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LA BRYAN VASQUEZ: Missing from New Orleans, LA - 14 Aug 2025 - Age 12 *Found Deceased* (4 Viewers)

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Have you seen this child? Non-verbal boy missing from New Orleans home, police say​

A 12-year-old boy with a neurodevelopmental disorder has been missing from his home on Beaucaire Street since Thursday morning, and New Orleans and state police are asking for the public's help to find him.

Bryan Vasquez was reported missing at 10 a.m. Thursday and Louisiana State Police received a request to issue a level II endangered child/missing child advisory early Friday morning just before 1:40 a.m.

During a Friday press conference in the New Orleans East neighborhood of Village de l'Est, officials from several law enforcement agencies said Vasquez was last seen at around 6:33 a.m. Thursday. He was nude, walking around the neighborhood, and appeared to be in distress.

Vasquez is non-verbal and autistic, and does not understand English or Spanish. He also takes medication, officers said.

“He’s probably hungry and needs medical attention,” NOPD Major Lejon Roberts said.

On Friday, New Orleans police asked residents in the area between Chef Menteur Highway, Dwyer Road, Michoud Boulevard and Interstate 510 to check their backyards and under any raised homes or buildings in case Vasquez is located out of sight. Officers also asked residents to check any surveillance cameras they have on their houses.

“He could be scared. He could be hiding,” Roberts said.

The area also has several low-lying canals, officers said. Boats were on the scene because the bodies of water have marshes.

Vasquez is Hispanic with brown eyes and black hair, state police said. He is 5 feet, 1 inches tall and weighs between 86-100 pounds. He was last seen wearing an adult diaper and is believed to have been walking in an unknown direction.


Media - BRYAN VASQUEZ: Missing from New Orleans, LA - 14 Aug 2025 - Age 12
 
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She also says she wasn't aware he was missing till 10 a.m. so thats 5 hours plus 10 hours waiting for LE response is 15 hours altogether. He could have got a long way in that time but i would have thought that people would start reporting seeing him once it was daylight.
The last time he was picked up on camera was at 6:40 am in the 13000 block of Sevres Street. This is also the location LE found his diaper. I think he took it off and went into the water. :(
 
She also says she wasn't aware he was missing till 10 a.m. so thats 5 hours plus 10 hours waiting for LE response is 15 hours altogether. He could have got a long way in that time but i would have thought that people would start reporting seeing him once it was daylight.
It would just be getting daylight here or just between. He certainly if seen one would call in I'd think as he was only in a diaper and at a point took that off.

I honestly thought it was something with her English when she said how long to respond or so it was thought, I felt like she was saying how many hours they were there. Could be wrong,
 
In the slew of new child cases lately, I think this is the only one where a parent isn't at fault but seems likely it will end up tragically as well. Hoping not but doesn't look good.
 

New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board draining canal to help in search of missing nonverbal boy​

The search for a missing nonverbal 12-year-old boy has entered its fifth day, and crews are now working to drain a canal near where he went missing.

Crews with the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board are working to drain a canal near the home of Bryan Vasquez.


On Monday, bloodhounds from Angola and a cadaver dog were assigned to the search, which is now being handled by the New Orleans Police Department Special Victims Division.
 

United Cajun Navy brings in divers, thermal drones as search for 12-year-old Bryan Vasquez continues​

Law enforcement continues to go door-to-door looking for any new leads in the search for Bryan Vasquez.

The 12-year-old, who suffers from a developmental disability and is non-verbal, has been missing since Thursday when he was caught on a ring camera attempting to open a neighbor’s door.

Now the United Cajun Navy has joined the search efforts using thermal drones to scan parts of the Michoud neighborhood.

“Really sophisticated in picking up heat signatures and distinguishing between wildlife and human activity,” said United Cajun Navy Vice President Brian Trascher.

Vasquez’s mother believes her son would try to drink any water that he sees.

Trascher says they’ve also brought in divers to take a closer look at the water.

“Once you get past that 48-hour mark, usually the survivor survivability index goes down quite a bit, but that doesn’t change the way we do things. We go full send until somebody tells us not to,” said Trascher.

As volunteers watched crews search the water and grassy areas, they continued to pray that Vasquez would return home safely.
 
Neighbors said wildlife is a common sight in the area. “Right across from my house, there’s a 12-foot gator that hangs there,” said Chrisha Pool.

The city’s 911 log shows a call matching the police description of Vasquez’ case. It was received at 10:20 a.m. On Thursday, officers were dispatched around 3 p.m. WWL Louisiana reached out to the NOPD, asking about the timeline, and has not received a response.


According to the NOPD’s calls for service database, someone reported a missing child in the same block around 10 a.m. It shows NOPD didn’t dispatch an officer to that call until nearly 3 p.m., about five hours later.

 
Neighbors said wildlife is a common sight in the area. “Right across from my house, there’s a 12-foot gator that hangs there,” said Chrisha Pool.

The city’s 911 log shows a call matching the police description of Vasquez’ case. It was received at 10:20 a.m. On Thursday, officers were dispatched around 3 p.m. WWL Louisiana reached out to the NOPD, asking about the timeline, and has not received a response.


According to the NOPD’s calls for service database, someone reported a missing child in the same block around 10 a.m. It shows NOPD didn’t dispatch an officer to that call until nearly 3 p.m., about five hours later.

At least FIVE hours before any officer was even dispatched. Wow .
 
A 12 foot alligator does not sound like good news to me when a 90 lb naked boy is wandering around in the early hours.

This article states his weight as 86-100lbs. Thats about 6-7 stone.


NEW ORLEANS, La. (KSLA) - Louisiana State Police have issued a Level II Endangered/Missing Child Advisory for 12-year-old Bryan Vasquez.
Louisiana State Police have issued a Level II Endangered/Missing Child Advisory for...
Louisiana State Police have issued a Level II Endangered/Missing Child Advisory for 12-year-old Bryan Vasquez.(Louisiana State Police)
He was reported missing to the New Orleans Police Department at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 14.
LSP says Bryan suffers from a neurodevelopmental condition, is nonverbal and does not understand English or Spanish.
Bryan is Hispanic, has brown eyes and black hair. He is 5′1″ and weighs between 86 and 100 pounds. He was last seen wearing an adult diaper.
Brayan Vasquez missing in New Orleans doesn't understand English or Spanish
12-Year-old Brayan Vasquez has not been seen since August 14, 2025(New Orleans Police Department)
The NOPD is asking all residents in the area of Chef Menteur Highway to Dwyer Road to Michoud Boulevard to Interstate 510 to check their backyards, under raised homes/buildings, etc., in case Bryan is out of sight in a similar location.
Anyone with information on his whereabouts is asked to call the police.
Copyright 2025 KSLA. All rights reserved.
 
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If mom shared that he had issues and was barely dressed, someone is going to have some major 'splaining to do for the beyond poor response time.

He could of course be anywhere by now but I can't shake that on video he was seen trying doors. Was he sociable or was he thinking it was his own door? It makes me think people should check their basements, every nook and cranny, etc. Maybe he did not stay with the intent of getting inside a home but maybe he did. Just a thought and probably entirely wrong.
 

Nearing a week since 12-year-old Bryan Vasquez went missing, family calls for action and answers​

It’s been nearly a week since 12-year-old Bryan Vasquez went missing from his New Orleans home, and his family is still searching for Bryan and answers.

Before the sun came up on Thursday, Bryan left his home alone. Around 5:20 a.m., he was seen on a security camera about a block from his house. By 5:28 a.m., Ring video obtained by our newsroom shows Bryan just a few blocks away, walking up to a home on Toulon Street. Police say he was then seen again at 6:30 a.m. on a home security camera about five blocks away near a canal.

His mother, Hilda Vasquez, says she realized he was missing around 10 a.m. and called 911. According to data obtained by our newsroom, a 911 call matching the description of Bryan’s case came in at 10:20 a.m. It shows that NOPD wasn't dispatched until nearly five hours later at 3:05 p.m. The record states they arrived one minute later at 3:06 p.m.

Family and friends have been critical of the police response time.

They’ve also been calling for an AMBER Alert to be issued. According to the Louisiana State Police, AMBER Alerts “require specific criteria to be activated.” The agency says it follows the Department of Justice guidelines.



Family and friends say there should be another kind of alert for missing children with autism, like Bryan.

“There is a Silver Alert and an AMBER Alert — they say he doesn’t qualify. There are so many children that wander, and we will ask and we will push to have some type of 1 a response team for children with autism.”

In the meantime, they say they’re holding on to hope.

When our newsroom reached out to NOPD on Tuesday, the department said in part: “We understand the family’s anguish and are reviewing all aspects of the response internally.”

We followed up on Wednesday in hopes of getting more information, but they have not responded.
 

Search enters second week with no sign of missing 12-year-old​

It has now been 7 days since 12-year-old Bryan Vasquez went missing from his home in Village de L’Est. His family is pushing to expand the search, believing he is still alive.

“Now we need to move across Chef Menteur Highway, now we need to look by the trucks and by the storage and by the tire shops and down Almonaster and down different waterways,” said Cristi Rosales-Fajardo, a community organizer speaking on behalf of Vasquez’ mother.


Much of the search so far has focused on the Michoud Canal, which is a few blocks from Vasquez’s home. Still, Bischoff cautions not to give up hope that he could be found alive.

“It is tough after a week to keep momentum going, to keep that faith, but you have to until proven otherwise, you've got to take those steps. You've got to continue the search. The community has to remain engaged,” he said.

And Rosales-Fajardo called on law enforcement and volunteers to give that community all possible help. “We can't just sit here and say, oh, we looked in the neighborhood and he's not here. Let's just wait for his body to pop up somewhere. We can't do that because we believe he's alive. We believe he has the skills to be alive,” she said.
 
I'm glad they maintain hope as there is hope BUT it's tough to imagine a scenario in which he is alive. He needs a food and water source. He can't even go into a store or ask a person without likely being called in. The child is nude and has no clothes to put on, so he'd be noticeable instantly. The only sceanrio I can think of is if he is in someone's home and comes out when they are gone and they are unaware of it OR he sneaks into someone's home at night or something...

Water is the big one I'd say. People can survive without food longer than many think.
 

As volunteers scour New Orleans East for missing boy, NOPD faces scrutiny​

New Orleans East resident Marco Hernandez donned rain gear and grabbed a machete on Friday morning as he prepared to search the area's thicketed marshes, abandoned homes and waterways until sundown. He joined dozens of community members who have done the same since a 12-year-old non-verbal boy vanished last week.

Hernandez said his motivations are simple: "I have a son."

The search for young Bryan Vasquez went into its ninth day as the New Orleans Police Department weathered criticism over a five-hour lag from when the first call came in and an officer was dispatched to respond. NOPD Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick said Thursday that the department has launched an internal investigation.

A Times-Picayune analysis of NOPD call logs shows the response in Vasquez’ case was not unusual. The department has fielded more than 250 missing child reports so far this year, many with similar response times, the data show.

Vasquez was last seen on surveillance video leaving his Beaucaire Street home at around 5:20 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 14.

Though foul play hasn't been confirmed in Vasquez' case, police haven't ruled it out, NOPD Detective Mario Bravo said Friday. Deploying drones and dogs, officers with NOPD, the St. Bernard Parish Sheriff's Office, the St. Charles Parish Sheriff's Office, Louisiana State Police and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries canvassed an area hemmed by canals near the 13000 block of Sevres Street.

The search has galvanized volunteers from Baton Rouge to Michoacán, Mexico and spawned an international partnership.

The United Cajun Navy, founded by local boaters in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath, has joined forces with Los Topos, a nonprofit Mexican rescue team founded in the wake of a deadly 1985 Mexico City earthquake.

"The Topos did a brief training to the community volunteers, and we began the search based on what the Cajun Navy needed us to do," said Cristina Casas, a member of Baton Rouge Unido.

She is one of around 40 volunteers she says are assisting authorities in an increasingly desperate search. New Orleans Crimestoppers on Friday announced a $1,250 reward for anyone with tips that help bring Vasquez home.

"We are working very hard to find Bryan," said Bravo, who is leading the investigation.

Family members don't believe the NOPD has done enough, said Cristi Fajardo, founder of El Pueblo Nola.

She cited a lack of communication with NOPD and the five hours that lapsed between the time the missing juvenile report came in at 10:20 a.m. on Aug. 14, and the time an officer arrived on the scene at 3:06 p.m., NOPD call logs show.

“We opened up a formal investigation into that so we could find out what all of the facts are, get them in context and then make decisions," Kirkpatrick said Thursday. "The most important thing is the child."

NOPD officials at a Friday media briefing did not comment on the response times, citing the open investigation. The city on Friday denied a request for related 911 audio, dispatch notes, NOPD records and transcripts, citing a constitutional right to privacy.

A Times-Picayune analysis of NOPD's calls for service log shows 254 reports of missing juveniles so far in 2025 that culminated in a police report. Of those calls, 78 came from the sprawling Seventh District, which encompasses New Orleans East. Only five of those calls were categorized as Priority 2 calls, which merit blue light and sirens.

Those Priority 2 calls had an average response time of 49 minutes. The rest were categorized as Priority 1, a "routine" call, and their response times ranged from hours to, in one case, days, records show.

Casas said she remains hopeful, saying she and other Hispanic volunteers are assisting in the search despite what they view as a risk of potential arrest and detainment by federal immigration agents. Darlene Cuzanza of Crimestoppers re-iterated Thursday that tipsters are anonymous.

"We want further collaboration with the Hispanic community," she said. "We don't want them to be scared of us. ... This hurts us all."
 

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