Crime & Safety
Amber Alert Jars Southeast Michigan Residents Awake
The technology was used for the first time to broadcast an Amber Alert, and some people didn't like it.

Thousands of southeast Michigan residents received an Amber Alert message on thier cell phones early Saturday morning. (Photo via WEYI-WBSF Facebook page)
Β» Get Patchβs daily newsletter and news alerts.
Michigan State Police are defending a first-of-its-kind Amber Alert issued about 5 a.m. Saturday for a 6-year-old believed to have been abducted by her father.
Find out what's happening in Huntington Woods-Berkleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Michigan State Police Lt. David Kaiser told The Flint Journal/MLive.com that he heard βrumblings that people were upsetβ about being awoken by the jarring alert tones, but said officials must act quickly in missing child cases.
Saturday was the first time state police have used the wireless Amber Alert system. The alert was blast in a 200-mile radius of Flint, where the girl was last seen in a situation that family members described as βescalating.β
Find out what's happening in Huntington Woods-Berkleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Kaiser dismissed the criticisms.
βIf it was their 6-year-old girl, theyβd want us to do everything in our powers to make sure their girl was safe,β he said. βTime is of the essence in something like this.β
The alert was canceled after the child was found safe in a Port Huron apartment complex about 11 a.m. Saturday.
Detective Sgt. Sarah Krebs, who works in the MSPβs missing persons coordination unit, said the ability to notify thousands of people at once through cell phone technology is an important tool β βone of the most critical alerts we have,β she said.
Though people were jolted awake, βchildren donβt get abducted during banking hours very often,βKerbs said. βWe donβt put out Amber Alerts very often.β
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.