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'All scenarios are being considered,' RCMP say 5 weeks after N.S. children disappeared

'All scenarios are being considered,' RCMP say 5 weeks after N.S. children disappeared

CBCa day ago

A member of the RCMP's major crime unit says it's taking "longer than we hoped" to advance the investigation into two missing Nova Scotia children who vanished from a rural community more than five weeks ago.
In a news release Wednesday, RCMP provided an update into the case, detailing the investigative tools that have been employed, the areas that have been searched and the various units and agencies now involved in the case.
Lilly Sullivan, 6, and Jack Sullivan, 4, were reported missing from their home in Lansdowne Station on May 2, sparking an extensive six-day search through mostly dense woods that included up to 160 search and rescue officials, dogs, helicopters and drones.
The Mounties say more than 11 units are working on the investigation, including the major crime unit, digital forensic services, police dog services and its behavioural sciences group, criminal analysis service and truth verification section.
It's also working with the National Centre for Missing Persons, Canadian Centre for Child Protection, and provincial and municipal police agencies from Nova Scotia and other parts of Canada.
"We're committed to doing what is necessary to locate Lilly and Jack and advance the investigation, which may take longer than we all hoped," said Cpl. Sandy Matharu, the investigation lead with the Northeast Nova RCMP major crime unit.
"We're accessing, evaluating and analyzing a significant volume of information from a variety of sources. We have a very coordinated and deliberate approach to make certain all information is meticulously scrutinized, prioritized and actioned to ensure nothing is missed."
The RCMP said they have extensively searched the Pictou County property where the children went missing, including the home, grounds, outbuildings and nearby septic systems, wells, mine shafts and culverts.
Investigators have collected hundreds of hours of video from areas surrounding Lansdowne Station, including footage taken along Gairloch Road — where the children's home is located — between April 28 and May 2.
They have formally interviewed 54 people, and in some cases polygraph tests were administered.
The Mounties have been following up on 488 tips they've received from the public and have been granted numerous judicial authorizations to seize and examine materials and devices that may provide information useful to the investigation.
Staff Sgt. Rob McCamon, officer in charge of major crime and behavioural sciences, said all scenarios are being considered.
"We've engaged every tool and resource at our disposal," he said in the news release.
"The investigation is being led by a tenacious, committed group of investigators who are gathering and assessing information daily to learn more about the circumstances of Lilly and Jack's disappearance so we can find them."
The wide-scale search was scaled back on May 7, but subsequent searches have taken place, including ground searches around the children's home on Gairloch Road, underwater searches of bodies of water in the region, and a pipeline trail, where a boot print was previously located.
RCMP said the information gathered so far in the investigation, including the ground search and rescue efforts, has not identified new search areas.

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