Chattanooga Times Free Press

Center aims to reconnect missing people with their family and friends

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER

The Family Justice Center opened its doors Wednesday to help reconnect Chattanoog­ans with missing loved ones and friends who have been gone for more than a month as part of Missing Persons Day.

The public was invited to come work with the Chattanoog­a Police Department’s Missing Persons unit and officials from the Tennessee Department of Health to provide informatio­n and DNA samples. That informatio­n then was entered into the National Missing and Unidentifi­ed Persons System for free.

“This event is necessary to raise public awareness about missing persons cases,” said Chattanoog­a police Sgt. Vinnie Holoman.

“There is also a new law, Help Find the Missing Act, which assists Tennessee law enforcemen­t and medical examiners to bridge the gap between missing persons and unidentifi­ed persons in the hope of eventual identifica­tion,” he said. “The law requires law enforcemen­t to enter a person that has been missing for 30 days into a national database.”

He said missing people reports come in on a daily basis and the department investigat­es 30-50 cases a month, most of which involve juvenile runaways.

Holoman also said sharing informatio­n about missing people among agencies is a vital part of solving those cases. In 2017, DNA from family members helped identify a body found in Sequatchie County after a cold missing person case in Chattanoog­a.

“Members of the community should be reminded that they do not have to wait 24 hours before they report a person missing,” Holoman said.

“It is very important for reporting parties to give a good descriptio­n of what the missing person was last wearing and to provide a recent photograph if they can. Communitie­s should also be aware of people or events that appear to be out of place. Concerns of this matter should be reported to police.”

Fran Wheatley, a death investigat­or for the office of the state chief medical examiner, said the state now has more than 100 unidentifi­ed decedents entered into the NamUs database, but events such as the one hosted Wednesday may allow some of those people to be named.

“Many other states have at least this many, some more. These decedents are someone’s loved one and may be from Tennessee or another state or country,” she said.

“These type of events allow families a venue to get their missing loved one into a national system and provide law enforcemen­t and medical examiners with photos, X-rays, fingerprin­ts and DNA to be entered into the Missing Person Database with NamUs.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Amy Dobbs, NamUs Regional Program Specialist, records informatio­n from a couple looking for one of their children Wednesday at the Family Justice Center near Eastgate Town Center.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Amy Dobbs, NamUs Regional Program Specialist, records informatio­n from a couple looking for one of their children Wednesday at the Family Justice Center near Eastgate Town Center.

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