NEW ORLEANS - SEPTEMBER 14: New Orleans residents sit in a stop and go a traffic jam on westbound Interstate 10 (I-10) headed out of town next to near barren eastbound lanes as Hurricane Ivan approachs the area from the Gulf of Mexico coastline as a category 4 hurricane September 14, in New Orleans, Louisiana. Ivan is expected to make landfall late night on September 15 or early morning on September 16 in the region somewhere from Southeastern Louisiana to the Mississippi or Alabama coastlines. (Photo by Mario Villafuerte/Getty Images)
Two Florida girls crossed multiple state lines last week to reportedly meet someone they met online. After the 12-year-old and 14-year-old saw themselves on TV at a gas station, they turned themselves into the police.
NBC News reports that the 12-year-old took her father’s car and picked up her friend in Lake Butler. The Union County Sheriff’s Department issued a missing girls alert at noon on April 6. By 3:38 p.m., the Department issued a ‘found safe’ update on its Facebook page.
Police also said no adult was with the girls, and they don’t suspect foul play. However, the Chief Deputy Capt. Lyn Williams said they believe the children were traveling to “meet someone they met online.”
The girls drove about 400 miles before being found safe in Bayou La Batre, Alabama. A missing alert went out Thursday (April 6) after they left their hometown. The distance is nearly a six-hour drive.
See the map below:
This is a developing story.