Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
Search
for boy winds down
Herald & News
Klamath Falls, Oregon
October 21, 2006
By LAURA McVICKER
CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK - The tone at Crater Lake National
Park on Friday changed from a desperate search to find a missing
8-year-old Portland boy to a dismal reality that park officials
likely won't find him alive.
“(Thursday) was pretty much the last major push,” said search
spokesman Rudy Evenson. “The probability of survival is pretty
low by now.” Samuel Boehlke of Portland has been missing since
last Saturday afternoon when he got separated from his father,
Ken, during an outing to Crater Lake.
By Friday, the number of searchers decreased from nearly 200 to
35, who were mostly park officials and local search and rescue
teams, including a team from the Klamath County Sheriff's
Office.
They
spent the morning taking down search-grid markers in 3,000 acres
of terrain surrounding Sammy's last known location. They had
earlier scoured every crevice, but found nothing. For a week,
searchers scaled rugged terrain on horseback. They used dogs,
rappelled down the caldera and searched by helicopter with
infrared cameras.
On Thursday, searchers from rescue teams throughout the West
Coast gradually left to move onto other pressing assignments as
the urgency in Sammy's search declined, Evenson said. The
long-term plan is to periodically search the area 500 yards from
the Cleetwood Cove parking lot until winter, he added.
Officials have expressed frustration over the fruitless search,
and say Sammy's fear of loud noises made the search more
difficult. The boy has a high-functioning form of autism
spectrum disorder, which causes him to have extreme reactions to
loud noises.
Searchers were unable to use sirens or whistles to find Sammy,
and say the disorder also causes him to hide, creating a
roadblock they wouldn't experience with another lost person,
Evenson said.
Sammy liked to play hide and seek with his dad, Evenson said,
and was running ahead of his dad into a forested area when his
father lost sight of him. Park officials then mounted the search
Saturday evening.
Sammy's mother arrived at Crater Lake this week from Europe, and
several family members, including the boy's parents, stayed
nearby.
Though they've declined to speak with the media, the family, in
a statement, expressed appreciation to searchers “for their
incredible conduct, kindness and superb efforts on behalf of our
families. We appreciate the sacrifice their families are making
for them to be here.”