Three days after she disappeared on her way to Perry Hall Middle School, Jasmine Leighlin Baker was found, police said Friday.

Federal agents located the 12-year-old Maryland girl at 10:30 p.m. on Friday in North Carolina, according to the Baltimore County Police Department. Baker, 12, left her home in Nottingham at approximately 7:30 a.m. on Tuesday to walk to school but never arrived there, according to police. She did not have her phone or an extra change of clothes, police said.

FBI agents found her in a residence in the Raleigh area at approximately 10:30 p.m. on Friday with a man believed to be in his thirties, Baltimore County police reported. The man was being questioned by federal agents and authorities were looking into how the two met and the nature of their interactions over the past several days, according to police. Baker, who appeared to be unharmed, was taken to the hospital for a medical examination, police said. She had not been interviewed Friday evening, according to the report.

Since the girl disappeared Tuesday, authorities conducted "exhaustive searches," police said. Detectives followed-up on approximately 100 tips, including reports of an unfamiliar blue pickup truck and other unfamiliar vehicles seen near the girl's home in the 4200 block of Soth Avenue, police said Friday afternoon. Police said online activity helped lead agents to the girl.

"Digital forensics—specifically, the clues provided by Jasmine's activity on her iPod and Xbox—played a crucial role in detectives' ability to find her," Baltimore County police reported Friday night.

Police had previously said the preteen was very active on social media and had a history of communicating with men, including those in other states, by email, text and apps using an Xbox and wifi or an iPod Touch.