Mason-Cornish

If your visiting the QR Code on this flyer, the children have been found Safe. whyy.org used our flyer and wrote a false article stating the children weren’t missing. This is false information. They were missing and reported missing. With the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children making a post prior to us, which includes their official NCIC Database entry numbers. (Police Missing Report Number)

We never said they were abducted, only that they were last seen at the Hospital, which is true information.

In their article they pushed their narrative that stated anyone stating they were missing were wrong. Basically, stating you shouldn’t trust the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, as they were the source of our information and stated they were missing children. We have emailed Whyy and their editing staff requesting they make a correction to their article and that they’ll cover more missing children, so that in the future they don’t have to make assumptions and they’ll easily be able to see if a child is in fact missing or not.

Below is a screenshot from their article. Scanning our QR code on the flyer normally would take you to the missing persons database entry, but they’re found safe, so their database entry has been removed. But because of their article we’ve connected this page to that QR code to show the truth. They went and blurred out the text, writing their own narrative. We’ve included the full flyer under their blurred-out flyer. We never stated the children were abducted; this is an assumption made by the media as they don’t cover missing children. They also went on to state they weren’t missing. This is false information. They were missing children at the time, the last known location of them was at the hospital. It wasn’t known where they went, there for, it wouldn’t be appropriate to state they were last seen anywhere else. We hope that Whyy will correct their article.

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