Edmonton Journal

Toddler vanished into Texas woods

Boy survives three-day ordeal unharmed

- BRITTANY SHAMMAS

Hope was starting to wear thin as the search for a missing three-year-old boy entered its fourth day in southeaste­rn Texas.

Authoritie­s knew Christophe­r Ramirez had vanished between 1:30 and 2 p.m. Wednesday after chasing a neighbour's dog into the woods near Plantersvi­lle — and little else. With so few clues, Grimes County Sheriff Don Sowell told reporters on the weekend, “We were running on prayers, four-wheeldrive and overdrive.” Tim Miller, director of volunteer search-and-recovery group Texas Equusearch, said it would be “impossible” to find Christophe­r.

Later Saturday morning, the impossible happened: A good Samaritan found the boy in a wooded area eight kilometres from where he was reported missing, the sheriff 's office said. The child was tired, hungry and dehydrated but otherwise unharmed.

Soon after, Christophe­r was back in his mother's arms, both of them crying.

How he survived the previous few days without food, water or shelter was not clear — and may never be. In a similar incident a month earlier, three-year-old Anthony “AJ” Elfalak was discovered in a woodland area of Australia three days after disappeari­ng from his family's remote property. Both families described their stories as miracles.

The search for Christophe­r began Wednesday afternoon, shortly after the toddler wandered off with the dog while his mother, Araceli Nunez, unloaded groceries at their home northwest of Houston. The dog returned, but the boy did not.

Relatives called authoritie­s, who went door-todoor, looking for signs of the boy last seen wearing a green shirt and Mickey Mouse shoes, KAGS reported. The sheriff's office said early in the investigat­ion that foul play was not suspected.

Nunez sobbed Thursday as she pleaded for help.

“I'm desperate, and my heart has a hole in it,” she said in Spanish during a news conference, according to ABC News. “Please bring back my son, please help me.”

The FBI and local agencies joined the effort, and more than 100 investigat­ors used dogs and helicopter­s to try to find the boy in the rural area. Authoritie­s drained three small bodies of water in their search, KAGS reported, and reviewed photograph­s of a child found at the U.s.-mexico border.

By Saturday, Sowell told reporters that he was thinking of the little boy found in Australia: “I said: `How ironic. Hope, pray that ours is going to be the same way.' ”

A break in the case came about 11 a.m. Saturday, when a man called authoritie­s and said he might have found Christophe­r. A person, described by the sheriff as “a humble and kind man that did not want his name mentioned,” had decided to look for the boy after learning of his disappeara­nce the previous night during Bible study.

The man, who gave his name only as Tim, told KPRC he was searching the woods near a pipeline when he heard what sounded like a child. He said investigat­ors arrived at the scene and started searching, shouting Christophe­r's name. He called for Christophe­r, too.

“I called his name, and he responded, and he kept talking and talking,” the man said. “And I just went through the thick of the woods and I found him.”

Of finding out the boy was okay, Miller said: “There's no feeling like this.”

Sowell thanked the community for the “tenacity, dedication and the spirit of never giving up in this mission to find Christophe­r.”

The toddler was taken to Texas Children's Hospital to be monitored, with his mother by his side. On Monday, he left the hospital with an escort from first responders. Sowell said it was arranged after Christophe­r told a deputy that he liked the police and fire department­s.

The boy and his mother arrived home to balloons, TV cameras and a crowd of police who lined up to hug him. Sowell pinned a junior deputy badge to his shirt, telling the group, “After all this, he's passed the survival test. He can be an Army Ranger, a Navy SEAL or a police officer or Air Force pararescue — or whatever he wants.”

With Christophe­r on her hip, Nunez called the family's ordeal “an example that God exists, that God is with us,” KWTX reported. She thanked everyone who helped bring him home. “I cannot put into words what I felt when I saw my son again and held him in my arms,” she said.

 ?? GRIMES COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE ?? Christophe­r Ramirez, 3, vanished after chasing a neighbour's dog into woods near Plantersvi­lle in southeaste­rn Texas on Wednesday. He was found Saturday.
GRIMES COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Christophe­r Ramirez, 3, vanished after chasing a neighbour's dog into woods near Plantersvi­lle in southeaste­rn Texas on Wednesday. He was found Saturday.

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