Two Good Samaritans helped stop a child abduction in the Queens borough of New York City over the weekend, police officers said.
Relyn Estrada, 40, targeted an 11-year-old girl while she was walking to school on Dec. 15, and forced her into his car before two men intervened and stopped him from taking off.
Edwin Gonzalez and another neighbor, identified later as Alexander Salas, heard the struggle and rushed outside.
The men heard the girl being taken because she kept kicking and screaming.
Estrada grabbed a baseball bat from his car and the neighbor was armed with a baseball bat as well.
“[Salas] came downstairs and said, ‘leave her alone,’ and he started cursing,” Gonzalez said.
Salas’s wife called the police, who rushed to the scene.
The girl was able to get out of the car after the neighbors rushed over.
Gonzalez said the goal was to delay Estrada until police officers arrived. The girl managed to escape as the trio was arguing and she was not hurt.
Eventually, officers arrived and arrested Estrada, who is a registered level 1 sex offender. He has been arrested 13 times before, since 2001, for sexual abuse and assault charges.
The latest incident ended with him being charged with kidnapping, unlawful imprisonment, and other charges. If convicted of the top count in the case, he could spend up to 25 years in jail.
Missing Children
There were 464,324 missing children reported in the FBI’s National Crime Information Center in 2017, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Under federal law, when a child is reported missing to law enforcement they must be entered into the database. In 2016, there were 465,676 entries.“This number represents reports of missing children. That means if a child runs away multiple times in a year, each instance would be entered into NCIC separately and counted in the yearly total. Likewise, if an entry is withdrawn and amended or updated, that would also be reflected in the total,” the center noted.
In 2017, the center said it assisted officers and families with the cases of more than 27,000 missing children. 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.
Nancy McBride, the executive director of Florida Outreach at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, said that most of the runaways involve technology.