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Here are the puzzling things to me:
1) Why the circling helicopter with agents looking out the sides? Looking for a place someone was buried or something discarded by the perpetrator? That landscape would be very easy to spot disturbed soil on foot or in the air. Just to make it look like the sheriff's dept is doing something?
2) How could a broken camera detect someone after it was disabled? Could it be instead a motion sensor inside the house like we used to have?
My gut feeling is that LE has video of the vehicle involved from multiple neighbor's door cameras and that they are trying to trace the vehicle to where it wasn't seen anymore passing by and therefore get to the point of knowing about where the driver either parked or left onto highways. IMO, video cameras are the most important forensic tool to help guide LE for facts. I believe that takes a lot of time to canvass the area but that ultimately, LE will know the kind of vehicle (make and model) but probably not a license plate.
I tend to agree with you regarding LE has more, and hopefully more about the vehicle.
(Remember the walking perp grainy video in the Tepe case?? We knew they had more video showing that perp getting into a vehicle--but would not show us)
However, these houses seem to be set back quite a distance from the road, so even ring cameras may not have picked up anything on the road.