| Case Type:
Endangered Missing
Missing Date: Saturday 01st November 2003 Missing From: Blackpool Lancashire England Missing Country: UK Sex: Female DOB: 25/Mar/1989 Age Now: 21 |
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Specific Details:
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Known Circumstances:
Charlene was last seen by her family on 01.11.03, when she went to the North Pier at Blackpool. Charlene failed to return home. Last seen wearing a black jumper with white diamond pattern on, black jeans with gold eagles on the front,black boots Please be aware that some of the news articles on this case file contain upsetting information. |
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If you have any information on Charlene Downes please contact the official numbers above immediately. Alternatively, you can e-mail us here at Help Find My Child - you can do this in strictest confidence - we will make sure your information is passed on to the relevant places. |
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Police 'failed' in missing Blackpool girl case
15 October 2009
A PROBE into the handling of the Charlene Downes murder inquiry has criticised police at the centre of the investigation.
The report by the Independant Police Complaints Commission said officers had been guilty of "strategic and tactical failure" in the management of evidence.
They were also criticised for failing to keep proper records, transcribe evidence or ensure the integrity of the evidence used in the case.
The use of inexperienced and untrained officers during the investigation also came under fire in the report.
<continues>
http://www.blackpoolgazette.co.uk/blackpoolnews/Police-39at-fault39-in-missing.5736180.jp
Charlene Downes
BS"D
So, Thomas Blewitt (nice pun there), why didn't you report these suspicious doings before?
Missing Girl
I was there on the day the girl got kidnaped i know the reg no of the car that took her it was j517xeh it was a white nissan micra i also saw her the following week in wolverhampton ording a train to london and i saw a new set of nives in the bag which the man who was with her was holding
Post dedictated to your daughter, Charlene
BS"D
My husband and I have a blog named "Schmoozing with Elya and Ellie Katz". We cover all sorts of topics. I stumbled across your story while searching out a topic on jihad against the West. I could not stop researching it. My post ended up being more of a dedication to Charlene and your family.
In the post, I attempted to summarize as much information as I could about Charlene's case, as well as giving as much contact information as I could find in an effort to do my bit to help more information filter back to you and the police in Blackpool.
I am so sorry for your loss, and for Charlene's. Wherever she is, I'm sure she knows how deeply she is loved by her family.
http://elyakatz.wordpress.com/2009/02/27/the-tragedy-of-charlene-downes/
I don't expect you'll be anxious to read the post, as you are more familiar with the details than anyone. But to let you know, I think of the post as a kind of "poster" for the rest of the world. If enough bloggers keep Charlene's story alive, maybe the fuller picture will become clear, or maybe you will find your daughter. If you ever find the time, I wouldn't mind updating the post from time to time for the sake of readers everywhere. I do get worldwide readership of about 100 or so a day. Not huge, but it is something.
May peace and justice find it's way back into your home and your family,
Ellie Katz
Missing Charlene tribute to be unveiled in Blackpool park
The family of missing Blackpool teenager Charlene Downes are to unveil a bench in her memory this weekend.
The former St George's High School pupil went missing on November 1, 2003, when aged 13, and has not been seen since.
Her family, including mum Karen and dad Robert, are to unveil the bench, near the visitors centre in Stanley Park, at 1pm on Sunday.
One man went on trial for her murder and another for disposing of the body, but they were cleared of all charges after a trial at Preston Crown Court.
http://www.blackpoolcitizen.co.uk/news/3808725.Missing_Charlene_tribute_...
Sincerest thoughts and prayers
Charlene's body has never been recovered and she remains listed as a missing child. We at HFMC extend our deepest and sincerest sympathy to the Downes family the pain they have suffered over the years is unimaginable. You are all in our thoughts and prayers.
The murder that expose blackpools hidden sex abuse
Blackpool has a terrible secret: shockingly high levels of child sex abuse. Julie Bindel reports how the disappearance of a teenage girl revealed a dark side of the holiday resort
The pier in Blackpool. Photograph: Christopher Thomond
On a mild November evening in 2003, 14-year-old Charlene Downes kissed her mum goodbye and walked with a friend to visit the Carousel bar on Blackpool's North Pier. When she failed to come home by the following morning, police circulated her description. Charlene looked young for her age. Described by her mum as "a bubbly girl who likes a laugh, Westlife and fashion", the girl shown on the missing poster had a cute child's face framed by shiny dark brown hair. She would be 19 now, but although her body has not been discovered, police are convinced Charlene was murdered within hours of her disappearance.
Charlene was last seen in the town centre hanging around the alleyway that runs between the shops on Talbot Road and Clifton Street, which is full of fast-food takeaway outlets. During the search, more than 3,000 people were interviewed. Early on in the investigation, police became aware that Charlene, and a number of other girls, had been targeted by abusers active in the town. It emerged that the girls had been swapping sex for food, cigarettes and affection. Police are certain that Charlene was sexually abused by one or more men, over a period of time before she went missing, and that her death (they advised her parents in 2005 that they were convinced their daughter had been murdered) is linked to the abuse.
Last year, the trial of two men accused over Charlene's murder was halted when the jury failed to reach a verdict. The subsequent retrial collapsed owing to concerns over a key prosecution witness. Both men were cleared of the charges. The case is still open.
In the search for Charlene, the police uncovered what was a barely hidden secret - endemic child sexual abuse and prostitution in the seaside town famous for its 1960s image of "kiss me quick" hats and sticks of rock. The Blackpool of childhood holidays past is still recognisable, but it has a dark underbelly of sexual exploitation. Before Charlene's disappearance, this epidemic in Blackpool has been hidden, disguised by the party atmosphere and happy-looking kids with bucket and spades on the beach. "There have always been shocking levels of sexual abuse of children in this town," says Sue McGurty, coordinator of Mothers of Sexually Abused Children (Mosac), "but before Charlene Downes went missing it was completely swept under the carpet."
Seasonal employment in the town's tourist industry and the large stock of low-cost, privately rented accommodation mean there is a constant flow of people moving into and out of Blackpool. Poverty levels are high: Blackpool is the 12th poorest area in the country. The number of children on Blackpool's child protection register who are vulnerable to, or experiencing, sexual abuse is, at 16%, almost twice the national average, as is the number of children living in care homes or foster families. It is one of the only places in the country where girls do worse at school than boys. The suicide rate among the 15 to 19 age group in Blackpool is eight times higher than the UK average. Underage and unprotected sex is rife. HIV cases rose by 50% between 2001 and 2004; one in 12 girls is pregnant before the age of 18. A report published around the time of Charlene's disappearance put this down to the resort's "carnivalistic and hedonistic atmosphere".
Children are attracted to the bright lights of Blackpool, so the town receives its fair share of runaways. And there are always plenty of sexual predators waiting for them to arrive, knowing they will be cold, hungry and homeless; probably already victims of abuse. On average, two more young children are found to be homeless in Blackpool every month.
There are approximately 800 convicted high-risk sex offenders living in Blackpool. Many choose to move there after their release from prison. "Why do so many child abusers want to live in Blackpool?" asks Wendy Shepherd from children's charity Barnardos. "Alongside the increase in child sexual exploitation there is a marked increase in the sex industry in Blackpool, and sex tourism masquerading as stag weekends. Questions need to be asked about the links."
Recently the Coalition for the Removal of Pimping (Crop), a child protection charity based in West Yorkshire, warned that Blackpool is becoming one of the hotspots where children and young people are sold for sex to older men.
"We know that young people from this area are being taken over to Blackpool," said Aravinda Kosaraju, a researcher at Crop. "If you're 13 or 14 and invited to come for a night out to a club in Blackpool, or have a holiday there, it may be hard to resist."
There is some evidence that disproportionate numbers of men from migrant communities are involved in the abuse of girls. Opportunism is one possible explanation, according to a police officer who worked on missing children cases. "A number of them work illegally in the takeaways, which is where a lot of the vulnerable girls either work for pocket money, or hang out."
The Awaken Project, a multi-agency initiative led by police and social services, was set up a year after Charlene disappeared, as a direct response to the case. There have been calls for the project to be extended to cover the whole of the UK, but so far, the government has been slow to respond, despite Awaken's success. The team - which brings together professionals from licensing, social services, education and police - aims to root out and arrest the abusers before they do serious harm, and protect children from exploiters. Officers target what they call "honey pots", likely to attract both children and offenders, such as takeaways, amusement arcades and the pier, which Charlene visited the night she vanished.
The Golden Mile between the North and Central Piers, which takes in the Promenade and the Winter Gardens, looks on the surface much as it did 30 years ago, but closer inspection reveals the difference. What used to be a B&B is now a massage parlour. Next to the shop where children buy their shoes for ballet class is a lap dance club. Further up the road is Twilight Babes, advertised as a "sauna". The Lucky Star amusement arcade on the promenade is where John Goodfellow, a convicted child abuser, tried to entice a group of children back to his flat by giving them money to play on the slot machines. He was jailed for seven years in July 2005 for attempting to procure minors for sexual activity.
I visited Blackpool on the second anniversary of Charlene Downes' disappearance, in November 2005. A photograph of her parents, Robert and Karen Downes, dominated the front page of a local paper, with a mockup of how Charlene might look aged 16. The headline read, "Clinging to Hope." At that stage in the investigation, some hope remained.
"I can't think the worst," Karen Downes told me in a rundown pub near her central Blackpool home. "I just wouldn't be able to carry on if I did." Downes had a nervous, almost child-like manner, and constantly twisted her hands together as she spoke. Her round, cherubic face crumpled with grief. She apologised, and struggled to continue.
Charlene was from a loving family, but, as social services noted prior to her going missing, a chaotic one. At the time that Charlene disappeared, a homeless man whom a family member had invited to stay was revealed to be a sex offender against young children. The area where the Downes live houses high numbers of people on benefits, with several boarded-up houses, few amenities, and high levels of street crime.
The story Downes told was a familiar one. Her daughter "fell in with the wrong crowd", whom she banned from the house. Eventually, Charlene was excluded from school for truanting. "When she was 13 she started going off the rails. I don't know why."
The week she went missing, all seemed as normal. "Charlene was in watching her Darren Day videos as usual. Only days after she went missing she was due back to the school to discuss going back." Darren Day, Charlene's favourite West End performer, even made a plea for help in finding her.
It was not the first time Charlene had been missing. When she was 12, she did not come home for four days. "It turned out she was staying with her friend and had not told me," said Downes. "When she went missing this time around, I think the police thought she'd done that again."
Paul Phillpott, a detective inspector in Blackpool police and coordinator of the Awaken Project, explained how abusers target their prey. "The common scenario is a young person being befriended by a significantly older male, groomed with small gifts, free food, small amounts of money. They give the young person lots of attention and affection and when they feel they can get away with it they sexually assault the young person, making them feel complicit in their own abuse." Those targeted are often 13- to 14-year-olds persuaded into sex in exchange for clothes, cheap jewellery or money. "It is more subtle than how most people think of child prostitution," said Phillpot.
"I found out," said Downes, "that Charlene was getting chips for a blow job. How can those bastards do that to kids?"
I met Downes again, just after the trial collapsed. She was inconsolable, and talked nonstop about her daughter, and about how much she missed her. "My daughter was a beautiful, clever girl. Good at English and maths. She liked nothing better than taking me and her nana shopping," said Downes. "She used to say, 'When I get older, I'm going to buy a car and take you both out every day.'"
Downes is angry that her daughter's death has barely been noted outside Blackpool, and that her case has warranted far less attention than those of other missing children. "I could not understand why the police did not put out information about Charlene on TV, and why only the local paper was interested in her disappearance," said Downes. "I often wonder, if she had been from a posh family, and was having piano lessons, would they have tried harder to find her?"
The lives of the Downes family are in limbo. A week after the trial collapsed, Downes was arrested for stabbing her husband, Robert, during an argument, causing minor flesh wounds. Robert does not wish to press charges, as he understands that his wife lashed out in desperation, crazed with grief and distress. "What people don't seem to understand," Downes told me, "is that not knowing where Charlene is feels almost worse than knowing she is dead".
Source: guardian
What happened to Charlene
The schoolgirl was murdered by a fast food shop owner who joked that she had been "chopped up" and had gone into the kebabs, a court heard today. Charlene Downes, 14, was killed by Iyad Albattikhi, 29, owner of Funny Boyz fast food shop in Blackpool, who it is alleged had sex with the youngster he described as "kinky", Preston Crown Court was told. Charlene was one a number of young white girls who went to "Paki Alley" in the town to have sex with older men who worked in the fast food shops, Tim Holroyde QC, prosecuting, told the jury.
A 14-year-old girl was murdered by a fast food restaurateur who later joked that she had been “chopped up” and had gone into the kebabs, Preston Crown Court was told yesterday. Charlene Downes, who had been expelled from school, kissed her mother goodbye three and half years ago and “vanished off the face of the earth”, the jury was told. She was one of a number of young white girls who congregated around a district of Asian food shops in Blackpool and had sex with the older workers. Tim Holroyde, QC, opening for the prosecution, told the court that Charlene had been killed by Iyad Albattikhi, 29, owner of Funny Boyz fast food shop and known locally as Eddie, who boasted of having sex with the teenager whom he described as “kinky”.
A missing persons inquiry was launched after her disappearance but was stepped up to a full murder investigation after information “leaked out” that the teenager had been “killed and chopped up”. Mr Holroyde said that Charlene was a happy teenager but her home life was chaotic. She lacked parental control and spent her life hanging about the shops along the promenade and North Pier. She was last seen early in the evening of Saturday November 1, 2003. Since then, no trace of her body has been found. The jury was told that since then she had never made contact with her family or friends, never come to the attention of police elsewhere, claimed benefits or received NHS treatment. It was inconceivable that she is still alive, the court was told. Mr Holroyde said that a witness, Kirsty Fletcher, who worked at another fast food restaurant, went to see her employer about her wages and heard a group of men, including Mr Albattikhi, talking about sex with white girls and mentioning Charlene. “Kirsty says Albattikhi laughed and said she was kinky and she was very small – the plainest possible indication that he was lying to police when he said he did not know her. “And, says Kirsty Fletcher, he and the others present were then laughingly saying that Charlene had gone into the kebabs.”
Mr Albattikhi denied murdering the teenager. Mohammed Reveshi, 50, his business partner and co-accused, has pleaded not guilty to helping to dispose of the body. The prosecution suggests that Charlene had some sort of sexual activity with “one or both” of the defendants. Both the accused went on to lie to the police about their involvement, the court was told. They told officers that they did not know her. The court was told that Mr Albattikhi fell out with his brother who later told a witness, David Cassidy, that he knew what had happened to Charlene.
He said that she had been killed and chopped up and there had been a lot of blood. The prosecution say that Mr Albattikhi later warned Mr Cassidy that he would be dealt with if he told anyone and, allegedly, later offered him an interest-free £20,000 loan from Mr Reveshi to buy his silence. But Mr Cassidy went to the police in December 2004. Officers bugged the men’s flats and Mr Reveshi’s car. Although the tapes were hard to decipher, Mr Holroyde said that parts of the tape were reveal-ing.v In one tape, Mr Reveshi speaks of his “surprise” that the police were investigating because “Charlene Downes was not even from a decent or important family”.
In another tape, Mr Reveshi said the words “eat the body”, the court was told. Mr Holroyde stressed that there were differences of opinion between police and the prosecution sound expert over what was said on the tapes. But both agreed that on one tape Mr Albattikhi said he “killed” while talking about Charlene. The tapes also revealed Mr Reveshi speaking about “checking the burial place” and at one stage he broke down, sobbing “I can’t cope”.
The trial continues.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article1838029.ece
From The Times May 25, 2007
Two men in court for Charlene
Two men have appeared in court charged in connection with the alleged killing of Blackpool teenager Charlene Downes.
Iyad Albattikhi, 28, appeared before Blackpool Magistrates' Court charged with murdering the 14-year-old on or about 1 November 2003.
Mohammed Raveshi, 49, was charged with assisting in the disposal of her body, which has never been found.
Both men, from Blackpool, were remanded into custody to appear back in court at a later date.
Disappearance
Mr Albattikhi, of Dickson Road, and Mr Raveshi, of Hornby Road, spoke only to confirm their details and that they understood the charges during the hearing on Thursday.
Magistrates sent the case of Mr Albattikhi to Preston Crown Court, where he is due to appear on 15 June.
Mr Raveshi is due to appear back before Blackpool Magistrates' Court on 13 March.
Charlene Downes has not been seen since 1 November 2003 when she said she was going to a bar with friends
Source: BBC News
Missing Teen Murdered?
Detectives searching for a teenager who disappeared in Blackpool more than two years ago have arrested two men on suspicion of murder.
Charlene Downes has not been seen since 1 November 2003, when she said she was going to a bar with friends.
Police now believe Charlene, who was 14 at the time of her disappearance, has been killed.
Three Blackpool men, aged 28, 29 and 49, are currently being questioned - two of them on suspicion of murder.
The 29-year-old has been arrested in connection with her disappearance, police said.
The hunt for Charlene has been one of Lancashire Constabulary's longest-running missing-from-home inquiries, but has been conducted as a murder investigation.
More than 3,000 people were spoken to by police officers and almost 2,500 statements were taken.
Det Supt Paul Buschini, leading the investigation, said: "Both myself and the Downes' family liaison officer have remained in contact with the family keeping them up-to-date of the investigation.
"It was with great sadness that we informed them that we do now firmly believe that Charlene was murdered.
"These arrests follow months of painstaking delicate enquiries by the investigation team working on this case."
Police said they would now be searching a number of premises in the town as part of their investigation
Source: BBC News
Missing one year
Police searching for a teenager missing for a year say they are "hoping for the best, but fear the worst".
Charlene Downes, 14, from Blackpool, Lancashire, has been missing since 1 November last year.
She left home saying she was going to a bar on the North Pier with friends, but has not been seen since.
Detectives will be in the area this weekend handing out leaflets to visitors to the illuminations in the hope of jogging someone's memory.
Charlene, of Buchanan Street, was planning to go to the Carousel bar at the North Pier on the Saturday she went missing.
There have been no confirmed sightings of her since she was seen on that day at the junction of Abingdon Street and the back of Clifton Street.
Her mother, Karen, said Charlene should not be afraid to contact them.
She said: "If anyone knows where she is please, please get in touch and put us out of our misery.
"We couldn't bear another year like this, it's been an unbearable year, the worst year of mine and the family's life, being without our lovely smiling happy daughter Charlene."
Lancashire Police has a team of 30 officers - a similar scale to a murder inquiry - working on the case.
Det Chief Insp Andy Johnson said: "The longer we go without any news, while I hope for the best, I have to fear the worst.
"There is still a possibility that Charlene is alive and well, living her life somewhere other than Blackpool, and I hope that is the case.
'No sightings'
"We are still getting information that gives us fresh lines of enquiry which we are following up, but there have been no confirmed sightings of Charlene at all which gives me grave cause for concern."
Enquiries have taken detectives to Oldham and Denton in Greater Manchester and Wolverhampton in the West Midlands - places where Charlene was known to have contacts.
Charlene is white, 5ft 1in tall, slim with straight shoulder-length brown hair and has blue eyes.
When she was last seen, she was wearing a black jumper with a white diamonds pattern, black jeans with golden eagles on the front and black boots.
Anyone with information about Charlene's disappearance, can contact Blackpool Police, or the Missing Persons Helpline.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolpda/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_3964000/3964423.stm?%252525253Fpage_id=1
Appeal for Charlene
A 14-year-old girl who has been missing from Blackpool since Halloween may have gone to Greater Manchester or the West Midlands, police believe.
Charlene Downes, of Buchanan Street, Blackpool, has not been seen since the early hours of 1 November.
She had left home saying that she was going to the Carousel bar on North Pier with friends.
Police have renewed an appeal about her whereabouts and say she may be in the Oldham or Denton areas of Greater Manchester or in Wolverhampton in the West Midlands.
Detective Superintendent Paul Buschini, of Lancashire Police, said 20 officers were working on the investigation.
Following leads
DS Buschini said: "We are growing more concerned for Charlene by the day as it is totally out of character for her to stay away from home for this length of time.
"We do have information that suggests Charlene has friends in Oldham, Denton and Wolverhampton and are keen for anyone in these areas who may have seen her since she was last seen three weeks ago to contact police at Blackpool."
Anybody with information can also contact the National Missing Persons Helpline on 0500-700-700.
Charlene is described as white, 5ft 1in tall, slim, with straight shoulder-length dark brown hair and blue eyes.
When last seen she was wearing a black jumper with white diamonds, black jeans with gold eagles on the front and black boots.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/lancashire/3233800.stm
Charlene age progressed to 16
Charlene Downes image 2