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Mariana

(15,613 posts)
27. The Polly Klaas Foundation has numbers on their website.
Fri May 3, 2019, 01:29 PM
May 2019
99.8% of the children who go missing do come home.

Nearly 90% of missing children have simply misunderstood directions or miscommunicated their plans, are lost, or have run away.

9% are kidnapped by a family member in a custody dispute.

3% are abducted by non-family members, usually during the commission of a crime such as robbery or sexual assault. The kidnapper is often someone the child knows.

Only about 100 children (a fraction of 1%) are kidnapped each year in the stereotypical stranger abductions you hear about in the news.

About half of these 100 children come home.


http://www.pollyklaas.org/about/national-child-kidnapping.html

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Is that a school policy? rownesheck May 2019 #1
I agree!! wcast May 2019 #2
I have two words for this: TruckFump May 2019 #9
For many people shanti May 2019 #3
Do you have any evidence that there are more incidents involving.... LAS14 May 2019 #4
Not really shanti May 2019 #13
I'm not comfortable with it either. ooky May 2019 #47
And in the here and now, what are those numbers? LanternWaste May 2019 #23
However Newton, MA is a very upscale, suburban city and I am sure they have smirkymonkey May 2019 #25
The Polly Klaas Foundation has numbers on their website. Mariana May 2019 #27
Where I'm at xmas74 May 2019 #38
There are positives more than physical health lostnfound May 2019 #18
I was a free range kid marlakay May 2019 #24
We moved a lot when I was a kid, in the 50's. dixiegrrrrl May 2019 #29
Ha. Ironically something once called a communist DID blow us up... lostnfound May 2019 #49
Yeah, my memories of walking home are some of my most vivid and satisfying. nt LAS14 May 2019 #30
It is much safer than it was before. There is more sensational coverage grantcart May 2019 #39
IIRC, we had to walk to school if we lived closer than a certain distance The Velveteen Ocelot May 2019 #5
That was my situation, exactly nocoincidences May 2019 #17
We walked tp all of them - elementary, jr. high and high treestar May 2019 #58
Yes, I recall herds of kids walking to school in those days, The Velveteen Ocelot May 2019 #59
The 24-hour news cycle has made parents afraid to do that. MineralMan May 2019 #6
I agree but it isn't as safe as it used to be when we all were kids. redstatebluegirl May 2019 #7
I don't think it's less safe now. There were trucks in the '50s and people got run over by them. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2019 #11
I remember being taught to look both ways before crossing MineralMan May 2019 #12
I think kids playing in neighborhoods goes back to when we moved from the front porch to the back redstatebluegirl May 2019 #15
Memory is cumulative. We don't think in rates per 100,000.. X_Digger May 2019 #42
It doesn't help at all Mariana May 2019 #46
I agree with you. llmart May 2019 #8
Is this a school issue, or a parent issue? Because plenty of kids walk to school. WhiskeyGrinder May 2019 #10
It's a parent issue, no doubt. MineralMan May 2019 #14
(late 50's-mid 60's) Walked or rode my bike to elem. school, about a mile. Then Jr. high, walked or dameatball May 2019 #16
Crazy to me. lark May 2019 #19
Two or three blocks? PoindexterOglethorpe May 2019 #20
I do it only because my son is of the belief that it's a school requirement. It certainly... LAS14 May 2019 #31
Double check with the school. PoindexterOglethorpe May 2019 #33
I used to walk my oldest grandson to kindergarten when I could. ismnotwasm May 2019 #21
We live a couple miles from the school complex in our township Ohiogal May 2019 #22
Big controversy locally about that Freddie May 2019 #26
A couple of miles, no matter how good the sidewalks, PoindexterOglethorpe May 2019 #34
1. Walk to the school. 2. Pick up your grandsons at school. 3. Walk home with them. NBachers May 2019 #28
This message was self-deleted by its author LAS14 May 2019 #32
Exercise isn't the only benefit of walking to and from school. Being... LAS14 May 2019 #45
As a child in Utica, NY, in the 1950s PoindexterOglethorpe May 2019 #35
why don't you walk over there and walk back with them? maxsolomon May 2019 #36
Thread win! madinmaryland May 2019 #41
Today I was focusing on exercise, but there are a host of other reasons... LAS14 May 2019 #44
I live in a safe community, and skeezers will try to pull up to elementary school kids often. TheBlackAdder May 2019 #37
It only takes a few high profile cases TexasBushwhacker May 2019 #40
When my daughter was young (she's 20 now) she was allowed to ride her bike all Luciferous May 2019 #43
"Land of the Free, and Home of the Brave." Captain Stern May 2019 #48
I don't have kids ellie May 2019 #50
I let my 9 year old walk but EllieBC May 2019 #51
I'm a little confused... Polybius May 2019 #52
I walked to elementary school in the 80's happybird May 2019 #53
My mother was crazy overprotective, but.. luvs2sing May 2019 #54
Ego-centrism applies in many areas to those afflicted with it. In a country where most Christians TeamPooka May 2019 #55
I live in a small town that's a underthematrix May 2019 #56
Do your grandsons have a grandparent who can WALK them home? JustABozoOnThisBus May 2019 #57
We live 45 minutes away and pick them up only every couple of months, but, LAS14 May 2019 #61
Besides not walking with them, check out to see if there are local pedos in the police database. TheBlackAdder May 2019 #60
You haven't responded, which one is it? Polybius May 2019 #62
Not allowed to walk without an adult. But, if you're going... LAS14 May 2019 #63
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