
Cindy Rodriguez Singh, a Texas woman with ties to India and Mexico, is now on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted
The Disappearance of Noel Alvarez: A Tragic Mystery Unfolds
The case that has gripped both the United States and India began with the quiet vanishing of 6-year-old Noel Rodriguez-Alvarez, a child with chronic health conditions who was last seen in October 2022 in Texas. His mother, Cindy Rodriguez Singh, 40, initially told authorities that Noel was living with his biological father in Mexico. But that claim quickly unravelled.
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In March 2023, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services requested a welfare check after receiving disturbing reports about Noel’s condition and absence. When police visited the family’s home in Everman, Texas, Singh allegedly lied about Noel’s whereabouts. Just two days later, she, her husband Arshdeep Singh, and their six other children boarded a flight to India without Noel.
Authorities later confirmed that Noel never boarded the flight and has not been seen since. An Amber Alert was issued, and the investigation escalated rapidly. In October 2023, Singh was charged with capital murder, and a federal warrant was issued for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.
From Texas to India: A Fugitive on the Run
The FBI believes Singh fled to India with her family and has not returned to the U.S. since March 2023. Her husband, Arshdeep Singh, is of Indian origin, and investigators suspect the family may be hiding among relatives or in remote areas with limited law enforcement visibility.
Singh is now the 537th person added to the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list, and the agency has increased the reward for information leading to her arrest from $25,000 to $250,000, one of the highest rewards currently offered.
Described as 5’1″ to 5’3″ tall, weighing 120 to 140 pounds, Singh has brown eyes, brown hair, and multiple distinctive tattoos on her back, legs, arms, and hands. The FBI has released her photos and urged the public in both the U.S. and India to report any sightings.
The case has drawn comparisons to other high-profile fugitives with international ties, raising questions about extradition protocols, cross-border cooperation, and the challenges of tracking fugitives in countries with vast rural regions.
A Disturbing Pattern: Abuse, Neglect, and a Trail of Lies
As the investigation deepened, a chilling portrait of Singh’s behavior emerged. According to police reports and witness statements, Singh allegedly subjected Noel who suffered from chronic lung disease to severe neglect and abuse. She reportedly withheld food and water, refused to change his diapers, and even claimed the child was “possessed” or “had a demon in him”.
Witnesses told investigators that Singh feared Noel would harm her newborn twins, born shortly before his disappearance. In one bizarre account, she allegedly claimed to have “sold” Noel to a woman in a supermarket parking lot an assertion police found no evidence to support.
The FBI and local authorities believe Noel is no longer alive, though his body has not been found. The case has sparked outrage across Texas and beyond, with many calling for stronger child welfare oversight and faster response mechanisms when children go missing.
At a press conference, FBI Special Agent Joe Rothrock stated, “This case is heartbreaking. We believe someone out there knows where Cindy Rodriguez Singh is. We will not stop until she is brought to justice”.
Conclusion:
The story of Cindy Rodriguez Singh is a haunting blend of maternal betrayal, international flight, and a child lost too soon. As the FBI intensifies its global search and the reward climbs to a staggering $250,000, the world watches and waits. For Noel, justice has been delayed but not denied. And for Singh, the net is closing in.
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