The agency has arrested over 300 human traffickers and 1,700 child predators over the past year.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has located over 6,200 missing children, and is “advancing the mission of protecting America’s children at a level never seen before,” FBI Director Kash Patel said in a March 17 update about the agency’s “historic year” in 2025. The number of children recovered was more than 30 percent higher than the previous year.
Of these, 2,700 were identified to be victims of child exploitation, the DOJ said.
Patel said that in 2025, the FBI arrested 1,700 child predators, over 300 human traffickers, and dismantled 764 criminal networks. Moreover, more than 3.8 million pedophile accounts on the dark web were terminated, the director said in a summary posted on X.
The FBI also made more than 435 Violent Crimes Against Children arrests, leading to indictments against over 300 individuals. Online exploitation and Nihilistic Violent Extremist arrests were up 490 percent from 2024, the FBI reported.
“We rebuilt the FBI, surging agents out of D.C. and into communities, expanding intel sharing, and deploying cutting-edge tech and AI to hunt predators faster than ever,” Patel said. “Under President Trump’s leadership, we remain relentless in protecting children and will not slow down.”
Nearly 30,000 children were reported missing in 2024, the FBI said in a Sept. 10 post, citing data from the Congress‑authorized nonprofit National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which partners with the agency.
Roughly 90 percent of those cases reported to the center that year were returned home.
“Missing children cases fit into one of several categories beyond true stranger abductions. Some are taken by someone they know, such as a parent, other relative, or family friend. Others run away to meet an online acquaintance or to escape their home life,” the FBI said.
“Some children are reported as missing to cover up a murder. Some are kidnapped by people who want to raise the child as their own. Others—usually the very young or those with developmental disabilities—wander off from home and get lost.”
According to data from the DOJ’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, which captures reports from every law enforcement agency nationwide, there were 349,557 reports of missing youths—under 21-years-old—in 2024. The office awarded over $86 million in fiscal year 2024 to prevent child abduction, locate missing children, and provide technical training and assistance.







