11-year-old Longwood girl last seen near Sweetwater Springs found safe
An 11-year-old Longwood girl who deputies described as endangered was safely located and reported in good health after officials asked the public for help.

Seminole County deputies have safely located an 11-year-old girl who had been reported missing in Longwood, officials said. Deputies had described the child as endangered and asked for public help after she was last seen around 12 p.m. in the Sweetwater Springs area, the Seminole County Sheriff's Office said.
Officials confirmed the child was located in good health. The Sheriff's Office described the outcome as a safe recovery; deputies had earlier sought community assistance in locating the girl. "Have safely located an 11-year-old girl who had been reported missing in Longwood," one agency statement read, and deputies had described the child as endangered while the search was underway.
Details about where the girl was found, who located her, and whether she has been reunited with family were not released by authorities in the initial public statements. The agency did not provide the child's name, the exact time of recovery, or whether any investigation remains open. Those are among the outstanding items reporters and residents are likely to seek from the Seminole County Sheriff's Office.
The missing-and-found incident arrives amid a string of regional child-safety alerts and responses. Local feeds have recently grouped multiple missing-child items alongside this case, underscoring how quickly such incidents can mobilize deputies and community volunteers across Seminole County. For Longwood residents, the recovery offers immediate relief but also raises routine questions about neighborhood safety, communications during active searches, and how the Sheriff's Office coordinates public alerts.
Seminole County deputies have relied in past incidents on public notifications to accelerate searches. Residents who want to stay informed about future emergency notices should monitor official channels maintained by the Seminole County Sheriff's Office and sign up for local alert services. Public awareness and swift tips from neighbors often make a difference in the first hours after a disappearance is reported.
The Sheriff's Office has not released additional comment or a photo, and it is standard practice to withhold identifying details about children until families consent to publication. Reporters will continue to seek confirmation about the child's reunification with family, whether medical evaluation took place, and whether any criminal investigation will follow.
For Seminole County readers, the quick recovery is a reminder of the community role in public safety: deputies asked for help, the public responded, and a vulnerable child was found in good health. Officials have invited anyone with information about the earlier disappearance to contact the Seminole County Sheriff's Office so investigators can close remaining questions.
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