"I was tired of looking at the same real estate over and over again,” he says, “with good but not great imagery." Too many times he believed he’d found a bone, or a backpack, or a tent belonging to O’Sullivan only to be deflated once ground searchers hiked in to his coordinates and discovered the bone was a stick, the backpack was a rock, and the tent was a tarp abandoned by illegal marijuana cultivators.
Dear Friends & Family, If I become a Missing Person . . . advice for thru-hikers and their families
Social media can be an amazing tool for missing person investigations. Even when the happy ending isn’t the one you hoped for.
Posted by Andrea Lankford
In December 2016, Sally Fowler was home sick when her nephew, Jimmy, sent her a picture he’d seen on Facebook--a photograph of a guy in his thirties from the abdomen up. The man appeared to be unconscious. A white sheet was pulled tightly across his bare chest. He had a full beard, blonde hair and a nice face. Sally’s heart raced. This man looked like her son and he was strapped to a hospital bed in Brazil.
If the scientist Arpad Vass says he can find your missing loved one using fingernail clippings, don't believe him.
When our loved ones disappear, we'll try anything to find them. So when a famous forensic anthropologist claims he can locate your son or daughter using his or her mother's fingernail clippings, there seems to be little reason to doubt him.
Unfortunately Dr. Arpad Vass is selling nothing but false hope.