LA - The Missing From Hurricane Katrina, 2005

I hope you all will pass this and the info I posted above along and post on other sites:

NATIONAL HOTLINE TO LOCATE MISSING HURRICANE VICTIMS ESTABLISHED

Katrina Missing Persons Hotline, 1-888-544-5475, Will Go Live at
12:00 Noon (Eastern) on Monday, September 5

ALEXANDRIA, VA - September 4, 2005 - The U.S. Department of Justice has asked the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) to set up a coordinated missing persons process to locate and reunite Hurricane Katrina victims in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama. NCMEC staff is working through the weekend and will have the Katrina Missing Persons Hotline, 1-888-544-5475, operational at 12:00 Noon Eastern time on Monday, September 5, 2005. Photographs, names, and physical descriptions of missing adults, missing children, and found children from hurricane-stricken areas will be posted to NCMEC's web site at www.missingkids.com.

NCMEC has also deployed representatives – retired law enforcement officers – from its Team ADAM and Project ALERT programs to the states affected to assist families with their missing persons reports. The representatives will also provide technical resources to facilitate the transfer of photographs and other data to NCMEC’s headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia.

NCMEC is urging media to air the missing persons flyers to aid in the reunification efforts. Viewers may access the information on missing persons and found children by clicking on the “Katrina Missing Persons” graphic on NCMEC’s homepage at www.missingkids.com.

In addition to the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, NCMEC is working in cooperation with the network of state missing child clearinghouses, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and other state and local law enforcement agencies. With these partners, NCMEC will also be assisting with the identification of unidentified deceased victims. Images of the unidentified decedents will be digitally-enhanced in an effort to create the best likeness that can be shown to the public to aid in positive identifications of victims.

Long-time corporate partners of NCMEC’s are providing valuable equipment and services to aid in this effort. Digital cameras and scanners are being supplied by Canon U.S.A. At the request of the parent or guardian, Lifetouch National School Studios will be providing school photographs of children, as possible, if no photograph is available of a missing child. Sprint Nextel Corporation has equipped the Team ADAM and Project ALERT representatives with cellular technology. NCMEC is grateful for the support of these private sector partners and for the dedicated volunteers who will be answering the Katrina Missing Persons Hotline.

Team ADAM and Project ALERT are made up of specially-trained retired law enforcement personnel who are available to assist law enforcement agencies in missing child and child sexual exploitation cases.

About the National Center For Missing & Exploited Children
NCMEC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that works in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. NCMEC's congressionally mandated CyberTipline, a reporting mechanism for child sexual exploitation, has handled more than 340,000 leads. Since its establishment in 1984, NCMEC has assisted law enforcement with more than 116,000 missing child cases, resulting in the recovery of more than 94,000 children. For more information about NCMEC, call its toll-free, 24-hour hotline at 1-800-THE-LOST or visit www.missingkids.com.


CONTACT:
Communications Department
NCMEC
703-837-6111
 
Please post this on the UP TO THE MINUTE Forum.... This is great info...
 
AMERICA'S MOST WANTED is hosting a website for viewers to register missing loved ones or check in with their families and let them know they are okay.

Viewers can go to http://katrina.amw.com to search the site for family members and friends. AMW has also dedicated its toll-free hotline number, 1-800-CRIME-TV (1-800-274-6388), for people to call and report a missing friend or loved one, let the world know they're okay after Katrina, or check in to see if there are any updates on people they know.

http://www.thefutoncritic.com/cgi/pr.cgi?id=20050908fox01
 
A Web site known for its classified ads, http://neworleans.craigslist.org/, has been flooded with visitors since the storm after creating a lost and found section.

The site also offers a "volunteer" section and a "free" section for hurricane victims and others.

Some media sites have become meeting places for storm victims as well. CNN.com is posting the names of those who wish to let loved ones know they are OK after the storm in a Safe List section.
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2005/hurricanes/list/

The Times Picayune's Web site, Nola.com, has been offering a missing person's forum that includes pleas for help and descriptions of people missing after the storm.

Questions like "Are you safe" and "Are you alive" are posted on other Web forums like Looking for Family and Friends. http://pub11.bravenet.com/forum/875918109

An interactive journalism specialist said even victims in the worst hit areas will be able to communicate to the world as wireless connections and satellites improve, according to a National Public Radio report.
http://www.local6.com/news/4925129/detail.html
 
Are all of the children listed? I had heard there were many more than that.
 
SewingDeb said:
Are all of the children listed? I had heard there were many more than that.


On the missingkids.com site, there is actually an excel spreadsheet with a list of the kids, I think it is a little over 600 so far.
 
If you run the names from the spreadsheet en masse against the Red Cross Family Network database of people registered by the Red Cross it really shows a huge duplication in effort.
 
Microsoft Corp. has created Web sites that allow survivors to search and connect with family and friends. The work usually takes months, but employees got the sites up and running in four days at www.katrinasafe.com or www.katrinasafe.org.


The Army Reserve has created a phone number and Web site for soldiers and their families coping with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to connect with the Reserve: 877-464-9330. (From a military phone, dial DSN 367-9330.) For other contact information, go to www.arfp.org.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/240028_katrinapeople09.html
 
Metasearch offerings from Yahoo and Lycos sift through a number of missing person sites that arose after Hurricane Katrina.

A pair of metasearch sites have been setup by search providers Lycos and Yahoo. Each takes queries on persons missing since Katrina hit New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. Search Engine Watch posted an entry describing the two sites.
http://www.webpronews.com/insidesea...osYahooProvideKatrinaMissingPersonSearch.html

http://www.lycos.com/katrina/

http://boards.news.yahoo.com/boards/
 
absolut said:
If you run the names from the spreadsheet en masse against the Red Cross Family Network database of people registered by the Red Cross it really shows a huge duplication in effort.

Hi...that is because I believe it is the same list. After the Justice Department asked the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children & Adults to take this challenge, I believe that several lists were incorporated into their list.

The Red Cross is gathering the information at the evacuee centers and passing it along to NCMEC.....CNN has had a reporter at the National Center for the past week or so...the list is growing as people have more and more access to computers help and computers. I know that several of the computer companies have donated equipment.

In answer to somebody else, I haven't seen the spread sheet, but have seen some pictures. I guess the first lesson in disasters should be to make sure you have pictures of all of your family members in a ziploc....unfortunately many of these people have no pictures which is going to make reuniting particularly young children so much more difficult.
 
Because people have become frustrated over using the many Internet lists of missing persons in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Bill Wolcott decided to do something to help consolidate all the information.

180+ volunteers are helping him upload pictures of missing persons and catgorize information. Born on September 1, 2005, his website Photofreeway offers those looking for displaced and lost people a place to upload pictures and/or text, see a listing of shelters, and do a mega search of all online missing persons' websites with one click.
http://www.joplinindependent.com/display_article.php/hpaxton1127533405
 
I still have no clue, my neighbor and her daughter who have always lived here in ohio had just moved to New Orleans about 3 weeks before. I haven't been able to locate them. I mapquested there address because I wasn't sure where in NO they would be. It seem to be right in the heart of it all. I know her mom lives around here and I usually run into her but haven't seen her to ask if she knows if they are alright. My daughters just keep asking me if there friend is alright. I hope they are ok and will be found soon.

Thanks for listening
 
mindi77 said:
I still have no clue, my neighbor and her daughter who have always lived here in ohio had just moved to New Orleans about 3 weeks before. I haven't been able to locate them. I mapquested there address because I wasn't sure where in NO they would be. It seem to be right in the heart of it all. I know her mom lives around here and I usually run into her but haven't seen her to ask if she knows if they are alright. My daughters just keep asking me if there friend is alright. I hope they are ok and will be found soon.

Thanks for listening

Mindi, why don't you call her mother? If her dau is missing, she may need someone to talk to. If her dau is not missing, I am sure she would be happy to reassure you.
 
I have lived next door to them for 8 years but I have no clue what her mothers name is. I had just spoke to her mother a few times before they left but I didn't get her name, so really don't have any clue how I would find her.

I just remembered that they transfered from the starbucks up here to one in new orleans, do you think that maybe they may know something. My biggest fear is that maybe they didn't leave when it was coming. If you knew them they are very well the right word I guess would be they are hippys...obviously they work and all but don't use computers and cell phones.

I just worry that they decided to try to stay through it. I was thinking of asking my daughters school if they had a phone number to her grandma when she went there. They probably wouldn't be able to give it to me but it is worth a shot. I am still trying to find something out if I do I will post it.
 

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