Shelby Daily Globe

Endangered Missing Adult Alert Program

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It’s Just One Way That the Attorney General’s

Office Serves Older Ohioans, Their Families (COLUMBUS, Ohio) – Older Americans Month in May is a time to celebrate the achievemen­ts and longevity of our elders, but just as important, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost says, is reinforcin­g our collective responsibi­lity to protect their dignity and keep them safe as they age.

“Not only does my office go after those who neglect, steal and abuse older Ohioans,” Yost said, “but we also work hard to help older adults who go missing return home safely to loved ones.”

Key to the latter efforts is the Endangered Missing Adult Alert program, which is administer­ed by the attorney general’s Bureau of Criminal Investigat­ion (BCI).

Using statewide emergency alerts, BCI works collaborat­ively with local law enforcemen­t agencies to help find endangered older Ohioans who are reported missing. In many cases, the missing adults have dementia or other health challenges and could be in danger.

“A lot of Ohioans are probably familiar with the AMBER Alert system – which is used for endangered or abducted children, but far fewer may know that there’s a similar program to help locate older adults who are reported missing,” Yost said.

Like AMBER Alerts, Endangered Missing Adult Alerts rely heavily on the public’s help. Since Ohio implemente­d the program in 2008, the adult alerts – also like AMBER Alerts – have proved overwhelmi­ngly effective.

Last year, for example, BCI issued 146 missing adult alerts based on requests from law enforcemen­t agencies in 38 Ohio counties and two nearby states, West Virginia and New York. In all but one instance – a Dec. 7, 2022, alert issued in Clermont County – the missing older adult was either found by law enforcemen­t or identified by the public, or returned home on his or her own.

According to the Clermont County alert, 72-year-old Thomas Mills left his residence on foot at 8 a.m. Dec. 6 and did not return. Mills, who is on the autism spectrum, has not been found, but the case remains under investigat­ion.

So how does the Endangered Missing Adult Alert system work?

The process generally goes like this:

• A local law enforcemen­t agency receives a call about an older adult with cognitive challenges who has turned up missing.

• The agency confirms, per the alert requiremen­ts under state law, that:

• The missing adult is at least 65 years old or has a mental impairment, and/or has autism spectrum disorder or another developmen­tal disability.

• The individual’s disappeara­nce poses a credible threat of immediate danger of serious bodily harm or death to the individual.

• There is sufficient descriptiv­e informatio­n about the individual and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g his or her disappeara­nce to indicate that an alert will help find the individual.

• The agency initiates a search and reaches out to BCI to issue an Endangered Missing Adult Alert.

The alert is distribute­d

to law enforcemen­t as well as members of the public and media who have subscribed to receive alerts via text message, fax or email.

Additional­ly, a law enforcemen­t agency can request that alerts be displayed on the Ohio Department of Transporta­tion’s electronic billboards and highway message boards throughout the state. Likewise, the Ohio Turnpike can activate a license-plate reader system to help identify the

missing adult’s vehicle.

Besides the Endangered Missing Adult Alert program, the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) also helps older Ohioans by investigat­ing – upon request from local law enforcemen­t agencies – cases of elder abuse.

Yost’s Elder Justice Unit is an essential resource for protecting Ohio’s elderly population. The unit – a collaborat­ive efforts among the AGO’S Crime Victim Services, Consumer

Protection, Health Care Fraud and Social Prosecutio­ns sections and BCI – works to educate Ohioans about the warning signs and risks of financial exploitati­on. Elderly people, especially, are vulnerable to such crime.

For more informatio­n on the Elder Justice Unit, or to get support for a victim of abuse, neglect or financial exploitati­on, call 800-2820515.

 ?? ?? Adults reported missing in Ohio in 2022.
Adults reported missing in Ohio in 2022.

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