BeyondMissing, Inc. began with an idea and blossomed into a reality that functioned flawlessly, twenty-four hours per day for eleven years. Since 2002, BeyondMissing technology has been utilized by law enforcement to issue 174 Amber Alerts, 56 Local Amber Alerts, 16 Abduction Alerts, and 94 Missing Child Alerts. The program had a 95% recovery rate. Yesterday we closed our doors for the last time.
Missing person flyers have been paper based ever since the first missing child flyer was issued for four-year-old Charlie Ross in 1874. Distribution was labor intensive and often times expensive and technology breakthroughs were few and far between. In 1979 the mysterious disappearance of Etan Patz riveted the country’s attention after pictures of the beautiful boy were distributed widely on television. Etan was also the first missing child on milk cartons. In 1993, my daughter Polly became the first missing child whose flyer was widely distributed via the Internet. Mostly though, paper flyers were distributed from hand to hand, appearing on telephone poles, Post Office walls, and merchants windows.
Two weeks after Polly was kidnapped we conducted a major flyer distribution. We printed thousands of our own flyers, acquired a mailing list, folded flyers, stuffed and addressed envelopes. A friend mortgaged a house to pay for printing and postage. Eight days later flyers began to arrive at their destinations. There had to be a better way.
BeyondMissing came to me in a vision. We could significantly close the time gap between a child being reported missing and the ability of the public and media to see the victim by creating an Internet based, password protected website that would allow law enforcement officers to use existing web based tools to create missing child flyers. They could then immediately distribute those flyers to pre-populated Fax and email databases.
I acquired a team of management and IT professionals and submitted a proposal for BeyondMissing to the U.S. Department of Justice (USDOJ) with the help of Wisconsin Congressman Mark Green. In turn, the USDOJ asked the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) to evaluate my proposal. They quickly concluded that it should not be funded because, “Existing programs render this program redundant.” I successfully challenged that conclusion and was eventually awarded $846,000 to build the program. By the time BeyondMissing was operational three months later we had included a parent flyer tool that allows parents of missing children to create their own missing flyers.
BeyondMissing was never fully embraced by the law enforcement community at large.
However, we did work with the Texas Department of Public Safety from August 12, 2002 through February 28, 2013. During that time BeyondMissing technology distributed 1,231,500 emails and 34,400 text messages, and initiated distribution to 1,721,800 faxes to targeted public and private recipients on behalf of law enforcement. This technology, which never broke down, was utilized by registered law enforcement in 35 states in the search for 340 abducted or missing children. Cases included 223 female and 117 male children reported as abducted or missing, including 146 White, 131 Hispanic, 45 Black, 5 Asian, 2 American Indian, and 11 identified as other.
In 1994, utilizing a $1,000,000 grant, the NCMEC created and introduced the Locator, a web-based poster-creation program that provides law enforcement agencies with access to create and distribute their own posters to include Missing Children. They said that they wanted to close the time gap between a child being reported missing and law enforcement’s ability to distribute a missing flyer. Distribution was limited to email. By this time BeyondMissing was distributing Texas Amber Alerts via text messaging. NCMEC introduced Locator Fax distribution in 2006.
In 2001, the NCMEC said that “Existing programs render this program [BeyondMissing] redundant”, yet within three years they had used 1,000,000 of our tax dollars to construct a third rate knock off. The USDOJ turned a blind eye to this waste of public funds. At best, the NCMEC’s behavior is unethical.
When I started writing this blog it was with a sense of nostalgia, but now I’m just pissed off.
Marc Klaas,
I am a citizen of the US and I can say confidently that I am fairly well educated regarding issues of child abuse in America and of child abductions and kidnappings. There is much I would like to say but I want to thank you Marc Klass you are a real, true soldier out here and you have done such great work since Polly’s death and I am so proud of you man!! Thank you for being the real deal and for dedicating so much of your life to this. I have watched what you do over the years and I don’t think anyone has done more than you have in taking real action to prevent children from being harmed by abductors and kidnappers. Marc, when I think about KlaasKids, I think about a true champion for the lives of humanity and human children. You have taken something so tragic, Marc, and turned it into something so beautiful that I know Polly is pleased with her Dad. KlaasKids is one organization that is as dignified as a modern day organization can possibly be and I thank you so much and Love you, Brad, and the rest of your team very much for everything y’all have done. Oh, and this article! Oh man, you articulate so well and I loved seeing you write how NCMEC truly has blood on their hands. You don’t hear people talk like that in today’s world and it is refreshing to see somebody telling the truth from such a position of respectability and solidarity. KlaasKids is a shining beacon of light in today’s world and you are a true KIng and champion, Mr. Marc Klaas .
Please contact me as soon as you can. I would love to know more about this issue you faced.
Who are you and why are you interested in this topic?
I am sorry your efforts were hijacked Mr. Klaas .. but I am encouraged by your rage over this issue. It will fuel all the fires that must be started to keep our kids safe.
i am a former resident of new jersey for 20 years.i was
a single mother with 3 children;ages 8 and 13 year old
twins.in 1976;i let my daughter’s teacher have her in her home”to study her behavior closer”(she was8 and had
a learning disability.she filed charges i was an unfit mother in the juvenile court.there was a”hearing” the
division of youth and family appeared;and presented no
evidence i was unfit.never got my daughter back.