Missing white children receive far more media coverage than missing Black and brown children โ a fact advocates often point to when explaining the disparity in attention provided to non-individuals of color.
But another unsettling fact has emerged with the release of the FBIโs latest statistics on missing children.
The federal agency noted about 346,000 children in the U.S. in 2020, identifying 125,727 Black juveniles. In addition, the agency said 197,381 white kids went missing, suggesting that missing white youth outnumber lost young Blacks by more than 71,600.
But a closer look at the statistics revealed a crucial piece of information that advocates called misleading.
โMissing from the report is separate data for Hispanic children because the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) combined white and Hispanic children,โ said Sherri Jefferson, the executive director of the African American Juvenile Justice Project (AAJJP).
โThis is alarming, disturbing and problematic,โ Jefferson said. โFirst, the combination of white and Hispanic children denies the Hispanic community raw data of their missing children. This process denies research and resources to fund and find their missing and exploited children or to examine causation.โ
FBI officials did not return several messages seeking comment.
โThe NCIC data isnโt robust or reliable to paint a complete picture of the magnitude of the problem facing missing persons of color,โ said Natalie Wilson, co-founder of the Black & Missing Foundation.
โWe believe the numbers are much higher based on underreporting,โ Wilson stated.
She noted that the FBI classified all missing Latino individuals as white despite research revealing that 24 percent classify themselves as Afro-Latino โ otherwise identifying as Black.
Further, โimmigrants donโt always report their missing because of fear of deportation,โ Wilson concluded.
Jefferson noted that โfrom ‘West Side Story’ actress Ariana DeBose to Jennifer Lopez and Carmen Perez, the co-founder of the Womenโs March to ‘The Viewโs’ Sunny Hostin and Ana Navarro, Hispanics are not monolithic.โ
โSome identify as biracial or Black. Therefore, a separate category is critical to finding missing children, too,โ Jefferson said. โMore compelling is by combining white and Hispanic as one race, the figures mislead the public about the status of missing Black children whose missing outnumber all other races.โ
NCMEC gathers data directly from law enforcement as children go missing, while FBI data is reported annually via NCIC.
โThe operative words are โreported missingโ and โcrime,โโ Jefferson insisted. โMost Black and Afro Latinx are underreported or not reported at all. This is because most law enforcement executes runaway warrants or deny families missing person reports.โ
Jefferson concluded that more Black children are missing than white and Hispanic juveniles combined.
She said 62 percent of the 30,000 newly reported missing cases in 2020 were Black children.
โThis is alarming because Blacks, or African Americans, represent about 14 percent of the U.S. population,โ Jefferson noted further.
โAAJJP is constrained to ask whether the combination of white with Hispanic children is to deflect from reporting raw data proving more Black children are missing than any other race,โ Jefferson said. โMoreover, whether itโs to evade or avoid finding our children or funding solutions to the problem?โ
The FBI report notes about 9,000 missing Native American or Indian children.
Jefferson pointed out that the White House proclaimed May 4 to recognize missing and exploited NAI/Indian children.
โThe White House has not proclaimed a day for Black girls or children,โ Jefferson demanded. โOur hashtag is #BidenProclaimABlackGirlsDay #NOWBeMe.โ
โMoving forward, AAJJP has created a missing person platform to include coalition-building of an Alliance. A collective lab in this space will help us to strategize, organize, mobilize, and energize (SOME) our base to effectuate lasting change in policy and policing and prevention and protection,โ she said.

