North Texas Woman On FBI’s ‘Most Wanted’ For Alleged Murder Of 6-Year-Old Son

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North Texas Woman On FBI’s ‘Most Wanted’ For Alleged Murder Of 6-Year-Old Son

Federal agents arrested a North Texas woman on the FBI’s “10 Most Wanted” fugitive list for the alleged murder of her 6-year-old son.

Cindy Rodriguez Singh of Everman, Texas, just south of Fort Worth, was wanted in connection with the presumed death of Noel Alvarez, although the child’s body has never been found.

Singh was added to the FBI’s Most Wanted fugitive list last month, as The Dallas Express reported at the time. 

“Singh is wanted on state charges of killing her six-year-old son,” FBI Director Kash Patel wrote. “She will face charges of Unlawful Flight to Avoid Prosecution and Capital Murder of a person under 10 years of age.”

Alvarez has been missing since October 2022, as The Dallas Express previously reported. 

In March 2023, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services requested that the Everman Police Department conduct a welfare check on the boy. Singh allegedly lied to officers, saying Alvarez had been “living with his biological father” in Mexico since November 2022. 

Days later, Singh, her husband, and six children boarded a flight to India using one-way tickets purchased by Singh’s husband, but Alvarez was not with the family on the flight.

In October of 2023, Singh was indicted for capital murder in the Tarrant County District Court. In November, the U.S. District Court for Northern Texas issued a federal arrest warrant for fleeing prosecution. 

Her arrest in India marks the FBI’s fourth “10 Most Wanted” fugitive arrested in seven months, according to Patel.

“That’s a credit to tremendous field work, law enforcement partners, intelligence operatives, and an administration who is letting good cops do their jobs,” Patel said. 

Patel thanked the Department of Justice, “partners in India,” the FBI-Dallas, and the FBI-New York for their assistance with the investigation.

FBI-Fort Worth, Texas Rangers, the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office, the Everman Police Department, and the Northeast Tarrant County Child Abduction Response Team also worked this case, as The Dallas Express reported.

“This is a promise we made to him and to this community, that we would never stop until those responsible are held accountable,” Craig Spencer, Everman city manager and former chief of police, previously said.

The Dallas Express reached out to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Texas, but a representative declined to comment. 

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