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Authorities in Arizona have revealed that a teenager who was missing for over 30 years had actually left home deliberately because she claimed to be “unhappy,” according to the police.
Christina Marie Plante disappeared at the age of 13 without leaving any clues, as stated by the Gila County Sheriff’s Office. She vanished after heading to a nearby horse stable from her residence in Star Valley, Arizona.
Her location remained unknown for decades until the sheriff’s office disclosed on April 1 that the mystery had been solved, confirming that Plante is alive and well.
Why Did Police Say Christina Plante Decided to Run Away?
In a recent update, Capt. Jamie Garrett shared insights into what was once a cold case.
“It seems she wasn’t content with her living situation or her guardians,” Garrett stated during an April 2 interview with Jesse Weber on News Nation Live. “So, she made the decision to run away.”
While investigating Plante’s case, Garrett identified a woman who matched the description of the missing teen. Upon contacting her by phone, Plante, now using a different name, verified her identity and confessed to Garrett that she had deliberately left her home back in 1994.
“I was dumbfounded,” Garrett told News Nation. “I was like, ‘Oh, my gosh. Okay, so you ran away.’ I told her…‘You know, we were under the impression that somebody kidnapped you. It was deemed a criminal offense.’”
Plante allegedly told the investigator that she ran away with the help of relatives and had since moved on with her life, providing few other details into the circumstances that led her to flee.
“She said that was a long time ago, that was an old life,” Garrett continued. “She’s in her adult life. She has her family now. That’s not something she even thinks about.”
Oxygen reached out to the Gila County Sheriff’s Office for additional comment, but did not receive an immediate response.
When Did Christina Plante Disappear?
After Plante disappeared in May 1994, the sheriff’s office said “extensive search efforts” were launched to find the missing blonde-haired teen, but “no viable leads” were developed at the time.
Plante was entered into national missing children databases, including the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).
Years later, after launching a special cold case unit, the Gila County Sheriff’s Office made a renewed effort to try to find the teen, which led to the recent discovery.
“Out of respect for Christina’s privacy and wellbeing,” they noted in the release, “additional details will not be released at this time.”
After the news that the case had been successfully resolved, NCMEC’s Director of Communications Angeline Hartmann said the case gives families of other missing children hope.
“Cases like this are exactly why we do what we do,” she said in a statement. “No matter how much time passes, even decades, we never give up. Every child deserves to be found, and every family deserves answers. Because of technology, we’re seeing more and more breakthroughs in cases once thought unsolvable. The safe recovery of Christina Plante is a reminder to our families still searching for their loved ones that hope endures, even after so many years.”