Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Autistic teen girl missing, LURED from home? Where is ALICIA NAVARRO?
Episode Date: August 19, 2020At 12-years-old, Alicia Navarro was diagnosed with high-functioning autism. She has difficulty in social situations but loves playing online video games. Navarro's family believes someone met her onli...ne and lured the now 14-year-old from her home. Joining Nancy Grace Today: Trent Steele - President and National Director of Investigative operations, Anti-Predator Project www.antipredatorproject.org Jose Santiago - Glendale Police Department Communications manager Alicia Kozak - SURVIVOR, www.aliciakozak.com Dr. Angela Arnold - Psychiatrist, Atlanta Ga. Sierra Gillespie - CrimeOnline Investigative Reporter Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an iHeart Podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
A beautiful little teen girl goes missing.
Where is Alicia?
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
I'm Nancy Grace.
This is Crime Stories.
Thank you for being with us here at Fox Nation and Sirius XM 111.
Let's start with our friend Dave Mack at CrimeOnline.com.
Alicia Navarro is 15 years old and is on the autism spectrum.
Her mother, Jessica, says she is shy and anxious in some social situations and isn't fond of being out in public much or for very long.
She did, however, like going to McDonald's for Chicken McNuggets.
Alicia Navarro takes medicine and has a compromised immune system. She also likes to wear the same clothes and the same shoes over and over, which her mother says is because of her autism. For
example, she only wore sweatshirts in Arizona, despite the harsh heat. In the very early hours
of September 15th, 2019, Navarro's mother saw her come down from her room and get a glass of water. Around
1 a.m., she made her way back to her room. Later that same morning, around 7 a.m., Alicia's mother,
Jessica, made breakfast for her husband and her two youngest children. Alicia was not up yet.
When her mom went to check, Alicia was gone. How can it happen just like that, mom sees Alicia go to the kitchen sink and get a glass of water around 1 a.m.
When mom checks on Alicia the next morning, just a few hours later, she's gone.
Again, I'm Nancy Grace.
Thank you for being with us here at Fox Nation and Sirius XM 111.
And with me, an all-star panel to break it down and put it back together again.
Trent Steele, who has been working on this case.
President, National Director, Investigative Operations at the Anti-Predator Project
at antipredatorproject.org.
Jose Santiago, Glendale PD, Communications Manager.
And you can find them at glendaleAZ.com forward slash
police. Alicia Kozak, we know her well, a survivor who was lured online, was kidnapped, taken far
away from her home, assaulted repeatedly. And the night she believes her kidnapper was set to kill her,
to get rid of evidence, the FBI swoops in and saves her. I'll let you hear her tell her story
herself. She's at AliciaKozak.com. Dr. Angela Arnold, renowned psychiatrist, joining me from the Atlanta jurisdiction.
She's at AngelaArnoldMD.com.
But first, to Sierra Gillespie, joining me, CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter.
Sierra, let's kick it off with our friend Ryan Sims at KTVK CBS 5 Arizona.
Listen.
Not only are we talking about a girl who depends on family for everyday things but in the process she missed her own birthday party we all miss you a lot I don't know exactly
what happened but I really don't care I just want you to come back home Jessica Nunez's message is
as distressed as it is desperate without Without any warning at all, she says her daughter, Alicia Navarro,
left home last Sunday morning and hasn't been seen or heard from since.
There is no fight.
Even though she's autistic, she doesn't have where she wanders or nothing like that.
Families say Alicia left behind a note saying she was sorry for leaving
and that she would return.
On Friday, though, her disappearance took on a whole new urgency
when Alicia missed her own 15th birthday party.
In the end, families say they served Alicia's birthday cake
to the volunteers searching for her.
My smaller sibling told me,
are we going to save a piece for Alicia when she comes back?
You know, and I don't know what to say. Do you hear the pain
in mom's voice? She missed her own birthday party and instead served the birthday cake to volunteers
who were trying to find Alicia. Please help us. Let me at the get-go tell you the tip line 6 2 3 9 3 0 3,000 repeat 6 2 3 9 3 0
3,000 and Sierra Gillespie crime online.com hold just one moment because I
want to go first to Alicia Kozak survivor Alicia let me give you a rapid
fire set of questions how old were you when you were kidnapped? I was 13 years old. A young teen,
just like Alicia. However, Alicia has the added difficulty of being on the autism spectrum. You
heard the reporter say that very often she would wear the same clothes all the time, the same shoes
all the time. She's very nervous in social settings. She depends
on her family for her food, her medication. Alicia Kozak, when you were
kidnapped, you had met your kidnapper. You were shy, beautiful, sweet, great grades,
but you were a little shy and you met a friend online,
a little friend girl, right? Exactly. Who turned out to be not a girl at all. And when you were
kidnapped, isn't it true? You were lured out of your house. Yes, I was. So guys, I just wanted
those questions with Alicia and she's going to tell you her whole story because you've got to hear this.
She's a miracle, Alicia Kozak at AliciaKozak.com.
So when we're talking about this little teen girl, Alicia Navarro, who's now missing, I think she was lured out of her home. This little girl is not equipped to be even out of the house to go to a mall on her own.
I mean, I can send my twins, John, Dave, and Lucy, I sent them together,
sent them in to the grocery store the other night,
and I waited in the don't park here fire lane so I could spy on them to make sure they were okay.
They were fine.
They got some, you know, very hard to find
tea my daughter wanted. And then they came out. Long story short, this little girl, Alicia Navarro,
she can't even do that. Sarah Gillespie, a lot of people are acting like they don't care
because they think she left on her own. That's not what happened. I think this girl was
lured out online. She has no idea what's outside her home. She's autistic. Sierra, tell me what
happened. Yeah, Nancy. So some people think she ran away because she did leave a letter. We've
actually seen a letter. It's been broadcast all over. It's kind of in sloppy handwriting.
But again, when she left, she was only 14. And the letter says, quote, I ran away. I will be back.
I swear. I'm sorry. Hold on, Sierra. Let me just get the facts out there. Had she ever left the home before? No, not at all. Her mom is very strict about that. Never. To Trent Steele, joining me,
President and National Director of Investigative Operations at AntiPredatorProject.org. Trent
Steele, you are intimately familiar with this case. This little girl, I mean, for Pete's sake,
she's still wearing braces on her teeth. She's never had a date. She's never even gone to the
mall or walked around a department store by herself.
This little girl has a lot of emotional issues.
She is autistic.
Trent, this child had never, ever run away in her life.
She was happy at home.
There were no problems.
You know, the other night, Trent, the church asked the twins to play the castanets, or as I call them, the canastas.
The castanets in some kind of a video they're doing for the youth.
And I went, sure.
Well, let me tell you, when I got home, Lucy was all over me because she wanted to say yes or no on her own.
And I respect that.
We were up all night till midnight, Trent, talking about her ability to make choices for herself.
I believe it.
I believe it.
So, you know, my daughter or son have never run away.
But if she had had some kind of reaction to that, which was all my fault, and I admit it, and I learned a lot from that.
Trent, there was nothing even like that with Alicia before she disappeared.
Was there nothing? No problem? No. Are you at nothing? No, no. We've spoken with mom at length
about this and there were no problems. In fact, from what we understand, Alicia and her mom had
a fantastic relationship. They got along well, you know, without disclosing a whole lot about
the investigation, obviously, because it's still an ongoing case and we don't want to tip our hands to what we've got or, you know,
step on anything that Glendale PD is doing.
But I would say that your assessment of her being lured out of the house is pretty accurate.
Based on what we know, we think that she left the house voluntarily to go meet somebody
that she thought she knew or thought she had met online.
And once she got there, she found herself in a situation
that she never expected.
This little girl is being raped right now
and sex abused if she's still alive. Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Guys, we here at Fox Nation and Sirius XM 111 Crime Stories,
we are dedicated to helping bring children home.
There is a chance we can help bring Alicia Navarro home alive.
Before I go to Jose Santiago, who has kindly joined us from the Glendale Police Department,
Alicia Kozak, survivor who went through this same thing at age 13.
And sometimes I notice when she tells her story, she glosses over the rapes and the
sex assaults.
And I thank Dr. Angela Arnold.
It's because it's so painful to remember.
But to you, Alicia, when people keep saying she left voluntarily, I hear what they're saying. But when
you're lured out of your home as a little girl, I don't call that voluntary because children,
even under the law, can't buy a car. They can't buy a home. They can't enter into a working
agreement or buy alcohol or cigarettes because they're minors. They don't have the ability to understand what they're doing.
So when you're lured out of your home, the way I think Alicia Navarro,
this little girl with autism who can't even pick out different clothes in the morning to wear,
so she wears the same thing every day.
Alicia Kozak, I don't think that that's of your own free will.
How did you get lured out of your home, AliciaKozak.com?
Well, children are low-risk assessment, high impulse, and don't always think things through.
Wait, wait, wait.
You said children are low-risk assessment, high impulse.
Okay. I completely agree with that. I had to think through what you were saying. Go ahead, dear. Yes. And so they don't always think through
every decision that they make. And so for me, I was 13. I was online. I was a really shy child.
I didn't feel unpopular, but I still didn't feel like anybody got me.
Anybody understood me. And that's very natural. And then somebody was online
who pretended to be my friend and be into everything that I was into and to make me feel
special and important and beautiful and unique in a time when it's really hard to feel any of those things. And with Alicia, which is triggering to hear the way the relationship,
there's just so much here that lines up, including the little girl's name.
But what my mind jumps to is the fact that this was her birthday month.
Could this have had something to do with that?
Could this have been somebody luring her out as a birthday surprise? That's really interesting. With this vulnerability. Okay,
that's a really good question. Using her birthday as a lure. In your case, tell us about Alicia
Kosek, how you were lured out of your home and what took place. This person online groomed me
for a period of nine months and grooming is just pretending to be a child's
friend and making them feel all those things that I said that it's really difficult to be a kid.
Kids don't ever feel like they're really enough. They can be surrounded by all the love in the
world and still feel different. They'll feel out of place and that's really normal. And this person
made me feel normal. And I did not know the dangers of the Internet before anybody was talking about that.
And one of my vulnerabilities as well was that I lived in a safe little bubble.
My parents raised me in a world that was beautiful and loving and not dangerous.
And so I wasn't aware.
I knew that danger happened and horrible things happened, but that happened elsewhere to other people.
And on New Year's Day 2002, I agreed to meet this person. I knew that danger happened and horrible things happened, but that happened elsewhere to other people.
And on New Year's Day 2002, I agreed to meet this person. And I think about Alicia getting up, having a glass of water, her parents seeing her, her mom seeing her, this being this very normal situation, although it's very late at night.
It reminds me of my own story in that between dinner and dessert, I vanished.
And I think about my parents in that moment. Oh, wait, wait. I just got to take in what you just said.
Between dinner and dessert, I vanished.
What happened?
I walked outside of my house to meet somebody
who I thought was my friend, and he kidnapped me.
And he took me from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Virginia
and held me captive in
his basement dungeon. And I do, I don't go into the details for, for many reasons, but one being
that it is so, so hard to talk about. It's, it's not, it's not easy by any means, even though it's
been all these years, it, it's still very difficult to talk about and still, for the lack of a better term,
triggering what children suffer is horrendous.
And I appreciated your tears when you were crying for her because it is likely that she has suffered something so terrible.
And I'm just so grateful that we are talking about this case.
Alicia, hold on.
Guys, from the outside looking in and Alicia Kovac, who we're talking to right now, you would think, wow, she's got it all right.
She's young. She's beautiful. She's smart. She's articulate.
She goes every day of her life with the burden of what she lived through.
And it's turned that around to try to help other people.
At 13, she was kidnapped, taken from her own home, from a family meal.
She was held with a choke collar.
She was assaulted over and over. She was convinced the night the FBI miraculously saved her that she was
going to be killed. Alicia, why in your heart did you know that that night your kidnapper,
Scott Tyree, was going to kill you? I knew early on that he didn't have any other option than to get rid of me at
some point. So I focused on the only power that I had was trying to stay alive as long as possible
and to get him to see me. My mind jumped into some sort of something instinctual and that he
sees you as an object and an object that he wants to hurt and torture, they can see you as a human. And so I did whatever I had to do to survive
and try to, it makes my stomach hurt to say this word,
but connect with him in whatever way that I could.
And on that day, he said,
I'm beginning to like you too much.
Tonight, we're going to go for a ride.
And I knew at that point that that was not even a veiled threat.
It was very clearly a threat and that he was going to kill me,
that what I had been doing to try to humanize myself was working too well
and he was becoming attached.
So he was going to have to end my life sooner.
All this happened to Alicia Kozak at age 13, the age of my twins.
They're turning 13 in November.
Think of your own child.
This little girl, who not only is a young teen,
she's autistic.
And I believe she's been lured out of her home.
Joining me, Jose Santiago, Glendale PD.
Jose, what can you tell us about the search for Alicia Navarro? Why do you believe, or do you believe she was lured out of her home?
Nancy, I can tell you that we are looking into all the possibilities here. We have been following up
with every lead that's been coming in. We've had a couple of people say that they've spotted her in various places, but unfortunately, those leads did not turn up Alicia.
We know that that night that she disappeared, we could see footprints leading to a specific area in the yard.
Alicia did go over the fence in that area.
Hold on, hold on, hold on.
You're cutting out on me. Isaiah Santiago, Glendale PD.
So you think, how could, I'm not even going to question how you saw the footprints,
but you saw footprints leading from front door, back door.
Which one?
From the back door.
To a fence.
The officers did see those footprints that were pointed out by Alicia's parents.
And this is something that just, this child just simply disappeared.
What was on the other side of the fence?
There was some debris that appeared that she went over on that side.
I think she met somebody.
I think she met somebody.
Because this girl, correct me if I'm wrong, Trent, because I want to have the correct facts.
And I don't want the facts to blur together for me.
Jose Santiago, Glendale PD, excuse me.
Jose, you say that she, you think, went over the fence.
But this little girl had never run away, had never discussed running away.
There was no argument that night.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
Guys, we're talking about a young teen girl
on the autism spectrum.
She's missing.
Help us find her. Tip line 623-930-3000.
So Jose Santiago, what if any clues were found on the other side of the fence? There was just debris there. There wasn't much to go on in that particular area. Something that we
want to make note of is that when she disappeared, she did have her cell phone and she did have her laptop with her.
Those devices have not been used since she left the home.
So this case really is a mystery because of the fact that there is just no trace of her anywhere.
We've spoken to her friends.
We've spoken to people that were close to her, which was a very limited group.
And no one seems to have any idea where she may have gone to that evening. To Trent Steele, president, national director, investigative operations,
anti-predator project.org. Trent, that makes me believe even more so that someone lured her
and was waiting for her on the other side of the fence
because if she had gone on her own, you could at least ping or track her cell phone, right?
Or she would have made one call or one text or something if left to her own devices.
Go ahead.
Correct.
I would tend to agree with that assessment. You know, I would say Glendale PD is correct in following, you know, every lead that they get in and every scenario.
Because as of now, we don't have something that points directly to this scenario.
This is exactly what happened.
This is exactly where she went. We can just say on our end, from our investigation that we've conducted, that we feel comfortable saying on our end that we believe she met somebody online.
We believe that this online relationship, because of her autism situation, was a long-term thing.
This was not something that happened within two weeks or even six months of her going missing.
We believe she had been corresponding with this particular individual for quite a while.
She left that night to go meet this individual whom she had built some sort of trust with.
And that's when things went south.
Question to you, Jose Santiago, Glendale PD. Are there any home security surveillance cameras that could be gleaned to see where she went or who she met?
Are there any tolls that have cameras?
For instance, when Alicia Kozak went missing, Alicia, isn't it true that you went through a toll booth with your kidnapper? Several of them. And what happened when you would go through a toll booth with your kidnapper.
Several of them.
And what happened when you would go through a toll?
What would go on in your mind?
At each toll booth, I would get a glimmer of hope.
At the very first one, I thought that that was the moment that I would be rescued,
that I would speak up, that the person in the toll booth would ask me something,
would notice me crying, would report something,
and that's no fault of their own.
They weren't expecting this to be happening,
but that there's so much hope that a child is holding onto in a situation like this,
and then it can so easily be cut out, and you search for those little bits of hope.
Take a listen to our friend Linda Williams at Fox 10.
Her mother
describes her daughter Alicia as a simple girl. She attends Borgate High School, doesn't even
wear makeup, and has a very small group of friends. But she's been missing almost three
full days now, and the family is sick with worry. Everybody is in shock because, you know,
she's so vulnerable. She can't even go outside.
She's receiving therapy just to go outside somewhere. Despite dealing with many anxiety
issues early Sunday morning 14 year old Alicia Navarro left her home near 45th Avenue and Bethany
Home Road. She left this note for her family. I ran away. We'll be back. I swear I'm sorry Alicia.
Nunez says she fears her daughter is somehow involved with or was drawn away by someone
online. I want my daughter back. Just please bring her safe and sound. That's all I'm asking from, you know, she needs her help.
Don't take advantage that she's so vulnerable.
Please just bring her back.
You're hearing Alicia's mom begging for her return.
Joining me, renowned psychiatrist out of the Atlanta jurisdiction, Dr. Angela Arnold at Angela Arnold MD calm dr. Angela what does it mean to be
under the spectrum or on the spectrum when when someone is diagnosed with
autism spectrum disorder this is this is a disorder which which is it's that
people can have many different levels of this disorder, okay?
It impacts the nervous system.
There is a range and severity of symptoms that can vary widely.
Common symptoms include difficulty with communication, difficulty with social interactions.
Oftentimes they will have obsessive interests interests and they will exhibit repetitive behaviors.
And also just to let you know, autism affects one in 54 children in the United States today.
So when you hear Dr. Angela Arnold that she will wear the same clothes over and over and over needs help just to bring
herself to leave the home to function normally what does that mean to you regarding her condition
well what it means to me is she's got she's got a high level of autism and she she is a very anxious person,
so she needs everything around her to always be the same, okay?
She's so anxious, Nancy, that the feeling of the clothing on her bothers her, okay?
That's why she wears the same thing over again.
It can actually be because of the way the clothing feels on her.
I just don't see a child like this who has never left home before, never even discussed leaving home before, seem perfectly happy.
It's very hard for me to believe this little girl could devise a plan to leave her home in the dark forever.
I don't believe that, Dr. Angela.
Well, I don't either.
I don't think she devised a plan at all.
I'm quite sure that someone worked on her and lured her out of the home, maybe to her backyard.
But I do not believe that she had any part in devising a plan.
To Sierra Gillespie, CrimeOnline.com investigative reporter,
earlier we heard Jose Santiago mention there had been sightings of her that did not pan out.
What can you tell me about those sightings?
So, Nancy, there were a couple different people who came forward to police and said that they saw her somewhere in the Glendale area, kind of near her home, but not super close.
There were two separate incidences that I saw.
People said that they saw Alicia walking hand in hand with an older man, which could be a suspect in this case.
But again, those leads kind of dried up pretty quickly.
To Jose Santiago, Glendale PD.
Jose, you heard Trent Steele state that he, as part of his own investigation with the Anti-Predator Project,
firmly believes she was lured from the home and that it was a cultivated relationship that someone had
sparked with this little girl online. Is there a way that you could capture her texts? Are they
in the iCloud? Is there any way to, was her phone pinged? I mean, what can you tell me about that avenue, the forensic avenue of her phone?
What I can tell you is that, once again, her cell phone and her laptop have not turned on since the night that she disappeared from her home.
That said, we are in the process of working with different apps, different social media sites to access as much information as
possible to see who indeed she was communicating with days, weeks, months prior to her disappearance.
You know, it's important for people to know that we are exhausting every means possible
because we want the best result possible for this family. We know how difficult this is. We're getting close to the one-year mark,
and Jessica, her mom, has been over the top with this
as far as her support and cooperating with our officers
in every way, shape, or form.
We want what's best for this family.
We want to find Alicia safe.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
We are talking about a gorgeous little girl missing from her own home, Alicia Navarro.
Take a listen to our friend Ryan Simmons at KTVK CBS 5. Families say Alicia is not only autistic, but struggles to feed herself.
Day six of her missing means day six without the things she needs to get by. It hits me a lot knowing that she's out there
and not receiving the services, her medication. Across Glendale, missing posters of Alicia
plastered on the doors of businesses. Families hope even the slightest minor of tips will help
bring Alicia home. But just get the word out there.
I mean, she's somewhere out there.
My little girl is somewhere out there.
Now, Alicia's family say they believe she was coaxed to leave her home by someone else.
Police have not commented or confirmed that yet.
Joining me, a special guest, Alicia Kozak.
You can find her at AliciaKozak.com, who was lured from her home with her family there, as she just said, between dinner and dessert at a holiday meal.
She vanished.
She was gone for a long time, held by her kidnapper.
Alicia Kozak, thank you for sharing with us. What do you advise, from your point of view, having lived through this,
for police and investigators to do? Well, Alicia was heavily involved in gaming, and gaming is a
very, it's an easy way to lure children because you are playing a game with them. You are already
being a friend with them. So it's really important
to not only check those different apps, but to look into the gaming platforms as well as the
gaming forums. So to hop on to Discord and to stream and to see who she was playing those games
with. As well as, it keeps popping up in my head,
was there a gaming convention at the time
that this person could have said,
hey, there's a gaming convention in town
or a state over or wherever.
Would you like to go?
It's a birthday surprise.
You'll be home before whatever date.
Your parents won't even know you're missing, whatever.
So that there's very clear ways that she could have been
lured here there's so many vulnerabilities and that's what a predator is seeking to do they are
looking for those vulnerabilities in order to exploit them and alicia had them so clearly
and up front that it would not be a difficult task to get this child to do what you wanted her to do.
And to think that it was a good choice for her, that it was fun,
that it was something that would bring about a good outcome for her,
when in reality she is now still missing almost a year later. Trent Steele with the President and National Director of Investigative Operations,
AntiPredatorProject.org.
Trent, you heard Alicia Kozak state that Alicia Navarro was a gamer.
She loved to play games online.
What games did she play, Trent?
Well, we are aware that she was a gamer,
and because the games that she was playing
are heavily involved in our investigation,
and I don't know if Glendale PD is looking at them or not.
I'm not going to disclose specifically what games
and what gaming platforms we're looking at.
All I can do is confirm that we are aware of that
and we are looking into those. Jose I can do is confirm that we are aware of that and we are
looking. Okay, great. Jose Santiago, do you know the game so I can warn other parents about it
that she was playing? Do you know? In unison with Trent, we are keeping that information
just because it would hinder the investigation. And so we are just looking into everything that
we could find on not only her phone, but as well as her
laptop as well. Alicia Kozak, you stated that Alicia Navarro played games like my son does.
What games are you referring to, Alicia? Well, any and all games can be a risk. Any game that
has any connection to anybody can be a risk. And there are so many that children play. It's not a specific game. It is
what it's usually one that is popular because that's where the kids are. So that's where the
predators are seeking children. But what is interesting is that when it comes to gaming,
it's likely that she was also playing with other people as well. So there is hopefully a wealth of knowledge that law enforcement is looking into.
And that's really great.
But it is so important to be careful on all of these games to talk to your children about
the fact that they may be playing with somebody who isn't who they say they are and that it is such an easy way to like I said to groom a child and just to pretend
to be that friend and to spend time with them in a way that they feel safe and comfortable and
they're having fun grooming feels good and grooming feels fun in the beginning because
this child is getting what what they they feel that
they need or that they're craving. I know Lucy's not into gaming but John David
plays and I hear his friends all talking they talk about one of them plays Zelda
one of them plays fortnight one of them plays roadblocks Minecraft just all
sorts of games and I go in and out of the room all the time
when he's playing one of the games
and say, who are you playing with?
And I know who he's playing with
because he's only allowed to play with people
he knows in real life, like at school.
Take a listen to our friend Jamie Warren at KNXV ABC 15.
Friday was Alicia Navarro's 15th birthday.
Today's her 15th birthday.
Look at the way I'm celebrating it.
But Alicia wasn't at her own party.
Happy birthday to you.
Through many tears, her mom, Jessica Nunez, sings to her.
When she comes back, because I have faith she's going to come back,
she will see how much she was loved and missed.
Nunez spending the past week taping up flyers, searching for her daughter,
who she says has autism and relies on medication and the help of her family.
She doesn't know how to be here by herself. Does that make sense? She doesn't know how to take a bus. But Nunez says when she woke
up on September 15th, Alicia was nowhere to be found. She says she left behind a note that read,
I ran away. I will be back. I swear. I'm sorry. Nunez says the two never had a fight, and Alicia never mentioned she was unhappy.
It's just out of character for her.
You know, I always say when you don't know a horse, look at the track record.
This child had never even gone missing at the mall before much less run away.
You know, I'm very curious about the medication to Dr. Angela Arnold at AngelaArnoldMD.com.
What type of medication would someone be on for autism? You know, I don't think she was on
medication specifically for her autism. She may have been on some medication for her anxiety.
There are a lot of, there are other things that she could have been on medication for, but
there aren't really medications that you specifically, you know, autism is a spectrum
of disorders, okay, Nancy? So when you are treating a spectrum of disorders, you treat
different symptoms that people are having in the disorder, and people have different symptoms. Okay. And so her medication, I am quite
sure was to treat one or another of the symptoms that she was having that was under her disorder
of autism. But there's no medicine that we give people that we say, oh, this will treat your
autism. Right. Right. Okay. I understand. Listen to William Pitts, KPNX 12.
15-year-old Alicia Navarro went missing in September without a trace. She left a note
telling her mom she was leaving, but she would be back. Alicia is on the autism spectrum,
takes medication, doesn't do well in social situations. Her mom says Alicia could not,
would not just disappear on her own. That was three months ago. Never in my mind I would think that it would take this long.
She, you know, has swore to me that she was going to come back.
In those three months, Alicia's mother has had little updates.
A few possible sightings didn't pan out.
She handed out flyers in parking lots, anything to get people to look for Alicia.
Today, a quiet house on Christmas.
Alicia's young siblings playing in the next room,
not really knowing what happened to their sister.
They just think she's lost,
and hopefully she'll find her way back home.
Alicia's mom has her own ideas about what could have happened.
Alicia ran away.
She met someone on the Internet.
All the fears a parent can have.
And on a day that's supposed to be about family,
this family isn't whole.
She could be anywhere.
In my heart, I want to believe that she's okay.
I'm never going to lose that hope.
Help us bring Alicia Navarro home.
Tip line, 623-930-3000.
Thank you, Fred.