
Mom Reports 3-Year-Old Daughter Missing, Then Police Charged Her for Murder
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A Delaware mother who reported her 3-year-old daughter missing on Tuesday was charged with murder in Maryland after officials determined the abduction claim was false, according to police.
Darrian Randle, 31, was initially arrested for falsely reporting by New Castle County Police before authorities expanded their investigation and charged her with murder and other offenses in Maryland linked to the death of her daughter, Nola Dinkins.
Darrian Randle was initially arrested for falsely reporting by police in Delaware, before authorities expanded their investigation and charged her with murder and other offenses in Maryland linked to the death of her daughter, Nola...
Darrian Randle was initially arrested for falsely reporting by police in Delaware, before authorities expanded their investigation and charged her with murder and other offenses in Maryland linked to the death of her daughter, Nola Dinkins. More
New Castle County Police
The Context
The case prompted an AMBER Alert, mobilizing federal, state and local law enforcement in a multi-state investigation.
In order to issue an AMBER Alert, authorities must confirm that an abduction has occurred.
"To allow activations in the absence of significant information that an abduction has occurred could lead to abuse of the system and ultimately weaken its effectiveness," the Department of Justice said on its website. "At the same time, each case must be appraised on its own merits and a judgment call made quickly."
What To Know
On Tuesday evening, patrol officers responded to a 911 call on the 500 block of Gender Road in Newark. Randle reported that her daughter, Dinkins, had been abducted by an unknown male armed with a handgun who allegedly fled in a dark SUV, New Castle County Police said in a news release. This led authorities to issue an AMBER Alert for the missing child, launching an intensive investigation involving New Castle County Police, Maryland State Police and the FBI.
Detectives later determined that Randle's story was false, according to New Castle County Police. She was charged with felony falsely reporting and booked into the Baylor Women's Correctional Institution in lieu of $1 million cash bail. The Amber Alert was subsequently canceled. Officials announced that the case is now being investigated as a homicide.
Maryland State Police charged Randle with first- and second-degree murder, first- and second-degree assault, child abuse, reckless endangerment, neglect, burying/disposing of a body in an unauthorized place, and failure to report a child death, according to records obtained by the Delaware News Journal. A second individual, 44-year-old Cedrick Antoine Britten, was also arrested and charged as an accessory to first- and second-degree murder after the fact, along with related offenses.
Newsweek reached out to Maryland State Police for comment.
Human remains consistent with a young child were found in a vacant lot in North East, Maryland, on Wednesday.
Identification of the remains is pending autopsy results by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore.
What People Are Saying
New Castle County Police, in a news release: "This remains an active investigation for both the New Castle County Division of Police and the Maryland State Police."
What Happens Next
The Maryland State Police Homicide Unit is leading the investigation with assistance from the FBI and New Castle County Police.
Police said Britten is in custody in Maryland, awaiting transport to the Cecil County District Court for an initial appearance. Randle is in custody in Delaware and is expected to be extradited.
Do you have a story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have any questions about this story? Contact LiveNews@newsweek.com.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
A Message to Progressive America
Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the interpretation of facts and data. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Many American progressives often claim to stand for universal human rights. But for the past 20 months, many have remained silent—or worse—when Jews and Israelis have been the victims. It has been 615 days since my brother-in-law, Omri Miran, was kidnapped by Hamas. On Oct. 7, 2023, he was taken from his home in Kibbutz Nahal Oz after being held at gunpoint with my sister, Lishay, and their daughters—Roni and Alma. They watched their neighbors slaughtered. They saw their community set ablaze. And then Omri was dragged into Gaza. Lishay and the girls were left behind, terrified and unsure if they would survive until they were rescued. Hostage Omri Miran and his family are pictured. Hostage Omri Miran and his family are pictured. Photo Courtesy of the Miran Family We still don't know where Omri is, what condition he's in, or whether he's being fed, tortured, and held in isolation. The little we know comes from two psychological warfare videos Hamas released—one in April 2024, the other just weeks ago, 12 days after his 48th birthday. Omri is one of 53 hostages still in Hamas captivity—people whose names and lives you never speak, never ask about, never make space for. For nearly 20 months, you've ignored them. Too often, you've desecrated them—reducing their abduction to a "consequence of the occupation," tearing their faces off lampposts, or dismissing their suffering as politically inconvenient. Worse, some have justified their captivity, recasting evil terrorism as "resistance." This isn't a critique of everyone who supports progressive causes. It's directed at the gatekeepers—the ones who shape discourse and decide whose pain is worthy of acknowledgment. The ones who denounce certain forms of extremism but excuse others flourishing in their own ranks. I live in New York. I studied at your elite universities, marched with you at your Pride parades, worked alongside you. I speak your language—the language of rights and justice, of liberation and solidarity. But somehow, that clarity ends when it comes to us—Israelis and Jews. Hostage Omri Miran's daughters are pictured. Hostage Omri Miran's daughters are pictured. Photo Courtesy of the Miran Family You march for Palestinian rights but say nothing about the 53 civilians still held in underground tunnels, the 250 kidnapped, or the 1,200 murdered on October 7. You twist terms like colonialism and rewrite history to fit your narrative, yet say nothing about generations of Israelis who have endured war and terrorism fueled by Arab rejectionism and radicalism. You speak of generational trauma, but when Jewish families live it in real time—when my nieces cry for the father they may never see again—you look away. And your silence has consequences. On May 22, two Israeli Embassy staffers were fatally shot outside a Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. A week later, Molotov cocktails were thrown at a peaceful "Run for Their Lives" rally in Boulder, Colo.—held to raise awareness about the hostages. At both events, the attackers shouted antisemitic slurs and invoked the now-familiar cry, "Free Palestine!" These are not isolated incidents. They are the product of a culture where violence against Jews is tolerated—so long as the victims are framed as symbols of a government you oppose. A world where hostage-taking is rebranded as "resistance," and antisemitism is recast as righteous anger. No, you didn't throw the Molotov cocktails or pull the trigger. But you helped shape a world where those acts are no longer shocking. Through the slogans you chant, the disinformation you share, the posters you rip down—you've blurred the line between activism and hate. Some go even further, treating American Jews as stand-ins for a government 6,000 miles away. This op-ed is not a demand for allegiance. It's a plea for coherence—for a moral compass that doesn't shift based on identity. If you believe in human rights, believe in them for us too. If you oppose oppression, then condemn what Hamas has done—not only to Israeli families but also to its own people. Hamas has brought nothing but suffering to Palestinians, subjecting them to an authoritarian Islamist rule, child conscription, and endless war. This is not about politics. It's about people. About Omri. About the 52 others still trapped in Gaza. About families—many of whom still don't know if they will ever say goodbye. You can oppose Israeli policy. You can support Palestinian aspirations. But if you cannot bring yourself to denounce hostage-taking and the deliberate murder of civilians in your own country—or worse, if you justify it—then your movement isn't about justice. It's about something else entirely. And one day, when the slogans fade and the reckoning comes, you may look in the mirror—and, like Dorian Gray in Oscar Wilde's novel, be horrified by what you see staring back. Omri is a father. A therapist. A gardener. He is not a symbol or a number. He is a human being who deserves to come home. Say his name. Say all their names. Acknowledge their suffering. Demand their release And if you can't, then be honest enough to admit that your vision of liberation does not include us. Moshe Emilio Lavi was born in Sderot, Israel. He is a former captain of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and now works as a management consultant in New York City. His brother-in-law Omri Miran is a hostage in Gaza. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
RFK Assassination: What Newly Released Files Reveal
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Newly released files about the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy shed new light on his life and how he briefed secret service agents about a foreign trip behind the Iron Curtain. On Thursday, the CIA released 54 previously classified documents totaling 1,450 pages about RFK's death. The documents, some redacted, show how the CIA responded to his killing and detailed RFK's trip to the Soviet Union, among other vignettes about his life and the broader social and political context of the time. Why It Matters RFK, a former Senator and Democratic presidential candidate was assassinated in June 1968 after making a campaign speech in Los Angeles. He died aged 42, on June 6, the day after the attack at the Ambassador Hotel. At the start of his second term, President Trump ordered the release of documents on the assassinations of RFK and his brother, former President John F. Kennedy, with backing from RFK's son, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The administration first released a batch of documents in April, then another in May. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., speaks in Washington, March 16, 1968, as he announces he will run for president. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., speaks in Washington, March 16, 1968, as he announces he will run for president. AP Photo RFK's death, as well as that of JFK, have fascinated the American public for decades, sparking conspiracy theories and speculation. Sirhan Sirhan, then aged 24, was convicted in July 1969 of the assassination. Sirhan, now aged 81 and serving life in prison, admitted at his trial that he shot RFK but said he could not recall doing so. RFK Jr. has expressed doubts on Sirhan being the shooter and called for a reinvestigation of the assassination. What To Know The documents include news articles, intelligence reports, dispatches and correspondence between the CIA and other agencies. One document detailed efforts to shape the media coverage of the assassination and another showed memos about allegations the CIA was involved in John F. Kennedy's 1963 assassination. Another detailed RFK's trip to the Soviet Union in 1955 as a young Senate staffer. RFK visited the communist state with Supreme Court Justice William Douglas and briefed the CIA about his experiences during the trip. In one memo he said he visited a state factory and said he met an engineer who "was friendly." What People Are Saying The CIA in a statement: "The records reveal for the first time that Senator Kennedy shared his experiences traveling to the former Soviet Union with CIA, reflecting his patriotic commitment to serving his country." RFK JR. in a statement: "Lifting the veil on the RFK papers is a necessary step toward restoring trust in American government. I commend President Trump for his courage and his commitment to transparency. I'm grateful also to Tulsi Gabbard and John Ratcliffe for their dogged efforts to root out and declassify these documents." What Happens Next The Trump administration has also ordered the release of documents related to the assassinations of JFK and Martin Luther King Jr.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Florida Amber Alert issued for Ryan Figueroa. His mother abducted him, police say
A parental abduction on Thursday night triggered an Amber Alert after a mother kidnapped her 6-year-old son in Little Havana, police say. Ryan Figueroa, 6, was last seen in the 1300 block of Southwest First Street, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement said. Officials note he is with his mother, 34-year-old Ismari Figueroa Leon, in a 2012 black Chevy Equinox with license plate number RUZG29. He was wearing a white polo shirt and black joggers, while Ismari was wearing a black jumper. Ryan is 3 feet 5 inches tall, about 70 to 80 pounds and has brown hair and eyes. Ismari is 5 feet 8 inches and has multiple tattoos. Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or the Miami Police Department at 305-579-6111.