Missing child alert — Cheyenne searching for 14-year-old Kymani Flores
The moment everything shifted
Missing person in Wyoming. Kymani Flores disappeared in Cheyenne on January first. Midday felt ordinary. Holliday Park looked peaceful. People walked dogs. Kids chased birds. Somewhere in those quiet minutes, a boy vanished. Calls reached voicemail. Messages stayed unread. Panic arrived fast. Officers began searching quickly. Every hour since has mattered.
Who Kymani Flores is
He is fourteen. He is a son, friend, classmate. Laughter comes easily around him. Games and music shape his afternoons. Dreams involve growing stronger and wiser. His absence leaves rooms feeling empty. Family waits at the window. Hope keeps them moving. They want one thing only: safety and home.
A parent’s plea
“My child is missing. Every minute steals my breath. If you’ve seen my baby, please don’t look away.” Those words carry fear. They carry hope. They carry love that refuses to break. Families never plan for nights like this. Silence grows louder than anything. One call could change everything.
The last known details
He was seen near Holliday Park. Movement afterward remains unclear. He might have walked along the road. He might have crossed near traffic. Someone may have passed without noticing. A memory could live there quietly. That memory could matter now. Investigators build timelines from fragments.
What he wore that day
Kymani wore a white T-shirt. Black jeans matched. Shoes were black and red. Those colors stand out near sidewalks. Think about your New Year afternoon. Did anyone fit that description? Even a faint recollection helps. Trust that instinct. Share it if it might matter.
Why urgency keeps rising
Teen disappearances shift quickly. Bus rides appear suddenly. Friends offer secret plans. Weather changes without warning. Darkness adds risk. Waiting costs options. Early reporting protects kids. Communities close those gaps. Awareness turns minutes into chances.
How officers search
Cheyenne officers canvass roads and paths. They review park cameras carefully. Patrols speak with walkers and neighbors. Dispatch logs every tip. Leads receive fast review. Regional partners stand ready. Clear information moves first. Rumors only slow progress.
What the family is living
Plates stay untouched. Doors remain unlocked. Lights glow through the night. Every message invites hope. Silence follows again. Friends bring blankets and coffee. Neighbors share flyers. Prayer circles form quietly. Love holds everyone steady. No one stops looking.
Why sharing matters now
Recoveries often start with one moment. A driver recalls shoes. A jogger remembers a shirt. A shopper spots a familiar face. Small fragments become direction. Direction guides search teams. Sharing multiplies eyes everywhere. Visibility protects children.
What to do if you see him
Stay calm. Keep distance. Notice streets and landmarks. Call immediately. Avoid confrontation. Remain available for officers. Your observation might save a life.
Where to report information
Call 911 if you see Kymani Flores. You may also reach the Laramie County Combined Communications Center. Provide times, locations, companions, and vehicles. Do not wait. Never assume someone else reported. One call could bring him home.
Cheyenne stays alert tonight. Officers continue searching. Neighbors remain vigilant. Screens share his photo. Please watch carefully. Please share widely. Help bring Kymani Flores home safely.