The Congressional Black Caucus is calling on Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the FBI to help in the search for missing black girls in the Washington, D.C., area, following an alarming string of missing children cases from the nation's capital.
The District of Columbia logged 501 cases of missing juveniles, many of them black or Latino, in the first three months of this year, according to the Metropolitan Police Department, the city's police force. Twenty-two were unsolved as of March 22, police said.
The letter, dated Tuesday and obtained Thursday by The Associated Press, was sent by Congressional Black Caucus chairman Cedric Richmond, D-La., and Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, who represents the District in Congress.
They called on Sessions and FBI Director James Comey to "devote the resources necessary to determine whether these developments are an anomaly or whether they are indicative of an underlying trend that must be addressed."
According to reports, the names of the missing girls include: Yahshaiyah Enoch and Aniya McNeil, both 13; Juliana Otero, Jacqueline Lassey, Dashann Trikia Wallace, Dayana White and Morgan Richardson, all 15; and Talisha Coles, 16.
Richmond said he hopes to meet with Sessions and bring up the issue. No meeting is currently scheduled, according to the AP.
But President Donald Trump assured caucus members on Wednesday that he would make his Cabinet secretaries available to them.
D.C. police officials, meanwhile, said there has been no increase in the numbers of missing persons in their jurisdiction.
"We've just been posting them on social media more often," said Metropolitan Police spokeswoman Rachel Reid.
Have you seen them? 8 yo Leera Gillespie & Rayneka Williamson last seen 700 b/o 24th St, NE. Text 50411/ call 202-727-9099 #MissingPerson pic.twitter.com/qm0s1f3hYx
— DC Police Department (@DCPoliceDept) March 19, 2017
According to local police data, the number of missing child cases in the District dropped from 2,433 in 2015 to 2,242 in 2016. The highest total recently, 2,610, was back in 2001.
But the increased social media attention has caused concern in the U.S. capital area, which has long had a large minority population and is currently about 48 percent black.
Hundreds of people packed a town-hall style meeting at a neighborhood school on Wednesday to express concern about the missing children cases.
"Ten children of color went missing in our nation's capital in a period of two weeks and at first garnered very little media attention. That's deeply disturbing," Richmond's letter said.
Derrica Wilson, co-founder of the Black and Missing Foundation, said that despite the assurances from police, it was alarming for so many children to go missing around the same time.
On Tuesday night, she noted, her group had four reports of missing children and only one had been found.
"We can't focus on the numbers. If we have one missing child, that's one too many," Wilson said.
Wilson said she is concerned about whether human trafficking is a factor, citing the case of 8-year-old Relisha Rudd, who has been missing since she vanished from a city homeless shelter in 2014.
A janitor who worked at the shelter was found dead of apparent suicide during the search for the girl.
"They prey on the homeless, they prey on low income children, they prey on the runaways, they prey online," Wilson said.
Information from the National Crime Information Center showed there were 170,899 missing black children under 18 in the United States, more than any other category except for the white/Hispanic combined number of 264,443.
Both numbers increased from the year before, which saw 169,655 missing black children and 262,177 missing white/Hispanic children.
"Whether these recent disappearances are an anomaly or signals of underlying trends, it is essential that the Department of Justice and the FBI use all of the tools at their disposal to help local officials investigate these events, and return these children to their parents as soon as possible," Richmond said.
On Monday, local pastors, activists and parents gathered at the Covenant Baptist United Church of Christ in Washington, D.C., to discuss the disappearance and the possibility of human trafficking, according to Latina.com.
"Sometimes when girls of color are missing they are deemed 'runaways' and sometimes that prevents an Amber Alert from being sent out," Dr. Vanetta Rather, founder of the support group My Sister My Seed, told the group, according to the website.
"It appears that when it's girls of color there's not this urgency," Rather said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.