The rain fell on Binghamton like a dirty shroud last April, washing the grit of the city into the gutters, but not the stain of what happened on Bigelow Street. Aliza Spencer, just twelve years old, was walking with her father and brother, a normal Thursday afternoon turned irrevocably black when a bullet found its way into her chest. No argument, no robbery gone wrong, just a senseless act that ripped through a family and left a hole in this already bruised town. The FBI is now openly asking for help, a tacit admission that this case, over a year cold, has hit a wall. They’re offering up to $50,000 for information – a substantial sum, even in a city where desperation is a common currency. But money can’t bring back a little girl.
Details are scarce, and that’s what’s gnawing at the edges of this investigation. The shooter, whoever they are, didn’t leave much to go on. No known aliases, no record of enemies, just a ghost who materialized long enough to fire a single, devastating shot. The Bureau isn’t even releasing basic descriptors – date of birth, place of birth, even race or sex remain unknown. It’s as if this person existed outside the usual channels, a shadow operating in the forgotten corners of Binghamton. Witnesses reported little beyond the immediate chaos, the screams, the frantic attempts to stop the bleeding. The area around Bigelow Street is a patchwork of quiet homes and harder edges, a place where people keep to themselves, and that silence is proving to be a formidable obstacle.
The lack of a profile is unsettling. Was it a random act of violence? A targeted hit gone wrong? Or something far more sinister, a message delivered with chilling precision? The FBI’s involvement suggests they suspect a level of organization, a connection to something larger than a street-level squabble. They’re combing through old cases, looking for patterns, for a thread that might lead them to the person responsible. But time is a relentless enemy in these situations. Memories fade, witnesses move on, and the trail grows colder with each passing day.
This isn’t just about solving a crime; it’s about sending a message. A message to the person who took Aliza Spencer’s life, and a message to the community that such acts will not be tolerated. Binghamton has seen its share of hardship, but the murder of a child is a different kind of wound, one that festers and refuses to heal. The $50,000 reward is a plea, a desperate attempt to break the silence and bring justice to a grieving family.
If you have any information, no matter how small, about the death of Aliza Spencer, contact the FBI’s Albany Field Office immediately. Don’t wait. Don’t assume someone else will come forward. A little girl deserves answers, and a city deserves closure. The number to call is (518) 465-7551. Let’s make sure this rain washes away the darkness, not just the dirt.
🔠Key Facts
| Full Name | Aliza Spencer |
| Charges | Murder Victim Binghamton, New York April 21, 2022 |
| Aliases | None known |
| Date of Birth | Unknown |
| Race / Sex | Unknown / Unknown |
| Nationality | Unknown |
| Height | Unknown |
| Weight | Unknown |
| Eyes / Hair | Unknown / Unknown |
| Scars & Marks | None reported |
| Location | New York |
📋 Source: FBI Most Wanted — Aliza Spencer
If you have information about this fugitive, contact your local FBI field office or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov.
Related Federal Cases
- Holly Ann Elkins, Stalking Murder, New York, 2024 · New York
- Frank Jenkins, Execution-Style Murder, New York 2014 · Vermont
- Michael Johnson, Abducted Elderly Woman with Dementia, New York Cit… · New York
- Edmanuel Victoria Charged with Armored Truck Robbery, New York, 2024 · New York
- John Doe, Midtown Shooting, New York NY, 2024 · New York

