Guymon Police Seek Public Help Locating Missing 17 Year Old
The Guymon Police Department has asked the public to help find 17 year old Alondra Juanita Larios Tino, who was last seen early on Thursday December 11 at her home. The case matters to Texas County residents because missing adolescents strain local law enforcement and social services, and highlight gaps in youth mental health and community safety resources.

The Guymon Police Department has asked residents to come forward with any information that might help locate Alondra Juanita Larios Tino, a 17 year old girl who was last seen around 4 a.m. on Thursday December 11 at her home in Guymon. She was reported as wearing a black hoodie, brown or dark red sweatpants and tan Ugg style boots when she disappeared. Anyone with information is asked to call the Guymon Police Department at 580 468 0915.
Local authorities are continuing an active inquiry into her whereabouts. For a small rural community like Guymon in Texas County, a missing teenager becomes an all hands on deck public safety concern. Investigations draw on limited sheriff and municipal resources, and the emotional toll on families and neighbors deepens quickly as hours pass.
Missing youth cases intersect with several public health issues. Adolescents are vulnerable to exploitation and to experiences that can harm physical and mental wellbeing. In rural regions those vulnerabilities are often compounded by fewer available mental health services, long travel distances to clinics, and constrained school based supports. These structural gaps influence both prevention and response, making community awareness and rapid sharing of credible information essential.
The case also underscores wider policy questions about funding and service distribution. Strengthening partnerships between law enforcement, schools, public health agencies and community based organizations can speed responses and offer families clearer pathways to support. Investments in youth outreach, crisis counseling and transportation can reduce the conditions that lead to disappearances and make recovery more likely when teens go missing.
For now the immediate step for residents is concrete. Anyone who saw Alondra after 4 a.m. on December 11 or who has relevant information should contact the Guymon Police Department at 580 468 0915. Community vigilance, along with coordinated public services, will be critical in bringing her home and in addressing the systemic needs the case exposes.
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