The Cleveland FBI brought its resources and posters of missing children Wednesday to Westown Square as it spreads awareness for Missing Children Awareness Day.
On Wednesday, Ashtabula Police and U.S. Marshals searched for evidence behind the West 38th Street home where Donnell White Jr. lived prior to his disappearance.
The U.S. Marshals Service, in a joint operation with Akron police and the Summit County Sheriff’s Office, successfully located a missing 15-year-old girl in Akron.
The man accused of multiple charges in connection to the 2017 disappearance of Amanda Dean will make his first appearance in court Monday afternoon in an arraignment hearing.
“I still have those feelings like that he’s like breathing down my neck of like he’s right there. I was trapped in a small room. I considered it a shoebox."
It’s been a decade since Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight were rescued on Seymour Avenue. For those who reside on that street, the healing process has been difficult.
When you ask Nancy Ruiz, to think back to May 6, 2013, the day her daughter Gina DeJesus escaped from almost 10 years of captivity, her eyes well up with tears.
It has been 10 years since Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry and Michelle Knight escaped from the unimaginable after being hidden in a Cleveland home for 10 years.
For the first time, we’re hearing from the retired Cleveland Patrolman Anthony Espada, who was first to respond to the scene at Seymour Avenue nearly 10 years ago, along with his partner Mike Tracey who couldn’t believe his eyes.
Almost 10 years after three Cleveland women escaped captivity, the mural “It’s Up to Us” still stands near the corner of Clark Avenue and West 25th Street.
"The sooner you get law enforcement involved, the better the chances are that we can recover the child safely and quickly,” said FBI Special Agent Andy Burke.