ONE EVENING IN 2011, Steve Carter was browsing the Internet on his iPad when he came across a missing children’s website. Scrolling through the photographs, the 35-year-old software salesperson from Philadelphia made an astonishing discovery. When Carter looked closely at a composite picture of a missing child–created using age-progression technology–he recognized the kid’s smile and sandy-blond hair.
“I got chills,” he told People in 2012. “I was like, ‘Holy crap, it’s me.’”
Carter had known that he was adopted at age 4 from an orphanage in Honolulu, Hawaii, but never knew his real name or biological family. After finding his image on missingkids.org, run by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), Carter said he could finally put together the missing pieces of his life, more than 30 years later.
“Good things do happen,” he said.
Carter’s amazing story is a rare case, but it illustrates the powerful role of technology in the search for missing children. The picture that Carter recognized on missingkids.org was created by NCMEC’s forensic artists using Adobe Photoshop. Over the years, NCMEC has used the software to age-progress more than 6,800 images of long-term missing children and created more than 550 facial reconstructions of deceased children. This work has aided the recovery of more than 3,000 lost children between 2014 and 2018, including 234 that had been missing for 10 years or more. It has also assisted in identifying 139 deceased children, providing much-needed closure to grieving families.
“Adobe solutions touch everything that we do—from finding children to engaging the public—and it helps us fulfill our mission of keeping children safe,” said Michelle DeLaune, Senior VP and COO of NCMEC. “We’ve helped to reunite hundreds of families because someone recognized age-progressed images we created using Adobe Photoshop. Seeing those children reunited with their families years later reminds us why we will never give up on finding our missing children.”
The NCMEC forensic team also works with law enforcement to identify current victims of exploitation and their captors in photos and video footage, using Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe Audition. “We review more than two million images and videos of child sexual exploitation every month,” says DeLaune, who is in her 21st year at NCMEC. “Adobe Creative Cloud apps play an essential role in helping us identify victims, determine their possible locations, and ultimately provide law enforcement with information that can help them rescue a child from harm.”
One recent case involved an image of two very young victims—one was holding a prescription pill bottle. However, the name and address on the bottle were blurry and impossible to read. Using a new Photoshop filter in beta, the team was able to perform what was once the stuff of science fiction or movie magic, sharpening the label to identify the prescription holder, leading to the apprehension of the offender.
Given the urgency of its mission, NCMEC embraces all available digital channels and tools to identify missing or exploited children, spread awareness with the public, and raise money. Adobe has proudly donated to NCMEC software solutions for many mission-critical activities, and since 2007, has added technical expertise that goes far beyond image manipulation.
https://video.tv.adobe.com/v/347325t1/?autoplay=true&chrome=false&hidetitle=true&mute=true