HARRIS COUNTY, Texas — The 1-year-old at the center of the AMBER Alert out of Houston is still missing.
On Friday, the state AMBER Alert for Noah Johnson was canceled, but officials said the Houston Regional Amber Alert remains active for the 1-year-old who hasn't been seen since Tuesday, Feb. 6.
An AMBER Alert was issued for Noah on Thursday, Feb. 8 after concerns his mother, Kamilah Antoinette Johnson, 38, took him from the hospital and didn't pick up his prescription, according to the Harris County Pct. 8 Constable's Office.
Deputies said Noah has a serious medical condition that could worsen if he doesn't get the medication.
Noah's doctors asked CPS to do a welfare check after they found out his mother hadn't picked up his prescription. CPS asked deputies to go to the family's apartment on Space Center Boulevard near Genoa Red Bluff Road, but Noah and his mother weren't there.
"We received information from the complex that the mother had been seen loading her vehicle up with clothes and different things, and her children and left the apartment complex," an investigator said.
Noah was last seen wearing a navy-colored shirt and flower-print pants. Authorities said he is around 2 feet tall and 30 pounds with black hair and brown eyes. His hair was braided in corn rows when he was last seen.
Kamilah is 5 feet 4 inches and 170 pounds with black hair and brown eyes, officials said.
They are believed to be in a white 2007 GMC Yukon with Texas license plate STM7097. Investigators believe they may be in Missouri where they have family. Noah's grandmother said she hasn't heard anything from her daughter in several days.
If you have any information about Noah's whereabouts, you're asked to contact the Harris County Pct. 8 Constable's Office at 281-488-4040, option 1.
What to do when someone goes missing
Thousands of people go missing every year across the United States, and there are organizations and law enforcement agencies that work to bring them home to loved ones.
The Texas Center for the Missing is an organization with Houston roots that works to educate loved ones and authorities on finding the lost.
From resources that deal with missing children to endangered adults, the nonprofit organization has compiled a wealth of resources to help.