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Child Abduction Response Team
(CART)
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Why Have a Pre-Planned Response?
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Facts and Figures
58,200 children are victims of non-family abductions each year
100 – 200 of those victims are stereotypical kidnappings
Approximately ½ of these victims are sexually assaulted during the commission of the crime
Statistics from NISMART II
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When a Child is Killed
49% are murdered in less than 1 hour 74% are murdered within 3 hours 91% are murdered within 24 days 99% are murdered within 7 days
Statistics from the Washington State Attorney General’s Report on Missing Child Homicides
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It is likely that the classic non-family abduction will require a
multi-agency response
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Child Abduction Response Team
A formalized multi-agency response to abducted, missing and endangered children
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What is the Purpose of CART?
To establish a multi-agency child abduction team that will respond to abducted, missing and endangered child cases
in a timely and efficient manner
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Inter-Agency Approach
Shared financial and personnel resources Provides expert resources to augment organized
investigative efforts Assures the victim family and community that all
resources are utilized for the successful recovery of the child
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Policy Issues to be Addressed
Liability CART resources and
use of equipment Mutual Aid/concurrent
jurisdiction Officer injury Use of force/litigation Pursuits
Overtime Command structure Briefing of agency
heads/confidentiality Media releases CART deployment length
of time resources are made available
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Policy Issues
Once policy issues are resolved then they need to be documented
Tools for solidifying documentation include: Memorandums of Understanding Protocols SOPs/Department Directives or General Orders Letters of Agreement
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Team ResponsibilitiesPhase I
Develop a response plan Response criteria Incident command structure Lead agency designation/CART Coordinator Assignments
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Team ResponsibilitiesPhase II
Develop a best practice policy regarding missing / abducted children for recommendation to member agencies
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Other Responsibilities Seek training for team members Develop exercises for team training and testing Respond to missing and abducted child cases as set
forth by the response plan Develop an after-action report on full scale responses
to be presented to the agency heads of the member agencies
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Responsibilities (cont.)
Develop and maintain a response manual for use by investigative members of the team
Develop and maintain a resource manual to ensure immediate availability of resources
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Proven Model
Training programs from January 2006 through July 2014 yielded the following: 3792 team members trained representing 45
states, District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, and Canada
102 Operationally Ready teams CART deployment has proven successful in the safe
recovery of children CART model recipient of 2005 IACP Choice Point
Award
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IACP Choice Point Award “One of the greatest challenges law
enforcement faces is responding to the report of a missing child. But the activation of available officers, coordination across multiple jurisdictions, and securing of necessary expertise can often eclipse the assets of any one department,” said then IACP President Joe Estey, chief of the White River Junction, VT, Police Department.
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How Do We Bring CART To Our Community
Leadership: Ensure Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Commitment
Establish a Steering/Oversight Committee Meet regularly until the Team is established Designate a Team Leader who will work diligently
to see the process through Support the efforts of Team Members
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Advice From Successful CART Programs
Be flexible Choose motivated and committed people Do not give up working on your plan Do not reinvent the wheel Check your ego at the door Do not put all your eggs in one basket Educate
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Lessons Learned
Keep the focus on finding the child Have a plan and use the plan Realize it is a work in progress Do not delay in deploying your team
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Contact Information
AMBER Alert Training and Technical Assistance Program
A U.S. D.O.J. Initiative
Fox Valley Technical College
Phone: (877) 71-AMBEREmail: [email protected]
www.amber-net.org