desaparecida y haga clic en ANALIZAR
para generar la evaluacion
en las primeras 3 horas. La rapidez salva vidas.
Una guia para padres, familiares y cualquier persona que busque a una persona desaparecida.
Este sistema le ayuda a entender a donde podrian llevar a una persona desaparecida, que tan rapido necesita actuar y que decirle a las autoridades. No necesita conocimientos tecnicos.
When a child or woman goes missing, traffickers use specific highway corridors to move them quickly. This system analyzes 427 real criminal cases across 45 states to predict which corridors and cities are most likely based on where the person went missing, their age, and the circumstances.
It does not replace law enforcement. It gives you information to share with police, the FBI, or NCMEC so they can act faster.
Use las tres pestanas en el lado izquierdo:
This is the most important mode. Enter the missing person's information and the system will calculate a threat score, predict which highway corridors they might be moved along, and tell you how much time you have to act.
Shows all 22 highway corridors ranked by threat level. Use this to understand the bigger picture of which routes traffickers use in your area.
Search by name, city, state, or corridor. Every case in this system is a real criminal prosecution. Use this to find patterns in your area or show law enforcement what has happened on the corridors near you.
Type the missing person's name in the first box.
Enter their age and gender. Age is critical — the system uses age profiles from 451 real cases to match which corridors target which age groups. Younger children (under 10) face different threats than teenagers (14-17).
You have three ways to enter where they were last seen:
If the system does not recognize your city or zip, you can enter latitude and longitude manually. To find coordinates: open Google Maps, right-click the location, and click the coordinates to copy them.
Enter how many hours they have been missing. This drives two critical features:
Select the circumstances if known: Did they run away? Were they abducted? Were they lured by someone online? If you don't know, leave it as "Unknown."
Check any risk multipliers that apply. These are factors that increase danger:
If you are unsure about any of these, leave them unchecked. The system will still work.
Click the red "ANALYZE CORRIDOR THREAT" button. The right panel will show:
When you enter hours missing, the system calculates a travel radius based on highway speed (accounting for stops, fuel, and fatigue over time). It then finds every city within that radius and ranks them:
Cities that are on a predicted trafficking corridor are highlighted — these are the highest-priority locations for law enforcement to check.
After running an analysis, the Full Alert Output section has two buttons:
The downloaded file includes everything: name, age, last known location (including street address and GPS coordinates), risk score, reachable cities, corridor predictions, and matching cases.
If you're overwhelmed or want to see how the system works before entering real information, scroll down in Alert mode and click one of the Quick Scenario buttons. These pre-fill the form with a realistic example — a 14-year-old runaway in Sherman, TX, or a 12-year-old foster child in Atlanta — so you can see the full analysis.
Research shows that 75% of children who are killed by abductors are killed within the first 3 hours. This is why the system shows a "Golden Hour Countdown." If the timer is still active, there is still a strong chance of recovery if law enforcement acts now.
Do not wait to see if the person "comes back on their own." Report immediately. You cannot over-report a missing child.
Click the ESCANER tab to see the Auto-Analysis Engine. This system works without any input from you:
When a green "LIVE" indicator is showing in the top bar, the system is actively monitoring and analyzing incoming alerts.
Behind the scenes, the system uses a pattern intelligence engine trained on 451 real cases. For each of the 23 highway corridors, it knows:
When you enter a missing person's details, the system matches their profile against every corridor's historical pattern. A 10-year-old missing from Sherman, TX matches the US-75 corridor profile (average victim age 9.6) much more closely than the I-95 corridor (average victim age 15.8). This makes the predictions more accurate.
After running the analysis, use the COPIAR or DESCARGAR buttons on the Full Alert Output. Then:
Tell them: "I have corridor prediction data from a case database of 451 trafficking prosecutions that suggests these routes and cities. Can you check with highway patrol along these corridors?"
This system works on phones and tablets. The layout will adjust to fit your screen. On a phone:
The system automatically pulls active missing children reports from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) and the AMBER Alert system (OJP) every 5 minutes. When alerts are active, you will see a green "LIVE" indicator in the top bar and the count of currently active cases. The Auto-Analysis Engine in the Scanner tab processes every alert automatically.
This system is built on 451 real criminal prosecutions across 46 states and 23 interstate corridors. Every case is a documented conviction with named defendants, specific sentences, and identified victims. Sources include:
The intelligence engine analyzes patterns across all 451 cases to identify which corridors are most active, which age groups are most targeted on each route, and which circumstances most commonly lead to trafficking. This is not guesswork — it is statistical analysis of proven criminal patterns.
No esta molestando a nadie al reportar. Every law enforcement agency in the country would rather investigate a false alarm than miss a real abduction. Confie en sus instintos. Si algo se siente mal, esta mal. Llame ahora.
Creado por Resistor Technologies U.S. | resistortechnologiesus@proton.me