Calera family praying for safe return of missing grandfather as search efforts continue
CALERA, Ala. (WIAT) — A massive search effort continues into Friday evening in Calera for 72-year-old Reuben Waithaka.
Calera police said Waithaka was last seen walking away from a relative's home in the Timberline subdivision around 11 a.m. on Thursday.
According to police, Waithaka is about five feet tall. He was last seen wearing khaki pants and a blue and white plaid button-up shirt.
He and his wife, Elizabeth Waithaka, are visiting from Nairobi, Kenya to see their first-born grandson graduate from Calera High School on Tuesday.
While he's never been diagnosed with dementia, the family said he seemed to be confused when they last spoke on Thursday morning.
We talked with his wife and his daughter-in-law, Mary Waithaka, outside their home in Calera on Friday morning. Elizabeth Waithaka said her husband seemed somewhat confused when he stepped outside on Thursday morning and began walking.
She said she had started to follow him but realized that she had left the door open. She rushed back to lock the door and said when she returned, he was gone.
'I'm so worried, I'm so, so worried,' she said, standing in the front yard of her son's home in Calera.
Despite their growing concern, the family has said that they remain hopeful that the search and rescue efforts will bring him back safely.
'We're praying. We're very prayerful, we're a prayerful family. Everyone is praying,' Mary Waithaka said.
Calera Police Chief David Hyche said they've talked with the individual who gave Waithaka a ride to the Chevron gas station near the entrance of Timberline subdivision. Waithaka was spotted on surveillance video entering the gas station.
Chief Hyche is asking for the public's help in case someone else gave him a ride.
'We would like to ask that if anybody else might have given this man a ride, we think that's a possibility, and actually we're hoping that somebody did that, because that would be far better than him being in the woods on a day like today for that long, being of his age and with his health problems, we're very concerned' Hyche said.
Hyche said this has been an extensive search involving multiple agencies with helicopters, drones and dogs from the Red Mountain Search Dog Association.
'We had reports from several civilians in the area that they had seen the person that met the description, so we decided to concentrate on this area,' Calera Fire Chief Sean Kendrick explained when asked about the location of the command center and the search area off of Highway 310.
This unexpected turn of events has not dimmed the family's hope that Waithaka will still get to see his grandson graduate.
'It is supposed to be a happy occasion,' Mary Waithaka said. 'But we have hope that he's going to be here and will get to celebrate.'
The search effort is expected to continue throughout the night if necessary, according to officials.
'It's been amazing. It's been overwhelming, just seeing people come out,' Mary Waithaka said.
Anyone who may have seen Reuben Waithaka is asked to contact Calera Police at 205-668-3505 or call 911.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

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


Fox News
25 minutes ago
- Fox News
Martha's Vineyard residents fume over arrests of illegal immigrants in liberal enclave
Martha's Vineyard residents are unhappy with the Trump administration deporting illegal immigrants from their liberal enclave, The Washington Post reported this week. The community has been reeling since Immigrations and Customs Enforcement officers arrested dozens of illegal immigrants in a recent raid, according to the report. "It's bullying," one Martha's Vineyard resident, Charlie Giordano, told the Post. "I don't know how many are illegal or legal, I don't give a s---. But I do care about how they're treated." The Washington Post's story on the Martha's Vineyard ICE raid comes as the federal law enforcement agency has been the focus of riots in downtown Los Angeles for the past several days. ICE agents carried out operations at businesses across Los Angeles on Friday, sparking protests and clashes outside multiple locations that grew so chaotic that President Donald Trump ordered National Guard troops into the city, followed by several hundred U.S. Marines, to restore order. Some California officials, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, have accused the administration of exacerbating the situation. As the Post reported, ICE agents performed a massive sting throughout Massachusetts in late May that resulted in nearly 1,500 arrests. Forty of those arrests happened on the two islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. The arrests have ignited "fear among undocumented workers who form the backbone of the workforce here just as the busy summer season gets underway," the outlet reported. "After the raid, many immigrants panicked and shuttered themselves indoors. Many spoke to The Washington Post only on the condition of anonymity because they fear being targeted the next time ICE arrives on the island. They recounted taking extraordinary measures that day and in the week after to protect themselves," the Post said, adding that the liberal community on the island had been shaken as well. "The arrests hit a nerve in a liberal enclave known for welcoming everyone: presidents — former president Barack Obama has an oceanfront property here — LGBTQ+ activists, racial minorities, celebrities and a large cluster of immigrants from Brazil," the paper noted. One Brazilian resident, who admitted to the Post he is undocumented, warned that the local economy will crater because of the arrests and deportations. The anonymous man, who also owns three businesses in Martha's Vineyard, said, "The money is just going to stop flowing. The U.S. is only losing in pushing us out." The Island has become a safe haven for many illegal immigrants from Brazil in recent decades as they fled their home country due to hyperinflation and other economic problems. According to the outlet, many came over on work or tourist visas, but ended up staying in the country. The Post reported that these immigrants "established businesses offering food and cleaning services that are now crucial to daily life in a resort town. Today there are few restaurant menus here that don't offer Brazilian-inspired options like croquettes or traditional cheesy bread." It noted just how prevalent the Portuguese language is within the community as well. An anonymous Brazilian woman, who owns a business and has raised three children on the island, told the paper, "The American people love us because we work so hard to help the community prosper and grow." "This was a safe place," she added. Residents said that the recent arrests "felt arbitrary and included valued community members who had committed no crime," according to the Post. A Brazilian pastor on the island told the outlet, "ICE would come here to get criminals and that is good. But the way they did it now, that was not it." However, the paper acknowledged ICE's recent statement disputing those claims. According to the agency, more than half of all the illegal immigrants detained in Massachusetts last month had a criminal record. ICE did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Martha's Vineyard was at the center of the nation's immigration debate in 2022, when Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ordered 50 illegal immigrants detained in Florida to be flown to the island. DeSantis was attempting to highlight the record influx of migrants at the southern border.


Fox News
30 minutes ago
- Fox News
China's Escalating Espionage War Against The U.S.
Concerns over China's espionage campaign against the United States are growing following recent reports highlighting issues of espionage, agro-terrorism, and artificial intelligence. Most recently, China has faced scrutiny after the arrest of three Chinese nationals, including one who attempted to smuggle illegal biological materials into the U.S. from a university in Wuhan, China. Former diplomat and senior advisor with the Center for International Studies (CIS), Jim Lewis, joins the Rundown to discuss China's threat to the United States and how they are targeting America on multiple fronts. At the end of the last fiscal year in 2024, the US Army exceeded its recruitment goal. Now in 2025, our army says they've met their goal four months early. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth credits President Trump for this uptick in military recruitment, saying he had initially called it the 'Trump bump' but now sees it's really a tsunami of young folks who want to work 'under a President they know has their back.' Navy veteran and The Heritage Foundation senior fellow Brent Sadler joins to unpack what could be fueling this military recruitment surge. Plus, commentary from the host of 'Tomi Lahren is Fearless on Outkick,' Tomi Lahren. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
If you're on the job hunt, watch out for this employment scam
Job seekers are being warned about scammers posing as recruiters. They just want applicants' information and money, the Better Business Bureau says.