Anyone who took photos or shot videos that included vehicles along County Road 501 and Florida Road (County Road 240) from 6 p.m. Nov. 18 to noon Nov. 19 is asked to share a copy with investigators. The county dispatch center may be contacted at 385-2900.
The door-to-door canvassing by the task force
followed days of searching with dogs and a dive team around Vallecito Reservoir. Community volunteers , as many as 200 in one day, visited vacant houses, barns and outbuildings looking for traces of Dylan.
Divers spent Monday searching beneath the waters of Vallecito Lake for the boy after two dogs alerted handlers to a scent that broke through the surface.
Dogs are now helping with ground searches.
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Twenty law officers on Wednesday continued their door-to-door visits and inspection of buildings that began Tuesday with the hope of finding someone with information who can help solve the mystery of Dylan’s disappearance.
The task force has officers from the Sheriff’s Office, Durango Police Department, FBI, Colorado Bureau of Investigation and the Bayfield Marshal’s Office.
“The task force is gathering any form of information,” Bender said. “The information may not be applicable now, but could be in the future.”
Specifically, investigators would like to talk to anyone who was taking photos or shooting videos that show vehicles along the typical routes between Vallecito and Durango from 6 p.m. Nov. 18 to noon Nov. 19. That would include County Road 501 and Florida Road (County Road 240).
Three canine units belonging to La Plata Search and Rescue returned Wednesday to Vallecito to explore areas adjacent to the reservoir but not along the shore, Bender said.
A dive team from the New Mexico State Police
used cadaver dogs, sonar and divers last weekend to explore an area near the reservoir dam that the dogs had signaled as being “hot.” Nothing unusual was found.
Bender said cadaver dogs don’t have to pass over every square foot of reservoir surface. The scents they are trained to detect emerge from the water, like smoke from a chimney, and dissipate, Bender said.
Dog handlers work into the wind to give the dogs the best opportunity to sniff out scents.