Epidemic of missing Black girls continues to stump authorities, frustrate parents

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Are they dead? Are they being held somewhere? Have they been sold into slavery? They are missing, and whatever their fates, they deserve our attention-- and to be found.

Epidemic of missing Black girls continues to stump authorities, frustrate parents

Lashaya Stine, 16
Lashaya Stine, 16

Lashaya Stine, 16, was walking down the street alone in Aurora, Colorado.

It doesn’t appear that the young African American female had any sort of trip planned, as she left her wallet and phone charger, and she didn’t take any clothes.

According to a television station in Denver, police released surveillance video of Stine taken on the morning of July 15 around 2:30 A.M. She is seen walking by herself in the area of East Montview and Peoria Street. The video was sent out to the public a little over two weeks after her disappearance in hopes of generating more leads.

The estimated 75,000 missing black women and girls continue to stump law enforcement while frustrating and devastating families. It forces the question: Does anyone care?

Since NNPA Newswire reported on the alarming lack of interest in the cases of missing black females, readers – including law enforcement – have responded by using social media to bring to light the host of African Americans and others of color who’ve gone missing.

The social media account for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children retweeted the NNPA Newswire story and then accumulated a long thread of missing girls – some as young as a few months old.

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Hazana Anderson, missing from College Station, Texas, since Oct. 28, 2018.

They began each tweet with: “Have you seen this child?”

Among the missing are:

Tim’Monique Davis, missing from Moorhead, Minnesota since Jan. 20.

Anya Washington, missing from Houston, Texas since Jan. 29.
Anya Washington, missing from Houston, Texas since Jan. 29.

Anya Washington, missing from Houston, Texas since Jan. 29.

R’Mahnee Williams-Turner, missing from Palmdale, Calif., since Jan. 26.

Whitney Elliseau, missing from Lakewood, Calif., since Feb. 5.

Jada Cyrus, missing from Boston, Mass., since Jan. 29.

Myla Abanda, missing from Fairfax, Va., since Nov. 16.

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Zakiah Abdul-Khaliq, missing from Austin, Texas, since Aug. 27, 2018.

Tim’Monique Davis, missing from Moorhead, Minnesota since Jan. 20.
Tim’Monique Davis, missing from Moorhead, Minnesota since Jan. 20.

Yasmin Acree, missing from Chicago, Ill., since Jan. 15, 2018.

Harmony Adams, missing from Columbus, Oh., since July 18, 2018.

Kelli Allen, missing from Atlanta, Ga., since Dec. 20, 2018.

Kelly Allen, Missing from Berkley, Miss., since March 13, 2007.

Kaaliyah Alston, missing from Hillsborough, NC., since Aug. 21, 2018.

Hazana Anderson, missing from College Station, Texas, since Oct. 28, 2018.

Karyn Anderson, missing from Walkersville, Md., since March 24, 2018.

Rae’vanna Anderson, missing from Duluth, Ga., since Nov. 3, 2018.
Rae’vanna Anderson, missing from Duluth, Ga., since Nov. 3, 2018.

A comprehensive list can be found on the website for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children(NCMEC).

For families with a missing or sexually exploited child, NCMEC provides crisis intervention and local counseling referrals to appropriate professionals.

The organization’s “Team HOPE” program connects families with peers who have had similar experiences and can offer coping skills and compassion. When a missing child is recovered, NCMEC helps the family with the reunification process, including mental health services and travel assistance.

Psychologist and Navy veteran Sheri Davis said it’s vital that the missing are given attention by the media and especially law enforcement.

Davis said she relates well with them on a couple of fronts: She once went missing and she’s also the victim of domestic violence, a trigger for some who’ve been made vulnerable to abductions, run away and become the eventual victim of sex trafficking.

“One thing I think for sure about the missing teens is that human trafficking is a hotbed in my city [and around the country],” said Davis, who lives in Madison, Alabama. “I think it’s very easy for the courts and police to turn their heads the other way and not deal with the problem at hand.”

Davis continued:

“I had to escape from my abuser in the middle of the night … naked and running down the road and praying that a good bystander helps me while I’m covered in blood. The families of these young ladies need to be in the face of [law enforcement officials] and let them see the pain they are in every day that those girls aren’t home or safe.”