Utah mother charged with kidnapping 11-year-old boy she accused of bullying her autistic son
A 40-year-old Provo, Utah, mother faces child kidnapping and aggravated child abuse charges after she allegedly hunted down an 11-year-old boy she claimed was bullying her autistic son, forced him into her vehicle, and refused to release him until he apologized.
Shannon Marie Tufuga now faces up to 15 years to life in prison if convicted on the kidnapping charge alone, a second-degree felony. A charging document was filed on Monday in connection with an incident that allegedly took place on September 17, 2025, the Daily Mail reported.
Months passed before the case surfaced. It remains unclear from court records how Tufuga's alleged actions came to light.
What the Charging Document Describes
According to the charges, Tufuga was driving around Provo on September 17, looking for her son's alleged bully, when she spotted the 11-year-old riding his bike. She stopped in front of him and made him get into her vehicle.
She then drove the child to her home in Provo without his parents' consent and forced the boy to apologize to her son. Even after extracting the apology, Tufuga allegedly threatened to have her husband beat him up. She told the boy he "was lucky she did not run over [his] bike."
Tufuga eventually drove the boy back to his parents' home in Provo, authorities said.
The charging document describes lasting damage. According to the filing:
"The incident has caused [the boy] serious emotional distress. [He] now has high anxiety and has had to alter his daily routines significantly."
An 11-year-old child now rearranges his life around fear because an adult decided to play enforcer.
Vigilante Parenting Is Not Parenting
There is no parent alive who doesn't understand the rage that comes from watching your child suffer. When a kid on the autism spectrum is targeted by a bully, the instinct to intervene is powerful and entirely natural. Nobody disputes that.
But what Tufuga allegedly did is not intervention. It is a crime. She reportedly stalked a child through the streets, coerced him into her car, held him in her home without parental knowledge, threatened him with physical violence from her husband, and only released him after he complied with her demands. Strip away the backstory, and what remains is a grown woman terrorizing somebody else's kid.
The bullying claim, even if entirely true, does not create a legal or moral license to kidnap a child. Schools have administrators. Communities have police. Courts exist for a reason. Every one of those channels demands more patience than driving around town hunting for an 11-year-old, but every one of them also keeps you out of a courtroom facing a second-degree felony.
The Social Media Footnote
In now-deleted Facebook posts, Tufuga reportedly explained that her son is on the autism spectrum. The posts are gone. No direct quotes survive in the public record. But the instinct to take the story to social media before the legal system tells you something about how the incident was perceived by the person who committed it: not as a crime, but as a justified act worth broadcasting.
That confidence is its own kind of warning sign. When adults convince themselves that the rules don't apply because their cause feels righteous, children on the other end of that calculation pay the price.
What Comes Next
Tufuga has been ordered to appear at the Utah County Jail before April 30 to be fingerprinted and processed. It was unclear as of Monday whether she had surrendered herself. The boy she allegedly kidnapped is identified only by his initials in court documents.
If convicted on the kidnapping charge, the maximum sentence is 15 years to life. The aggravated child abuse charge carries its own penalties.
Whatever was happening between these two children needed adult intervention. It got an adult escalation instead. And now two families are dealing with consequences that didn't have to exist.



