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Isabel Mercedes Celis Missing: FBI Dogs Search Disappeared Girl's Tucson Home

By TERRY TANG and TRACIE CONE 04/23/12 09:55 PM ET AP

Isabel Mercedes Celis
Isabel Mercedes Celis, last seen by her family in her bedroom at 11 p.m. Friday.

TUCSON, Ariz. — Polly Klaas. Elizabeth Smart. Megan Kanka. The names are synonymous with a parent's worst nightmare: a child snatched by a stranger from the safety of her own home.

Now, police in Tucson, Ariz., are trying to determine what happened to 6-year-old Isabel Mercedes Celis. Her parents say they awoke on Saturday to find her missing. Police said a window was open with the screen pushed aside.

While officers are investigating all possibilities in her disappearance, experts say, abduction from the home is relatively rare, with just over 18 children taken each year.

"It's unusual, but it's not unprecedented," said Ernie Allen, president of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which is involved in the search.

Each year, 58,000 children are abducted by strangers and released, according to the most recent statistics. Of those, 115 were "stereotypical" kidnappings carried out by strangers who either killed the children or held them for ransom. And 16 percent of those were taken from home.

Nearly three quarters of the victims are girls, and 38 percent of them are 12 to 14. At 24 percent, the second largest victimized group is the one Isabel belongs to: girls ages 6 to 11.

In Tucson, the possibility that a kidnapper could be in their midst unnerved some parents.

"I put two-by-fours in their windows this morning," said Erin Cowan, who has worked with Isabel's mother at Tucson Medical Center and has a daughter, 7, and son, 12. "I guess you can't be too careful, sadly."

Since Saturday, investigators and volunteers fanned across Isabel's neighborhood and an area landfill searching for clues. Volunteers posted fliers with a photo of Isabel – about 4 feet tall with brown hair and hazel eyes – holding a school award.

Her parents, identified by friends as Becky and Sergio Celis, told investigators they last saw the first-grader at 11 p.m. Friday. Her mother, a nurse, was at work Saturday when her father went to wake her at 8 a.m. and discovered her missing, police said.

Police call the case a "suspicious disappearance/possible abduction."

"We're not ruling anything out of the investigation at this point because we really need to keep our mind open about all the information that's been brought to us," Police Chief Roberto Villasenor said.

The family released a statement through police Monday evening with their first public comments.

"We appreciate everyone's interest in finding our daughter, Isabel, and thank all the volunteers who have come out to search for her," the statement said. "We love Isabel and will never give up finding her."

The family added that they are fully cooperating with authorities.

On Monday, FBI dogs – one that can find human remains and the other used for search and rescue – went through the family's home and turned up information that required a follow-up, but police declined to say what that was.

Officers are also interviewing sex offenders in the area. It has become standard practice for all abduction investigations.

When 12-year-old Polly Klaas disappeared during a slumber party in 1993 in California and was strangled by a man with a long criminal record, there were no police protocols, said her father, Marc Klaas.

"Every time a child would disappear, they would invent that wheel all over again," said Klaas, who travels the country speaking about child abduction. "Now almost every agency in America has some handle on how to launch a missing child investigation."

Polly's case served as a model for the FBI's first missing child protocol and also prompted California voters to pass the state's three strikes law, which requires harsh prison sentences for repeat offenders.

Congress didn't pass the federal Megan's Law until 1996, inspired by the case of 7-year-old Megan Kanka in New Jersey. She was raped and killed by a known child molester who lived across the street. Now federal law requires that every state have a procedure for warning neighbors when a sex offender moves nearby.

John Evander Couey, who took Jessica Lunsford from her home in Florida, lived just down the street. "He had an opportunity to stalk the family," Allen said. "He went in there for the child."

In the 2002 kidnapping of Elizabeth Smart in Utah, her abductor was a handyman the family knew and took her from her bed at knifepoint. Nine months later, motorists spotted her as she walked with her captors.

Investigations have changed since the days the milk carton was the best way to disseminate photos of missing children, as the world was reminded last week when authorities in New York reopened the 1979 case of Etan Patz. The boy was 6 when he disappeared while making his first unescorted walk to the school bus.

Now groups can quickly disseminate photos on the Internet and to the media in the hopes that anyone who may have seen something will come forward with information.

And while social media has worked miracles in spreading the word when a child goes missing, such tools are also used by predators to stalk young people, Klaas said.

"At the end of the day, if some guy out of nowhere sneaks into a little girl's bedroom and steals her without leaving a fingerprint, we're in a world of hurt," Klaas said. "It's like pulling a needle out of a haystack."

___

Cone reported from Fresno, Calif. Associated Press writers Leanne Italie and David Crary in New York, and AP researcher Jennifer Farrar contributed to this report.

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TUCSON, Ariz. — Polly Klaas. Elizabeth Smart. Megan Kanka. The names are synonymous with a parent's worst nightmare: a child snatched by a stranger from the safety of her own home. Now, police ...
TUCSON, Ariz. — Polly Klaas. Elizabeth Smart. Megan Kanka. The names are synonymous with a parent's worst nightmare: a child snatched by a stranger from the safety of her own home. Now, police ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
degirl
02:26 PM on 05/15/2012
why was the father laughing on the 911 call?
07:27 PM on 05/06/2012
Scenario1, a local predator took the child and disposed of her in another state maybe not Mexico...could have went to Cali. I think they are looking in the wrong places.

Scenario 2, a family member maybe one of the boys hurt her and the parents are covering for him because they could stand to lose all 3 kids instead of just 1

Scenario 3, the father may have been the one to dispose of Isabel and the mother does not suspect her husband would do anything to hurt her.

Scenario 4, If the neighborhoods are filled with sex offenders who is to say just becuz the police checked with them, that it still could not be one of them. A little girl in my home town was taken by a guy who lived around the corner ...a few houses down..and the police checked his house found nothing..but when the investigation was over, evidence proved that he was the culprit.
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degirl
02:27 PM on 05/15/2012
mexico is a state now?
04:27 PM on 04/25/2012
Some things that maybe are not so clear.
1. if the childs room happened to be next to the parents, they should of hear something.
2. If the mom gets up to go to work early, she should of at least opened the door ajar and checked on her children
3. whoever took this child had to know where her room was idk if the house was two stories, but if her room was on the second floor idk how noone hear anything
4. do they not have alarm systems?
5. the child didnt scream, maybe she knew the perp
6. if their was a high fence, how did they manage to get both whoever took the child and the child over the fence
7. why was the child going to bed so late at 11pm did they have guests over?
8. also if they didnt have AC and since the weather is hot in Arizona wouldnt the windows of been opened?
9. The dogs uspposdly didnt bark and apparently they always bark, maybe its cuz they were familiar with the person.
10. some people likes to sleep late, why is the father waking up his daughter at 8am on a saturday when she has no school.
those are just some theories i have
something does seem off here if you look at the big picture.
03:19 PM on 04/24/2012
Well if we can put chips in our pets and cars and cell phones to locate them I say we should under sedation so the predator does not know where the chip is placed and put one in them so we can locate every move on them! or sad but true our children could have one (would be better) as I am thinking we need to take depesperate measures to protect our children as I could not imagine the horror this family is going through as well as the little girl!!!
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map06
01:36 PM on 04/24/2012
I won't be surprised if her family had something to do with it. If they last saw their at 11 pm, mom went to work, Dad found her missing in the morning, the window screen was moved and the window was open, it's hard to climb into a window without making noise, I have had to do it when I locked my keys in the house, it's not a piece of cake. I would imagine that they are checking out the parents, so many things like this happening, it's like someone reads an article about this, and then a string of them come up, maybe they should say a child is missing and not another word until they know something specific. It's getting to be an epidemic. I still cannot in my life know how a parent could sleep like that and not hear a thing.
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stayingsaneinthemadness
The sun's not yellow, it's chicken!!!
09:38 AM on 04/25/2012
Very scary stuff. We would all like to feel safe in the place we call home and think we would wake up to any noises, but then hearing of this makes you stop and wonder if it could actually happen. I put loud things (wind chime, the sill is stacked with plants and nic nacs. Nothing to give away it's a childs room, though) in an effort to make it impossible for someone to try and get in with out making a ton of noise. And it's always closed and locked at night. Having a dog that barks at anyone anywhere near our home helps, too. But the truth is, you can never feel too secure and have to stay on gaurd because there are some really determined weirdos out there.
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stayingsaneinthemadness
The sun's not yellow, it's chicken!!!
09:45 AM on 04/25/2012
And I totally agree, if it doesn't help the public with helping to find this child, the public really doesn't need to know.
11:10 AM on 04/24/2012
Local TV station update:
http://www.kvoa.com/full-coverage/finding-isabel/
10:34 AM on 04/24/2012
How'd they get those dogs at the FBI on this? Oh that's not what the headline means...
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08:40 AM on 04/24/2012
Common sense tells ANY one person- a little girl does NOT just disappear of the face of the earth. She's somewhere. Sex offenders if ANY in that area and there most likely is- should be the FIRST doors they knock on. In those situations, there should be IMMEDIATE searching of where they reside- because it's happened before, happening now- someone has her and if they do NOT go in and look- how do they know the SCUM doesn't have her in the basement or something. Also, the mom is gone at work, the dad says he discovered their daughter missing- ok... when did the mom leave, when was the girl last visually seen. I know as a parent, when I've left my kids, I've checked on them- so who saw her last- the mom see her? Then the dad? It matters by the time frame and the hours possibly missing. It also says a lot that this family may have been watched and they picked the one kid they wanted because they seemed to know which bedroom window to go to- hmm... that means it's someone close- sex offender 101. TWT- time will tell and it's going to NOT end well if they don't do something different and better to find her- that simple
10:18 AM on 04/24/2012
good points! must be someone that has been in that house before and in her room to know how to plan it out. perhaps an adult she was close to that she talked about aside from her parents??
10:54 AM on 04/24/2012
The sex offenders have been interviewed and are being watched.
We don't have basements in AZ.
Mom is a nurse so she left most likely before daylight.
The police are going door to door within a three mile radius.
There are lots of details the TPD is NOT releasing to the media because this is an on going investigation.

Read our local paper on-line, The Arizona Daily Star.
07:54 AM on 04/24/2012
Poor child =( breaks my heart read the article. I sincerely hope the life of this child has not come to an end. God help her.
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Americanwoman55
live, laugh, dance, run with scissors
07:49 AM on 04/24/2012
It took 50 years to get the definition of Rape changed by the FBI.

COME ON!!

Jessica Lunsfords might have been found ALIVE if not for statements LIKE THIS ONE!!!!

OLD MEN MAKING OLD STATEMENTS!!!

Elizabeth Smart was taken and found thanks to alert people!!

Jaycee Dugard found alive 18 years later due to LAZINESS by a probation officer who could not bother going into a back yard and police who could not checkout reports of a predator who should not have children around him, and old statement like this!!!
10:07 AM on 04/24/2012
Yeah but if Jaycee mother wasn't so selfish (she had a new man that she put ahead of Jaycee) running off to work instead of making sure her kid was SAFELY put on a school bus, then NONE of that would have happened to Jaycee to begin with.

I do agree about the probation officer but sorry - too many times these kids go missing and it's due to the laziness and incompetency of the PARENTS.
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Americanwoman55
live, laugh, dance, run with scissors
01:17 PM on 04/24/2012
Jaycee and her mother are not to BLAME for theustice system letting a predetor out a jail that was suppose to be serving a 50 year term for doing this to another woman already. Also no parent should have to watch their child because sick predators are released repeatedly by defective justice system. Further do not blame the victim for this or her parents. The predator and his sick wife own this 1000% . Shame on you you tool!!!
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07:30 AM on 04/24/2012
It seems like alot of work for one person, to carry a child over to a wall, or fence, then climb over with child, or toss her over first, then climb over, unless someone knew how to get in the house, & was already hiding in the house before nightfall. Maybe 2 people involved. It is either within the family, or an intruder or close associate of family."
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06:36 AM on 04/24/2012
Who ever did this, had to get her out of that fortress of a property. Good they had walls up, fence, busy street. But, something is not jiving here.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maybesomeday
If you take short cuts your always gonna come up s
04:13 AM on 04/24/2012
Time and time again we read about someone who wants to harm our children. This reminds me of Lisa Irwin's case where there is no resolution. I hope this baby is found safe.

Those are pretty bad statistic's from this article. It's unacceptable but what more can parents do to protect their children? What is going on that 58,000 children are abducted every year in our country. That's 58,000 too many.
04:41 AM on 04/24/2012
It's just not those who disappear,but, those who are used by predators as well... The sad thing is many are relatives, and they will NOT turn them in....
03:08 AM on 04/24/2012
I worked for the Tucson Police Department for 11 years as a community service officer (non-sworn civilian patrol officer taking reports that didn't require arrests on the spot). I can tell you without hesitation or fear of contradiction that when a child goes missing, TPD pulls out ALL the stops and runs with the case until there is either a successful recovery or every single lead has been squeezed for all it is worth. I personally participated in several missing child and missing endangered adult (i.e. Alzheimer's patient) searches, and I can tell you that when the dispatcher says, "Any unit to clear reference a missing child call in Team (fill in the blank)" that EVERY officer who is not actively in the middle of an investigation stops whatever else they are doing (case report, traffic stop, whatever) and points their nose toward the call. It's amazing how many units you get right off the bat, and more clear as soon as possible. Everyone wants to find the missing person and get them home safe - especially in the hot Tucson weather which can rapidly take a toll on anyone. I hope that Isabel is soon found safe and sound, and there is a happy resolution to this call.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maybesomeday
If you take short cuts your always gonna come up s
04:16 AM on 04/24/2012
Thank you for all the service you provided during your time with Tucson. I too hope she is found alive.
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