search for missing girl
Reward money surpasses $60,000
By Scott Parrott
Staff Writer
August 24, 2003
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Members of the Tuders family gather Saturday morning at the search headquarters for 11-year-old Heaven LaShae Ross, who disappeared from Northport last Tuesday on her way to her school bus stop. In the center is Debra Tuders of Nashville, whose daughter, 13-year-old Tabitha, disappeared in a similar case April 29. The Tuders family said they wanted to join the search for Ross because so many people came to help them search for Tabitha after her disappearance.
Photo | Carmen Sisson
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Members of the Texas-based Laura Recovery Center joined the search Saturday for Heaven LaShae Ross, dispatching more than 60 people to comb areas in Northport and Tuscaloosa for any signs of the missing 11-year-old.
But as evening came, and the final teams returned from the field, there was still no clue about what happened to Shae, who disappeared Tuesday while walking to her school bus stop.
A neighbor last saw Shae on Hunter Creek Road at about 7 a.m. Tuesday. The bus stop is on that road, not far from her home in Willowbrook Trailer Park in Northport. She is the daughter of Beth Lowery.
Police investigators also had not uncovered any leads in the case, authorities said Saturday.
Meanwhile, a $50,000 reward was offered Saturday by a private donor for the girls safe return ó bringing the total reward to more than $60,000 ó and search organizers said they still need more volunteers.
Were trying to cover as much ground as possible," said Gay Smither, co-founder of Laura Recovery Center, a national organization that helps families find missing children. Even if someone comes and does one search, that would allow us to cover one more area that we wouldnt have."
Smither and Bob Walcutt, the executive director of LRC, flew to Alabama early Saturday morning at the request of Shaes family. During the next few days, they will train and dispatch searchers, then step away, Smither said.
We hope to leave the search in the capable hands of this community, where it belongs," she said.
While some volunteers searched from early morning until night, others made fliers inside the makeshift search headquarters at 1439 McFarland Blvd., the former Gateway computer building. More than 40,000 missing-person posters, with a photo of the missing brown-eyed, red-haired girl, have been distributed. Anyone who wants to help in the search, or has any information about Shae, should call (205) 752-0383.
We rely on the community and the volunteers, and weve never been let down," Walcutt said.
Laura Recovery Center trains volunteers and helps organize searches. The foundation has helped with several national cases, including that of Elizabeth Smart in Utah.
The group debriefs searchers upon their return and passes any information it gets to law enforcement, Walcutt said.
We are searchers," he said. Were not police, were not detectives. Our job is to simply come in and help find this missing child."
Police investigators are attempting to check every lead. Many calls have come in from Alabama and other states from people who think they might have information about Shae.
A K-9 team from the Escambia County Sheriffs Office in Florida aided the investigation Saturday, as did a police helicopter that surveyed the area surrounding where the disappearance occurred, said Sgt. Kerry Card of the Northport Police Department.
Investigators have turned up very little that could guide the case in one direction or the other, Card said.
Were still at ground zero," he said.
The parents of a Nashville, Tenn., girl who disappeared April 29 visited Shaes family Saturday to offer their support.
Investigators are talking about possible links between the cases of Shae and the missing Nashville girl, 13-year-old Tabitha Tuders. Although both girls look similar and vanished while walking to a school bus, no connection has been made between the cases.
Reach Scott Parrott at
[email protected] or 722-0200.