A man who was abducted as a six-year-old while playing in a California park in 1951 has been found more than seven decades later thanks to the help of an online ancestry test, old photos and newspaper clippings.

The Bay Area News Group reported on Friday that Luis Armando Albino’s niece in Oakland – with assistance from police, the FBI and the justice department – located her uncle living on the US east coast.

Albino, a father and grandfather, is a retired firefighter and Marine Corps veteran who served in Vietnam, according to his niece, 63-year-old Alida Alequin. She found Albino and reunited him with his California family in June.

On 21 February 1951 a woman lured the six-year-old Albino from the park in West Oakland, where he had been playing with his older brother, and promised him in Spanish that she would buy him candy.

  • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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    1 month ago

    That’s disgusting, I hope that woman lived a short, painful and miserable life.

    • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      And I hope the couple who adopted him gave him love. (It doesn’t say whether they knew he’d been stolen, they lived on the opposite coast so it wouldn’t have been in their newspaper.) Glad he and his brother were able to reconnect, after all the lost decades

      • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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        1 month ago

        its only assumed yeah that the parents were financially well off because it was a common thing back then (and is still prevelent today) where couples would adopt children, not knowing that they were victims of child trafficking.