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Missing

Tavish Sutton










Missing Person Case September 2021



Missing Person Case September 2021



Missing Person Case September 2021


Age at the time of disappearance: -progressed imAge at the time of disappearance: of Tavish at Age at the time of disappearance: 17 (approximately 2010) (Photographs of Tavish are unavailable); Sketches of women wanted for questioning in Tavish's abduction




Date reported missing : 03/09/1993

Missing location (approx) :
Atlanta, Georgia
Missing classification : Non-Family Abduction
Gender : Male
Ethnicity :
Black


DOB : 02/10/1993 (28)
Age at the time of disappearance: 1 month old
Height / Weight : 2'0, 8 pounds
Description, clothing, jewerly and more : A white flower-print t-shirt, a diaper and Grady Memorial Hospital tags around his wrist and ankle.
Medical conditions : Tavish was recuperating from minor surgery to treat an abcess at the time of his March 1993 abduction. He required continuing medical care to treat his condition.
Distinguishing characteristics, birthmarks, tattoos : African-American male. Black hair, brown eyes. Tavish had a quarter-inch surgical incision in his left buttock at the time of his disappearance.





Information on the case from local sources, may or may not be correct : Tavish was admitted as a patient in the Hughes Spalding pediatric unit of Grady Memorial Hospital on Butler Street in Atlanta, Georgia on March 6, 1993. He was in the custody of the Department of Family and Children Services (DCS) at the time.
He underwent minor surgery over the weekend and was recuperating in a semi-private room in the ward during the early morning hours of March 9. His roommate was another infant, and that baby's mother and sister were spending the night in the room also. A nurse checked in on them at 6:45 a.m.; at the time, Tavish's roommate's mother and sister were asleep on a couch in the room. When the nurse checked the room again fifteen minutes later, Tavish was gone.
Tavish's roommate's family was thoroughly investigated by police; their home was searched and all the family members were interviewed. They were eventually cleared as suspects in his case. Tavish's mother was being treated for schizophrenia in a mental institution at the time of his abduction; neither she nor other relatives were considered suspects in his disappearance. In fact, no one in his birth family was ever even aware that Tavish was in the hospital at the time of his abduction.
There were two persons of interest in Tavish's disappearance. One was an "agitated" man who tried to enter the hospital's pediatric wing after 8:30 p.m. the night before Tavish was last seen. Visitors to the children's wing after 8:30 p.m. are required to carry passes that identified them as authorized to be there; this man didn't have a pass and had no legitimate reason to be there. The man is described as tall and thin and was wearing a baseball cap. He disappeared before security could be called.
The second person of interest was a woman Age at the time of disappearance: d about 25 years old, described as 5'5 and 160 pounds, with a medium-brown complexion, strong cheekbones and almond-shaped eyes. She wore black pants, a long black coat and large earrings, and her hair was pulled back with a large bow. She was carrying an infant with curly hair. A man saw the woman just outside the hospital and noticed her because she was very attractive. Another witness saw the same woman inside the hospital.
Sketches of two women wanted for questioning in Tavish's disappearance are posted with this case summary.
The DCS has terminated Tavish's mother's parental rights to his three siblings and was seeking to terminate her rights to Tavish as well when he disappeared; they had taken custody of the baby when he was a few weeks old and placed him with a foster family. His mother sued the hospital over her son's kidnapping in March 1995; the suit was settled out of court for $600,000.
Authorities stated that a woman who was pretending to be pregnant may have abducted Tavish in an attempt to raise a child. They speculated she lived between four and twenty-four miles from the hospital. No evidence supporting any theory has been recovered and Tavish's case remains unsolved.


Other information and links : ncy

Atlanta Police Department
404-853-3400
Federal Bureau of Investigation
202-324-3000



September 2021 updates and sources

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
11 Alive
NewsLibrary
The Doe Network
The Fall Line Podcast