A 2-year-old girl with autism was abducted in the Bronx, New York, according to officials.
She was allegedly kidnapped by her father, 21-year-old Christian Benitez, near Gleason Avenue in the Bronx at around 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 14.
Benitez is not permitted to have contact with the girl, officials told the news outlet.
The child is in the custody of her grandmother, who has been raising her since she was born. She is in the process of becoming her legal guardian, the ABC affiliate report said.
Benitez is accused of taking Seniya after he and the grandmother got into a dispute.
Officials said Seniya Benitez has black hair and brown eyes, and she was last seen wearing pajamas and a blue jacket with no shoes.
Christian Benitez is approximately 5-foot-5 and 160 pounds with short black hair and brown eyes and was last seen wearing black jeans, a black hooded sweatshirt, and black sneakers, ABC7 reported.
He was seen on the 6 train at Castle Hill Avenue in the Bronx.
“I want her back, that’s all I want, I just want her to come home,” she said.
“He came to visit the child and to help my daughter, because I was in the hospital, and when I came home, I got into a verbal argument with him, and he threw me on the floor and kidnapped her and, took her out,” added D’Amore.
“He told his friend to tell the cops that he’s never bringing her back. Nobody knows where he is.”
D'Amore said the girl was taken without wearing a warm jacket or shoes, adding that she needs special care due to her autism.
“He took her out of here with no clothes, nothing,” she said. “No clothes, no diapers, no food, nothing.”
Parental Kidnapping
According to the Polly Klaas Foundation, approximately 200,000 children are kidnapped each year by a family member.Child custody experts say that people kidnap their own children to force a reconciliation or continued interaction with the other, left-behind parent; to spite or punish the other parent; from fear of losing custody or visitation rights. In rare cases, the kidnapping may occur to protect a child from a parent who is believed to be abusing the child.
Common warning signs include the other parent threatening abduction, suspected abuse, or paranoid delusion.
Missing children typically fall into five categories: kidnapped by a family member, abducted by a nonfamily perpetrator, runaways, those who got lost, stranded, or injured, or those who went missing due to benign reasons, such as misunderstandings.
The center said it assisted officers and families with the cases of more than 27,000 missing children in 2017. In those cases, 91 percent were endangered runaways, and 5 percent were family abductions. About one in seven children reported missing to the center in 2017 were likely victims of child sex trafficking.