I e-mailed the author of the article on the KTXS site to ask about how long this search was going to last. She replied that is was "just a one day thing". That to seems like they were looking for something very specific and not just a needle in a haystack.
Again this was a reply to an e-mail from my personal account. I cannot link the e-mail as I do not want my personal e-mail address listed all over the net. So take this post as you see fit.
You cannot search a landfill in one day. :maddening:
This is absurd. It has been two months. :banghead:
In Lori's case they stopped the garbage within
24 hours of her disappearance and it still took
33 days to find her body.
That was AFTER a week long search of the landfill starting less than a week after Lori went missing...
Plus a second 12 day or longer search starting August 4th.
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/...issing-wife-makes-first-court-appearance.html
Then they started searching in the end of August and didn't stop until they found her. So they actually searched for more than
50 days total of the
73 days Lori was missing.
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/595095560/Lori-Hacking--Her-body-found.html?pg=3
The body found 33 days after police first began searching the refuse pile was "heavily decomposed," but
most of the remains were recovered, Salt Lake City Police Chief Rick Dinse said.
An estimated 4,300 tons of refuse was deposited at the Salt Lake Valley Solid Waste Facility, 3060 W. California Ave. (1400 South), on
July 19, the day Lori Hacking disappeared, Stanford said.
By midday July 20, police asked landfill managers to redirect incoming refuse to another area of the facility.
Cadaver
dogs and handlers spent 21 unsuccessful nights searching the huge pile of garbage for the woman's remains.
Police then altered their approach, beginning a visual, day-time search for the woman on Sept. 14. Salt Lake police asked for the help of other valley police departments for assistance, with dozens of police officers and firefighters from the area volunteering for the job.
Over the past three weeks,
a search team of 20 to 25 people, dressed in overalls and steel-shanked boots, have combed through one-ton sections of garbage with pitchfork-like rakes and sometimes by hand.
Working 10-hour shifts and four-day weeks...