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Your Guide to Child Abduction Statistics

Child Abduction Statistics Overview

The public impression of child abduction is often exaggerated due to the nature of around-the-clock media cycles that requires breaking stories at a constant pace. About 2,000 children are reported missing every day in the United States. However, most of these cases were solved within hours. These cases were generally not serious.

Family child abduction is the most common form of abduction in the United States. In fact, nearly half of child abductions are by a parent or other family relative and are not considered serious risks to the safety of the child.

More than 25 percent of child abductions are by an acquaintance of a child. Fewer than one quarter of all abductions are by a stranger. 80 percent of child abductions by strangers occur within a quarter mile of the child's home. Only one in every 10,000 missing child reports ends with the death of a child. Most stranger kidnappings are committed by males aged 20-40 years old.

As you can see, the fear of American parents over the danger of child abduction and the exaggerated risk of the crime affecting their family is over-emphasized. Most abductions are by people close to the child.

In the past, parents preached safety against "stranger danger." Today, most child abductions are by family members and other people that the child knows. The vast majority of these abductions were not serious, with most children being recovered quickly.

Abductions by family members are more than three times more common than stranger abductions. The increasing number of divorces and the relative ease of international travel has led to an increase in parental child abduction rates, especially international child abduction.

The state of child abduction in the United States is often misunderstood. About 50 percent of abductions are committed by family members. As such, the abducted child is usually returned to the rightful parent(s) physically unharmed.

Less than 5 percent of stranger abductions have led to a complete disappearance of the child. The overwhelming majority of all abductions lasted less than 24 hours. For non-family abductions, one third of the abductions last less than 3 hours. In non-stranger abductions, the child is returned 99 percent of the time unharmed. Stranger abductions are more dangerous, as only 57 percent of children were returned safely.

Understanding that only a small percentage of child abduction cases are by strangers should help Americans understand that the large majority of cases end with the child's safety intact.

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