Child Kidnapping

by Tad Camp 17. July 2010 15:22

Each year, something like 800,000 children are announced missing. That’s about 2100 each day! Near to 75% of parents worry about that their children may become the prey of kidnapping, and with these kinds of statistics, they’ve the right to be afraid. Child kidnappings are broken into three categories: family child abductions, non-family child abductions, and international parental kidnapping.

Family child abductions are when a family member kidnaps a child and they take into account about 350,000 abductions a year. In 54% of the instances, it is the father that takes the child, and in the other 46%, it is the mother that takes the child. The child goes through serious mental injury in 16% of child abductions. In 8% of instances, children experience physical harm and 7% are sexually abused.

Non-family abductors are those people who are acquaintances (21%) or total strangers (79%). These add up to roughly 204,000 abductions each year. Girls account for 65% of the children kidnapped and 46% are sexually abused. Seventy-five percent of abductors are males and 67% of these are under the age of 29.

International parental kidnapping is when one parent takes a child outside the country in infringement of a child custody decree. It may also be whenever one parent legally takes a child to their home country for whatever reason, but don’t return. Those are usually the most difficult circumstances to be sorted out due to international jurisdiction troubles.

Being a parent, are these types of stats terrifying for you? Child kidnapping needs to be a scary possibility for almost any family. The world isn’t the secure place it was previously and we must figure out how to guard our children from these risks.

To learn how to protect your children, as well as the best way to help the police if you’re your child is a victim of child kidnapping, go to AmberChildSafety.com.

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About the author

www.AmberChildSafety.com Because every child is worth protecting...

Amber Child Safety is dedicated to protecting America's children.

What is the Amber Child Safety System™? This system collects your child's information, starting with his/her description (height, weight, hair color, eye color, marks etc.) We also record and store fingerprints, dental records, and medical information.

You may be thinking: that's nice, but other firms do that too. What makes your company a better choice for my family? The answer is simple; we don't stop with just the basic information listed above. We are just getting started.

We collect information on your child's relationships, specifically, adults your child has contact with. This includes family members, family friends, teachers, sports coach, piano teacher, karate instructor, and friend's parents just to name a few.

Our goal is to collect the information needed to conduct a complete and thorough investigation into abduction or missing child cases. The time saved by police in the first few hours could mean the difference between safe recoveries and..well, you get the point.

Naturally, we recommend you keep the information updated and as complete as possible.

 

Mission

 

To aid in the recovery of abducted and missing children by providing high speed, cost effective communication tools to law enforcement and the communities they serve. Our top priority is the safe recovery of missing and abducted children.

 

Statement from the Amber Child Safety System™ creator,
Tad A. Camp:

 

I created this system to aid Law Enforcement in the recovery of missing and abducted children. I have worked on missing and abducted children cases across the country and have a 100% success rate. This system is based on the information I use to recover these children. The system will prompt you with questions in order to collect the most accurate information possible. We do not, for example, provide you with a blank space and ask you to give us the names and addresses of the people you can think of that has contact with your child. How many people would think to include the information on their child's soccer coach, karate instructor, piano teacher, or best friends new step parent?

I have eliminated all the guess work about your child's relationships. We ask specific questions about the people your child has, or may have contact with in a format designed to help you provide accurate information. I strongly encourage all parents to update the information on a regular basis.

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