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UTAH
AMBER ALERT
The AMBER
Alert System began in 1996 when Dallas-Fort Worth broadcasters
teamed with local police to develop an early warning system
to help find abducted children. AMBER stands for America's
Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response and was created as a
legacy to 9-year-old Amber Hagerman, who was kidnapped while
riding her bicycle in Arlington, Texas, and then brutally
murdered. Other states and communities soon set up their own
AMBER plans as the idea was adopted across the nation.
AMBER
Alerts are issued for abducted children when the situation
meets the AMBER Alert criteria. Some children wander away
in a crowded grocery store, others might run off after a heated
argument. When a child is missing, law enforcement can act
swiftly to help recover the child, by developing search and
rescue teams or by bringing dogs to the scene to track the
scent for example. AMBER Alert is only one tool that law enforcement
can use to find abducted children. AMBER Alerts should be
reserved for those cases that meet the AMBER criteria. Overuse
of AMBER Alert could result in the public becoming desensitized
to Alerts when they are issued.
The AMBER
Alert has been very effective. AMBER Alert programs have helped
save the lives of over 200 children nationwide.Over 84 percent
of those recoveries have occurred since October 2002 when
President Bush called for the appointment of an AMBER Alert
Coordinator at the first-ever White House Conference on Missing,
Exploited and Runaway Children. AMBER Alerts serve as deterrents
to those who would prey upon our children. AMBER Alert cases
have shown that some perpetrators release the abducted child
after hearing the AMBER Alert on the radio or seeing it on
television.
Utah's
criteria for an AMBER Alert:
1) Is
this believed to be a child abduction?
2) Is
the child 17 years of age or younger? (AMBER Alerts are not
activated for persons over 17)
3) Is
the victim believed to be facing imminent danger, serious
bodily injury or death?
4) Is
there information that could assist the public in the safe
recovery of the victim or the apprehension of a suspect?
UTAH'S
ENDANGERED PERSON ADVISORY
I.
PURPOSE
The Endangered Person Advisory is a system to rapidly disseminate
information about a missing and/or endangered person to law
enforcement agencies and the media. The Endangered Person
Advisory is a voluntary partnership between law enforcement
and local broadcasters for notifying the public about a missing
and endangered person. The advisories are initiated solely
by Utah law enforcement agencies.
A. The
initiating agency must determine if the guideline for an Endangered
Person Advisory is met:
1- Is
the person missing under unexplained or suspicious circumstances?
2- Is
the person believed to be in danger because of age, health,
mental or physical disability, environment or weather conditions,
in the company of a potentially dangerous person or some other
factor that may put the person in peril?
3- Is
there information that could assist the public in the safe
recovery of the missing person?
4- Do
the circumstances fail to meet the criteria for an AMBER Alert?
(If they do meet the criteria for an AMBER Alert, immediately
follow the protocol to issue an AMBER Alert).
What
Happens When an Endangered Person Advisory is Activated?
Law Enforcement
enters information into the National Crime Information Center
(NCIC).
All Utah law enforcement agencies are notified with a state
wide "Attempt to Locate"/Endangered Person entry.
Broadcasters and media are notified by e-mail.
Note:
Freeway signs will not be activated for an Endangered Person
Advisory. The purpose for the advisory is for media notification.
Visit
the web site for the U.S.
Department of Justice for more information about the Amber
Alert
Return to Missing Person's Clearinghouse
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