WA TEEKAH LEWIS: Missing from Tacoma, WA - 23 Jan 1999 - Age 2

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Teekah's photo is shown age-progressed to 17 years. She was last seen on January 23, 1999, at approximately 10:30 p.m. at the New Frontier Lanes bowling alley in Tacoma, Washington. Teekah is Biracial. She is Black and American Indian. Teekah was wearing a Tweety Bird T-shirt, white sweat pants and Air Jordan sneakers. She has eczema, with a skin discoloration on her face and left side of her buttocks. Teekah's ears are pierced. When she was last seen, her hair had a silver streak on the front right side. Teekah may require medical attention.
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Teekah and nearly a dozen of her family spent the evening of January 23, 1999 at New Frontier Lanes bowling alley on Center Street in Tacoma, Washington. Teekah was last seen playing a race car video game in the arcade section of the alley between 10:00 and 10:15 p.m.

She was a few feet from her family members and approximately six feet from the building's exit. Teekah's mother, Theresa English, said that she turned away for a moment and the child vanished. She has never been seen again. An extensive search of the area produced few clues as to her whereabouts.

A witness at the bowling alley told authorities that an unidentified maroon Pontiac Grand Am sped out of the parking lot during the night Teekah disappeared. The vehicle may have had four doors and was possibly a late 1980s or early 1990s model with dark-tinted windows and a large spoiler.

Another witness stated that an unidentified Caucasian man may have followed a child to one of the alley's exits during the night. The individual is described as being in his thirties with shoulder-length brown hair, facial pockmarks, a mustache and a large nose. Investigators do not know if the vehicle or the unidentified man are connected to Teekah's case.

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Teekah Lewis: 21 years later, witness account could be key to solving case of missing girl

It has been 21 years since 2-year-old Teekah Lewis vanished from a Tacoma bowling alley. For the first time, a witness from that night is telling his story publicly about a man he saw with Teekah.

Detectives feel this could be the lead that might break the case wide open.

The witness, who Q13 News is calling John, was 17 when he and his family spent their Saturday night at New Frontiers Bowling Alley in Tacoma.

“We’d gone to that bowling alley plenty of times. It’s the kind of place where people can go with their families and kids just roam,” says John.

New Frontiers was often crowded, especially on weekends, but in a sea of people, one was memorable to John.

“I had to use the restroom, so I went towards where the restrooms were. This rude guy bumped into me, with this little girl, and he was white - the little girl was mixed ... I just thought it was a father rushing his daughter to the restroom.”

John says the moment stuck with him because the man bumped into his shoulder hard but didn’t apologize. He seemed to be in a rush. The rest of the night went on and seemed normal until John and his family walked out to leave and noticed police in the parking lot.

But John says officers didn’t disclose what, or who, they were looking for.

A couple of days later, John saw the little girl from the bowling alley plastered all over the news. That was when he realized the man he’d seen with the child he’d later know to be Teekah Lewis was not her father.

Now the 2-year-old was gone and John felt helpless, but he knew he had to say something. He was interviewed by police in January 1999 but never heard anything after that.

He often wondered if his information was irrelevant or not useful to law enforcement.

It wasn’t until two decades later that a cold case investigator combing through thousands of pages in the case file came across John’s information and instantly knew it was significant.

“This witness actually describes an encounter with Teekah by this individual and the description of the individual is not generic. It’s specific and it’s detailed and unique enough that the description can maybe identify the last person who maybe had contact with Teekah,” says Det. Steven Reopelle.

When Reopelle contacted John, his memory of the man’s face remained the same.

“A gentleman with pockmarks ... he was holding this little girl’s hand when he bumped into me and I was thinking 'this is the rudest person in the world,'” says John.

Pockmarks could be the key.

“I was unfamiliar with this individual with the pockmarked face, so as I was reading through the file and I saw that I did think it was important right away and I thought maybe this is the one piece of information that could break this case open,” says Reopelle.

And when the detective kept combing through the file, he found another tip that stuck out to him. This one came in while a news crew was out at the bowling alley.

“About a week after Teekah’s disappearance they were filming a reenactment down at the bowling alley and someone who was standing there watching noticed a person with a pockmarked face who was also watching the reenactment, and the witness who called in thought he was acting strangely,” says Reopelle.

At that time there would’ve been no way for the caller to know a man with pockmarks had come up in the investigation.

Det. Reopelle says the man they’re looking to identify is white, 5 feet 11 inches tall with a husky build. He’s described as having shoulder length curly brown hair with a thick mustache and a heavily pockmarked face.

The night of Teekah’s disappearance he was wearing a blue plaid shirt and faded jeans.

 

FBI working to crack some of Washington’s most haunting missing children cases

Then there are cases, albeit rare, but still horrifying: stranger abductions.

Such seems to be the case in the haunting disappearance of 2-year-old Teekah Lewis, who was taken from a Tacoma bowling alley in 1999. It's a case that Agent O'Reilley says the department will never give up on.

"That certainly is one that's solvable, its something we have a lot of information and we're looking for more information from the community to find out exactly what happened."

The gut-wrenching unknowns consume Teekah's mother no less now than they did 21 years ago.

"I need to know what happened to my baby," says Theresa Lewis.

Earlier this year Q13 News shared an interview with an eyewitness who saw a Caucasian man with shoulder lengthy curly hair, a thick mustache, and a heavily pockmarked face walking with the toddler towards the exit.

"Out of 21 years this is the first year that I've ever felt that she wasn't coming home, and it breaks my heart because all these years, I really thought she would come home...all I've ever wanted in 21 years is answers."

It's the anguish, heartbreak, and nightmare of it all that fuels the agents to work harder than any of us could ever know.

"I think the hardest part of the job is also the best part of the job, its that you're working cases, knowing the background of these children, and you're working with their loved ones and they're telling you stories about their childhood, so it's not just a case to us; it's's a child. And you know their loved ones and you want to be a part of adding to the next chapter of their future," says Agent O'Reilley.

If you have any information on any missing child, you can contact the FBI at 1-800-225-5342. You can also always submit an anonymous tip through Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.
 
Tacoma police to give update on 1999 disappearance of Teekah Lewis Thursday
Tacoma police are expected to provide an updated age progression photo of Teekah done by Louisiana State University’s FACES Laboratory Thursday. Information about a vehicle of interest related to the case and photos of similar make and model cars will also be provided.

Teekah’s family members, including her mother and sister, are also expected to speak Thursday.

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22 years later, case of kidnapped Tacoma toddler remains unsolved​

Teekah Lewis, who was kidnapped as a child from a Tacoma bowling alley, remains missing after 22 years.

She was only 2 years old when she vanished.

As the case remains open, detectives have released an age-progression photo showing how she may look now that she would be in her mid-20s.


Teekah Lewis: Police release new age progression photo of missing girl​

Tacoma police released an updated age progression photo of Teekah Lewis, the 2-year-old girl who vanished from a Tacoma bowling alley nearly 24 years ago.

During a Thursday news conference, Tacoma Police Department Det. Julie Dier and Teekah's mother, Theresa Czapiewski, spoke about her kidnapping.

Her family said they haven't given up on searching for her.

Police also released an updated age progression photo on Thursday of Teekah. It was done by Louisiana State University’s FACES Laboratory.


 
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Through it all, Czapiewski, 51, has held candlelight vigils for her daughter each year. She has also gotten Teekah’s missing person’s poster displayed on the side of semi-trucks used for shipping and transportation. The girl’s mother has moved to Virginia, but she said she flew back to Tacoma earlier this year to meet with police Chief Avery Moore to discuss the new age-progressed photos. She said the new photo brought her to tears. “We want it nationwide,” Czapiewski said. “We want everybody across the United States, not even just the states, you know different countries to see this because you never know, she could be anywhere. It’s time to bring her home.” Anyone with information is asked to call Tacoma-Pierce County Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477).
 
Another age-progression for Teekah, done by NCMEC. Alongside the other previously released age-progression image.

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Where is Teekah Lewis? 2-year-old vanished from Tacoma bowling alley 24 years ago
It's been 24 years since 2-year-old Teekah Lewis was kidnapped from a Tacoma bowling alley.

A candlelight vigil is also planned for Teekah at the Tacoma Police Department Monday at 6 p.m. to bring attention to the ongoing search.


Theresa Czapieski, Teekah’s mother, said she cried when she first saw the new age progression photo of her daughter.

“After all these years, they finally made a picture that looks like my daughter,” Czapieski said in a previous interview. “I’m hoping this picture can bring new light to the case, bring more people calling in saying, ‘We know where this child is,’ or, ‘We know what happened to [Teekah].”

Tacoma police detective Julie Dier said Teekah’s body nor the clothing she was wearing at the time of her disappearance were ever found, adding that, “It is a possibility she is still alive and does not know she was a kidnap victim.”

Numerous tips have been called in over the years, but police still don't have a suspect in the case.

Tacoma police also released information about a possible vehicle of interest seen speeding away from the bowling alley parking lot shortly after Teekah went missing. Photos of a similar make and model car were shared with the public.

Witnesses described the vehicle as a late ‘80s or early ‘90s Pontiac Grand Am with tinted windows and a spoiler. Dier said witnesses described the vehicle as a maroon color but said, “under the lights [the vehicle] could be something darker or lighter.”



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Photos of a similar make and model of a vehicle seen fleeing the area the night Teekah Lewis went missing in Jan. 1999. Tacoma police said witnesses described the vehicle as a maroon late ‘80s or early ‘90s Pontiac. (Tacoma Police Department)

In 2020, police released a description of a man seen at the bowling alley the night of Teekah’s disappearance they believe may be connected to the case. Detectives still hope to find and talk with the man after all these years.

Officials described the man as white, between the ages of 30-40, about 5-foot-11-inches tall with a husky build. He had wavy brown hair, a thick mustache and pockmarks on his face, police said.
 
25 years have gone by since Teekah Lewis went missing. Tacoma police to spotlight case
Twenty-five years ago, Teekah Lewis disappeared from a Tacoma bowling alley. Lewis’ family and police hope to bring more attention to her case through a candlelight vigil Tuesday.


Local businesses are partnering with Tacoma Police to distribute images of Lewis at the time of her disappearance, as well as age-progression photos of what she might look like today. The images will be on posters, billboard and cargo vans, according to a Tacoma Police Department news release.

Lewis’ family and the police department hope that by bringing attention to the case tips will be obtained which will help reunite Lewis with her family. People with information are asked to visit the Crime Stoppers of Pierce County or call 800-222-TIPS.

A candlelight vigil will be held at Tacoma Police Headquarters at 3701 S. Pine St., which the public is invited to attend at 7:30 p.m.

Prior to the vigil, there will be an invitation-only panel discussion on Lewis’ case and the broader topic of missing children investigation at 6:30 p.m. Panel guests will include Theresa Lewis, Lewis’ mother, representatives from the Tacoma Police Department, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the Washington State Patrol, the release said.
 

Teekah Lewis vanished from a Tacoma bowling alley in 1999. Her mom hasn't stopped searching for her since​

Tacoma's New Frontier Lanes bowling alley was packed with families on Jan. 23, 1999. Theresa Czapiewski and her family, including her 2-year-old daughter Teekah Lewis, were having a blast.

It was Czapiewski’s turn to bowl. Before she rolled, she turned and saw Teekah and other children playing the arcade games a few feet away.

She threw the ball and turned to walk back to her chair. She scanned the area where she had just seen her daughter trying to reach the pedals of the racecar driving game, but she was nowhere to be seen.

“Immediately, my heart stopped,” Czapiewski said.

In the minutes after Teekah vanished, her family alerted an off-duty officer. The bowling alley was then shut down and police started to check the vehicles leaving the parking lot, but she was never found.

The arcade games were located directly next to an emergency exit door. If someone kidnapped Teekah, they could have been out of view within seconds.

"The days go by, the minutes go by, the hours go by, and there's no news," Czapiewski said. "None."

There have been many theories over the years about what happened to her. Tacoma police received over 700 tips during the investigation.

Tacoma Police Detective Julie Dier is assigned to the case and said investigators are still determined to solve it.

“Back then, there were no cameras, no videos of this incident, there was no physical evidence to look at and test to actually find out what happened,” Dier said.

Dier said time has not been on their side for this case. With no physical evidence, even recent technological developments aren't of much help.

“People forget," Dier said. "People’s memories get replaced with what they think they remember."

"I know it's been 25 years and some people give up hope, but I can't because I think my daughter's out there somewhere," Czapiewski said.
 
Always been one that sticks with a person and yeah, they really had and have nothing. Cameras would have made such a difference in a different time.

Odds are she was dead not long after if we just go by the likelihoods and the odds. Of course she could have been kept and is alive, always possible, maybe someone wantted a child but she would have been too young to recall who she is or that she even had another life. I don't recall If she was to the younger side of two or the older side but if the older side, she MIGHT have some memories. I do. A handful. Not tons. I recall some fair detail with them as well.

It's still unlikely and anyone who had her would want those memories gone or explain them away. The best chance sadly of ever solving this case is if one day her body is come across. I'd assume they have her DNA or at least the parents and so on to check against any body found the right age in this country?

It's been some time ago BUT NOT THAT long in that did the emergency door not have an alarm? I'd also say if I saw someone going out and emergency exit and with a child in arms or by hand, even if I had no reason to suspect it was not the child's parent, I'd notice it as no one should be using exits marked for emergency only. So imo not na person noticed or that was not the exit used.

As they say, there is basically no evidence in this one... Sad.
 

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