
‘We want to fi nd Patrick’
Detectives look for clues, ‘redemption’ in young boy’s 2010 disappearance
BY DEAN MOSES
Seven-year-old Patrick K.
Alford left his Spring Creek
Towers’ apartment in Brooklyn
at about 9 pm on Jan. 22,
2010 to throw out the trash, but
never returned home.
Seeming to vanish from
the face of the earth, the near
12-year-old mystery has continued
to endure in the hearts
and minds of those who knew
the young boy and those who
continue to search for him.
Formerly known as Starrett
City, Spring Creek Towers
is an East New York complex
made up of 46 apartment
buildings, and several amenities
such as its own sports club
and a newspaper. Almost serving
as its miniature city on the
outskirts of the Big Apple, this
community was left in shock
when Alford disappeared.
For years, the NYPD
searched high and low for the
missing child. Following lead
after lead that led to nothing
but dead ends, investigators
even scoured the nearby Shirley
Chisholm State Park (once
known as Penn and Fountain
Parks) that was, at the time, a
notorious dumping ground —
but no traces of the boy ever
materialized.
Despite the passage of time
and the decade since Alford’s
initial disappearance, detectives
COURIER L 20 IFE, DECEMBER 3-9, 2021
tell amNewYork Metro
that they are refusing to give
up. Becoming a rather personal
case for the department,
Detective Leiddy Zuber says
the NYPD is not going to stop
until the mystery is solved.
“All missing persons cases
are important, but this case
particularly touched everybody
because he was seven
years old,” Zuber said. “It was
cold when he disappeared, and
he was not properly attired.
Everybody who has a child
can relate. It is a scary thing.”
Posting fl yers inside 130
Vandalia Ave. — Alford’s
place of disappearance — and
around Spring Creek Towers
at high pedestrian locations
such as bus stops, the detective
says she is turning to the
community in hopes of bringing
closure to the family.
“My message to the public
is now that we have more technology,
you have more social
media. We want you to share
this story, because we want
to fi nd Patrick,” Zuber said.
“There’s always time for redemption.
And please call us
anything small, every little
detail that you can give us can
possibly help us fi nd Patrick.”
As passersby eyed the image
of the boy and the reward
of up to $13,000 for information,
residents were instantly
taken back to that day. Inside
the building where he vanished,
Brooklyn Paper’s spoke
with Natalie Thomas who still
lives at 130 Vandalia.
Thomas described the disappearance
as strange, in more
ways than one.
“It didn’t seem like a random
thing, it seemed like they
wanted that boy. It wasn’t like
we have to watch our kids, it
wasn’t that feeling at all. It was
totally like something’s going
on with this particular family
and this child,” Thomas said,
adding, “It’s a sad story but we
never got a sense that the child
was dead.”
Another resident who
didn’t want to be identifi
ed mentioned rumors that
swirled on the street indicating
the boy was whisked out
of the country, but as the
mystery grows, so does local
intrigue.
Still, the NYPD states
that no matter how big or
how small any information
could lead them to Alford’s
whereabouts. The boy would
have turned 19 on Nov. 28,
and investigators hope to be
able to solve the mystery at
long last.
Anyone with information regarding
this missing child can
call Crime Stoppers at 800-577-
TIPS. You can also submit tips
online at crimestoppers.nypdonline.
org, or on Twitter @
NYPDTips. All calls and messages
are kept confi dential.
Posting fl yers inside 130 Vandalia Ave.—Alford’s place of disappearance—
and around Spring Creek Towers. Photo by Dean Moses