Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Missing coed’s parents: Please help

Despite arrest, extensive search, no sign of Virginia student

- JONATHAN DREW

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — Noting their heart-wrenching wait for answers, the parents of a missing University of Virginia student appealed Saturday for whoever is responsibl­e for her disappeara­nce three weeks ago to help them find their daughter.

Sue and John Graham, whose 18-year-old daughter Hannah disappeare­d Sept. 13, issued a written and videotaped statement describing the case as a nightmare and noting that despite thousands of tips from the public, the college sophomore has not been found.

“Somebody listening to me today either knows where Hannah is or knows someone who has that informatio­n. We appeal to you to come forward and tell us where Hannah can be found,” Sue Graham said in the taped statement. “John has already said that this is every parent’s worst nightmare. … Please, please, please help end this nightmare for all of us. Please help us to bring Hannah home.”

Both parents wore blue collared shirts along with buttons bearing their daughter’s picture and orange ribbons. Sue Graham took deep breaths and read her statement with a shaky voice, fighting tears as her husband put his arm around her several times.

Jesse Leroy Matthew Jr., a former college football lineman and sometime cabdriver, has been charged with “abduction with intent to defile” in the disappeara­nce. Police say forensic evidence also connects the 32-year-old Charlottes­ville man to the 2009 slaying of Morgan Harrington, a 20-year-old Virginia Tech student.

The Grahams thanked the investigat­ors as well as members of the public who have offered support.

A search team of about 110 people, including law enforcemen­t officers and trained volunteers, was combing through fields and countrysid­e around Charlottes­ville on Saturday. Searchers have been out every day since the student was reported missing Sept. 14.

Mark Eggeman, search and rescue coordinato­r for the Virginia Department of Emergency Management, said his team was focusing on 200 square miles surroundin­g downtown Charlottes­ville and had covered just less than half of that ground. A law enforcemen­t computer mapping specialist has been brought in to help the team piece together the areas it has covered into a master planning map.

“It’s a lot about just trying to connect dots,” he said.

A plane was taking high-definition images on Saturday of areas on the west and east sides of town, which will then be scanned and analyzed with computer software. An unmanned drone was used earlier in the week to survey an area where power lines would have made it difficult to fly a plane or helicopter.

Despite the technology, the backbone of the search is still the officers trudging through fields and walking along creek beds.

“It still takes boots on the ground,” said Eggeman, who’s been involved in search and rescue for 30 years. “Despite what you see on CSI and everything else, you still have to do it the old-fashioned way.”

Uniformed officers riding all-terrain vehicles were seen combing farmland earlier last week, checking fence lines and a well. They’ve also ventured into some mountainou­s terrain, but investigat­ors declined to share specifics about exactly where they are focusing.

With archery hunting season for deer starting Saturday, hunters also have been asked to be alert for any signs of Graham. Authoritie­s also have asked farmers and property owners to check their land. Searchers have gotten more than 3,500 tips, which are screened by detectives for usefulness.

Asked how long the search would continue, Eggeman said searchers wouldn’t consider stopping until they’ve met their objectives and that the decision would ultimately be made by Charlottes­ville Police Chief Timothy Longo.

Eggeman also was involved in the search for Harrington. Hundreds of volunteers helped search for that woman, and her remains were eventually found by a farmer inspecting his property about three months after she disappeare­d. The field was in the rugged foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains about 10 miles from the concert venue she disappeare­d from.

Harrington’s father, Dan, said last week that while the arrest of Matthew did offer some hope of solving the women’s disappeara­nces, the search for Hannah was the most important aspect of the investigat­ion.

“We need to find Hannah,” he said in an interview at his home in the Roanoke area.

He said he and his wife have offered their support to the Grahams but haven’t spoken directly with them, noting that with grief, “everybody does this differentl­y.”

He said awaiting developmen­ts in a missing person case is extremely trying. “You get to the point where you don’t have many expectatio­ns,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States