cecybeans
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Thanks for following up. I read in the article that "neighborhood groups" indicated that that area was searched with cadaver dogs.
I guess for me that seems a bit vague, but it is better than nothing. I am curious to know if an organized search was conducted that catalogued all of the items that were located, or were the searchers just walking through the woods looking for a body? Would they have documented the location of trashbags they noticed? Were the dogs actually trained cadaver dogs, were they trained search dogs, or possibly just "neighborhood dogs" as well?
I appreciate the link, but I am still skeptical. Perhaps we will learn the actual details of these searches at trial, but my belief remains that Casey discarded her daughter there in mid-June, where the body remained until being discovered in December. I think the plant evidence will confirm it.
Excellent points all. I imagine that many people searching may have been actually looking for a toddler's body - it took a while for most people to learn that remains would likely be skeletonized at that point. It would be easy to see how informal searchers might be looking at less densely covered areas like paths or clearings and not going directly into very dense underbrush.