In the quiet town of Enterprise, Alabama, a heartbreaking case has gripped the nation. On February 16, 2026, Adrienne Reid, 33, called police at 3:10 a.m. claiming her 2-year-old daughter, Genesis Nova Reid, had vanished from her bed in their apartment. The front door was allegedly open, suggesting the toddler wandered out into the night wearing pink Minnie Mouse pajamas.

But the story quickly unraveled. Investigators discovered major inconsistencies in Adrienne’s account. Neighbors and witnesses reported not seeing little Genesis for several weeks prior to the report—raising alarming questions about when she was truly last seen safe. Police swiftly determined the child had likely been missing far longer than claimed, prompting a shift from a simple missing person case to a full-scale investigation involving local, state, and federal agencies, including the FBI and Alabama Law Enforcement Agency.

The search intensified around the Meadowbrook Apartments and surrounding wooded areas, drainage systems, and sewers. By the third day, specialized cadaver dogs from East Alabama Canine Search and Recovery were deployed. These highly trained animals, used to detect human decomposition, reacted strongly in key zones near the home—alerting aggressively with barks and howls that signaled the presence of human remains scent. Despite exhaustive sweeps, no conclusive evidence was recovered at that time, leaving authorities both relieved and frustrated. Police Chief Michael Moore noted in a briefing that teams were thankful nothing definitive turned up yet, but the investigation presses on relentlessly.

Adrienne Reid was arrested shortly after and charged with providing false information to law enforcement—a felony in Alabama. Prosecutors argued she is the only known suspect, potentially having concealed or destroyed evidence, and labeled her a flight risk. A judge set an unusually high $1 million cash-only bond, which her attorney has since petitioned to reduce. She remains in Coffee County Jail as the search expands, following leads across the southeast United States.

Digital billboards now display Genesis’s photo along major highways, urging the public to come forward. Authorities continue to plead: “Someone knows something.” The Enterprise Police Department stresses that every tip matters, no matter how small, and the priority remains bringing Genesis home safely—or providing closure if the worst is confirmed.

This case highlights the devastating impact of child disappearances and the critical role of community vigilance. As days turn into weeks since the initial report, the unanswered questions loom larger: What really happened to tiny Genesis Nova Reid? The truth may still be hidden, but the search—and the hope—endures.