FACT SHEET

2000 MISSING CHILDREN STATISTICS


· In 2000, 876,213 missing persons (adults and juveniles) were reported missing to the police and entered into the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC).

· The FBI estimates that 85 - 90% of missing persons are juveniles. Thus, in approximately 750,000 cases (or 2,100 per day) the disappearance of a child was serious enough that a parent called the police, the police took a
report and entered it into NCIC.

· For the fifteenth time in the eighteen years since the passage of the Missing Children's Act in 1982, the number of missing persons reported to the police increased. The 2000 reports were up 1% over 1999. The total
increase since 1982 is 468% (154,341 entries in 1982 vs. 876,213 entries in 1997).

· In 1990 Congress passed the National Child Search Assistance Act, mandating an immediate police report and NCIC entry in every case. Since 1990, NCIC missing persons reports have increased 32%.

· The primary NCIC categories in which missing children reports are entered are

"Juvenile" - 685,617 cases, up .2% over 1999 (police enter most missing child cases in "Juvenile," including some nonfamily abductions where there is no evidence of foul play)

"Endangered" - 120,726 cases (adults and juveniles), an increase of 5.8% over 1999 (defined as "missing and in the company of another person under circumstances indicating that his/her physical safety is in danger")

"Involuntary" - 31,539 cases (adults and juveniles), a decrease of 1.1% from 1999 (defined as "missing under circumstances indicating that the disappearance was not voluntary; i.e., abduction or kidnapping")

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation, National Crime Information Center (NCIC), Missing Person File