Innovations In Rescuing Abducted Children Highlighted At National AMBER Alert Conference

November 13, 2007

Denver, Colo.—The U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Justice Programs (OJP) today opened its Fifth National AMBER Alert Conference in Denver. Over the next four days, teams from all 50 states, tribal communities, the territories, the District of Columbia, Canada and Mexico will gather to discuss strategies for strengthening the AMBER Alert network.

“Seventy-four percent of children who are kidnapped and later found murdered are killed within the first three hours after being taken,” said Cybele K. Daley, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs. “Our many AMBER Alert partners are gathered here to ensure that our response to child abductions, wherever they occur, is swift and seamless.”

Participants will take part in workshops focusing on all aspects of AMBER Alert plans and will hear about best practices for issuing an AMBER Alert, relevant technology and tools for investigating missing and abducted children’s cases. They will also gain insight into what motivates child abductors as well as an understanding of the victims’ perspective.

Among the featured speakers is Elizabeth Smart, who at age 14 was abducted from her home in Salt Lake City in June 2002 and went missing for nine months before being found about 18 miles from her home.

Other speakers include Acting Assistant Attorney General Daley; Troy Eid, United States Attorney for the District of Colorado; David Fisher, Criminal Investigations Division Chief, Denver Police Department; and Trevor Wetterling, brother of abducted child Jacob Wetterling and co-author of What About Me: Coping with the Abduction of a Brother or Sister.

In October 2002, President Bush hosted the first-ever White House Conference on Missing, Exploited and Runaway Children. Following the conference, the Attorney General appointed the Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs to serve as the national AMBER Alert Coordinator, and work began on a strategy to create a seamless national network of alert systems.

The PROTECT Act, which President Bush signed into law in April 2003, statutorily established the national AMBER Alert Coordinator role. Since that time, AMBER Alert has made remarkable progress.

  • All 50 states now have statewide AMBER Alert plans, creating a network of systems nationwide to aid in the recovery of abducted children.
  • A secondary distribution effort undertaken in partnership with wireless companies, online service providers and other private and public entities enables AMBER Alerts to be sent directly to the public.
  • Tribal nations are working to develop their own plans tailored to their specific needs so that children in Indian country may benefit from AMBER Alert.
  • More than ninety percent of the 365 AMBER Alert recoveries have occurred since AMBER Alert became a nationally coordinated effort in 2002.
  • Anecdotal evidence demonstrates that perpetrators are well aware of the power of AMBER Alert, and in many cases have released an abducted child upon hearing the alert.

One Response

  1. Child abduction can also occur when one spouse kidnaps the child or children and he/she may choose to travel with their child. The Amber alert is also important in locating these internationally abducted children. There are many ways for these parents to locate their children and increase the chances of their return. Take a look at this site for more information. http://www.freemychild.com/firststeps.html

    Leah

    May 1st, 2008 at 1:43 pm





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