The tragic deaths of three sisters — Paityn (9), Evelyn (8), and Olivia (5) — have left their mother, Whitney Decker, devastated and the nation demanding answers. Their father, Travis Decker, now wanted for their alleged murders, was found to have killed them at a campsite in Leavenworth, Washington. The girls were discovered bound and suffocated, with investigators calling the crime “unthinkable.”
Whitney says this could have been prevented. She had repeatedly warned authorities about Travis’s mental instability, including PTSD and borderline personality disorder. When he failed to return the girls after visitation, she begged police for an Amber Alert — but was denied because the case “didn’t meet the criteria.” Her attorney, Arianna Cozart, argues those warnings should have triggered urgent action. “We may never know if an Amber Alert would have saved their lives, but it could have made a difference.” The case exposes systemic flaws in handling custody disputes and mental health red flags. Experts say the threshold for Amber Alerts and emergency intervention is often too high, leaving parents like Whitney powerless until it’s too late. As Travis remains at large, the murders have become a rallying cry for reform. Demands for quicker police response, improved mental health screening