For those of you concerned why Noah's scent has not been picked up by the dogs. I live close to where he went missing and It rained the night that Noah went missing. I would think that would likely prevent the dogs from picking up his scent. Still praying that he will be found soon, it is going down to 16 degrees here tonight ��
The poor grandma will never be happy in her own house again ...![]()
Thank you for your insightful and knowledgeable information.One of the dangers in any search is scenario lock. The last thing you want is to put ALL your resources on a single track and exclude the possibility that something else may be at play. Early on in a search (after initial hasty search/reflex tasking) the commanders should employ one of several systematic methods of determining probability of area (POA), or in laymen;s term...what areas should we focus on.
A over simplified version consists of gathering some key players (LEO, locals familiar with the area, SAR team leaders) and having them brainstorm possibilities.....for example...
1. Wandered along the trail.
2. Wandered off trail.
3. Encountered a stranger and was abducted.
4. Taken by a friend / family.
5. Found the local pond, and fell in.
6. Abducted by aliens.
You get the idea. Once this "initial" list is tabulated, all the key players go thru a process of assigning percentages to each possibility. This process of voting is also performed on the segments that are created on the map, of the search area. Ultimately you have the initial high probability areas to focus on. As new clues arise, and areas are searched, the focus will change on what areas have next highest priority. It is part science and part art.
Hey, Khughey, you seem to know about searches. Yesterday the sheriff said they had been doing grid searches and were starting "cross gridding." Do you know what that means?
For those of you concerned why Noah's scent has not been picked up by the dogs. I live close to where he went missing and It rained the night that Noah went missing. I would think that would likely prevent the dogs from picking up his scent. Still praying that he will be found soon, it is going down to 16 degrees here tonight ��
That is very interesting.Is it normal for an 'endangered child alert'
http://utcecho.com/2016/01/17/endangered-child-alert-issued-for-missing-2-year-old.html
when LE say he is in the woods???
One of the dangers in any search is scenario lock. The last thing you want is to put ALL your resources on a single track and exclude the possibility that something else may be at play. Early on in a search (after initial hasty search/reflex tasking) the commanders should employ one of several systematic methods of determining probability of area (POA), or in laymen;s term...what areas should we focus on.
A over simplified version consists of gathering some key players (LEO, locals familiar with the area, SAR team leaders) and having them brainstorm possibilities.....for example...
1. Wandered along the trail.
2. Wandered off trail.
3. Encountered a stranger and was abducted.
4. Taken by a friend / family.
5. Found the local pond, and fell in.
6. Abducted by aliens.
You get the idea. Once this "initial" list is tabulated, all the key players go thru a process of assigning percentages to each possibility. This process of voting is also performed on the segments that are created on the map, of the search area. Ultimately you have the initial high probability areas to focus on. As new clues arise, and areas are searched, the focus will change on what areas have next highest priority. It is part science and part art.
That is very interesting.
Note the time of the issue: January 17, 2016 | 20:31 (8:31 pm Pinson time tonight)
Why now?
jmo
That is very interesting.
Note the time of the issue: January 17, 2016 | 20:31 (8:31 pm Pinson time tonight)
Why now?
jmo
That is very interesting.
Note the time of the issue: January 17, 2016 | 20:31 (8:31 pm Pinson time tonight)
Why now?
jmo
Mn
He has been considered endangered from the beginning - see tweet from TBI posted to twitter at 3:05 January 14 at link below below -
https://mobile.twitter.com/TBInvestigation/status/687772528547368962
IMO endangered because he is 2 yrs old lost by himself in the woods.
Respectfully, this sounds like a lot of steps to take when a child is missing. I'm sure it falls into place quicker that I can understand, but during the times that someone is lining up a grid to search, deciding the high probability areas, etc do they have someone who does an initial search as soon as info comes in that there is a child missing and LE arrives on scene? Even if there is a possibility of custodial kidnapping or foul play of some kind are there searches going on while other officers are checking into alternative scenarios?
Just curious, are you a search coordinator or maybe LE?
You are absolutely correctThings need to happen immediately, even before a lot of info has been gathered. That is where Reflex Tasking comes into play. I posted another item (just after the one you replied to) that gave a very brief description of that. The whole reason for reflex tasking was to let the initial incident commander "get the ball rolling" while he prepped for the possibility that the subject isn't found or self rescues in the initial first few hours. While the reflex tasking is going on, the IC can prep for the next operational period.
I've been a volunteer SAR operator in north Georgia for many years. Started with a focus on missing aircraft, and have morphed into lost person focus. I've attended formalized training on managing the lost person incident and lost person behavior, and have participated in numerous live searches. Currently I'm with the Georgia Appalachian Trail Club's SAR team. The sar team's site is at http://www.GeorgiaSAR.com .