Jul 27, 2016
Jul 15, 2024
Ivon
Fowler
25
7
44 inches
52 lbs
Black / African American
Male
In the summer of 2016, a welfare check at a home in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, unraveled a deeply disturbing mystery that had remained hidden for over a decade. When officials from Allegheny County's Department of Children, Youth and Families (CYF) arrived at Patricia Fowler's residence on June 20th to remove her children due to medical neglect, they expected to find six children. Instead, they found only four. This discovery triggered a frantic search for Patricia's then 17-year-old twins, Ivon and his sister Inisha. Officially, the date of their last contact is listed as September 11, 2006, when they were both seven years old. However, the reality of when they were last seen is far more uncertain, with some relatives stating they hadn't seen the twins since they were toddlers, around 2002 or 2003. The investigation into the twins' whereabouts was immediately fraught with confusion and conflicting narratives, primarily from their mother, Patricia Fowler. She offered investigators a series of contradictory stories, claiming the twins were living with various relatives or friends in different states, including North and South Carolina, and Georgia. At one point, she made the shocking claim that she had sold each of her children for $2,000 to a woman named "Barbara," a story she later recanted when informed of its criminal implications. None of Patricia's explanations could be verified by law enforcement. The uncertainty was compounded by the fact that there were no recent photos of Ivon or his sister; the only images available were from when they were infants. Further investigation revealed that neither child had ever been enrolled in school, and there was no activity associated with their social security numbers. A dark cloud from the past also hangs over the case, specifically an incident involving Ivon when he was just two years old. In November of 2000, he suffered severe second and third-degree burns over a significant portion of his body after allegedly being accidentally scalded in a bathtub. His mother did not seek medical attention for him until the following day. Though he was hospitalized for over a month, and the twins were briefly removed from their mother's care, they were returned a few days later, and police were not notified by CYF at the time. This incident left Ivon with extensive scarring, a key identifying feature that was notably absent from a child a social worker later thought might have been him in 2006. The children's older brother, Datwon, later admitted to impersonating Ivon in messages to the police, an attempt to get investigators to stop questioning his family. While Patricia Fowler ultimately pleaded guilty to charges of making false statements, as well as theft and fraud for collecting public assistance on behalf of the missing twins, she was sentenced to probation. The more serious charges were dropped due to a lack of direct evidence that she had harmed them. The disappearance of Ivon Fowler and his twin sister remains an unresolved and heartbreaking case, leaving family and investigators to fear the worst. The vague timeline, lack of evidence, and shifting stories from their mother have created a deeply unsettling mystery, leaving a community to wonder what truly happened to the two young children who seemed to vanish without a trace.
Sep 11, 2006
Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania
Allegheny County
No
30241
Allegheny County Police Department
Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania
Allegheny County
15208
Michael Kuma
Detective
400 North Lexington Street, Pennsylvania
4124731200
County
Law Enforcement
1600010823-B
Allegheny County Police Department
Black
Brown
Brown
06/06/2026