14-year-old girl missing for 2 weeks found in Marine barracks was ‘sold,’ says aunt - National

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A 14-year-old who went missing from her family’s home outside San Diego was found by military police inside the barracks at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, authorities said Thursday.

A U.S. Marine was taken into custody for questioning in connection with the incident, though no charges have been filed thus far.

The girl was said to have run away from her grandmother’s house in the Spring Valley area on June 9, though she wasn’t reported missing until June 13.

“The grandmother reported to deputies that the teen had previously run away before, but always returned home quickly,” said Melissa Aquino, a media relations officer for the San Diego County Sheriff’s Office (SDSO).

The 14-year-old was then located nearly three weeks later on June 28 inside Camp Pendleton’s barracks.

NBC San Diego was the first to report on the incident a week later on July 6.

That was the same day that Casaundra Perez, who identified herself as the 14-year-old’s aunt, posted a TikTok claiming her niece was raped at the Marine barracks and was “sold to a service member for sex.”

“(The military is) trying to cover it up and place the majority of the blame on her. However, the reality is the whole facility allowed this to happen,” Perez says in the video. She did not provide any evidence to corroborate her claims.

“The security looked her in the face and allowed this man to bring a minor onto the base, where he proceeded to have sex with her. Due to her age, she could not have given this consent.”

Perez notes that her niece has learning disabilities.

After the teen was found, she was interviewed by authorities and returned home to her grandmother, officials said.

The Naval Criminal Investigative Services (NCIS) is handling the investigation as Camp Pendleton is a Marine base. The San Diego Sheriff’s Department and San Diego Human Trafficking Task Force are supporting the investigation.

“We can confirm that a Marine with Combat Logistics Battalion 5, 1st Marine Logistics Group was taken into custody for questioning by NCIS on June 28, 2023, as seen on social media July 2, 2023,” Capt. Chuck Palmer told NBC San Diego, referencing a photo of a Marine being led away in handcuffs posted to Instagram.

“The incident is under investigation, and we will continue to cooperate with NCIS and appropriate authorities.”

The Marine, who has yet to be identified, remains in the custody of his command and has not been officially charged, Palmer said.

“This command takes this matter and all allegations very seriously,” he added.

View image in full screen Photo of an unidentified marine being led away in handcuffs at Camp Pendleton on June 28, 2023. notinregz/Instagram

NCIS spokesperson Jeff Houston told NBC San Diego that “out of respect for the investigative process, NCIS does not comment on, confirm details relating to, or confirm the existence of ongoing investigations.”

It’s unclear how the 14-year-old was allowed to enter the Camp Pendleton barracks. Visitors to the sprawling base are stopped at the entrance and required to show authorization. Marines are allowed to bring a visitor on base and into the barracks until a certain hour, which varies according to each building.

Single junior Marines are generally assigned to the barracks where most share a room with at least one other Marine. The rooms generally have two single beds, a small refrigerator, eating area, secretary desk, closet and wall lockers. The barracks also have common areas with pool tables and TVs.

Perez is demanding a transparent investigation into her niece’s disappearance.

“We hope you would join us in calling and demanding both release of details as well as the pursuit of justice,” she said. “Our family is worried about retaliation from the military and the man that has trafficked my niece.”

— with files from The Associated Press

CosmiqCow on July 11st, 2023 at 14:37 UTC »

I was 17 years old when I decided to be an adult and run away from home my senior year of high school. I was gone for 3 weeks during that 3 weeks I stayed somewhere with some woman I didn't know, who had some men over, and one of those men invited me to live with him. He was in his thirties. Of course I said yes.

While I was living with him at his house, he was away at work and his buddy was there. And his buddy would get me drugged up and drunk and pimp me out. I was being sex trafficked when I was a runaway.

Then the pimp took me out with the guy from Chicago he was wearing a fur coat, and was in a Lincoln. Did take me to bars and nobody carded me and I thought it was the coolest thing I didn't really know what was going on because they would get me so drunk and drugged up but what I do remember was being told hey you're going to go to Chicago with this guy make a lot of money.

I was 17 years old I was fixing to be sex traffic to Chicago. This was in a tiny little rural backwards place in Kentucky where all this was going on. Fortunately my parents found me I was arrested by a sheriff who was looking for me and I went back home and thus narrowly escaped being sold to the highest bidder. This was back in the late '80s.

These sex trafficked victims don't just come from some mythical overseas place on a boat. They come from our own backyard. Got to be real careful what you do, and I'm so glad the internet wasn't around back then it must be 10 times worse for kids now.

I am now in my fifties, and hardly anyone on this planet knows what happened to me it's hard to talk about, and it is ruined every aspect of my life since then. There needs to be much harsher punishments on people who think they can purchase a human being as a slave.

dontstealmydinner on July 11st, 2023 at 12:34 UTC »

This is Human trafficking, isn't it?

cdiddy19 on July 11st, 2023 at 08:03 UTC »

This makes me so sick and sad