Ashley Williams asked her parents for money then disappeared

Ashley Williams

Ashley Williams disappeared in Los Angeles. (Sherry Williams)

Want to see more of NewsNation? Get 24/7 fact-based news coverage with the NewsNation app or add NewsNation as a preferred source on Google!

(NewsNation) — One Georgia family has flown to Los Angeles in search of their 28-year-old daughter, who has been missing since Aug. 29, 2025.

Ashley Marie Williams requested money in a text message that day but never accepted the funds. Her family hasn’t heard from her since then, which they say is unusual for Williams, who was in constant contact with her family.

Ashley Williams was close to her family

“I cut her umbilical cord, I was the first holder,” said her father, Dwayne Williams. “I just want my baby back.”

Ashley Williams kept in touch with her dad every day — sometimes by phone, sometimes by text, but a day didn’t go by without some sort of connection to her dad and other family members.

Williams grew up in Ohio, but in 2022, her father got a job transfer to Georgia, requiring a move. But when the family moved south, Williams decided to go west.

She had been assaulted, a crime that scared her, so she decided to move to Los Angeles, one of the places farthest away from her imprisoned attacker.

“She came to California because of an assault; she was assaulted in Cleveland,” Dwayne Williams said. “So she remained in Cleveland for a while, fearing that her attacker was going to get out of prison and come looking for her.”

At 28, Ashley Williams worked retail jobs and braided hair on the side. She was hoping to become a teacher.

“She was learning Mandarin,” Dwayne Williams said. “She wanted to teach English as a second language to Asian children.”

Ashley Williams disappears

On Aug. 29, Ashley Williams texted her father to send her money. He sent it to her, but she never accepted it. That’s the last time her parents heard from her.

  • Ashley Williams
  • Ashley Williams
  • Ashley Williams
  • Ashley Williams

“The whole time that Ashley’s been out there in California, there has not been a day that she has not talked to her dad,” said Sherry Williams, her mother. “So immediately after a day of her not accepting the money, her dad started saying, ‘What’s going on?'”

The Williams family called the Los Angeles Police Department for a welfare check. Officers went to the place she’d been staying, a room at a house in the 3800 block of Crawford Street, and were told she hadn’t been there since July.

Searching for Ashley Williams

So Sherry and Dwayne Williams got on a plane and flew to LA to search for their daughter and find answers for themselves. They hired a private detective and went to the last place she had been living.

They were told that their daughter hadn’t been at the home in months.

A call log from Ashley Williams’ phone shows she contacted the Midnight Mission on Skid Row. Her parents and the investigator went there, looking for Williams among the homeless.

“[Her] dad started crying,” said private detective Moses Castillo. “Because some of the sites we saw were just real people, down and out.”

“There were blocks upon blocks upon blocks of homeless people and just to imagine that my daughter may have been down there,” Dwayne Williams said. “Had we known, we would have caught the next flight out there.”

“Ashley has always known that we have always been there for her, to support her, in whatever way, financially, we have been [there],” Sherry Williams said. “Something that we always tried to instill in all of our children, no matter what the situation, no matter what it is, no matter how bad it gets, please come to us. We’re here to support, to help, and that’s what we’ve been doing all this time Ashley’s been in LA.”

Ashley Williams’ parents want her to come home

Both Sherry and Dwayne Williams say their faith and their church community

“[We] can’t sleep, can’t eat, it’s difficult to even function, not knowing,” Dwayne Williams said. “There is absolutely, positively, no way that I could do [this] and function without faith.”

But the pain doesn’t stop.

“Please come home, let us help you,” Williams said. “You got so many family, so many people that want you back home. That’s all we want, you back home safely. You don’t have to worry about somebody hurting you. And if anybody, god forbid, is holding her, just let her go. Please just let her go, let her come home.”

Williams is described as a Black woman with black hair and brown eyes, who is 5 feet, 6 inches tall and weighs about 150 pounds. Anyone with information should call the Los Angeles Police Department’s Missing Persons Unit at (213) 996-1800.

Missing

Copyright 2026 Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AUTO TEST CUSTOM HTML 20260112181412