Parent of the missing Everman boy admitted to selling him to a relative at Fiesta Mart

 Parent of the missing Everman boy admitted to selling him to a relative at Fiesta Mart



According to a search request for the house of the family, relatives of the mother of a 6-year-old kid who vanished in Everman alerted authorities the boy was perhaps being molested. Although Noel Rodriguez-Alvarez was formally reported missing on March 20, some family members have told Everman police that they haven't seen him in about a year. On March 20, Texas Child Protective Services received a tip regarding Noel's abduction from an anonymous source. As a result, investigators visited the family's long-term residence on Wisteria Drive. Cindy Rodriguez-Singh, her husband, and their seven kids, including Noel, divided their time between living inside Charles Parson's house and in a shed that had been renovated in the backyard.

According to investigators, Noel's mother, Rodriguez-Singh, told police on March 20 that the boy was residing in Mexico with his biological father. Police claimed that after speaking with the father on March 23, they discovered that this was untrue. Police went back to the house on March 24 but found that the family had left. Police claim that Noel's mother and stepfather travelled to India on March 22 with a connecting aircraft through Turkey after obtaining travel visas for themselves, the children, and everyone else but Noel. There is no physical proof of Noel's whereabouts, and police have been unable to get in touch with the family.

After beforehand looking through the property with the proprietor's assent, on Walk 30, police got a court order to search for explicit things in the shed as proof of youngster danger and deserting.

As per the court order, Parson let police know that Rodriguez-Singh resided principally in the shed, and Noel and a portion of her different youngsters remained generally inside his home.

 Parson said he had not seen Noel since around Thanksgiving. Rodriguez-Singh additionally let Parson know that Noel was living with family members in Mexico and he had no great explanation to uncertainty the story, he said. As per a duplicate of the court order got by the Star-Wire, in which the kid's name is redacted, family members let police know that Rodriguez-Singh recently made concerning remarks about Noel and attacked the youngster.

 During an encounter with one relative, Rodriguez-Singh told the relative not to give Noel any water since she would have rather not tidied up after him in the event that he had a grimy diaper, the warrant states. The general's better half gave Noel water in any case and Rodriguez-Singh found out, the court order says. The general saw Rodriguez-Singh hitting Noel with her vehicle keys joined to a cord, he told police. The relative faced Rodriguez-Singh, and she went out with the kid, he said. The overall said he had not seen Rodriguez-Singh or her children from that point forward.

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