Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Families of missing find support

In LR session, they learn of efforts to help with searches

- CLARA TURNAGE

On Feb. 28, 2006, Travis Roberson’s sisters helped him pick out clothes before he drove to Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le to celebrate Mardi Gras.

They never saw him again. In any other setting, the story would have been horrific and foreign. But on Thursday, while still horrific, Sonya Roberson found herself in a crowd who understood her worries, her frustratio­ns and her struggle to find her brother.

They had lost someone, too.

Families of missing people crowded in for Attorney General Leslie Rutledge’s eighth annual Never Forgotten discussion, where they asked questions of law enforcemen­t officials and heard updates about legislatio­n that may help them in their searches.

Two pieces of legislatio­n that passed in this year’s legislativ­e session will aid

families of missing people, Assistant Attorney General Bradford Nye told the nearly two dozen families gathered at the Benton Event Center.

Arkansas Act 913 is intended to increase cooperatio­n among state agencies in the instances of missing children, facilitati­ng the transfer of informatio­n among state and local agencies. The act will enforce the use of a state child abduction response team — a conglomera­tion of agents of law enforcemen­t agencies with the express purpose of finding missing children.

“We are the first state in the nation with child-abduction response teams statewide,” Nye said. “We are leading the change.”

Arkansas Act 920 will remove any waiting period before adults can be reported as missing or their informatio­n entered into national missing persons registries. When Nye explained the legislatio­n’s purpose, several people in the room sighed or murmured their approval.

Many had been told that they could not report missing adults for three days, delaying the investigat­ive process.

Act 920 also will require police training in missing persons investigat­ions.

“When you talk to law enforcemen­t officers, they really weren’t educated enough in the laws around missing persons,” said Kermit Channell, director of the state Crime Laboratory. “That’s the greatest thing about this law. It mandates that training, and the officers want to learn.”

In fact, Morgan Nick Foundation Executive Director Colleen Nick said, the officers’ first training course was happening next door.

Next to the long room where families sat, more than 150 law enforcemen­t officers and leaders listened to Kevin Metcalf of the Washington County prosecutin­g attorney’s office. Metcalf founded the National Child Protection Task Force, which searches for missing children for law enforcemen­t agencies across the United States and internatio­nally using cellphone, social media and other digital investigat­ive methods.

Later in the day, officers heard a presentati­on on changes in local laws concerning investigat­ions on missing people and unidentifi­ed remains.

Each of the 12,000 law enforcemen­t agents in Arkansas is required to have the training within one year, said Jami Cook, secretary of the Department of Public Safety.

Becky Glenn, whose brother disappeare­d more than 18 years ago, offered a suggestion to the panel of law enforcemen­t leaders Thursday.

“Do you ever have families of missing people come to the training?” Glenn asked. “Our emotions are not like someone in a car wreck.”

Glenn said many families react differentl­y. Some lash out in anger when it feels there is no progress being made in an investigat­ion, while others are inconsolab­le.

“I can’t tell you that we’ve done that in the past but — what’s today, the 18th?” said Little Rock Police Chief Keith Humphrey, stopping in midsentenc­e. “I can tell you that as of July 18, 2019, the Little Rock Police Department will make plans to do that. That’s a promise.”

People in the crowd answered one another’s questions as often as the panel did. Many of them had shared the same frustratio­ns and some were further along in their searches than others. One man said he’d been searching for his loved one for 25 years. Another woman said she had finally found the body of her sister, who had been murdered.

Sometimes, as the families spoke to and over one another, their voices grew tense with anger and exasperati­on. They spoke of mishandled DNA samples, detectives who seemed reluctant to investigat­e and evidence that was never gathered.

“Some of us are angry and have been for years,” Glenn said. “We have made great strides, I’ll give you that. But a lot of us are just left hanging.”

Arkansas State Police Col. Bill Bryant suggested that members of one family tell their local police that the state force was willing to assist in any way if the department requested it. Mike Nance, regional system administra­tor for NamUs, had technician­s available to take DNA samples from family members who did not have a familial DNA on file with the online database of missing persons and unidentifi­ed remains.

NamUs’ promotiona­l material says 600,000 people disappear and around 4,400 unidentifi­ed bodies are found every year in the United States. Many of the missing return home safe; many do not.

“I’ve done the knock where you tell someone their loved on died in some horrific incident,” Nance said. “You haven’t gotten that knock, and you live in this ambiguous loss. I understand that.”

Nick is the executive director of the Morgan Nick Foundation, named for her 6-yearold daughter who was abducted from a softball field in 1995. Throughout the meeting, she served as a mediator for the families, often stepping in to ask questions or to explain.

Nick gathered the families in the hallway outside the room before the panel and asked them to lock arms. Standing in the center of the circle, she walked from person to person, recalling moments from their search.

“Remember when we made Cassie’s poster?” she asked one woman, pushing her gently. “I never thought we’d have to go through a funeral.”

Before moving on to the next person, Nick asked the same questions: Are you still standing? Are your friends holding you up?

“It’s really easy to get frustrated, but we need to look at what we’ve accomplish­ed,” Nick said, her voice softening. “We’re getting there.”

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L ?? Colleen Nick (right) and Pearl Southerlan­d share histories Thursday during a session for families of missing people at a Never Forgotten-Arkansas Takes Action event in Benton. More photos are available at arkansason­line.com/719missing/
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L Colleen Nick (right) and Pearl Southerlan­d share histories Thursday during a session for families of missing people at a Never Forgotten-Arkansas Takes Action event in Benton. More photos are available at arkansason­line.com/719missing/
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L ?? Arkansas Public Safety Secretary Jami Cook (center), along with Arkansas State Police Director Col. Bill Bryant (left) and Little Rock Police Chief Keith Humphrey discuss new training programs for law enforcemen­t officers dealing with missing persons cases Thursday in Benton. More photos at arkansason­line.com/719missing/.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L Arkansas Public Safety Secretary Jami Cook (center), along with Arkansas State Police Director Col. Bill Bryant (left) and Little Rock Police Chief Keith Humphrey discuss new training programs for law enforcemen­t officers dealing with missing persons cases Thursday in Benton. More photos at arkansason­line.com/719missing/.

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