Missing: Dead or Alive? (2023) s01e04 Episode Script

Episode 4

1
Dave!
Y'all find any clues yet?
They found his pants.
They're covered in blood.
They're ripped almost in half.
Anybody down there?
Dave!
Vicki, I think
we might have something over here.
We've got buzzards circling above us.
We might have
something down the ravine.
He's down the ravine.
Down the rock.
Slumped against a tree.
He's dead.
I was hoping we could search and find him,
and we would have a different outcome.
So sad.
But what got him to this point?
And that he died alone in the woods.
You know what bothers me?
What if he was alive yesterday?
Where we searched yesterday
was only 50 yards
from where we found the body.
I mean, you just cannot know
if we were this close to him.
I would not ever forgive myself.
We can go this way.
I'm very sorry. I'm
sorry for your loss.
Mmm.
Um
This is, um, his toxicology report.
So I'll just go through it with you.
We found him,
and the coroner came out and everything.
Did the autopsy, as you know,
because he looked fine.
Like, there was no stab wounds,
gunshot wounds, nothing like
No blunt-force trauma. Nothing.
So, um, it was really confusing to us.
So, here's the toxicology report.
Mm.
So, it says,
"Given the investigative information,
this is a methamphetamine
intoxication hypothermia death."
So, he has meth in his system.
I know you didn't think
David had ever taken drugs.
- You see, that don't even sound like him.
- Right.
I'm so sorry.
I called the coroner, and she said
that the meth that was in his system
could cause him to hallucinate
and not know where he was at.
You can hallucinate.
You can imagine somebody's chasing you,
which might be why he ran across the road.
So, essentially,
because he had meth in his system
and he was kinda delusional,
and he wasn't able to get out
of the woods, he died of hypothermia.
We didn't find the phone
or the lottery ticket.
But there's no evidence
that anyone was with David when he died.
Far as much as we can investigate,
we've literally done everything we can do.
Right, and I understand that.
And we appreciate everything
- Oh, no It's fine.
- Yes.
I just wish so bad
we would have found him a day earlier.
We were so close.
I know you
you did everything you could have done.
And I know that.
I've got attention. Forward.
Pause. Left, left, left, right
My duty
as a missing-person investigator
is to prevent people from coming to harm.
About face.
I guess
that doesn't always happen.
Fold the flag. Ready. One.
I came to this unit
because I wanted to save lives.
Ready. Three.
Death has always been part of the job.
But in this world,
it leaves you with difficult questions.
Was there something
I could have done differently?
Did I do everything I could have done?
But maybe the question
I really need to ask myself is
"Is Missing Persons
really the job for me?"
- Knock-knock.
- Hey.
- Hey.
- Vicki, how are you doing?
Yeah, I'm okay.
I just really feel bad for the family.
You know, you have the hope
that you're going to find them alive,
and have that happy reunion, so
- Yeah.
- That's always disheartening.
You did a great job on this case,
in spite of the ending not being
what we wanted it to be.
Right.
It's one
of the hardest parts of the job
to tell a family
that it didn't work out the way we hoped.
- Right.
- Okay.
- I just wanted to make sure you're okay.
- I'm good. I'm good.
Y'all,
this case came in this morning.
Sierra Stevens, 17 years old,
is missing out of foster care.
Her foster mom reported her missing,
and she left all her belongings.
That's a concern.
Her grandparents say that
she usually stays in touch with them,
but they haven't heard from her either.
I've had at least two or three girls
that have left that area
- Mm-hmm.
- that's in the sex trafficking category.
One of these cases
was just a couple of weeks ago.
Yeah, let's jump on this one.
Hi, Investigator Smith
with Richland County.
This is pertaining to Sierra Stevens.
She left the foster home on the fourth,
and from speaking with the foster parent,
she said she was going to the movies,
but seemed like
she just dropped off the grid.
This is our second missing child
from that area, and
- What?
- Yes, ma'am.
Is the home itself
in a bad neighborhood?
It's a touch-and-go neighborhood.
It's down the street
from one of our truck stops
and one of our questionable hotels.
So that's all in walking distance
of this neighborhood.
Now, this is a concern.
Now you see
why we blowing up everybody's phone.
This it?
Yeah.
Um, I'm Investigator Rains.
We need to look at Sierra's belongings.
- Hello.
- I'll be there, come on.
All the bags and stuff are there.
Is that her suitcase?
All that's hers.
This is stuff
I would imagine she would want.
She looks like a sweet kid.
She's so young to have gone missing.
The foster mom said that she told her
she was going to the movies
and was walking to the city bus stop,
and never heard or seen her again.
Looks like she's definitely
trying to get on the right track.
She's got books for Pathways to Success.
She's making notes.
She is I mean, it's not
You mean
notes like she's enjoying school?
Yeah. Like she's studying.
Look, this has her shoes
and everything in it. Like, I just
This makes no sense.
And to leave everything
It is bad out there
for these young girls now.
'Cause I hear a lot of them
sitting out in the room and talking.
"Yeah, if I could get me a a daddy,
and he pay me money and buy me clothes,
I'll be all right."
I say, "You don't want that, baby."
There's a consequence behind that.
'Cause they put 'em to prostitute.
They always offer them money,
and these young girls,
they know they don't have no money.
And once you offer
these young girls money, they jump.
She left on Friday night
to go to the bus stop.
The bus stop is on this road,
in front of the truck stop.
If she went to the bus stop,
but then said,
"Hey, maybe I could
catch a ride or something."
Even the gas station, she could've
gotten in the car with somebody
thinking they're going her direction.
You have drug activity
and prostitution in this area.
So, if she messes
with one of these drug dealers,
and they slip her some type of narcotics,
that's gonna go
real bad for her real quick.
Yep.
Or she is in this parking lot,
trying to hitchhike a ride.
One of these truckers
could have put her in their truck.
The interstate runs right by here.
So, you know,
she could go in any direction.
She could be anywhere right now.
You got the tape?
Yeah, I have everything.
We got a missing granddaughter,
and I was wondering
if I could put this flyer up.
You know her? Have you seen her?
She got missing from Columbia.
She was in beauty school over there,
and she went out to go to the movie
and never returned.
Oh, my God.
Ever since she was a little girl,
she's always had a rough life.
Sierra didn't have anybody at home.
She didn't have a mother.
Her dad, he worked graveyard,
and she stayed there by herself.
And the brother did too,
and that's the reason we wanted
to take them when they were little.
But it was sad the way that
the way that things turned out
because her dad and her mother,
they were into drugs.
Her dad made her quit coming.
Then Sierra's mother passed away.
Look at this one. Look at this picture.
Yeah, we had fun.
She has this tremendous laugh.
The last we heard of her, she was happy.
Going to beauty college.
We want to find her.
Every little
blond-headed girl that I see,
I look and see if it's Sierra.
When I was young,
we would run and play in the fields,
and my mom would ring a bell
when it was time to come in.
And our only rule was really,
"Come home before it gets dark."
But as I got older and had kids
and fostered and adopted lots of children,
it just seems like the world
has become a more dangerous place.
As a mom, I know personally
how vulnerable these kids can be.
As a cop,
I know how easily they can be exploited
and fall into great danger.
Honestly, it worries me to death.
Hi.
- We're just here to get Sierra's stuff.
- Oh, okay.
Is that her picture?
Okay. That's pretty.
This is, like,
all her worldly possessions.
What little girl's gonna leave everything,
even her clothes, and leave with nothing?
There had to be a pretty good reason.
Might seem like nothing,
but this could become important.
All this hair in here
potentially could hold her DNA there.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Hopefully, we won't need that.
She was attending your school.
Her name is Sierra Stevens.
Mmm, in the foster system,
was attended here for
a couple of weeks, two or three weeks.
Okay. Is there anyone
that she was hanging out with,
or was friends with there?
Let me go check,
and I'll call you back as soon as I can.
Sure.
Do you have
a digital picture of her?
- Yeah.
- Okay.
Let's check the escort ads and make sure
that she's not being trafficked online.
South Carolina.
- 613 ads and 388 profiles.
- Wow.
- Wow.
- Yeah.
And, you know, I always wonder
who's taking those pictures,
'cause clearly those girls
aren't taking their own pictures.
Exactly.
- Like, look at this one.
- And that one. I mean, look at that.
So when that emoji's over their face
- They're underage?
- Probably.
Sad to see
that there's so much of this out there.
Um
Some of them
you can just tell are juveniles.
This one right here now. That could be
That definitely
Okay, go to "18 photos."
Right there. Yeah.
That one don't
No, this is probably not her
'cause I don't know of any tattoos.
Mmm.
I don't think
any of these are Sierra,
but it doesn't mean
that she's not being trafficked
just 'cause she's not advertised on here.
We've kind of hit that three-day mark.
So, hopefully, they haven't already
moved her out of state.
I hope so too.
Hello.
Okay, two strawberry.
Two carrot. Wait, that's ten, right?
Thank you so much.
Have a good evening. Thank you. Bye-bye.
When I came to Missing Persons,
I thought it would be really different.
But in lots of ways it's just the same
as working Major Crimes.
You have to face the worst of humanity.
- Well, hello.
- Hey!
How are you?
What always kept me going in Major Crimes
was getting justice for the victim.
There was always the satisfaction
of knowing a criminal was off the street
and couldn't hurt anyone else.
I don't want people to get away
with the bad things they've done.
I guess sometimes it takes
stepping away from a job
to realize what was so good about it.
So my old captain called me,
and he wants me to come back
to Major Crimes,
but that means
I would have to leave Missing Persons,
so I'm kind of weighing out
different things, like
I mean, in Missing Persons
it can either be, like
Not only do you have, like,
the actual cases,
you actually go out and look for them.
We just had a really bad one,
and they weren't found alive.
- And so then that's hard.
- Yeah.
- It takes a toll on you.
- It does.
One.
Hi, Investigator Rains.
Um, hello.
Yeah. Here is my husband.
Yeah.
I called her phone
and a guy answered the phone.
Hold up a second.
The number for Sierra, you called it
Mm-hmm. And the guy told me
that he bought the phone.
I said, "Well, this is her phone,
and this is her number."
So they called the number.
They got an answer.
It was a male that answered and said
Wait a minute,
a male that answered her phone?
Answered her phone,
and they said, "Who is this?"
And he said,
"I bought this phone yesterday."
And they were like,
"That's my granddaughter's phone."
And he's like, "I don't know anything
about her," and he hangs up.
So, yeah.
Let's track her phone.
My name is Investigator Smith, I'm with
Richland County Sheriff's Department.
This number is attached to
We have a missing 17-year-old girl,
and we're trying to see
where we can get a location on her.
Okay, is this
an emergency involving danger of death?
Yes.
Okay.
Point 76093, um, at 19:57
that phone was hitting off the tower
at 1355 Ruby Road in Hartsville.
Okay.
- Thank you so much.
- All right. Thank you, sir.
- It pinged in Hartsville?
- It's in Hartsville.
She's originally from Hartsville.
I'm gonna reach out
to law enforcement there.
I think her dad's still there.
- All right, let me know.
- All right. Thank you.
- 'Cause I'mma be lurking out here.
- All right.
I seen her picture at the local Walmart.
You know, and it's like
You know, it's
almost unbelievable.
2019 was the last time I saw her.
That was two years ago.
She was a good kid.
When she was little, she did dance.
They put her in beauty pageants.
She was on stage, waving to the judges,
and she added
a little thing of her own to it.
She actually blew some kisses
to the judges as she was walking by.
And we thought that was somethin' else
'cause we didn't tell her to do that.
Sierra had good grades, everything.
But she had to grow up quick.
And, uh
She got, uh, 14.
That was the turning point.
She was, uh
She took my car and got in a wreck,
killed somebody.
VSS charged me with, uh,
neglect.
It gets me like this
when I think about her life and
Here is where the accident happened.
A lady was coming
- From there.
- From there coming this way.
And Sierra run this stop sign right here.
And hit the lady right right there.
A 32-year-old's life came to a tragic end,
here at the intersection of High Point
and Indian Branch Roads near Hartsville.
Troopers have cited a 14-year-old girl
in that deadly crash
So, she was sent
to a juvenile detention center
for 18 months because of this.
Oh, my God.
Highway Patrol
says this investigation is far from over.
They're still trying to determine
how the 14-year-old even got the car.
In the meantime,
the family says what happened here
has forever changed their lives.
She may think that because
she's supposed to be in foster care,
if she ran away or somethin',
if the police find her,
we'll put her, you know,
back in DJJ instead of putting her
in another foster home or something.
I mean, it could be that.
But if she's hiding, how do we
convince her that she can trust us?
A couple years ago
one of my own adopted daughters ran away.
She wasn't too happy about the way
things were going at home.
So her and her friend,
who had also been in foster care,
took off together
and went to a whole different city.
After a couple weeks of them being gone,
they were recovered with an older male
and an older female
who were charged with
harboring them as runaways.
She never came back home after that.
Darlington County
Sheriff's Department
is asking the public's help
in finding a missing teen.
Seventeen-year-old Sierra Stevens
was last seen on September 5th
Is she 17?
Yeah, we're just afraid
that she's so vulnerable
that somebody might have tried
to entice her into leaving with them.
Just don't want her
to be a trafficking victim.
Yeah, that's like my age,
so it's, like, scary.
That's why I always want you to keep
Life360 on or something like that.
If you ever became missing, at least
I'd know where to start to look for you.
I'm a cop and I'm a mom.
And I try to do the very best I can
when I'm a cop at work.
And I try to do the very best I can
when I'm a mom.
And sometimes at that intersection,
you're wondering if you're
in the right role.
Come in.
- Hello.
- Hey.
- Come sit down.
- Oh, thank you.
So, I heard, um
I heard that they're trying to get you
to go back to headquarters
to work in Major Crimes now.
I gotta ask you to please reconsider.
Please.
Um
I don't want to lose you.
I think you're amazing.
When you're working the cases,
I see you're so fully committed to them,
and I don't know
how I could replace you right now.
So, I'm just asking you,
I know you've got
got a lot to think about right now,
but I would challenge that Major Crimes
isn't necessarily the only path right now.
You've done your time in Major Crimes.
I mean,
do you like working Missing Persons?
Yeah, I actually
really enjoy Missing Persons.
I'm really glad I got to come down
and learn so much,
but they are very, um, emotional cases.
Because, you know, they're a little
You know, emotionally draining
'cause they break your heart.
But, um
Um
Well, um, think about it. I really hope
I hope you choose to stay.
- But they're fighting for you
- Uh, yeah.
for Major Crimes, and I get why they are.
Um
But I feel that we can
get you on the right track here too.
I mean, I love working with you.
You're very like-minded.
You have that same passion to help people.
You feel the same way, so
All right, well, you let me know.
Take a day or two to think about it
and let me know, okay?
Investigator Rains.
Hi, Investigator.
This is Pat King about Sierra.
I got some news that I just heard.
Okay.
I have a friend,
and he called me this morning and said
there's a motel in Hartsville
And he says she could be there.
Okay.
We often find girls
that have been trafficked in motels.
Oh, my gosh.
I think
you need to go to Hartsville.
Call me if you get anything,
and go ahead and go direct with the chief
if you get something
that looks pretty bad, okay?
Okay.
The ones in Hartsville,
which one of those y'all wanted to check?
- I can, um, show you the addresses.
- Okay.
Y'all can figure out which route to go.
'Cause I don't know what we come to first.
- Absolutely.
- Yes, ma'am.
This woman thinks
she has seen Sierra at the motel.
She said she was 19.
I didn't believe her.
And then she said her mom is dead.
Then somebody came looking for her.
"Do you know where the 17-year-old is?"
I said, "Excuse me? How old are you?"
He said, "I'm 27."
Did she say the guy's name by any chance
or call him by a name or anything?
- I wasn't even
- Wasn't paying attention. I understand.
Sorry, I didn't ask. I should have done.
- All right, thank you so much.
- Thank you. Thank you so much.
She said he's very abusive to her,
which, again, is what we're afraid of.
If she's working third shift,
they'll be putting her
to sleep right now at the hotel.
- Okay. Sounds good.
- Thank you.
Hey, we were looking to see
if you had somebody specific
staying in one of your rooms.
- Yes, ma'am.
- If we showed you a picture.
- Yes, ma'am.
- Okay.
Do you recognize her at all?
She'd have a room
with a male maybe?
I have two girls that stay.
I know them.
They are locally from here
and they've been here for a while now.
- Upstairs? Okay.
- Mm-hmm.
- Hello.
- We checked the hotel.
And we were hoping we could find her,
but she's not here.
Okay.
We don't have a warrant
to get into these rooms.
So I've asked the local police
to come by and check later on.
All right,
why don't you just head on back
and we'll kind of
see what we can do from there.
- Okay. I'll see you in a bit.
- Okay, see you soon.
Okay, bye-bye.
I don't usually talk about it,
but the worst cases of my whole career
involve children being abused.
I couldn't always save them.
And I still find that hard to deal with.
Working Missing Persons
brings back those emotions.
Then you can't just turn them off.
I need to believe
I can find this girl safe.
Otherwise, what's the point
of me doing this job?
Hi, Vicki.
I have Sierra Stevens' school
on the phone for you.
- Okay, you there?
- Yes, sir.
So, we did hear
through the grapevine that
that there might have been
about three people that
Word around is that at one point
they all kind of went to a party together.
Um, Sierra was with
Two of them aren't here,
but I'm having one of the other ones
brought into my office right now.
- Okay.
- Um
Um, sorry,
I've got a quick question for you.
Miss Sierra Stevens.
Have you had any contact with her at all?
Have you heard from her
or anything like that?
Okay, um, did you guys go to a party
or something together at one point?
And, by the way, you're not in any trouble
whatsoever, just to make sure
I don't know.
I didn't go to the party with her.
Okay. So, no problem.
But, do you know, did some other students
go to the party with her?
Well, I know other people
that was there.
Okay, perfect.
That's all I needed. Okay. Um
There might have been one other person.
There was
There was a guy
by the name of Van Davis was there.
Unfortunately, we had to remove him
from the program for behavior.
We actually put him
on a "no trespass" for our location.
Now, let me just
I'm trying to pull up Mr. Davis's contact
Okay.
- Hello?
- Hi. Is this, um, Van Davis?
Yes, ma'am.
I'm trying to locate Sierra Stevens,
and um, I heard
that you and her were friends.
- Sierra?
- Yes.
I have not talked to Sierra
since the day that she went missing.
I remember we had something planned,
but we never went.
You and her had something planned
to go somewhere or something?
Yes, but we never went.
Was that because she didn't show up,
or what was the reason
No, she said she was going out
with some other friends,
and then after that
I never talked to her again.
We need to speak
to this Van Davis.
How you doing?
- Does Van Davis reside here?
- Yes.
- Is he home?
- Is something wrong?
We need to talk to him
about a missing girl we're lookin' at.
You can go to his job right now.
He work at the Circle K.
- Van Davis?
- Yeah?
You're not in trouble.
You don't need to be in trouble.
You don't need to be
caught up in something
that you don't need to be caught up in.
Okay? Did you take Sierra to Hartsville?
No, I don't know who she was with.
Who would you guess
she was in the car with?
I don't know none of Sierra's friends.
I just know her from school.
Bro. Listen to me.
Listen to me. Listen to me.
- Don't get caught up in something
- Right.
you don't need to be caught up in.
I know that she's in Hartsville.
I don't know who she's with.
She won't tell me.
She never told me who she was with
or where she was there.
Okay, so tell us the truth.
- That night, we was out.
- Okay.
We was at a hotel. I went home
because I really wasn't feeling it.
I can't hear you. I'm sorry.
Come a little bit closer.
- Yeah, there you go.
- We went out. We was at a hotel.
I went home
'cause I really wasn't feeling it.
I'm not the type of person to go out
and have parties.
She stayed there
with people that she didn't know.
I barely knew nobody at the party.
That's why I left.
Where was the party at?
I don't even know
the name of the hotel.
I just know it was beside a Waffle House.
And after I left,
I never talked to her again until the day
the next day
when she was already in Hartsville.
How she got to Hartsville, I don't know.
She's not in trouble.
We just don't want her staying in a place
where bad things could happen to her.
So if she would just
Do y'all want her? Y'all want Sierra?
We're trying to help her.
She's missing.
That's why we said,
"Do you think she's in danger?"
She's not in trouble.
We want to make sure
she's not being held against her will.
Okay. You want me to call?
Yeah!
That would be spectacular.
Hello?
Hello?
Hey.
- And it was one day here
- No, she didn't call her.
Hello. This is Pat King.
Hi, Mr. King. How are you?
I'm doing good.
I'm pretty sure
that within the next little bit
we are going to have Sierra.
She was on the phone
and I heard her voice and she's okay.
That's awesome!
Awesome! Awesome!
Oh!
I I'm so
This is great news, Investigator!
Thank you so much. That is awesome news.
Great news. I love it.
That is awesome.
Thank you so much.
You're very welcome.
- All right. Bye-bye.
- Bye-bye.
Awesome!
That's some great news.
Aw, they're so happy.
Dear Heavenly Father,
we are here to say thank you
for the opportunity to have people
taking care of Sierra,
and wonderful investigators,
and wonderful team,
in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
Amen.
Hey, Sierra.
This way.
We were just so worried about you
and trying to find you.
I was at my foster home.
I was going to a party, you know.
And I asked, and they said
I just had to be back by a certain time.
And I got too, you know, I was
- Late?
- Yeah, so I ended up falling asleep.
And then I
Early that morning, I woke up,
and I was going back to the house.
So I went back to the house
and then I seen five cop cars in the yard.
I'm like,
"Oh, my God, I'm going back to jail."
I'm scared. I didn't know what to do.
- I was in a panic mode.
- Right.
And I saw the police.
I wasn't thinking, I just ducked.
And I was like, "Oh, God."
"Okay, just keep going, just keep going."
And then we just went,
and then I was like
I took my phone and I just called Emily.
She's the only person I really trust.
I don't talk to people like that.
- Like your best friend?
- Yeah. And I've known her my whole life.
She came and got me real quick.
And then I just sat there until she came.
I got in the car and I was like, "Okay."
She called me, and she was like,
"Emily, I can't go back to jail."
She said, "I've been taken away
from everybody my whole childhood."
"I can't do that."
So I told Sierra to sit at Waffle House.
Do not go outside. Do not talk to anybody.
Cut her phone off.
And she'd see me there
within the next two hours.
It's a dangerous world.
Girls go missing by being vulnerable.
I know some girl that was kidnapped
and she was took away from her family.
I guess people like that
never come back from it.
But I told Sierra,
if she'd stay with me, she'd be fine.
'Cause I wouldn't
let nothin' happen to her.
How long were you in DJJ?
They gave me 12 to 18 months.
I did my whole 18, plus another month.
So it was 19 months.
They had to find me a placement
because nobody would take me.
I was like, "I'm a horrible person."
Like, "Nobody wants me because
I did what I did back in the day."
It made me feel like I was nothing.
I was like, "I can't go back to DJJ.
I can't do it. I can't."
We were afraid something bad
was happening to you.
Yeah.
Or that you were being
held against your will.
But now that, you know,
we have found you and everything,
and it's like, "Oh, she was afraid of us."
- Like, that's so sad.
- Yeah.
Like, had we known,
we could have said on the news,
"Sierra, you're not in trouble."
"We're trying to help you
and make sure you're safe."
I would have never thought
the police would try to help me
with anything like that
because it's never been that way.
They've always just came at me wrong.
So I never would have thought that,
but I understand that now.
We literally would lay awake at night
going, "Oh, my gosh."
"This girl has had such a hard life,
and then now where is she?" We were
I mean, it really
We worried about you a lot.
So I'm so glad that it ended up
that you're safe and good.
So, if you ever need anything,
please call me. Absolutely.
- Yes, ma'am. It was nice talking to you.
- Thank you, you too.
I'm so happy to have found Sierra.
When you're trying to find
a missing person,
their life depends on it.
So, finding David Taylor in the woods
- That was not the result I wanted at all.
- Yeah.
Because I was asking myself,
"Oh, my gosh."
"We were out here searching yesterday."
Like, "What if I was ten feet from him
and didn't find him?"
You read the toxicology report, right?
But did you read the coroner's report?
The coroner's report says
that he was deceased
before we even got
the missing person report.
There's nothing we could have done.
He was already gone.
So we weren't too late.
Well, that makes me feel a lot better.
You put your heart into it
and you're really
truly making a difference.
You do definitely have
that burden of responsibility
of the families counting on you,
and then you do it to yourself.
That's why you're so good at it.
Because you have passion.
So you can't leave me
out of this position.
Because how am I gonna find anyone else
that's gonna work this 24/7?
Um
I thought about it.
And, I mean, I definitely want to stay.
I really like saving lives.
I just see those families and I just
I just can't imagine not helping them.
If I have a family member missing,
I want you to work it.
- I'm so pleased.
- Thank you.
I feel like
I lost you for a minute.
I know. I know. I was about to pack up
and go to headquarters. Yep. Yep.
You want some cake?
- Oh, this cake is good.
- Do you not like chocolate?
Oops, sorry.
Fifteen hundred people
go missing in the US every single day.
It might seem like
an impossible mission to find them.
But the first step
is to be willing to try.
We need to show these people
they are missed.
They are cared for.
They are loved.
We need to show them they do matter.
Vicki, we got a new case.
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