The mother of a missing Maine girl has sued the girl’s father and accuses him of causing the girl’s death.
Ayla Reynolds, 20 months old, was reported missing in 2011 from the house of her paternal grandmother in Waterville.
Justin DiPietro and his girlfriend at the time, Courtney Roberts, were at the home along with DiPietro’s sister Elisha DiPietro.
The girl was never found and a judge last year officially declared her dead.
The declaration opened up other options for Trista Reynolds, the girl’s mother, and she filed a wrongful death suit in Portland on Dec. 17, telling reporters her main goal was to find out what happened to her little girl.
DiPietro’s whereabouts aren’t known and efforts to find him to serve him with the lawsuit have not been successful, Reynolds’s lawyer William Childs said.
After Ayla’s disappearance, DiPietro moved away from Maine and at one point resided in California. A process server tried but could not locate him, trying multiple locations, including his mother’s home.
The suit seeks monetary damages but was filed so that Reynolds could find out what happened to her daughter and recover her remains, if possible.
“Not a day goes by that I am not haunted by what happened to Ayla. For seven years, I’ve asked myself, ‘Who would want to hurt such an innocent little girl who was filled with so much spunk.”
Police officers are still working on solving the case, the Maine State Police Unsolved Homicide Unit said.
Missing Children
There were 464,324 missing children reported in the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC) in 2017, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Under federal law, when children are 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 Likewise, if an entry is withdrawn and amended or updated, that would also be reflected in the total,” the center noted.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 was likely a victim of child sex trafficking, experts said.