Andre Terrence Bryant, 1989, Brooklyn, New York (US)

Andre Terrence Bryant

Missing Persons

Name: Andre Terrence Bryant
Case Classification: Endangered Missing
Missing Since: March 29, 1989
Location Last Seen: Brooklyn, Kings County, New York

Physical Description

Date of Birth: February 17, 1989
Age: 1 month old
Race: Black/African American
Gender: Male
Height: 1’7″
Weight: 10 lbs.
Hair Colour: Black
Eye Colour: Brown
Nickname/Alias: Unknown
Distinguishing Marks/Features: Unknown

Identifiers

Dentals: Not Available
Fingerprints: Not Available
DNA: Not Available

Clothing & Personal Items

Clothing: The child was last seen wearing a gray sweatsuit with two red horizontal lines, beige & white knitted hat & sweater, and white socks
Jewellery: Unknown
Additional Personal Items: white socks

 

Circumstances of Disappearance

Andre’s mother, Monique Rivera, had been taking Andre and her two older sons for a walk in their Brooklyn, New York neighborhood on March 28, 1989, when she encountered two women driving a 1988 or 1989 burgundy Pontiac Grand Am Sports Edition with tinted windows and possibly Maryland license plates.

Monique Rivera

One of the females was African American, approximately 30 years old in 1989, and heavyset with a dark complexion; she wore sunglasses. The other woman was Hispanic or African American with long red hair and a light complexion; she wore a red leather jacket and white pants and was approximately 22 years old at the time. Both women were about 5’7 tall. Rivera may have known one of them from back when she was in middle school. The women engaged Rivera in conversation about her children and asked to hold Andre, and they convinced her to go shopping with them. Rivera bought herself an outfit from a store called Canadian’s, and the women bought her a pair of pants and a shirt. Then they took her home.

Rivera told her husband, Timothy Bryant, that the women used a fraudulent credit card to make their purchases and that she planned to go shopping with them again in White Plains, New York the following day. Timothy’s sister, Patricia, agreed to babysit the children while Rivera shopped. On March 29, Patricia went to Rivera’s apartment on Madison Street to babysit.

The two women did not pick up Rivera outside her apartment but called her home from a payphone around the corner and asked her to come out and meet them. They insisted that she bring Andre with them on the shopping trip, so Rivera took the baby with her and left her other children with Patricia. She was last seen getting into the women’s vehicle outside her apartment at 2:00 p.m.

On the morning of March 30, Rivera’s body was found in the woods by the Eastchester Bay, near City Island Road in the Bronx. She had been struck on the head and strangled and had numerous defensive wounds such as bruises and broken fingernails, indicating she fought back against her attacker(s). There was no sign of Andre, Rivera’s companions, or their vehicle at the scene. The police were able to identify the body a few days later after Timothy published an ad in the paper appealing for information on her whereabouts.

A few days after Rivera’s murder, a strange woman calling herself Joan Walker called her apartment. Joan asked to speak to Rivera, and when told she was dead, said this was impossible because they had just gone shopping a few days earlier. The caller has never been identified and authorities were never able to link anyone named Joan Walker to the case.

Andre has never been heard from again and the two women who accompanied him and his mother on the shopping trip have never been identified. A photo of Rivera is posted with this case summary. She was twenty-five when she died and left behind her husband and two other sons besides Andre.

Authorities believe Andre may have been sold into an adoption ring. At the time of his disappearance, they thought his presumed abduction might be connected to the disappearances of Shane Walker and Christopher Dansby. Both boys disappeared from the same Harlem Park three months apart in 1989. All of the missing children are African American.

All of the cases remain unsolved, and it is unclear what happened to the children.

 

Investigating Agency(s)

Agency Name: New York City Police Department
Agency Contact Person: N/A
Agency Phone Number: (212) 694-7781
Agency E-Mail: N/A
Agency Case Number: 03687

NamUs Case Number: MP5304
NCIC Case Number: M-353851251
NCMEC Case Number: 721896

 

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