Trio arrested for abducting 11-year-old Indiana girl found 350 miles away

Two men and a woman from South Dakota were arrested in Wisconsin Sunday after allegedly abducting an 11-year-old girl in Indiana the night before.

The victim was “safely” taken into the custody of authorities after she traveled some 350 miles with her alleged captors, who were reported to have been “possibly armed,” officials said.

Zachary Delozier, 27, Sara Gaudino, 23, and Isaiah Schryvers, 24 were apprehended in the town of Dodgeville after a silver alert was issued. They were all charged with kidnapping a minor, according to the Iowa County Sheriff’s Office.

A multi-state manhunt began after Wells County, Indiana officials issued a silver alert saying the missing girl had been picked up in a “white Dodge caravan” from a trailer park in Zanesville, outside Fort Wayne, at 3:30 p.m.

Dozens of Hoosier State agencies mobilized to search for the girl, deploying helicopters and drones, according to WPTA-TV.

The suspects eluded capture in Indiana and passed through Illinois before they were spotted by authorities at a gas station in Barneveld, Wisc.. They were pulled over a short time later and the girl was “safely removed,” according to officials.


Kidnapping suspects Isaiah Schryvers, Sara Gaudino and Zachary Delozier are pictured, from left to right.
Iowa County Sheriff’s Office

Police departments in Dodgeville and Mineral Point, Wisconsin Department of Justice officials and Iowa County social service and highway departments were involved in the arrest and investigation, Sheriff Michael Peterson said.

“Being out there with this great group of professionals, watching all these agencies come together, taking these three adults into custody quickly, and removing this 11-year-old female from this situation so she can return to her family is an amazing feeling,” Peterson wrote in a press release.

“Thank you for making a difference in our community.”

The relationship between the suspects and their victims was unclear, and the girl does not share a last name with any of the alleged abductors.

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Mexican authorities find Washington state 8-year-old missing since 2018, returned to US

A Washington state 8-year-old missing since 2018 was recently found in Mexico and returned to the US, according to the FBI.

Aranza Maria Ochoa Lopez was kidnapped by her biological mother on Oct. 25, 2018, at a Vancouver, Washington, shopping mall, according to the FBI.

She was found and safely recovered by Mexican authorities in February in Michoacán.

FBI special agents escorted Lopez back to the US after she was found.

When the 8-year-old was kidnapped, the FBI determined that she was taken to Mexico.

Her mother was taken into custody in September 2019 in Puebla, Mexico, but the 8-year-old wasn’t found.

Richard A. Collodi, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Seattle field office, said that law enforcement never gave up on finding Lopez.

“For more than four years, the FBI and our partners did not give up on Aranza,” Collodi said. “Our concern now will be supporting Aranza as she begins her reintegration into the U.S.”

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Russian woman seen kidnapped by man she refused to marry

Shocking video captured the moment a Russian man kidnapped an 18-year-old woman in a medieval custom known as “bride stealing” – after she refused to marry him.

Three men are seen carting off Bella Ravoyan from an apartment building in the city of Tambov and placing her inside a car that took her to the Nizhny Novgorod region, East2West reported.

Her abductors have been identified by police as her rejected beau, 20-year-old Amik Shamoyan, his father, Oganes, 48, and brother Alo, 24.

“Amik was in love with this girl and they kidnapped her,” an acquaintance reportedly told the local gazeta news outlet.

“Bella’s father filed a complaint with the police, and she was returned back. Amik turned himself in to the police,” the person added.

Bella Ravoyan, 18, is seen being abducted after she refused to marry 20-year-old Amik Shamoyan.
social media /east2west

The spurned man has confessed to the kidnapping, according to East2West.

Amik Shamoyan has reportedly confessed to the shocking “bride stealing.”
social media /east2west
Shamoyan, his father, Oganes, 48, and brother Alo, 24, face up to 12 years behind bars.
social media /east2west

Another video allegedly shows Bella’s furious dad laying waste to a cafe owned by the family of the alleged kidnappers as he brandishes a gun.

Bella’s father was captured on video going on a rampage inside a cafe owned by the kidnappers’ family.
social media /east2west

Oganes and Alo remain at large. All three men face up to 12 years behind bars if convicted.

The abduction has been described by some local media outlets as a medieval “bride stealing” custom still prevalent in parts of the country.

Some reports also suggested that Bella and Amik are related.

The Russian Investigative Committee said the two other suspects have been placed on the federal wanted list.

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FBI warns criminals using low-profile rideshares to abduct kids in alarming ‘trend’

Criminals are carrying out a disturbing trend where they are using ride-sharing vehicles to abduct minors, according to one of the nation’s top law enforcement agencies. 

“It’s affected my school life, my friends, my family,” one 15-year-old girl who was a victim of an attempted abduction said in 2019, according to ABC News. “It’s had such a negative impact on me. Everywhere I go, I feel scared because I’m so much more aware of my surroundings now.”

The teenager recounted that she had frequently used ride-sharing services in the New York area, but in the summer of 2019, an Uber driver picked her up and tried to abduct her. The Nassau County District Attorney’s Office said at the time that the driver tried to force her to go to her home, “where he intended to sexually assault her.” 

Now, the FBI is warning that similar incidents have become a “trend,” and issued a public service announcement making Americans aware. 

“Since the onset of COVID-19 pandemic, law enforcement received several reports of rideshare services being used to facilitate child abduction,” the FBI said last month in the PSA, the Hill reported. 

The federal agency warned that the criminals are using ride-sharing vehicles due to the “lower likelihood of detection and ease of facilitation.”

Criminals are beginning to use ride-sharing vehicles to abduct kids at an alarming rate.
Getty Images

“While other modes of transportation were used during the pandemic, the privacy of ride-share services allowed criminal actors to obfuscate potential witness identification and afforded them direct transportation,” the FBI stated.

The FBI specifically pointed to one incident this year, when a 16-year-old Texas boy who requested an Uber ride found himself abducted. The teenager had ordered an Uber for a roughly 20-mile trip in April and was allegedly offered something to drink during the ride. The boy woke up later that day at a home 31 miles away from his destination. He fled the property to a nearby home and alerted authorities. 

In another case cited by the FBI, a child was abducted in Mexico City in February when the 7-year-old boy’s father asked a ride-share driver to make a pit stop at a flower stand. The father exited the vehicle and the driver left with the young boy. The child was recovered after he called his mom from the car. 

Car-share services have exploded in popularity over the last decade. Even though Uber and Lyft ban people under the age of 18 from having their own accounts or from riding in car shares without a guardian, some still get around the rules by using an adult’s account. 

“I know a lot of drivers who’ve faced outraged parents,” Larry Duncan, a Lyft driver in Bowling Green, Kentucky, told Vox in 2019. “They yell and scream for you to give their kids a ride, and what some of us try to do, we say that the parent can ride with the kid, but they can’t be alone.”

A study in 2019 found that many parents were concerned about their kids taking ride-share services alone, citing a bevy of reasons such as teens not wearing seatbelts or the driver being distracted by their phone or speeding. 

One of the top concerns, was that the minors would be sexually assaulted by a driver, according to the 2019 Ipsos Public Affairs study. Nearly 80% of parents of daughters were worried their child would face assault, while 55% of parents worried the same could happen to their sons. 

The FBI is making sure to educated Americans about the horrifying trend.
Getty Images

“Safety is paramount to the Uber experience and the report outlined by the FBI is extremely concerning,” an Uber spokesperson told Fox News Digital when approached for comment on the FBI’s PSA. “We are always working to build features and policies designed with safety in mind, which is why we’ve introduced many safety features into the app, like the Emergency Button; Live Help from a Safety Agent; Text-to-911 capability (where available); and GPS tracking on every trip. We also aim to do our part to raise awareness of these societal issues through education to help drivers spot the signs of human trafficking and report it.”

The spokesperson also noted that all drivers undergo “background checks on the federal, state and local level,” and that riders “must provide valid phone numbers, email addresses, and payment methods in order to use the platform – which is more than many other forms of transportation require.”

“We know our work on safety is never done, and we’re committed to always working to raise the bar.”

Experts have also warned that teenagers are often more timid about speaking up if something feels off during their ride.

“Teens may feel awkward or inhibited to speak up if they notice a driver is not driving safely or if something does ‘not feel right’ about the car or the driver,” pediatrician and co-director of the 2019 poll Gary Freed told the Detroit Free Press. “Parents should empower their teens to feel comfortable to speak out or refuse a ride. They should be reminded that they are getting into a vehicle with someone they do not know, and that it is essential for them be especially attentive to anything that may risk their safety.”

The FBI is calling on anyone who sees suspicious behavior to report it to local authorities immediately.

Lyft did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on the FBI’s PSA. 

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Eliza Fletcher suspect’s uncle says whole family is ‘wacky’

An uncle of the convicted kidnapper now charged with snatching Eliza Fletcher has said his “whole f—ing family’s wacky” — and he’s convinced his nephew was involved with abducting the Tennessee heiress.

“I’m 100% sure he had something to do with her abduction,” Nathaniel Isaac, 69, told DailyMail of his nephew, Cleotha Abston, who was charged Sunday with violently abducting jogger Fletcher, 34, early Friday.

“Can I prove it? No,” he said.

Cleotha Abston’s uncle said he’s “100% sure” his nephew is involved in Eliza Fletcher’s kidnapping.
AP

Isaac — who married into the family — spoke out before a body was found in the hunt for Fletcher, a Memphis teacher and mom of two. The identity remained unconfirmed Tuesday.

Police have yet to confirm that a body found Monday is the abducted Tennessee heiress.
Instagram/Eliza Fletcher

However, the uncle tried to distance himself from the clan as police searched the Memphis apartment complex looking for family members, including Abston’s mother, who he said was “in hiding.”

“My whole f—ing family’s wacky … They always have been,” Isaac told the Mail.

“They’re not beloved to me because they’re nuts. It’s the truth.

“Go check the police records for the Abstons. You’ll find they’re all perpetrators of something,” he said.

He noted that Abston’s younger brother, Mario Abston, 34, was also arrested at the weekend “for drugs and carrying a gun.”

Police have stressed those charges — including allegations that he was manufacturing and selling fentanyl and heroin — were not tied to Fletcher’s kidnapping.

He said he had little interaction with the accused kidnapper — but knew enough to suspect his involvement in the monstrous crime.

“I believe that he probably did it — but I have no proof,” he told a videographer at the complex.

The damning interview came as Abston was hit with further charges late Monday, court records show.

He was charged with identity theft, theft and fraudulent use of a credit card after a woman reported her wallet being stolen on Thursday, the day before Fletcher’s abduction, ABC 24 noted. He allegedly used the stolen cards at two gas stations for more than $910.

Fletcher, who comes from a pedigreed Tennessee family that founded a $3.2 billion private hardware company, was caught on camera being violently snatched during her regular 4 a.m. run.

The Memphis teacher, who comes from a wealthy family, was last seen jogging just after 4 a.m. Friday.
Tennessee Bureau of Investigatio

Abston was busted after DNA testing on a pair of slides left at the scene, with his phone also linking him to the crime scene.

Surveillance footage showed him running “aggressively toward the victim, and then [forcing] the victim Eliza Fletcher into the passenger’s side of the vehicle,” according to a police affidavit which also said, “there appeared to be a struggle.”

He was later seen cleaning his car and scrubbing his clothes while acting “strange,” the affidavit said.

He remains behind bars on $510,000 bond and is set to be arraigned Tuesday morning.

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NYPD investigate girl who escaped kidnapping by ice cream truck driver in Staten Island

A 10-year-old girl said she was abducted by an ice cream truck driver on Staten Island on Sunday, but was able to break free and call her mother, police said.

The girl told officers that a man grabbed her wrist as she was heading into a deli near Harbor Road and Forest Avenue in Mariners Harbor and allegedly dragged her into an ice cream truck.

She said she was able to break free and flee the vehicle less than a mile away near the corner of Union Avenue and Richmond Terrace. She flagged down a passerby and used their cellphone to contact her mother, according to police.

The girl’s mom then called 911 around 4:40 p.m. to report the alleged abduction, cops said.

Officers canvassed the area and found the ice cream truck near where the child said she was first grabbed by its driver.

Police took the male driver into custody and are investigating the alleged incident.

No charges were filed Sunday night.

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