COMING SOON:

COMING SOON:
Watch Trailers To 'New Moon,' More

°

Homepage / Orlando News
Text Size

'Minutes Make Difference' In Many Missing Child Cases

CART Teams Search For Children

POSTED: Monday, July 28, 2008
UPDATED: 1:16 am EDT July 30, 2008

When a child is abducted or report missing, minutes can save lives, an investigator said in a special Local 6 investigation.

The nation's attention has been focused on Orlando during a massive search for missing Caylee Anthony.

And there are other missing children.

In 2007, there were more than 58,000 children who were victims of non-family abductions -- some with tragic endings.

Jessica Lunsford, 9, was abducted in the middle of the night by a neighbor, John Couey, 47.

Jessica was kept alive for three days just doors away from her home and sexually brutalized before Couey buried her in garbage bags.

Couey, a convicted sex offender, was found guilty of her murder and sentenced to death.

Lake County sheriff's Detective James Vachon said he knows how hard it can be to find a missing child.

"(It's) more like a question of how many minutes," Vachon said. "The sooner you find them, the better. Every minute that goes by, it gets harder to find them."

Vachon got the case of Courtney Clark, 1, who was abducted by her non-custodial mother in 2006.

He tracked Courtney and the woman, Candice Clark to Wisconsin nearly nine months later.

And, it was images in 2004 of Carlie Brucia, 11, being abducted from a Sarasota car wash and news of her murder that finally had an agent with the Florida Department of Enforcement saying enough is enough, Forbes reported.

The agent formed a new kind of task force to deal with missing and kidnapped children called the Child Abduction Response Team or CART.

The force is made up of dozens of specialists whose only job is to find missing children.

"Forty-four percent of the children that are abducted by a predator are killed within approximately one hour," Palm Bay police Maj. John Blackledge said

Blackledge is part of Brevard County's CART unit.

"In many cases of a missing child where there is malicious intent and where they've been abducted by a predator, it is highly likely we will find that child either alive or dead within one or two miles from the original point that they have been abducted from," Blackledge said.

Statistics also show that 74 percent of children were killed with in three hours of their disappearance, 91 percent were killed within 24 hours and 99 percent were killed within seven days, Forbes reported.

The CART team was successful in the discovery of a Winter Garden girl who was abducted in 2004, Forbes reported. Her abductor, Brent Mackinder was arrested and convicted.

In 15 of 19 times the CART team has been activated, they have been successful in finding a child they said would have been killed otherwise.

"Minutes make a difference," Blackledge said. "Minutes may save a life."

Watch Local 6 News for more on this story.
Text Size

Sponsored Links

Links We Like
Sponsored Content
Don’t believe everything people tell you about home improvement. Check out the top 4 myths and stop throwing away your money. More

If you have aspirations of becoming a millionaire, check out these five habits that may be worth emulating. More

Eating breakfast is good for you, but eating a healthy breakfast is even better. Get the scoop on which breakfast foods are the most nutritious. More

You’ve heard of certain foods that can help you prevent cancer and even halt the spread of the disease. Find out if these anti-cancer foods really work. More

Most Popular