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A 9-year-old girl went missing during a bike ride while camping at New York’s Moreau Lake State Park with her family — and police scoured the area for 18 hours before issuing an Amber Alert.
Charlotte Sena, of Greenfield, NY, was enjoying a family outing on Saturday evening when she decided to make one last loop around their picnicking field by herself, Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a press conference Sunday.

Sena set off on Loop A on her bike at around 6:15 p.m., to prove she was “one of the big kids,” but she never came back.
Hochul said the girl’s family was distraught over the sudden disappearance.

“The family was here to make memories, the kind that would last a lifetime. Instead, it turned into every parent’s nightmare,” Hochul said.
When Sena failed to return within 15 minutes, her family and fellow campers went out to look for her, with police called to the scene at around 6:47 p.m.

The 9-year-old’s bike was found on Loop A, with a 100-person search party composed of state troopers, special ops, forest rangers, park police and civilian volunteers converging at the scene.

Since Sena’s disappearance, NY State Police Lt. Col. Richard Mazzone said his team had conducted an extensive 18-hour search of the park, with police believing the child is no longer there.
Sena was described as a white child with blond hair, standing at 5-foot 1 and weighing 90 pounds. She was last seen wearing an orange tie-dye Pokemon shirt, dark blue pants, black Crocs and a gray bike helmet.
 
Nine-year-old Charlotte Sena was found alive Monday evening and a suspect in her abduction was arrested, according to State Police.
Multiple law enforcement sources said the 51-year-old suspect, who has a sexual abuse criminal history, allegedly left a note at Sena’s parents' house — possibly demanding some type of ransom in connection with her disappearance.
Those sources also said that police had raided a house in Milton on Monday evening. That residence is on Barrett Road — off Middeline Road — about 13 miles south of where Charlotte Sena lived with her family in Porters Corners, near Corinth. The Barrett Road residence is where a relative of the suspect apparently lives and the girl may have been found in some type of trailer on the property, according to a law enforcement source.
 
Wonder who ratted him out.
He did it himself!

The suspect, identified as 46-year-old Craig Ross Jr., allegedly left a note at Charlotte’s family’s home – possibly demanding some type of ransom in connection to her alleged abduction, the newspaper reported, citing sources.

Gov. Kathy Hochul told CNN host Anderson Cooper Monday night that investigators were able to track down the suspect through fingerprints left on the ransom note.

“There was a ransom note and that was instrumental in leading us directly to the suspect,” Hochul said. “His fingerprint was already in the database.”

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Mugshot revealed after man charged with kidnapping 9-year-old Charlotte Sena, who was found in cabinet inside his camper​

craig-ross.jpg

The man accused of kidnapping Charlotte Sena looked dazed and disheveled in a new mugshot released after he was ordered held without bond early Tuesday — as authorities investigate whether he may have been involved in other child abduction cases.

Craig Ross Jr., 46, was snapped with a scraggly beard and a receding hairline in the mugshot released by police on Tuesday. It describes him as 6 feet 4 and about 275 pounds.
 
A state trooper who was guarding the home of 9-year-old Charlotte Sena has come under scrutiny for failing to arrest Craig Ross Jr. when he allegedly dropped off a ransom note, according to a report.
The 47-year-old suspect drove away in his pickup truck before dawn Monday without being stopped by the trooper, multiple sources familiar with the matter told the Albany Times-Union.

There has been no allegation that the trooper mishandled the incident, but the New York State Police are investigating whether Ross should have been arrested at the time, the sources told the news outlet.
On Tuesday, Gov. Kathy Hochul and officials with the agency declined to discuss the trooper’s actions.

State Police and the governor’s office said they would not comment due to an “ongoing investigation,” the Times-Union reported.
Meanwhile, the news outlet cited another source briefed on the investigation as saying that Ross may have forced Charlotte to write the ransom note for $50,000 herself.

The man accused of kidnapping Charlotte Sena had reportedly been charged with choking another person during a domestic dispute in 2017.

Craig Nelson Ross Jr., 46, was arrested in April 2017 after police responded to a “physical domestic dispute,” according to NBC News.
Ross “applied pressure” to the victim’s throat during an altercation, according to police. The victim’s gender was not revealed.


He was charged with a misdemeanor for criminal obstruction of breathing or blood circulation. He was released on his “own recognizance” after being arraigned, police records, viewed by NBC, said. It was not clear how the case was adjudicated.
 
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Authorities will look into any possible connections between the man charged with kidnapping Charlotte Sena, and the abduction and murder of two teenagers that have remained unsolved since the aughts, according to a report.https://www.thedailybeast.com/charl...ig-ross-jr-was-once-accused-of-choking-person
Craig Nelson Ross Jr., 46, was arrested Monday and accused of taking 9-year-old Sena from upstate New York’s Moreau Lake State Park over the weekend, with authorities later rescuing Sena from a cupboard inside Ross’ camper. He will now be scrutinized for potential links to the killings of two young women who disappeared in 2003 and 2005, according to the Times Union.
Jennifer “Moonbeam” Hammond, 18, and Christina N. White, 19, were last seen alive near mobile home parks in the town of Milton, where Ross and his family have lived for decades. Their remains were later found a few miles apart in the Lake Desolation State Forest, about 10 miles north of where they were seen for the last time.

“At this time, we have no information to indicate that he was or was not involved,” Saratoga County Sheriff’s Investigator Matthew Robinson, the lead investigator in the women’s cases, told the Times Union. “I can tell you that one of the investigative steps that we will take with regards to the ongoing investigation around Mr. Ross will be any association he has with any major case in the area. And that is something that we are actively working on. But at this time, we have no information to indicate that he is involved in any of those [two] cases.”


Robinson added that considering any connection Ross may have to other cases is a “standard investigative step… [and] we will analyze any potential involvement as we continue to work on it.”

White’s family told police she left the Saratoga Village Mobile Home Park at around 10 p.m. on June 30, 2005, and witnesses saw her walking about three miles from her home. No further sightings of White were reported until her skeletal remains were found in March 2006.

An autopsy found that she had died from stab wounds to her abdomen and chest. Ross lived in the Saratoga Village Mobile Home Park in the early 2000s around the time when White went missing, according to property records cited by the Times Union. Robinson said he is “aware of Ross’ prior address” but would not say if he had ever been interviewed in connection with the deaths of White or Hammond.

Hammond, from Littleton, Colorado, was last seen in August 2003 in the Creek and Pines Mobile Home Park on Middleline Road in Milton—which is reportedly about 1,000 feet north of where Ross’ mother has lived for about three decades. Hammond was there selling magazine subscriptions alongside co-workers but failed to show up at pre-planned pickup spot about two hours after entering the park.

Skull fragments and teeth were found in the woods near Lake Desolation six years later. A forensic analysis confirmed that they were Hammond’s, and her death was ruled a homicide. Saratoga County Sheriff Michael Zurlo has previously said investigators believed there was a “strong possibility” that Hammond’s and White’s killings were linked to the same suspect owing to the close proximity of the sites where their remains were discovered as well as the locations where they were last seen.

Craig Ross Jr., the 46-year-old New York man accused of abducting a nine-year-old girl from her bicycle and holding her for ransom, is now accused of raping the child while he kept her captive in a camper behind his mom's double-wide trailer.
A Saratoga County court unsealed a nine-count indictment Friday as Ross pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Police arrested Ross last month on kidnapping charges, but he now faces charges of first-degree rape, predatory sex assault against a child and more.
Ross' son told Fox News Digital that he hoped his father dies in prison over the allegations. He also said that he hadn't seen any warning signs.

"I don’t know anything," he said. "I hate him and hope he dies in prison."
 

Creep admits to abusing 9-year-old girl after kidnapping her from NY campground​

An upstate New York creep admitted Wednesday that he molested a 9-year-old girl after plucking her from a Saratoga County campground last year — and now he faces 47 years behind bars.

Craig Ross, 46, pleaded guilty to charges of first-degree kidnapping and predatory sexual assault of a child in the horrific case that saw the young girl snatched while riding her bike at the Moreau Lake State Park on Sept. 30, setting off a massive manhunt for the missing girl.

It ended two days later when she was found alive in a trailer in the backyard of Ross’s mother’s home.

“With the guilty plea today of Craig N. Ross, Jr., the victim and their family were able to hear the defendant admit his guilt to these heinous and despicable acts,” Saratoga County District Attorney Karen Heggen said in a statement Wednesday.

“His admission of guilt ends the question of who was responsible for the kidnapping that rallied our entire community together to assist in locating her,” Heggern said.
 
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