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Thousands of volunteers take part in search for missing 13-year-old girl

October 23, 2018 By: Stephen Dietrich

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The search for a missing 13-year-old Wisconsin girl whose parents were killed in the family’s home was expanded Tuesday, with as many as 2,000 volunteers expected to take part in a search of the area.

The new ground search for Jayme Closs comes several days after an effort with 100 volunteers turned up nothing. Jayme has been missing since Oct. 15, when deputies responding to a 911 call found that someone had broken into the family’s home in Barron and gunned down James and Denise Closs.

Authorities believe Jayme was abducted and have ruled her out as a suspect in her parents’ deaths.

A long line of vehicles streamed into a staging area near Barron on Tuesday morning as volunteers gathered under cloudy skies and in freezing temperatures to begin the search for clues.

Joe Scheu, a retiree from the nearby village of Haugen, said he decided to join the search alone after hearing about it on the news. He said he has a 13-year-old granddaughter of his own and that he came “just to help out.” He said the violence in the case is terrible, and he feels sorry for Jayme.

Jill Robinson, who lives about 60 miles (100 kilometers) south in Eleva, drove to Barron with a friend to join the search.

“I guess I’m not doing anything different than I would hope someone would do if it was one of my loved ones in this situation right now,” said Robinson, 48. “I just think anytime it hits close to home like this, it just makes you think it could be you or one of our loved ones.”

Video posted to Twitter by a KMSP-TV reporter showed a line of volunteers, all holding sticks, getting instructions to go slowly and, if they see something, yell “Stop!” and wait for authorities to assess what they find. Other video showed searchers walking in a grid pattern, using the sticks to bat down tall grass and vegetation.

Barron County Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald said Monday that investigators had received more than 1,300 tips and have closed 1,100 of them. Some of the tips led to the decision to resume the ground search , he said, though he declined to elaborate. Authorities mapped the area by helicopter in preparation for Tuesday’s search.

“We’ve determined we’d like to search a bigger search area based on information our investigators have collected,” Fitzgerald said. “These tips have led us to this.”

Investigators are searching for two cars — a red or orange Dodge Challenger and a black Ford Edge or black Acura MDX — that may have been near the Closs family’s home on the night of the attack, Fitzgerald said. He didn’t have information about the cars’ license plates.

A few hundred people attended a Monday night vigil at the high school football field in Barron, a rural community of about 3,400 that is roughly 80 miles (130 kilometers) northeast of Minneapolis.

First Lutheran Church Pastor Ron Mathews told the crowd that hope has the power to move people beyond despair, fear and anxiety.

“Hope is the sure presence of peace in the midst of grief and deep sadness,” Mathews said. Leaders from several churches were on hand to lead small group prayers and comfort a community on edge.

Relatives plan to hold a funeral for James and Denise Closs on Saturday at 1 p.m. at St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Cameron, a village next to Barron. The funeral will be preceded by an 11 a.m. visitation.

 

The Associated Press contributed to this article.

About the Author

Stephen Dietrich

Stephen is a U.S. Army veteran with over a decade of combined experience in political commentary, economics, and news.

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