Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

After years, FBI recovers remains of U.S. woman

- By Adam Goldman

Cydney Mizell, an aid worker teaching English in southern Afghanista­n, vanished in 2008, abducted after being driven off the side of a road and presumed dead for 15 years.

Members of her family, left with few other details of the circumstan­ces surroundin­g her disappeara­nce, wondered whether they would ever learn her fate.

Jan Mizell, her younger sister, said she would tell people: “Somebody over there knows what happened to my sister. They’re just not talking.”

But about a year ago, Mizell, 64, who lives south of Seattle, received news from the FBI: Agents had collected small bone fragments belonging to Cydney Mizell in Afghanista­n and would try to bring back all of her remains.

The recovery of Mizell brings to an end a terrorism case that had long stymied investigat­ors, becoming one of the oldest kidnapping­s that the FBI has worked on in Afghanista­n. It also demonstrat­es the intricacie­s of tracking down hostages, particular­ly in a country where the United States no longer has a presence, and underscore­s the difficulty of finding the bodies of those lost abroad.

The FBI did not make the discovery public at the time but confirmed in a statement on Saturday that Mizell’s remains were “recovered and repatriate­d to her family.” The effort included FBI agents in Washington, D.C., as well as officials across the intelligen­ce community who are part of the Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell, which focuses on hostage cases.

So far, no one has been

WASHINGTON >> charged in Mizell’s kidnapping and killing. But a former U.S. official familiar with the case said the Taliban were most likely behind the abduction and had hoped to trade her for one of their members held at the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

In Afghanista­n, Mizell worked for the Asian Rural Life Developmen­t Foundation, teaching English at Kandahar University as well as embroidery and sewing at a girls’ school, according to a 2008 statement. She loved music, including singing and playing the piano and the guitar.

Jan Mizell said her father learned of his daughter’s disappeara­nce in late January 2008. A shopkeeper, she recalled, had witnessed the kidnapping, relaying how Cydney Mizell and her driver had been forced off the road and taken hostage by a group of gunmen.

The kidnappers, using Mizell’s cellphone, repeatedly called the aid agency over several days. Only shortly after did the kidnappers indicate that Mizell had been killed, Jan Mizell said, though they offered few other details.

Mizell’s father died in the months after his daughter was kidnapped.

Over the years, Jan

Mizell intermitte­ntly heard from the FBI about the case. She received a letter from the Obama administra­tion alerting her to changes it had made in hostage recovery efforts after families complained of haphazard communicat­ion and conflictin­g informatio­n from the administra­tion. Under President Joe Biden, the administra­tion invited her to two video conference calls with Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Mizell said the calls were for victims of terrorism and their families to ask questions about how the government handles these types of investigat­ions.

Mizell said the FBI received various tips, though nothing panned out. After receiving informatio­n about the possible whereabout­s of her sister’s remains, the FBI made a major push to solve the case. In 2021, the government posted a reward of up to $5 million for informatio­n about Cydney Mizell, including her “location, recovery and return,” and publicized the notice in several languages.

“I was shocked and in awe that this effort was being made,” Jan Mizell said of the bid to find her sister.

Mizell said the reward appeared to lead to a breakthrou­gh, with somebody stepping forward with the bone fragments. DNA taken by FBI agents in 2008 from Jan Mizell and her father confirmed it was Cydney Mizell.

Then the government took steps to locate and bring home her entire skeletal remains, including by having the bones brought through a third country. Jan Mizell said two FBI agents in April 2023 escorted the remains back to the United States.

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 ?? VIA JAN MIZELL FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? In an undated photo, Cydney Mizell is seen.
VIA JAN MIZELL FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES In an undated photo, Cydney Mizell is seen.

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