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In Search For Missing 8-Year-Old, A Grim Turn

Local police and the FBI continue searching for Relisha Rudd, an 8-year-old girl missing for almost a month from a Washington, D.C., homeless shelter.
FBI
Local police and the FBI continue searching for Relisha Rudd, an 8-year-old girl missing for almost a month from a Washington, D.C., homeless shelter.

Washington, D.C., police chief Cathy L. Lanier said Thursday the search for Relisha Rudd, a missing 8-year-old girl, "may be best described as a recovery operation." Lanier's comments suggest authorities fear she is no longer alive.

Earlier this week, the FBI released a Feb. 26 surveillance video showing Relisha and Kahlil Malik Tatum, a 51-year-old janitor at the homeless shelter where Relisha's family lived, in the hallway of a local hotel. Neither one has been seen since.

Relisha went missing from the Washington shelter last month. Her mother, Shamika Young, says she left her daughter in the care of Tatum.

Officials at Relisha's school contacted Young after the girl missed more than 30 days of school. The mother told school officials her daughter was out sick, and the absences had been excused by a "Dr. Tatum."

A counselor at the school referred the case to a social worker at the D.C. Child and Family Services Agency. The social worker arranged to meet "Dr. Tatum" at the homeless shelter and discovered he was a janitor. That same day, March 19, local police initiated a missing-person investigation when Young could not account for her daughter's whereabouts.

Tatum's wife, Andrea Tatum, was found dead in a hotel room the following morning, and police then launched a manhunt spanning several states.

USA Today reported earlier this week that the Amber Alert, which blasts out to mobile phones and pre-empts television and radio broadcasts when a child goes missing, never went out in nearby states during the early days of the investigation, although local police insist that it did. State police in Virginia and Maryland told the paper they were never asked by the Washington, D.C., police to issue the alert.

Young has repeatedly said she last spoke to her daughter by cellphone on March 17. She told WTTG-TV that her other children have been removed from her custody.

The Washington Post reported that "a grand jury has been empaneled to investigate possible obstruction of justice charges against [Young]."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Gene Demby is the co-host and correspondent for NPR's Code Switch team.
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