A mother is missing her little girl and the girl’s stepfather has told a story of abduction and a 24-hour blackout.
That story, authorities say, has changed several times.
The mother—who “did not want to believe, by any stretch of the imagination” that the girl’s stepfather might have been involved in the child’s disappearance—now tells CNN she believes he bears some responsibility.
It has been one week since anyone saw Maleah Davis.
Stepfather Says He Was Attacked and Abducted
Darion Vence, the stepfather, told police he, Maleah and Maleah’s 1-year-old brother were driving to George Bush Intercontinental Airport in north Houston to pick up Maleah’s mother, Brittany Bowens, who had been in Massachusetts.Vence said he heard a “popping noise.” Thinking it was a tire, he stopped to check. A blue pickup truck then pulled up behind his car and two Hispanic men got out.
One of the men said, “Maleah looks very nice, looks very sweet,” Vence told police.
That’s when the other man hit Vence in the head, and Vence blacked out.
Vence said that at some point, he was going in and out of consciousness but he was aware of being in the back of a pickup with both children and three Hispanic men.
When Vence came to, he said, Maleah was gone.
Vence said he didn’t fully regain consciousness until the next day. At about 6 p.m. Saturday, he awoke to find himself and the boy on Highway 6 in Sugar Land, southwest of Houston. Maleah was gone.
Vence then walked to a nearby hospital and was treated. An off-duty police officer noticed that Vence had fresh wounds, CNN affiliate KTRK reported.
Police issued an Amber Alert for Maleah on Sunday.
“I realize there’s a lot of blanks in the story,” Sgt. Mark Holbrook of the Houston Police Department’s Homicide Division told reporters. Police hoped the public could help them “fill in the blanks” in the narrative provided to them by Vence.
Maleah’s Mother Pleads for Her Return
In the meantime, Bowens had gotten a ride home from the airport from another relative after Vence didn’t show up.Bowens told CNN’s Nick Valencia on Friday she doesn’t believe Vence and that he bears some responsibility for the girl’s disappearance.
At a news conference later, community activist Quanell X said, “The mother did not want to believe, by any stretch of the imagination, that this man is capable of what is obvious that has taken place here.”
Bowens did not speak during the news conference. She cried and covered her face as she stood next to the activist.
Quanell X told reporters that he has seen video surveillance from a neighbor’s camera that shows Vence leaving the apartment with a bottle of bleach and a laundry basket with a garbage bag in it. CNN has not seen the video.
CNN affiliate KTRK aired an image from the camera that purportedly shows Vence carrying a laundry basket with a dark garbage bag. According to Quanell X, Vence told Bowens that he was cleaning the apartment.
Police: Story Doesn’t Add Up
Vence’s account of what happened “did not add up,” Sugar Land police spokesman Doug Adolph told CNN Wednesday.Stepfather’s Car is Found
The car Vence was driving, a silver Nissan Altima, was found Thursday morning in the parking lot of a shopping mall in Missouri City, Texas, about 4 or 5 miles from where Vence said he regained consciousness.The car’s condition appeared normal, with no visible blood or any obvious signs that something may have happened inside, said Ken Fregia, a homicide detective with the Houston Police Department.
Police are running forensic tests on the car as well as looking for surveillance video from the shopping mall and a nearby Walmart.
Allegations of Abuse
Maleah and her two brothers were taken from their home and placed with a relative after allegations of abuse last year, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services told CNN.Bowens said the children had not been abused, and that Maleah’s head injury, which led to the allegations, was only discovered after a number of hospital visits. Maleah was first treated for a strange lethargy, and a week later, she fell and cut her head while sitting at a table. The doctors discharged Maleah without performing a CT scan, Bowens said.
Maleah had a seizure five days later, and that’s when doctors discovered bleeding on the left side of her brain and operated on her, Bowens said.
Child Protective Services showed up a few days later, Bowens said.
“They didn’t find anything because we’re not those kinds of people,” she said.
But authorities soon placed Maleah and her two brothers with relatives, where they stayed until a judge ordered them to be returned home in February.