Couple arrested after kidnapping son over 7 years ago: Cops
Share and Follow

Inset: Abdul “Aziz” Khan in 2017. Left: Rabia Khalid. Right: Elliot Bourgeois (Douglas County Sheriff’s Office).

Police in Colorado recovered a now-14-year-old boy more than 7 years later and 1,400 miles from where his noncustodial mother kidnapped him.

Deputies with the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office were called on Feb. 23 to a home on Kelliwood Way in Highlands Ranch, just south of Denver, after the owner spotted two people on surveillance cameras who had entered their property without permission. The home was vacant and for sale.

When deputies arrived on scene, they found two kids sitting in a car. They then saw a man and woman walk out of the house, according to a press release issued Wednesday. The couple claimed they were associated with the real estate agent but their story didn’t add up, deputies said. For four hours the cops worked to identify the pair who had given them false names.

They uncovered what Sheriff Darren Weekly called a “remarkable story.” It turned out that the woman’s name was 40-year-old Rabia Khalid. She had an active arrest warrant for kidnapping her then-7-year-old son in November 2017 in Atlanta. Abdul Aziz Khan, now 14, was one of the children in the car.

According to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), Khalid was supposed to appear at a custody hearing in Atlanta on Nov. 27, 2017, but instead disappeared with Abdul and her new husband Elliot Blake Bourgeois — the now-42-year-old man with her at the home in Colorado last month.

Abdul, who went by his middle name Aziz, was at the center of a nasty custody dispute between his mother and father after they separated in 2014, NCMEC reported. When it became clear that Khalid may lose custody, the trio fled Georgia and seemingly vanished, authorities said. Khalid and Bourgeois allegedly got rid of their phones and deleted their social media accounts.

“They did not show up at work one day, just out of the blue,” Deputy U.S. Marshal Brian Fair told NCMEC. “They fell off the map.”

It’s unclear how they’ve evaded authorities for all this time, but it wasn’t for a lack of trying. The U.S. Marshals have searched 11 states since they assumed the investigation in 2020. The family had moved around a lot.

“We believe that they have been all over the country,” said Weekly.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Tepe Homicides: Accused Surgeon Faces Potential Additional Charges While Incarcerated for Dual Murders

An Illinois resident is facing charges for allegedly murdering his ex-wife, Monique…

Father Accused of Drugging Kids at Sleepover Reaches Lawsuit Settlement

An Oregon man has reached a settlement in a civil lawsuit following…

DOJ Accused of Misconduct: Abrego Garcia Claims Critical Documents Could Dismiss High-Stakes Case

Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife Jennifer Vasquez Sura leave the United…

Shocking Verdict: Couple Receives Lenient Sentences for Grisly Double Murder and Dismemberment

Inset: Jeffrey Mackey and Alexis Nieves walking to a courtroom appearance (Newsday).…

Cause of Death Unveiled for Special Education Teacher Linda Brown Found in Lake Michigan

The cause behind the tragic death of Linda Brown, a dedicated special…

Stepmother Allegedly Starves 11-Year-Old to Death as Family Dines in Her Presence, Police Report

Inset: Shannon Faith Robinson (WVDCR). Background: The area in West Virginia where…

Surgeon Accused in Tepe Murders Faces New Charges for Gruesome Double Homicide

Michael McKee, a surgeon from the Chicago area, is now entangled in…

Tragic Incident: Woman Allegedly Kills Sister and Conceals Body in Backyard

Inset: Karen Pais (Remembered.com). Background: Debra Patton at her trial for killing…