The U.S. Marshals Service said Thursday it located 31 missing children during Operation Desert Dawn, a three-week sweep across parts of Arizona’s Valley that began April 13 and ended May 1. Of those children, 20 were safely found, while the locations of 11 others were confirmed.
The operation targeted areas with high concentrations of missing children and endangered runaways, according to the Marshals Service. Van Bayless said the work was about protecting children in vulnerable and dangerous situations, and he said each child located represented a young life removed from the risk of exploitation, abuse, or worse.
The result gives the operation a clear measure of success: children were not just reported missing, they were found. In a state that has seen public attention on child safety in other cases, including a recent Arizona voter data lawsuit dismissal that dealt a setback to a Trump effort, the numbers from Desert Dawn show how quickly coordinated law enforcement can change a child’s immediate risk.
The Marshals Service said the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, local agencies and community partners helped safely find the children. The effort was supported by the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act of 2015, a federal law that has underwritten work aimed at children most exposed to exploitation.
Bayless said the operation gave these children a chance to return to safety and begin moving forward, and that is the real takeaway from the three-week push: in Arizona, a coordinated sweep turned a list of missing names into a set of recoveries and confirmed locations. The question now is whether those partnerships can be sustained long enough to catch the next child before danger does.