2011年4月6日星期三

Research of ground above autistic boy of Laval

Police of Laval, QC, called off the coast of field research Wednesday for a three year autistic boy who disappeared for three days.

Police said they have now changed their efforts for a recovery mission.

Investigators believe that adam Benhamma fell in the river of the thousand islands, which extends from a few meters behind the House of a friend of the family in a wooded of the Montréal city area.

Adam Benhamma disappeared from a Laval, Que., neighbourhood on Sunday afternoon.Adam Benhamma has disappeared to a neighbourhood of Laval, QC, Sunday afternoon. Laval policeAfter intensive research, three days involving sniffer dogs, helicopters, all-terrain vehicles and research teams on the ground and in the water, police reduced the effort as the hope of finding alive Adam faded.

Divers equipped with equipment sonar returned the region Wednesday to try to retrieve the body of the boy from the River.

If divers come up empty-handed, the recovery operation could also be closed at the end of the day, said police constable Laval Nathalie Lorrain.

"In my experience, after two or three days, that the operations are generally called off,"Lorrain said."".

Divers returned to the Mille-?les River on Wednesday with hopes of recovering Adam's body. Divers returned to the river of the thousand islands Wednesday hoping to recover the body of Adam. Melissa Kent/CBCAdam, who cannot hear or speak, was the last given Sunday afternoon on street Pointe - aux-Ormes in the neighbourhood of Auteuil Laval, where he and his family were visiting friends.

He was playing with her old sister seven years under the supervision of their father, police said. But when the father went inside for a few minutes, his daughter rushed to say that adam had disappeared.

He was wearing a tuque black and purple and black jacket and jeans.

Martine Dufour of nearby Terrebonne, Que., has been coming to Laval every day to help search for the missing boy.Martine Dufour of Terrebonne in the vicinity, Que., was entered in Laval every day to help search for the missing boy. Melissa Kent/CBCWhile police are ending their field research, volunteers have decided, that it is not time to give up.

Martine Dufour, who lives in Terrebonne, Que., planned to walk along the shoreline on Wednesday for clues, such as a piece of clothing of Adam.

Dufour was entered on the site every day since the beginning of the research.

"We must find the boy, even though he is not alive, so that parents can [cry],"Dufour said. ".

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