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CLICK HERE to
download the Oklahoma Amber Plan Participation Application

America's Missing: Broadcast
Emergency Response by State?
The Amber Alert is a critical missing
child response program that utilizes the resources of law
enforcement and media to notify the public when children are
kidnapped by predators. Although the scope of the Amber Alert
varies, the criteria for activation are fairly consistent. Whether
it is a local, regional or statewide program, law enforcement
activates an Amber Alert by notifying broadcast media with relevant
identifying and case information when circumstances meets the
following criteria:
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The missing child is of a
pre-determined age;
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The law enforcement agency believes
the child has been kidnapped;
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The agency believes the missing child
is under threat of serious bodily harm or death.
Once they receive the Amber Alert
radio and television stations interrupt regularly scheduled
programming to notify the public that a child has been kidnapped.
Because 95% of all people driving in their cars listen to the radio,
this is an extremely effective way of providing descriptions of the
child, the kidnapper, vehicles or accomplices.
Besides turning the public into instant investigators when children
are kidnapped, benefits of the Amber Alert include:
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It is free;
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It encourages participation between
natural adversaries, law enforcement and media by drawing on their
inherent strengths;
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It promotes accountability by creating
the foundation of a comprehensive missing child protocol;
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It is an effective time critical
response to kidnappers who can disappear with children at the rate
of a mile per minute;
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It sends a powerful message to wanna-be
kidnappers that this is a community that cares about and protects
children;
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It saves lives.
Initially prompted by citizen concerns
following the tragic 1996 kidnapping and murder of nine-year-old
Amber Hagerman in Arlington, Texas the concept has been embraced by
all segments of society. A sampling of the pro-active, diversified
citizens inspired to implement variations on the Amber Alert
include:
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Mrs. Robin Trumbull, a young mother
with a strong social conscience created the statewide Michigan Amber
Alert after hearing about it at a Klaas Kids Foundation sponsored
town hall meeting.
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To give meaning to the death of their
kidnapped daughter Traci, Chris and Terry Conrad initiated the
localized Corcoran, California TRACI Alert.
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To create a legacy in the name of her
kidnapped daughter, Colleen Nick inspired the Arkansas statewide
Morgan Nick Alert.
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A sense of duty drove Officer John
Goad of the North Carolina Center for Missing Persons to begin the
regional NC CAN Alert System.
Because progress in the effort to
recover kidnapped children is glacial, great ideas like the Amber
Alert should be enthusiastically embraced, supported and promoted
whenever possible. Had the Amber Alert existed when Polly was
kidnapped in 1993, she might very well be alive today. Although law
enforcement had her killer in their custody within sixty minutes of
the crime, they helped him pull his car out of a ditch instead of
arrest him because they were unaware that a child had been
kidnapped.
Our goal is to protect every child with one of the most brilliant
ideas yet devised in the battle to recover kidnapped children. So,
in order to remain current we encourage law enforcement agencies,
broadcast media and the public to provide updated information that
we may include in our comparative analysis of the Amber Alert.
For more information the Informal
Website is
http://www.klaaskids.org/amst-oak.htm
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