Crime & Safety
31 Children Reported Missing In CT: Have You Seen Them?
On National Missing Children's Day, CT authorities are asking if you have any info on the following children, and "no detail is too small."

CONNECTICUT — Anjelica Torres has been missing from her home in Fairfield since March 25.
She is 14 years old, 5-feet tall, weighs 100 pounds, and has brown hair and blue eyes. When she went missing, her hair was dyed pink.
Anjelica is among dozens of kidnapped and missing Connecticut children the FBI is working to bring home as part of National Missing Children’s Day on Thursday.
Find out what's happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
As of Thursday, there were 31 missing children from Connecticut in a long-running database kept by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a national nonprofit started in 1984 by child advocates and the parents of children who had been kidnapped.
Here's a look at some of the children who are currently reported as missing in Connecticut.
Find out what's happening in Across Connecticutfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Hilary Hill has been missing from Stratford since May 17. She has black hair, brown eyes, is 16 years old, 5-foot 4-inches tall, and weighs 142 pounds.

Antonio Vargas is 16 years old, 5-foot 7-inches tall, weighs 150, and has brown hair and eyes. He has been missing from Bridgeport since May 16.

Missing from Naugatuck since April 6 is Janeliz Sanchez. She is 12 years old, 4-foot-10, 125 pounds, with brown hair and eyes.
Review the complete database of missing children and adults here.
The FBI, in its announcement of National Missing Children’s Day, also released a separate Kidnappings and Missing Persons list.
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“Please take a moment to review the list — and if you recognize anyone or have any information in a case, contact the FBI or local law enforcement or submit a tip online,” the FBI said in the statement. “No detail is too small.”
“We as law enforcement never forget these children and never stop looking for them,” Todd Tumbleson, a criminal investigator for the Nevada Attorney General’s Office and an officer on the FBI’s Child Exploitation Task Force, said in a statement.
These kids and their families “deserve nothing less” than a commitment from law enforcement to never stop trying to bring them home, he said.
“The public often knows something they think is not important but which we in law enforcement find very important,” said Tumbleson, who has been involved in a multi-year investigation into the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of a 7-year-old in Las Vegas reported missing by her school in 1999 and never returned home.
Sometimes when people hear about the case of a missing child, “it brings back memories of things a suspect said or things the witness saw that might help to locate a child,” Tumbleson said. “Any information the public has should be shared with those investigating the case.”
The FBI said National Missing Children’s Day is also a reminder of the steps parents should take if their child disappears under suspicious circumstances. FBI agents have the authority to immediately begin investigating mysterious disappearances or kidnappings, regardless of jurisdiction.
“Do not wait to report a missing child,” the agency said.
The FBI’s free Child ID app allows parents to quickly share key information with authorities if their child is missing. The app also provides on keeping children safe and guidance on what to do during the first crucial hours after a child disappears.
Photos courtesy the Federal Bureau of Investigation/National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
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