Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
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Author Topic: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007  (Read 4748 times)

Offline Kelly

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Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« on: July 31, 2010, 07:22:30 PM »





http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PubCaseSearchServlet?act=viewPoster&caseNum=1082616&orgPrefix=NCMC&searchLang=en_US



Tammy Flores

DOB:   Mar 30, 2004
Missing:  Oct 23, 2007
Sex:  Female
Race:  Hispanic
Hair:  Lt. Brown
Eyes:  Brown
Height:  3'2" (97 cm)
Weight:  36 lbs (16 kg)
Missing From:
VICTORVILLE
CA
United States



Diego Flores

DOB:   Jul 28, 2005
Missing:  Oct 23, 2007
Sex:  Male
Race:  Hispanic
Hair:  Lt. Brown
Eyes:  Brown
Height:  2'9" (84 cm)
Weight:  24 lbs (11 kg)
Missing From:
VICTORVILLE
CA
United States

FRANCISCO FLORES

Abductor
DOB:  Apr 23, 1974
Sex:  Male
Race:  Hispanic
Hair:  Black
Eyes:  Brown
Height:  6'0" (183 cm)
Weight:  210 lbs (95 kg)

Tammy and Diego were allegedly abducted by their father, Francisco Flores. A felony warrant for Kidnapping was issued for the abductor on January 18, 2008. They may still be in the local area or they may travel to Oregon or to Mexico. The abductor has a mole on each cheek and a mole under his nose.

Diego's photo is shown age-progressed to 5 years. Tammy's photo is shown age-progressed to 6 years.

ANYONE HAVING INFORMATION SHOULD CONTACT
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
1-800-843-5678 (1-800-THE-LOST)

Ontario Police Department (California) 1-909-986-6711
« Last Edit: October 29, 2011, 09:56:55 AM by Kelly »
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
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If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« Reply #1 on: August 03, 2010, 12:00:48 AM »
Project Jason Profile:

Name: Tammy A. Flores

Date of Birth: 03/30/2004
Date Missing: 10/23/2007
Age at time of disappearance: 3
City Missing From: Victorville
State Missing From: California
Gender: Female
Race: Hispanic
Height: 3'2"
Weight: 36 lbs
Hair Color: Light brown
Hair (other): Straight
Eye Color: Brown

Identifying Characteristics: Tammy sucks her middle and ring fingers at the age of three.

Circumstances of Disappearance: Tammy and her brother went for a scheduled visitation with her father and they were never seen or heard from again.

Investigative Agency: Ontario CA Police Department
Agency Phone: (909) 986-6711

Name:Diego A. Flores

Date of Birth: 07/28/2005
Date Missing: 10/23/2007
Age at time of disappearance: 2
City Missing From: Victorville
State Missing From: CA
Gender: Male
Race: Hispanic
Height: 2'9"
Weight: 24 lbs
Hair Color:    Brown
Eye Color: Brown

Circumstances of Disappearance: Diego and his sister Tammy went for a scheduled visit with their father and were never seen again.

Medical Conditions: He was born premature, therefore is small for his age. He was not speaking at age 2. He has discolorations on his front teeth.

Investigative Agency: Ontario CA Police Department
Agency Phone: (909) 986-6711


Print a Poster:
http://www.projectjason.org/aan/AAN_TammyandDiegoFlores.pdf
« Last Edit: August 03, 2010, 11:56:03 PM by Kelly »
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
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If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« Reply #2 on: August 05, 2010, 01:09:17 AM »
AAN Poster Notify Sent to AAN Subscribers   Code 91   

Help us find the missing: Become an AAN Member and receive notifications about missing persons via email.

Click here to become a part of the solution: http://www.projectjason.org/awareness.shtml
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« Reply #3 on: September 05, 2010, 04:03:45 PM »
Jeramy Burt and Tammy and Diego Flores are Project Jason's featured missing persons for September of 2010. Their photos and case information, with links to their news and information threads, is on the main page of the Project Jason website. This is one means of awareness for them, and with a high average of daily hits to the site, we'll reach many with their stories.

If your missing loved one is not registered with us for services, please click here: http://www.projectjason.org/report.shtml
« Last Edit: November 14, 2010, 08:31:30 PM by Kelly »
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« Reply #4 on: September 07, 2010, 12:59:20 PM »
http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/PageServlet?LanguageCountry=en_US&PageId=4296


TruTV In-Session's FIND OUR CHILDREN Series


CNN Headline news is partnering with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children to air a new series on TruTV In-Session that features one missing child case every week.  The segment, "FIND OUR CHILDREN", is hosted by anchor Christi Paul and airs on Tuesdays at 1:45 PM.  The segment will air a second time on Thursdays at 11:45 AM.

Anyone with information about any of the missing children cases featured should contact the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at 1-800-THE-LOST.


Week of June 15, 2010

Tammy and Diego Flores

One early evening in October 2007, a father walked out of his home with his 2 and 3 year old children and was never heard from again.  Nearly three years later, his former wife is desperate to find her children.

On October 21, 2007, Tammy and Diego Flores were dropped off at their father Francisco Flores’ home in Victorville, California by their mother for a regularly scheduled one week visit.  Francisco and the children’s mother were in the middle of a divorce and shared joint custody.  However, due to Francisco’s unpredictable and violent temperament, Tammy and Diego’s mother called them daily to check in.

On October 23, 2007, her worst fears began to surface when no one answered her calls.  Her fear was affirmed when she went to Francisco’s house, only to find no one home. Tammy and Diego’s mother immediately took action and was granted full custody of both children a week later on October 31, 2007.

Local investigators learned that Francisco may have been planning the abduction for weeks. Francisco had refinanced his home and withdrew the $100,000 earnings. The house has since been foreclosed.  Francisco also walked away from his job at a cable company without any notification that he was quitting.  He had been a model employee at the company for ten years.

It was originally believed that Francisco fled to Mexico, as he shared dual citizenship in Mexico and the United States and he is known have relatives in Mexico City. The investigation is primarily headed by the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office - Child Abduction and Recovery Unit.  Their joint cooperation with the FBI and the Ontario, California Police Department lead them to the areas of Mexico, California and Oregon as possible whereabouts.  There has been no evidence thus far that confirms that they left the United States and no locations are being eliminated as Tammy and Diego’s exact location is still unknown.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Office issued a felony arrest warrant for kidnapping and child abduction for Francisco that was issued on January 18, 2008.  Francisco’s bail has been set at $1,000,000.

Diego is now 4 years old with light brown hair and brown eyes.  He has a visible mole on his right hand pointer finger.

Tammy is 6 years old with light brown hair and brown eyes.

Their father Francisco is 36 years old with black hair and brown eyes.  He is about 6 feet tall and 210 pounds.  He is noted to have thick eye brows and black moles under his nose and on both cheeks.  He may have grown a beard and long hair.


Francisco was abusive to the children’s mother and she fears he could harm Tammy and Diego. She is anxious to be with her two children again.  
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« Reply #5 on: November 15, 2010, 03:54:21 PM »
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/13/business/13missing.html?_r=1

I.R.S. Sits on Data Pointing to Missing Children

By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
Published: November 12, 2010


For parents of missing children, any scrap of information that could lead to an abductor is precious.

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in Alexandria, Va., has a wall of posters dedicated to unsolved cases.

At the center, Colin McNally ages an image of a girl taken by a relative at 4. She would now be 17.

Three years into an excruciating search for her abducted son, Susan Lau got such a tip. Her estranged husband, who had absconded with their 9-year-old from Brooklyn, had apparently filed a tax return claiming the boy as an exemption.

Investigators moved quickly to seek the address where his tax refund had been mailed. But the Internal Revenue Service was not forthcoming.

“They just basically said forget about it,” said Julianne Sylva, a child abduction investigator who is now deputy district attorney in Santa Clara County, Calif.

The government, which by its own admission has data that could be helpful in tracking down the thousands of missing children in the United States, says that taxpayer privacy laws severely restrict the release of information from tax returns. “We will do whatever we can within the confines of the law to make it easier for law enforcement to find abducted children,” said Michelle Eldridge, an I.R.S. spokeswoman.

The privacy laws, enacted a generation ago to prevent Watergate-era abuses of confidential taxpayer information, have specific exceptions allowing the I.R.S. to turn over information in child support cases and to help federal agencies determine whether an applicant qualifies for income-based federal benefits.

But because of guidelines in the handling of criminal cases, there are several obstacles for parents and investigators pursuing a child abductor — even when the taxpayer in question is a fugitive and the subject of a felony warrant.

“It’s one of those areas where you would hope that common sense would prevail,” said Ernie Allen, president and chief executive of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. “We are talking about people who are fugitives, who have criminal warrants against them. And children who are at risk.”

About 200,000 family abductions are reported each year in the United States, most of which stem from custody disputes between estranged spouses. About 12,000 last longer than six months, according to Justice Department statistics, and involve parental abductors who assume false identities and travel the country to escape detection.

But, counterintuitive as it may seem, a significant number file one of bureaucracy’s most invasive documents, a federal tax return. A study released by the Treasury Department in 2007 examined the Social Security numbers of 1,700 missing children and the relatives suspected of abducting them, and found that more than a third had been used in tax returns filed after the abductions took place.

Criminologists say it is unclear what motivates a child abductor to file a tax return: confusion, financial desperation for a refund or an attempt to avoid compounding their criminal problems by failing to pay taxes. Whatever the reason, the details in a return on an abductor’s whereabouts, work history and mailing address can be crucial to detectives searching for a missing child.

“It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense,” said Harold Copus, a retired F.B.I. agent who investigated missing child cases, of why abductors provide such information. “But if they were thinking clearly, they wouldn’t have abducted their child in the first place.”

The law forbids the I.R.S. from turning over data from tax returns unless a parental abduction is being investigated as a federal crime and a United States district judge orders the information released. But the vast majority of parental abduction cases are investigated by state and local prosecutors, not as federal crimes, say investigators and missing children’s advocates. Even when the F.B.I. does intercede in parental abduction cases, requests for I.R.S. data are rarely granted.

When the Treasury Department study identified hundreds of suspected abductors who had filed tax returns, for instance, a federal judge in Virginia refused to issue an order authorizing the I.R.S. to turn over their addresses to investigators. The judge, Leonie M. Brinkema, declined to discuss her decision.

Advocates for missing children say that federal judges often argue that parental abductions are better suited to family court than criminal court.

“There’s this sense that because the child is with at least one of their parents, it’s not really a problem,” said Abby Potash, director of Team Hope, which counsels parents who are searching for a missing child. Ms. Potash’s son was abducted by a relative and kept for eight months before he was recovered. “But when you’re the parent who’s left behind, it is devastating. You’re being robbed of your son or daughter’s childhood.”

In Ms. Lau’s case, her search for her missing son dragged on for two years after the I.R.S. refused investigators’ request for her ex-husband’s tax return. She actually got the tip from the I.R.S., which disallowed her request to claim the boy on her own tax return because someone else had. The boy was eventually found in Utah, after his photo appeared in a flier distributed by missing children’s groups, and he was reunited with his mother at age 15 — five years after they were separated.

I.R.S. officials are quick to point out that they have worked closely with missing children’s advocates in some areas. The I.R.S.’s “Picture Them Home” program has included photos of thousands of missing children with forms mailed to millions of taxpayers since 2001. More than 80 children were recovered with the help of that program.

Ernie Allen, chief of the center, says, “It’s one of those areas where you would hope that common sense would prevail.”

Still, attempts to change the law to give the tax agency more latitude have sputtered over the last decade. Dennis DeConcini, a former Democratic senator from Arizona, lobbied for the change in 2004 on behalf of a child advocacy group, but said that it never gained traction because some members of Congress feared that any release of I.R.S. data could lead to a gradual erosion of taxpayer privacy. In recent years, much of the legislation involving missing children has focused on international abductions.

One problem missing children’s advocates have wrestled with in proposing legislation is determining how much information the I.R.S. should be asked to release from a suspected abductor’s tax return. Should disclosure be required only if a child’s Social Security number is listed on a return? Should child abduction investigators be given only the address where a tax return was mailed? Or the location of an employer who has withheld taxes on a suspected abductor?

Griselda Gonzalez, who has not seen her children since 2007, holds fleeting hope that some type of information might reunite her family. Diego and Tammy Flores were just 2 and 3 years old when their father took them from their home in Victorville, Calif., for a weeklong visit and never returned. After Ms. Gonzalez reported their disappearance, a felony warrant for kidnapping was issued for the father, Francisco Flores. His financial records suggest he meticulously planned his actions for months — withdrawing money from various accounts and taking out a second mortgage — so Ms. Gonzalez doubts he would claim the children as dependents on a tax return.

But it gnaws at her that some federal laws seemed more concerned with the privacy of a fugitive than the safety of children.

“When your kids are taken from you, the hardest part is at night, thinking about them going to sleep,” she said. “You wonder who’s tucking them in, who will hug them if they have a bad dream or taking them to the bathroom if they wake up. And you ask yourself whether you’ve done everything possible to find them.”

“It would be good to know that you tried everything,” she said.

Missing children’s advocates see the I.R.S. data as a potentially powerful resource.

“There are hundreds of cases this could help solve,” said Cindy Rudometkin of the Polly Klaas Foundation. “And even if it helped solve one case — imagine if that child returned home was yours.”
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

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Offline Kelly

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Re: Missing Siblings: Tammy and Diego Flores--CA--10/23/2007
« Reply #7 on: January 13, 2012, 10:00:36 PM »
http://insession.blogs.cnn.com/2012/01/11/find-our-children-flores-kids/

January 11, 2012  (Video)

Find Our Children: Flores Kids

In Session has teamed up with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children to help find some missing children. In this segment of Find Our Children we focus on the missing Flores kids. Watch the video for more information on the Flores family. If you have any information about the whereabouts of these children please call 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678).
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.