08-30-2011, 05:34 PM
welcome to Mock kittykane.
thankyou for posting.
please read:
http://mockforums.net/thread-6313.html
WCPO
![[Image: IMAG0048_20110830130744_640_480.JPG]](http://media2.wcpo.com//photo/2011/08/30/IMAG0048_20110830130744_640_480.JPG)
![[Image: 15355203_BG1.jpg]](http://wave.images.worldnow.com/images/15355203_BG1.jpg)
FAIRFIELD, Ohio - The search for a missing Fairfield woman is getting help from a nationally known search agency. Texas Equusearch , an organization known for its work in the search for Caylee Anthony and Natalie Halloway, will assist the local community in locating 22-year-old Katelyn Markham.
Tuesday morning, Tim Miller, the agency's founder and director, met with the Fairfield Police Department.
"Right now we're on our way to find a spot to use as a command center and we've got a couple of options we're looking at," Miller said after meeting with police.
He says that churches are often the best places to use as a command center because they offer a lot of parking and have office space and equipment.
"We've got a lot of 'Recon' work to do today along with mapping of the area. We'll also be meeting with the family as well," said Miller.
"The man has resources like you have no idea," Miller's colleague David Rader said on Monday. "Anywhere from sight scan Sonar to drones. He is well connected and if we need something, he will get it here."
Rader is a volunteer with Texas Equusearch and S.T.A.R.R. (Search Tactics and Rescue/Recovery). He never knew Markham but says that's no reason not to help.
"There's some people that volunteer for different things," said Rader. "I would hope that if I had a family member that was missing that they would come out and help me."
That's exactly what nearly 50 volunteers did Monday evening off Buell Road near Triple Creek.
"We are going through the forest and we are checking underneath bushes and things like that looking for any kind of evidence," Monroe volunteer Dana Stuhlreyer said. "It is a needle in a haystack, but I think with the large group, there's bound to be something that we find."
The volunteers searched until dusk and no new evidence was found.

please read:
http://mockforums.net/thread-6313.html
WCPO
![[Image: 15355203_BG1.jpg]](http://wave.images.worldnow.com/images/15355203_BG1.jpg)
FAIRFIELD, Ohio - The search for a missing Fairfield woman is getting help from a nationally known search agency. Texas Equusearch , an organization known for its work in the search for Caylee Anthony and Natalie Halloway, will assist the local community in locating 22-year-old Katelyn Markham.
Tuesday morning, Tim Miller, the agency's founder and director, met with the Fairfield Police Department.
"Right now we're on our way to find a spot to use as a command center and we've got a couple of options we're looking at," Miller said after meeting with police.
He says that churches are often the best places to use as a command center because they offer a lot of parking and have office space and equipment.
"We've got a lot of 'Recon' work to do today along with mapping of the area. We'll also be meeting with the family as well," said Miller.
"The man has resources like you have no idea," Miller's colleague David Rader said on Monday. "Anywhere from sight scan Sonar to drones. He is well connected and if we need something, he will get it here."
Rader is a volunteer with Texas Equusearch and S.T.A.R.R. (Search Tactics and Rescue/Recovery). He never knew Markham but says that's no reason not to help.
"There's some people that volunteer for different things," said Rader. "I would hope that if I had a family member that was missing that they would come out and help me."
That's exactly what nearly 50 volunteers did Monday evening off Buell Road near Triple Creek.
"We are going through the forest and we are checking underneath bushes and things like that looking for any kind of evidence," Monroe volunteer Dana Stuhlreyer said. "It is a needle in a haystack, but I think with the large group, there's bound to be something that we find."
The volunteers searched until dusk and no new evidence was found.