A NEWCASTLE fan whose teenage daughter has been left unable to communicate after thieves stole her computer has received support from Magpies legend Alan Shearer.
An appeal for help in finding the equipment Miya Thirlby, who has cerebral palsy, uses has been shared on social media by the Newcastle and England football legend.
More than 2,000 people have retweeted an appeal for help in tracing the talking aid.
Shearer tweeted: "Come on man. Do the decent thing and please somehow get the machine back to this little girl."
The 16-year-old from Plymouth, who also has epilepsy, uses a tablet with sophisticated equipment which generates speech from what she is looking at.
Come on man. Do the decent thing and please somehow get the machine back to this little girl. 🙏🏻🙏🏻 https://t.co/17fqu8Znla
— Alan Shearer (@alanshearer) January 11, 2018
Her father Paul Johnson said the Accent 1400 cost around £5,700 and he is asking for information about where it is after it was stolen from his car outside the family home.
Mr Johnson, a 40-year-old business analyst, said: "I want to get the word out to get it back.
"Miya cannot talk but I get the feeling she knows it has gone, she uses it every day.
"It will be upsetting for her."
He said the thieves may have thought they were stealing a regular computer as it was stored in a laptop bag.
An interesting take on the issue. Don't turn on the thieves who have stolen someone else's property that they have no doubt worked hard to pay for, for their child. Turn on those trying to help. #idiot https://t.co/9C8Zwz0ozW
— Alan Shearer (@alanshearer) January 11, 2018
He was desperate to get it back for Miya as the software was specially adapted to work with her eyes.
The machine has pictures of her father, mother Kerrie Thirlby and her twin Macie and it says their names if Miya looks at the images.
He urged anyone who might know where it is to hand it in to a responsible person.
After Mr Johnson, an exiled Newcastle United fan, tweeted about the theft, people have offered to fundraise to buy a replacement, but he hoped to get the original computer back.
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