LOS ANGELES — For over two decades, all Maria Mancia had of her son was a single photo, a slightly blurry image of a boy, 18 months old, staring unsmiling into the camera.
On Thursday, he was wiping away her tears at a reunion neither of them ever expected.
When the boy's father abducted him from their Southern California home in 1995, he also took every picture she had of him, even the ultrasound of him during her pregnancy. She had to write to a relative just to get one picture to show the police.
But early this year a tip led investigators to Mexico and the son, Steve Hernandez, now a 22-year-old law student.
On Thursday morning, he came to the U.S. and immediately met his mother.
"It was a shock," Hernandez told the San Bernardino Sun. "I didn't know if she was alive or not and to get a call that says they found my mother and that she had been looking for me, it was like a cold bucket of water. But it's good. It's good."
The two parents and their toddler boy had been living in Rancho Cucamonga, California, in 1995. The parents were having relationship struggles. Mancia came home from work one day and thought they had been robbed. It took her a while to figure out that both her son and his father were gone.
The San Bernardino County District Attorney's Child Abduction Unit had been looking for Hernandez for years, searching for him in several states.