The
police department in Sharonville, Ohio, was one of numerous
agencies that received a request from authorities in Kentucky to
help search local motels for men who the teen said had been
holding him, Sharonville Police Chief Steve Vanover told
Reuters.
However, details of the case remained murky Wednesday evening.
A police report filed by a Sharonville detective summarized a
dramatic story of escape from kidnappers, which Vanover said was
told to Sharonville police by officials in Campbell County,
Kentucky. Vanover said he could not confirm whether the account
was true.
In the report, Sharonville Detective Earl Davis summarized the
request from Campbell County, saying officials there had
reported finding a 14-year-old boy who said he was Timmothy.
The teen said he had been held by two white men for seven years,
and had escaped from them and run across a bridge from Ohio into
Kentucky. He described the men as "body-builder types" and said
they were driving a Ford SUV and staying at a Red Roof Inn,
Davis said in his summary of the Campbell County request.
The FBI's Louisville, Kentucky, office said it was working with
the FBI in Ohio, as well as police in Newport, Kentucky, Aurora,
Illinois, and other agencies on a missing child investigation.
The agency offered no additional information and did not
identify a child.
Timmothy Pitzen was last seen with his mother in May 2011,
according to the Chicago Tribune, when she pulled her 6-year-old
son out of school in the Chicago-area suburb of Aurora and took
him on a trip to a zoo and water parks. Amy Fry-Pitzen committed
suicide soon after in a motel room, the newspaper and other
media said.
She left a note that said, "Tim is somewhere safe with people
who love him and will care for him," ABC7 Chicago reported
Wednesday. "You will never find him."
The FBI, Campbell County Sheriff's Department and Newport,
Kentucky police did not immediately respond to requests for
comment from Reuters on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; editing by Bill Tarrantand
Leslie Adler)
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