WA DANICA CHILDS: Missing from Federal Way, WA - 21 December 2007 - Age 17

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Danica Childs disappeared from Federal Way, Washington on December 21, 2007. She was last known to be at the Sunset Motel in Kent, WA, a hotel noted for drug and prostitution activity. Her coat, purse, and cell phone were all left behind at the motel.

NamUs - The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
NCMEC - Have you seen this child? Danica Childs

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Human trafficking: Federal Way mom’s worst nightmare
Nearly four years ago, Danica Childs disappeared at age 17. Her last known whereabouts: a Kent motel associated with drugs and prostitution.

Dianne Zoro and her children lived in an apartment near 272nd Street and Pacific Highway South — a Federal Way intersection notorious for prostitution activity. Months before vanishing, Danica began dating a man she met on the bus. He was rumored to be a pimp, Zoro learned, and Danica was starting to hang out with “the wrong people.”

In hindsight, that was yet another red flag from her at-risk daughter that Zoro wishes she would have taken more seriously.

Danica had no history of running away. Despite a few behavioral issues, she seemed to be on the right track with high school graduation on the horizon, Zoro said. Shortly before disappearing, Danica was staying out all night.

One day, Zoro and Danica’s friends knew something was wrong. Danica could not be reached and had not called any close friends or family. No one knew her whereabouts. Her purse, coat and phone were found at the Sunset Motel in Kent in December 2007. After listening to voicemail messages on Danica’s phone, Zoro discovered her daughter had been working as a prostitute. Hearing those sexually graphic messages from clients, known as “johns,” was gut-wrenching, she said.

Zoro remains hopeful her daughter will eventually come home to Federal Way. When putting all the pieces together, Zoro believes Danica may have been kidnapped and sold against her will.

“I still believe she’s alive and out there somewhere,” Zoro said. “It gets harder the more time that goes by.”

The past four years have yielded a few dead-end tips, she said. Zoro and volunteers posted fliers across the city and area. Police databases have shown no arrests for Danica, whose fingerprints are on file. No calls were made on her cellphone since its discovery at the Kent motel.

One anonymous caller from South Carolina claimed to know Danica’s location, but nothing came of the tip. The most recent lead came from California this fall after a woman involved in prostitution was found to have an Auburn-based cellphone number.

Authorities once contacted Zoro because a body discovered near Ft. Lewis in Pierce County happened to fit Danica’s profile.

“When I hear about a body of a dead girl, I think about it,” Zoro said. “It’s upsetting to hear from law enforcement that it fits the description.”

Knowing what she knows now, Zoro is even more protective of her other daughters and keeps close tabs on them. She also joined a new Federal Way community action team that’s dedicated to stopping human trafficking and related activities in the Federal Way area. The team is focused on education and assisting law enforcement.

“I’ve wanted to do something about this for a long time,” Zoro said. “Parents need to know it’s basically in every middle school and every high school in Federal Way. … Until it happens to you, you don’t want to believe it.”
 

'I Had No Clue,' Says Mom Whose Teen Vanished After Leading A Double Life

It's been more than 11 years since Dianne Zoro has seen her smart, outgoing daughter, a poet and talented dancer who vanished one December afternoon after failing to show up for a Christmas shopping trip with her sisters and friends.

Every year, as winter approaches, Zoro is once again reminded of the last conversation she had with her daughter and the discovery she made in the days after Christmas that revealed her 17-year-old daughter Danica Child's secret double life and galvanized her own fight against human trafficking.

Childs disappeared December 21, 2007 from Federal Way, Washington, after failing to show up for a planned shopping trip.

Zoro had talked to her daughter on the phone earlier that day.

"It was just a normal conversation and she said that she was going to come to our house a little bit later because she had plans to go Christmas shopping with her sisters and her friends," Zoro told Oxygen.com

After the two hung up, Zoro remembered something else she wanted to tell her daughter and immediately called back, but it went straight to voicemail.

"Every time I called, that's what would happen," she said.

Childs had told her mother her phone was dying, so initially Zoro wasn't overly concerned. But after she missed the shopping trip and still hadn't been seen by friends the next day, Zoro contacted police.

In the days that followed, disturbing details would begin to emerge that revealed that Childs, once a happy and energetic child, had been sexually exploited in the months before she disappeared.

Zoro would first learn that her daughter, who had been staying at a friend's house, had spent the night before her disappearance at a local motel that was known for drugs and prostitution. Her mother thought the discovery was a "red flag," but she also knew teens that age would often rent out hotel rooms to have a place to party.

Even more troubling was the discovery of Child's coat, purse, and cell phone, all left behind at the motel without any trace of Childs herself.

Then, just a few days after Christmas, Zoro was able to figure out the voicemail password to her daughter's phone. She listened to a series of "really, really heartbreaking messages" on her daughter's phone that made it clear that she was being exploited.

"That was a big shock. I had no clue," Zoro said. "I knew it was around, I knew it was around our area, but I didn't realize that it was affecting these young girls."

The messages, which hadn't been listened to, started from the time Zoro had first tried to call her daughter back, suggesting that Childs may have vanished shortly after the phone call between the mother and daugther.

"It seems that she did not use the phone at all from that point on," she said.
 

Missing Federal Way girl added on trucking trailers

Dianne Zoro had seen the girls along Pacific Highway South before.

The mother of four daughters saw girls walking to the bus stop as she drove home from work to her Federal Way apartment near 272nd Street nearly every day since she moved here. She always felt bad for the girls who, for whatever reason, felt they needed to sell their bodies for money. She envisioned the girls as young single mothers with babies they couldn’t afford to feed. But she never paid much attention to them.

Until her 17-year-old daughter went missing.

“I started driving that stretch day and night and all of a sudden it struck me how many girls were out there,” said Zoro, whose daughter Danica Childs disappeared from a Kent motel associated with drugs and prostitution in December of 2007. “Then looking at their faces and realizing that Danica was 17, but I was seeing girls who were much younger.”

Zoro later learned that her daughter’s boyfriend was a pimp and Danica was working as a prostitute.

During an event on Monday morning, Zoro and three of her daughters were at Gordon Trucking in Pacific, Wash., where company officials and members of the Washington State Patrol unveiled a trucking trailer with a large poster of Danica on the side.

Gordon Trucking currently has 100 trailers that feature posters of 21 missing children from Washington and Oregon. The company’s fleet travels across the U.S. and in Canada, along freeways, interstates and highways like Pacific Highway South.

“It’s weird to see her face right there,” Zoro said when she saw her daughter’s face on the side of the truck.

Gordon Trucking, in partnership with the state patrol and IMagic, highlighted the Homeward Bound program with the addition of Danica’s poster to its fleet on Monday.

Renee Padgett, a trooper who works in state patrol’s Commercial Vehicle division, came up with the idea for the program in 2005.

“She worked as a commercial vehicle enforcement trooper at the time and she thought if we can get these posters out there, people are on the road every day, so what better idea than to put pictures of missing kids on the side of trucks,” said Carri Gordon, a manager in state patrol’s Missing and Unidentified Persons unit. The unit identifies missing children who will be featured on Gordon Trucking’s trailers.

She said her unit identified Danica for this program after one of the unit’s case workers spoke with Zoro on a regular basis. Gordon said her unit considers several factors when choosing missing children for this program, including parental support and whether family members have quality photos of their loved ones.

“The hope is that this will generate some leads on where Danica is,” Gordon said. “That’s the goal of the program is to get her face out there, so that the public will know that we’re still looking for her, that she has not been forgotten. We want those phone calls to happen.”

Erik Anderson, director of operations for Gordon Trucking, added that the company “hopes that we can bring somebody home.”

Danica’s oldest sister Jasmin Johnson said she felt relieved to see her sister’s poster on the trailer.

“To know that it’s going to go all around the country is a really good feeling,” Johnson said.

She recalled the day her younger sister went missing. She hadn’t heard from Danica, so she called her but didn’t get any response.

“That was unusual because we usually kept in contact every day,” Johnson said. “So when she wasn’t responding immediately my heart sunk because I felt that something was wrong.”

Zoro didn’t see her daughter the day she disappeared, but she had spoken to her on the phone.

“I was on my way home from work and we just had a conversation and she said she was coming home and she was going to go Christmas shopping with all her sisters and her friends but she just didn’t show up.”

Danica’s friends later called Zoro and said they were concerned that they hadn’t heard from her. Danica’s boyfriend, who she met on the bus, also called Zoro and said Danica was with him at the Sunset Motel earlier that day. She left around 3 p.m. and was supposed to come back with a friend who had a car to pick him up.

“But she never came back and she left her coat and her purse,” Zoro said.

She figured out her daughter’s voicemail password and listened to the sexually graphic messages from clients, known as “johns.”

“Listening to them was really hard because it was obvious that prostitution was involved,” Zoro said.

She said she believes her daughter’s boyfriend sold Danica to somebody.

“Her friend eventually told us that Danica had reported to her that she witnessed (her boyfriend) selling another girl,” she said. “I never had any doubt that she left of her own accord. There was just no reason for her to, boom, leave without contacting anybody.”


Zoro said her family’s biggest challenge has been coping with the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and the depression that comes with losing a loved one.

“We know nothing,” Johnson said. “It’s like an indescribable feeling. If you loose someone and you know what happened, at least you know. But when you have absolutely no idea is she OK, was she murdered, is she in somebody’s basement, did somebody completely brainwash her – the mystery is unreal.”

Zoro has worked with the Federal Way Coalition Against Trafficking since 2011, raising awareness and educating the community about sex trafficking. Throughout the years, she has learned that trafficking happens to students in Federal Way, including some who attend Todd Beamer, Decatur, Federal Way high schools, and even some middle schools.

“We learned that at Federal Way High School for a while, girls were having roses delivered and then the girls would be gone,” Zoro said. “So the school and police finally figured out it was a signal. If they got a rose delivered, it was like they had a job. That’s why we’re really interested in working in the schools to educate students and teachers.”

She also hopes to raise awareness in the Federal Way community that trafficking is a real issue and kids don’t just run away because they’re bad kids, she added.

“She didn’t leave of her own free will, and if she is able to come home now, she’s being held back by fear, shame, embarrassment, things of that nature. But she wasn’t just being a bad kid.”
 

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