A Lubbock family is asking local and state lawmakers to reconsider current policies and procedures after their loved one was kidnapped and murdered by a close friend.
15-year-old Elizabeth Ennen was babysitting for Humberto Salinas Jr. on the night of January 5th, 2011. Salinas Jr. admitted to kidnapping the Monterey High School student from the Carriage House Inn. Her body was found a few weeks later just a few miles northeast of Shallowater. She had been strangled.
The aggravated kidnapping charges against Salinas Jr. were dropped when he agree to a life long sentence without the possibility of parole, for capital murder charges.
Ennen’s family said they had several issues with the way Lubbock police handled Elizabeth’s case from the beginning.
On the day she was reported missing, LPD listed her as and endangered runaway. Her status was not changed to an endangered missing person until almost three weeks later, the same day Salinas Jr. was charged with her kidnapping.
Current Lubbock Police Chief, Greg Stevens, was the Public Information Officer in 2011. He said there was not enough evidence to support the argument that Elizabeth had been taken against her will. He said it’s a tough call to make, but one he stands by to this day.