FBI Announces $1M Reward for Info About Those Responsible for the 2012 Kidnapping of Caitlan Coleman and Her Family

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In October 2012, Caitlan Coleman, who was approximately six months pregnant, was traveling through Maidan Wardak Province, Afghanistan, with her husband, Canadian citizen Joshua Boyle, when they were kidnapped. While in captivity, Coleman gave birth to three children. During their captivity, proof-of-life videos featuring Coleman, Boyle, and their two oldest children were released publicly by the captor network. In one of the videos, Coleman identified her captors. The Coleman-Boyle family was freed from captivity by the Government of Pakistan on October 11, 2017.

The United States Government is offering a reward of up to $1 million for information directly leading to either the arrest or prosecution of those responsible for the kidnapping and captivity of Caitlan Coleman and her family.

“The FBI is dedicated to not only bring American citizens back home but also to bring them justice after years in captivity,” said Timothy R. Slater, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office. “Years after the Coleman family returned home, dedicated FBI special agents and analysts are still actively working to identify the family’s captors. Our pursuit of justice does not end, but we also need the public’s help to identify those responsible for the family’s five years of captivity.”

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