Missing girls' dad cuts polygraph short

Written By Unknown on Thursday, July 19, 2012 | 5:25 PM

  • FBI team will use sonar to search lake where missing cousins' bicycles were found
  • Mothers say the girls don't go to Meyers Lake
  • Search is still considered missing persons case, with no evidence of a crime
  • Entire town of nearly 5,000 people looking for girls, mayor says

(CNN) -- An FBI dive team is slated to arrive in Evansdale, Iowa, on Thursday as authorities slowly drain a lake where the bicycles of two missing girls were found.

The team will use sonar to check the lake when the water level is considered "drained," and divers will probably wait until Friday, when the 25-acre lake reaches its lowest level, FBI spokeswoman Sandy Breault said.

The FBI team will be using side-scanning and 360-degree sonar to scan what's left of the water. Since the equipment needs at least 6 feet of water to function, authorities are likely to halt the drainage process, Breault said.

The mother of one of the girls said it's unlikely the two cousins will be found there. She thinks the girls might have been kidnapped.

"They don't swim there. My daughter is familiar with swimming in lakes, so I don't think she would be scared of this lake, but they don't come here and swim here," Misty Cook-Morrissey, mother of 10-year-old Lyric Cook, said Wednesday. "Because we haven't found them anywhere in the surrounding area, I feel like maybe they were taken."

Mom: Someone must have scared them badly
Missing cousins' kin to do polygraph
Dogs hit on missing girls' scent
Dad: Not first time kid has gone missing

Lyric and 8-year-old Elizabeth Collins were last seen by their grandmother on Friday when they left on a bike ride. The girls' bicycles and a purse were found near Meyers Lake hours after they were reported missing. Scent dogs following the girls' trail led searchers around the lake and stopped at the water's edge, Cook-Morrissey said.

Lyric's grandmother, Wylma Cook, said she doesn't believe that the girls intended to go swimming.

"I don't think they would have even known the way to Meyers Lake," she told HLN's Nancy Grace on Tuesday.

Cook-Morrissey said she'd be "more comfortable" with the theory that the girls might have been abducted "once they drain the lake and we find nothing there."

"If you've taken our kids," she said on national TV, "bring them back."

Missing girl's grandma: 'We will fight'

Authorities said Tuesday that they didn't know whether the girls had been at the lake.

"We have their bicycles, and we have the purse, and that doesn't tell me that they've been there, just that those items are there," Chief Deputy Rick Abben of the Black Hawk County Sheriff's Office said.

The family has been questioned and polygraphed and had information taken from their cell phones, a process Cook-Morrissey said is hard but necessary.

"We know that it's a necessary measure they have to take to get as much information as they can and of course rule us out, so we did what we have to do," she said.

Mom: Dogs searching for Iowa girls stopped at edge of lake

Questioning has taken Cook-Morrissey and other family members away from the lake, which is hard, she said.

"Not that being out here might make a difference, but in your heart you want to be close to where they were last seen," she said.

When Evansdale Mayor Chad Deutsch heard that two little girls were missing in his town, he said, the first thing he did was to make sure every city asset that was needed was made available to the county sheriff.

The next thing he did was take to the air, taking off in his twin-engine plane and flew over his town, looking for any sign of Lyric and Elizabeth.

"It just makes you sick," said Deutsch, who knows both families.

Family 'bracing for the worst but hoping for the best'

In this town, neighbors know exactly how many people live there -- 4,751 -- and the small community in northeast Iowa has never suffered through anything like the worrying going on now, the mayor said.

The search remains a missing persons case, authorities said. No evidence has been found to suggest this is a crime, Deutsch said, but it is a mystery that has the whole community looking for two of their own.

"We just want our girls home," Tammy Brousseau, an aunt to both girls, told CNN's "AC360Ëš." "We're bracing for the worst but hoping for the best."

Calls are coming in to a tip line, Abben said, and each bit of information is being checked out. Police ask that anyone who may have seen the girls on Friday contact authorities.

Heather Collins, Elizabeth's mother, told HLN's Jane Velez-Mitchell that if the girls were abducted, she would not pass judgment. "We just want our children brought back," she said.

CNN's Tristan Smith contributed to this story.

0 comments:

Post a Comment