team
as model
Wayne County Sheriff Warren Evans and Detroit
Police Chief Jerry Oliver today announced the formation of a new
joint
task force dedicated to finding and rescuing the hundreds of children
listed as missing in Wayne County. Currently there are more than
1,300 open juvenile cases in Wayne County, where approximately
3,000 children were reported missing in 2002. In many of these
cases, the kids fall into patterns of drug use, crime, and forced
prostitution or are killed.
"Too often we are seeing cases of kids who are abused, exploited
or murdered because not enough resources have been available to
find them," said Oliver. "The creation of this task
force represents a renewed commitment on the part of these two
agencies to the safety of our children our highest priority."
To form the new unit, two Sheriff’s Office's officers
and two Detroit Police officers who currently work on foster care
and neglect/abuse cases will begin working together. [The two
Sheriff's officers will continue their work involving foster
children, as is required under their current funding source.]
An additional Sheriff's sergeant and two deputies will join
these four officers, bringing the unit to a total of seven full-time
officers. The salaries of the three new officers will be funded
through a $297,000 Byrne Memorial Fund grant recently awarded to
Wayne County by Governor Jennifer Granholm, specifically for this
purpose.
» Go To Top Pooling knowledge and resources
As the national AMBER Alert system has shown, the most important
aspect of finding any missing person is communication among police
agencies, not only regionally, but nationally. Evans said that
by joining these sections of the state's two largest law
enforcement agencies the Amber unit's collective knowledge
base will grow immediately, as will its ability to deploy the
various tentacles of the law enforcement community across numerous
states.
As an example, Evans cited the recent case of a four-year old
Taylor boy, who was the subject of a parental abduction case last
June. In that case, sherif's deputies worked with agencies
from various states and eventually tracked the family to Galveston,
Texas, where Justin was safely recovered.
First things first
Although records show that there are more than 1,300 open cases
involving missing juveniles, the reality is likely far different.
One of the first orders of business for the new unit will be
to reconcile these records with reality.
"We know that many of the children listed as missing are
no longer children because their cases have been open for so long,"
Evans said. "We need to clean up that list so we can have
reliable information. Otherwise, we'll just be spinning our wheels."
» Go To Top Using the FAST model
Chief Oliver said that the blueprint he and Sheriff Evans established
earlier this year with the creation of the Fugitive Apprehension
Services Team [FAST] was the model for the missing & endangered
children’s unit. Since the two agencies joined forces and
doubled the number of officers assigned to fugitive apprehension,
the rate of arrests have tripled over recent years.
"We have seen from the tremendous success of the FAST team
that increasing the number of officers dedicated to a single mission
and having them work collaboratively multiplies their productivity,"
Oliver said. "In this case, we believe that combining our
officers’ experience
and efforts will result in a much higher rate of children being
returned to their families or other appropriate custody."
Oliver added that once the list gets purged of old or closed files,
Amber Unit officers will begin to develop a database the can be
link with other resources, including the national Center for Missing & Exploited
Children.
History of AMBER Alert
The AMBER Alert System began in 1996 when Dallas-Fort Worth broadcasters
teamed with local police to develop an early warning system to
help find abducted children. AMBER stands for America's Missing:
Broadcast Emergency Response and was created as a legacy to 9-year-old
Amber Hagerman, who was kidnaped while riding her bicycle in Arlington,
Texas, and then brutally murdered. Other states, including Michigan
have set up their own AMBER Alert systems.
Stats
3,000 juveniles reported missing in Wayne County in 2002
Approx. 1,342 open files of missing person under the age of 17
- 1,135 are Detroit cases
- 207 are out-county
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