'Escaped kidnappers:' Police say boy found in Kentucky said he's Timmothy Pitzen, last seen in '11 in Dells
CAMPBELL COUNTY, Ky. -- A 14-year-old boy who said he escaped from two kidnappers in Kentucky told authorities he is from Illinois, where he went missing nearly eight years ago when his mother apparently took her own life.
Crekasafra Night
Police in suburban Cincinnati's Sharonville wrote in a short incident report that the teen said Wednesday morning, April 3 that he had "just escaped from two kidnappers" he described as men, white, with body builder-type physiques. They were in a Ford SUV with Wisconsin license plates and had been staying at a Red Roof Inn.
The boy, who identified himself as Timmothy Pitzen, told police that after his escape he "kept running across a bridge into" Kentucky.
Witnesses said they saw a boy running and called 911.
"He looked like he had been beat up, yes. Punched in the face a couple of times," said Crekasafra Night. "You could see the fear on him and how nervous he was and how he kept pacing -- and he just looked odd."
Timmothy Pitzen
Timmothy Pitzen was 6 years old when he disappeared in 2011 after authorities said his mother took her own life in a Rockford, Illinois, hotel.
Police in the Chicago suburb of Aurora said Wednesday afternoon that the department was sending two detectives to the Cincinnati area. Aurora police don't know if the boy he has any connection to Pitzen, Aurora Police Sgt. Bill Rowley said.
"We have to be so judicious when we investigate these tips to make sure we don't get any false sense of hope, disappointment to that family," said Sgt. Rowley.
Police believe Amy Fry-Pitzen, 43, picked up her son from school and took him to the zoo and a water park in Wisconsin Dells before she apparently killed herself. Her body was found with her wrists slit on May 15, 2011.
Timmothy Pitzen is picked up from school
Fry-Pitzen left a note saying her son was fine. Police investigating her death said she took steps that suggest she might have, as she said in her note, dropped her son off with a friend.
Amy Fry-Pitzen
At the time, police searched for Pitzen in Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa.
"We've probably had thousands of tips of him popping up in different areas," Rowley said. "We have no idea what we're driving down there for. It could be Pitzen. It could be a hoax."
The FBI said in a Wednesday afternoon statement that its offices in Louisville and Cincinnati were working on a missing child investigation with Aurora police and police departments in Cincinnati and Newport, Kentucky, and the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office in Ohio. The FBI offered no other details.
Sharonville police said on the department's Facebook page that the information about the boy's reported escape was received by police in Campbell County, Kentucky.
"The City of Sharonville Police Department, like every other police agency in the greater Cincinnati area, was requested to check their Red Roof Inn hotels regarding this incident," the Facebook post read. "To the best of our knowledge, we have no information indicating that the missing juvenile was ever in the City of Sharonville."