sorrell skye
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Another reference to 9am being the last time seen.
http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2010/06/kyron_horman_search_may_have_s.html
Once notified, Multnomah County authorities responded swiftly, but crucial hours already had been lost, Sheriff Dan Staton said.
"This is what is hugely disturbing to me," he told The Oregonian on Saturday. "The fact that you had a child in school and the last time the child was seen is at 9 in the morning -- there are concerns about that lag time. If the child had walked away from the school, the likelihood of finding him under those circumstances would have been extremely high.
TY for posting this SuziQ!
It's disturbing to me, as well. If the school had called home after his absence had been relayed to the office, LE could have been notified sooner, rather than later. Perhaps the search for him would have begun that morning, rather than 6 to 7 hours later that day.
As Sheriff Staton said "Crucial hours had already been lost."