Child Safety
Tips
What Parents Can Do To Prevent
Child Abduction
and Exploitation
Most of the more than 350,000
children abducted
in America each year are taken by relatives. Random abductions by
strangers
are rare but terrifying; experts offer the following tips to parents
for
trying to avoid them:
-
Teach your children in whose car
they may ride.
Children should be cautioned never to approach any vehicle, occupied or
not, unless accompanied by a parent or trusted adult. If a stranger
asks
for directions or assistance, the child should tell them to ask an
adult.
-
Create an atmosphere in your own
home where your
children feel safe confiding information about uncomfortable
experiences.
Ensure a sense of confidence in your children that you will believe
them
and be responsive to them if they need your help.
-
Tell your child not to go out alone
— always take
a friend, sister, or brother. Teach them always to tell an adult where
they are going, and never to take a ride with someone they don't
know.
-
Discuss with your children whose
homes in the
neighborhood they can visit, and the boundaries of where they can and
can't
go in the neighborhood.
-
Make sure your children know their
address and
telephone numbers, and how to use the telephone. Be sure they know what
to do in an emergency, and, if appropriate, how to reach you using cell
phones or pagers. Make certain they do not tell anyone who calls that
they
are home alone.
-
Don't drop children off alone at
malls, movies,
video arcades or parks.
-
Know where your children are at all
times. Be
familiar with their friends and daily activities.
-
Be sensitive to changes in your
children's behavior;
they are a signal that you should sit down and talk to your children
about
what caused the changes.
-
Be alert to a teenager or adult who
is paying
an unusual amount of attention to your children or giving them
inappropriate
or expensive gifts.
-
Teach your children to trust their
own feelings,
and assure them that they have the right to say NO to what they feel is
wrong.
-
Listen carefully to your children's
fears, and
be supportive in all your discussions with them.
-
Teach your children that no one
should approach
them or touch them in a way that makes them feel uncomfortable. If
someone
does, they should tell you immediately.
-
Be careful about babysitters and any
other individuals
who have custody of your children.
What Children Can Do To Avoid
Abduction and
Exploitation
As soon as your children can talk,
they can
begin the process of learning how to protect themselves against
abduction
and exploitation. Children should be taught:
-
Never tell someone that you are home
alone.
If a caller asks for mom or dad, tell them that they can't come to the
phone right now and take a message.
-
If you are in a public place, and
you get separated
from your parents, don't wander around looking for them. Find a clerk,
security officer, or other store employee and tell them that you have
lost
your mom and dad and need help in finding them.
-
Do not get into a car or go anywhere
with any
person unless your parents have told you that it is okay.
-
If someone follows you on foot or in
a car, stay
away from them. You don't need to go near the car to talk to the people
inside.
-
Grown-ups and other older people who
need help
should not be asking children for help, they should be asking other
grown-ups.
If a stranger asks you for directions or assistance with a "lost
puppy",
tell them to ask an adult.
-
If someone tries to take you
somewhere, quickly
get away from them and yell or scream. "This man is trying to take me
away"
or "You're not my father (or mother)." If you are riding on your
bike and someone tries to grab you, hug the bike so that they have to
pick
up both you and the bike.
-
You should always try to use a
"buddy system"
and never go places alone.
-
Always ask your parents' permission
to leave the
yard or play area or to go into someone's home.
-
Never hitchhike or try to get a ride
home with
anyone unless your parents have told you it is okay to ride with him or
her.
-
No one should ask you to keep a
special secret.
If someone does, tell your parents or teacher.
-
If someone wants to take your
picture, tell them
NO and tell your parents or teacher.
-
You have the right to say NO to
anyone who tries
to take you somewhere, touches you, or makes you feel uncomfortable in
any way.
If you have any
information
about an unsolved crime, or know the location of a felony fugitive,
call
Henry County Crime Stoppers toll free at 1-800-227-2324 or
309-937-2324.
Your call will be confidential, and if it leads to an arrest you could
receive a cash reward.

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