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There's a viral post about a missing autistic child in Evansville. And it's a scam

Portrait of Jon Webb Jon Webb
Evansville Courier & Press

Posts describing a missing child have rocketed around social media in Evansville and across the country the last few days. And they're all a scam.

The Facebook posts, which often turn up in yard sale or local news groups, claim a child named Brandan Cooper has been reported missing in whatever town is being targeted at the time.

"He is diagnosed with autism and needs daily medications. He is considered to possibly be in EXTREME danger and in need of medical assistance," the posts read. "We are asking for the community's HELP TO FIND HIM. ONLY TAKES 2 SECONDS to share."

The posts have materialized in groups as far flung as New York and Colorado. And on Monday, someone posted one to "Evansville And Henderson Yard sale / Garage sale!!" − a page with more than 13,000 followers. Within six hours, it racked up over 2,000 shares.

The problem? There is no missing child named Brandan Cooper in Evansville – or likely anywhere else.

"You're right, it's a scam," Evansville police spokeswoman Officer Taylor Merriss said Tuesday.

The Middletown, New York police department echoed that sentiment in a Facebook post Monday night after "Cooper" appeared in a buy-sell-trade group there.

"Brandan Cooper has not been reported missing to our agency and we have no reason to believe that he is an actual missing child," the post states. "Please do not share this post if you see it on another page."

A post to a local Evansville and Henderson group shows a recent scam flooding Facebook pages around the country. Evansville police and other law enforcement agencies say there is no missing child named Brandan Cooper.

What the Brandan Cooper posts show

The posts come complete with two seemingly identical photos of a small boy with curly red hair. He wears a black t-shirt covered in an orange tank top that reads "Autistic Be Kind."

The comments to the posts are sometimes turned off, preventing anyone from raising an eyebrow.

Individual accounts post them to popular local groups, but the accounts are usually inactive or filled only with other suspicious posts. The complete Facebook history of the one that perpetuated the Cooper scam in Castle Rock, Colorado consisted only of a single profile picture, two other missing children posts, and a rent-to-own ad for a three-bedroom, two-bath home magically going for only $550 a month.

It's also uncertain if the child shown in the images is a real photo of another boy or just an A.I. creation. A reverse image search by the Courier & Press turned up zero other online hits.

While Brandan Cooper is fake, hundreds of other missing persons cases aren't.

Indiana's missing persons spreadsheet lists more than 1,000 Hoosiers who have reported missing between 1974 and just a few days ago. Some are young, some are old, and many, unlike Cooper, are real children.