Crime

Fort Lauderdale police call in psychic to help find girl in infamous cold case

Sophie Reeder went missing from southwest Fort Lauderdale when she was 15. If she’s alive, she would be 24.
Sophie Reeder went missing from southwest Fort Lauderdale when she was 15. If she’s alive, she would be 24. Fort Lauderdale Police Department, 2022

Fort Lauderdale police have hired a psychic to help crack one of their most widely known cold cases — the mysterious disappearance of 15-year-old Sophie Reeder.

The teen, who lived in a waterfront home with her father on Citrus Isle in southwest Fort Lauderdale, went missing in 2017 and would be 24 now..

She was last seen on surveillance camera as she strolled along Davie Boulevard late at night, in high-top sneakers and a leopard-print coat. Her phone later pinged at the apartment of a felon.

Lonely and depressed, she’d been communicating online about working in the sex trade — and police and family fear she might have been trafficked for sex. Adding to the mystery, the date she disappeared, May 19, 2017, was circled on the calendar in her bedroom.

There’s been no sign of her since, no arrests, no breaks in the case.

Family members, who have expressed disappointment over the years with Fort Lauderdale Police Department’s handling of the case, said they were open to the use of a psychic and glad to see any movement toward answers. Though unusual, unorthodox and often a last resort, police departments at times call on psychics to help redirect detectives who’ve looked at the same facts and evidence time and again. The woman hired in this case specializes in helping law enforcement.

A Fort Lauderdale Police Department spokeswoman, Casey Liening, said an investigative team met with “psychic profiler and medium” Alejandra Taborn recently on Sophie’s case and is “actively evaluating the information provided and determining if there’s anything that may assist the investigation.”

Liening said this is not the first time the agency has consulted a psychic in Sophie’s case. Last year, another psychic reached out and offered to help for free, Liening said.

“It did lead to some follow up investigation in a canal and we immediately began conducting an extensive search in the canal and surrounding area,” Liening said in an email. “Unfortunately, this search yielded no results.”

Had vision of a murder

Taborn, 31, lays out on LinkedIn how her life experiences led her to create a training program for police, Sharpen Your Instincts.

At age 20, just before graduating from college, she says, "My boyfriend’s dead brother came to me. I started seeing things, hearing things, feeling things, knowing things about the dead. I thought I was losing my mind.”

Five years later, she says, she had her “first detailed vision of a murder. I saw how she was killed, who did it, and felt the intention behind it.”

Sophie Reeder
Sophie Reeder Facebook

Patrick Reeder, Sophie’s father, said he turned to a psychic himself years ago when his daughter went missing, and found it “good but a little hocus-pocus.”

“It’s encouraging that they want to do something, but I would like to see a track record or success stories,” he added.

The Tampa-area psychic said she can’t speak about her work for Fort Lauderdale police and declined to share past successes.

Liening said the agency paid $1,500 for a 90-day consultancy period and might use her on other cases.

“I’ll keep it simple: Psychics don’t solve cases, the police do,” Taborn wrote to the Herald. “I just act as another set of senses alongside theirs, working as an additional investigative tool. The information I sense acts as breadcrumbs, specific, detailed, and directional, for investigative teams to explore and follow.”

Sophie’s aunt, Kirsten Milhorn, said, “If someone, psychic or otherwise, truly believes they have information to help us locate her, we are willing to listen.”

Case featured on ‘Dateline’

Though initially Sophie’s disappearance got little attention from police or media, that changed. Her disappearance became one of Fort Lauderdale’s most publicized mysteries.

Her face has been emblazoned on a billboard, her case was the subject of a “Dateline: Missing in America” episode and countless news reports, and the police department agreed to offer a $25,000 reward for information that leads to her discovery. (Tipsters can email sophietips@flpd.gov or call 954-828-6677.)

National advocates for missing children, particularly children of color, have embraced her case and tried to help. Her aunt created a non-profit, Sophie’s Light Foundation, to teach children how to stay safe online. A Facebook page, Looking for Sophie, helps keep her story alive.

This story was originally published July 17, 2026 at 10:31 AM.

Brittany Wallman
Miami Herald
Brittany Wallman joined the Miami Herald in 2023 as an investigative journalist. A graduate of the University of Florida, she has been a newspaper journalist for 35 years. In 2026, she shared in a Pulitzer finalist honor for the series Killer Train. She previously shared in the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, for coverage of the Parkland school shooting. She grew up in Iowa and Oklahoma. 
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