Snatched in the night-what every parent should know about home
invasion abductions
Home invasions have made the news recently as a frightening form
of child abduction. This type of abduction is not new, but it is
starting to become more common as traditional forms of child
abduction are becomming less effective.
This type of child snatching has parents panicked and paranoid.
After all, where is your child safe it not in their own home?
However, very few parents understand that with a little safety
training, this type of abduction can usually be prevented just
as easily as other forms of child abduction.
How it works An abductor will sneak into the child's home at
night, attempting to gain access to the child. He or she will
then either threaten the child with harm, or talk the child into
coming with them. The child is snatched out of their bed,
usually without a sound or commotion, and unfortunately, is
rarely seen alive again.
What it depends on This type of abduction, is obviously a
stealth abudction. It is secretive, quiet, and depends on the
child's compliance, in one form or another. They need silent
kids, period.
Defeating it Noise. Plain and simple. Compliance gets a child
nowhere, they need to yell and make a ruckus. If a person did
not intend to physically harm the child, this will just scare
them off. Even if they did intend to harm the child, it is
highly unlikely, that in the commotion, the abductor will choose
to kill the child on the spot as opposed to run off. Silence
with kids is death. Yelling and screaming is life.
Training your kids It is important that you sit down and talk
with them about this type of abduction. Tell them that if anyone
ever awakes them in the middle of the night, they are to scream
as loud as they can and call for help. They need to scream, kick
the walls, knock over furniture, make as large of a ruckus as
they can in order to yell for their parents and try to get away.
If the person grabs them and try's to run off, they should hang
onto doors, windows, whatever they can to resist. Teach children
to do this even if the person says they will kill them if they
make noise. Explain to them the reality outlined earlier, that
they are just saying that to get compliance and will probably
run off if you make noise. If you go with them, they might kill
you anyway.
A parents role If at all possible, encourage children,
especially younger children, to sleep with their doors open at
night. Parents should also keep their doors open, (when not
engaged in extra curricular activities) so that they have a
means to hear their child if they happen to scream in the middle
of the night. Not only does this ensure you hear them in the
rare event that someone is in their room, but it will also come
in handy for the everyday night terrors and other needs that
your little ones require your assistance for.
Friends don't come a knocking in the night... What many parents
don't seem to realize, more likely of a scenario than threats,
is that the child willingly walks out with the abductor because
it is someone the child knows. Around 60% of all children
murdered are taken by a close friend or relative.
It is important to teach children to never go anywhere with
anybody except their parents in the middle of the night. If
someone awakes you at night, it doesn't matter who they are, you
scream as loud as you can, and you get your mom and dad, no
exceptions. Teach children that there is never any circumstance
where someone they know would have a need to enter their room or
retreive them at night without their parents knowing.
Additional resources All parents should sit down at some point
with their children and go over this subject. Global Children's
Fund also publishes a book, "Something Scary Happened", which
teaches kidsabout what to do in this situation. Have a happy and
safe year!