"I don't even want to put my baby in her bed," she said. "I sleep with her right next to me. It freaks me out to put her in her bed because I don't want nobody coming in my windows."
West had been thinking of getting the kids in her life Id'd for quite some time, but it was the case of missing baby Lisa Irwin that got her to come out this weekend.
"That's all I have in my life are my kids and my nieces," said West.* "That's what I live for everyday, so it's a pretty neat thing to come get done for free."
Brad Fowler, with Missouri's Masonic Children Foundation, says kids should have an ID done each year, or anytime their appearance or information change.
"It's sad to say that kids go missing in the U.S.," said Fowler* "It's sad to say it happens in Missouri and even here in Kansas City.* But it's something you have to do to protect your kids."
That's why his organization offers MOCHIP events every weekend.