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 Post subject: Somer Thompson Missing From FL- Canceled, Body Found
New postPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 10:25 am 
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http://www.missingkids.com/missingkids/ ... berServlet

issing From: Orange Park, FL
Missing Date: 10/19/2009 12:00 AM
Issued for: Florida: Statewide
Contact: If you have information, please contact Clay County Sheriff's Office, 1-877-277-6911, 911
Circumstances: The 7 year-old child was last seen in the area of West Gano and Debarry Avenues in Orange Park, FL.

Missing Child
Name: Somer Renee Thompson
Alias:
Hair Color: Brn Eye Color: Brn
Skin Color: Whi Age: 7
Height: 3'7 Weight: 65
Gender: Female
Description: Black shirt under a cranberry colored sweat suit with pink stripes running down arms and legs, possibly has a red bow in hair, white hat and scarf

http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/2009 ... father_of_
missing_clay_county_girl_calls_the_ordeal_unimaginable

The father of Somer Renee Thompson said he's praying for the safe return of his 7-year-old daughter after she disappeared Monday while walking home from her Clay County elementary school.

“She’s just a beautiful, wonderful little girl, full of life,” Samuel Thompson, 41, told the Times-Union this morning from his North Carolina home. “It’s unimaginable.”

As Clay County deputies continue a massive search for Somer, the mother of a girl who was nearly snatched 10 days ago in the same area said she is frightened for the missing girl.

"It's horrible," said April Boothroyd, whose daughter, Kaylee, is 5.

Sheriff Rick Beseler said it is unclear whether there is a connection between the Oct. 10 abduction attempt of Kaylee and Somer's disappearance. The first incident occurred on the weekend while Kaylee was out riding a bike, while Somer disappeared on the way home from Grove Park Elementary School.

Orange Park Police Chief Jim Boivin told the Times-Union his agency notified the Sheriff's Office of abduction attempt, but the investigating officer failed to report it to the school. He said that should have been done.

"It just slipped her mind," Boivin said.

Boivin said his officers have kept an eye out for any suspicious blue Nissan SUVs matching the description of one used in the abduction attempt.

Boivin said his agency received a flier from the Sheriff's Office a week before the attempted abduction that a suspicious black SUV pulled up to a student at Orange Park Junior High School. He said there was no indication the latter incident was an attempted abduction, or that there is any connection to Somer's disappearance. Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Mary Justino said she is trying to gather more information about the junior high school incident.

A statewide Amber Alert for Somer was issued about 9 a.m. by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. The alert wasn't immediately issued for Somer because her disappearance wasn't witnessed and there is no vehicle description, which are criteria for such alerts.

(GET A PRINTABLE VERSION OF THE AMBER ALERT FOR SOMER RENEE THOMPSON)

Meanwhile, more than two dozen volunteers have signed up to search for Somer this morning. They have been asked to post fliers in different neighborhoods.

“It’s really scary,” said volunteer Jill Harris, a mother of a 13-year-old girl who knows Somer. “Usually when they’re gone this long, the outcome us not usually good. I’m praying that I’m wrong.”

Thompson said his daughter has four sibilings, including a twin brother. He is undergoing a divorce with the girl's mother, Diena, and last saw Somer about two years ago when she visited him.

Thompson said Clay deputies called him about 6:30 p.m. Monday to tell him about Somer's disappearance. He said he is waiting for more information from authorities about his daughter before making plans to come to Florida.

"We've got every church around here praying that she's just at a friend's house. Maybe she's just scared to move," he said.

Boothroyd, Kaylee's mother, told the Times-Union her daughter said last night the two girls had previously walked home from Grove Park Elementary school together.

Boothroyd said the attempted abduction of Kaylee occurred at the corner of Gano Avenue and Grove Park Drive, about a block from where Somer was last seen. Boothroyd said she learned of the abduction attempt from a woman who saw the incident, scared off the potential kidnappers and followed Kaylee home to report what happened.

Boothroyd said a woman in a car, possibly a blue Nissan SUV, drove up to the girl about while she was riding her bike three blocks from her home. There were also two men in the vehicle.

“The lady was trying to lure my daughter in, saying, 'Your mother told me for you to get in the car so I can take you home,'” said Boothroyd, 26. “My daughter said no. This other lady saw everything happen. She said they instantly drove off.”

Boothroyd said the woman who witnessed the abduction attempt told Kaylee to go home and she followed her.

“My daughter was hysterical. The lady was almost crying herself. She said your daughter would have gotten kidnappaped the way the lady was trying to get her in the car," Boothroyd said.

Boothroyd said she called Orange Park police and the officer who wrote the report advised her to have her daughter ride her bike closer to their home.

"They just gave me a card and told me if I have more information, let them know," she said.

Boothroyd said Clay investigators interviewed her and her daughter for at least 30 minutes this morning, but offered little information on what they think happened to Somer.

"That could have been my child," Boothroyd said. "She's [the 5-year-old] not been out of my sight."

Somer was walking home from Grove Park Elementary near West Gano Avenue and Debarry Avenue with her sister and friends but separated from them about 2:45 p.m. The child lives about a mile from the school. Her mother reported her missing to deputies a few hours later. Her father lives in North Carolina.
Somer was last seen wearing a cranberry colored jumpsuit with pink-striped sleeves. She is 3-foot-5, weighs 65 pounds and has brown hair in a pony tail.

Dozens of Clay deputies, joined by several FBI agents, members of other law enforcement agencies, as well as area residents combed the neighborhood in the cold and dark, but found no sign of the girl, authorities said. Almost 100 deputies including SWAT and K-9 officers are helping in the search this morning. Helicopters are also involved.

Beseler said authorities are searching an approximately 3-mile radius. The 53 sexual predators in that area were interviewed and their residences searched, Beseler said.

(SEARCH: First Coast Sexual Offenders and Predators)

Beseler said before Somer went missing on Monday, she might have hit another child with her backpack during an argument and run off. He had said it's possible she might have run to a friend's house because she was afraid of getting in trouble.

"The longer she's out there unaccounted for, it becomes more disconcerting that it might not just be a childish prank," Beseler said early Tuesday morning.

Overnight, authorities asked neighbors and members of the public to bring flashlights and join the search. Many answered the call, donning coats and spending hours searching the area, their flashlights dotting the dark night. Organized searches by members of the public will continue, the sheriff said, but he also encouraged residents to also search outside their homes today.

Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or (904) 264-6512.


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 Post subject: Re: Somer Thompson Missing From FL- Canceled, Body Found
New postPosted: Thu Oct 22, 2009 11:20 am 
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http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/crim ... _somer_tho
ORANGE PARK — Clay County Sheriff Rick Beseler said today that a body found in a Folkston, Ga., area landfill was that of Somer Renee Thompson, 7, who's been missing since she disappeared in Orange Park on Monday.

Beseler said he believes Somer was abducted and murdered on the way home from Grove Park Elementary School. He indicated there were no suspects and warned area residents to be on guard.
"There is a child killer on the loose," Beseler said at a 7:15 a.m. news conference. "I fear for our community until we bring this person in."
Beseler said he plans to hold a 4 p.m. news conference to release any new details. He encouraged the public to add to the hundreds of tips that have been pouring into police since Somer disappeared.
"I am very confident that we are going to have a positive outcome and find the person or people who are responsible for the death of this beautiful child," Beseler said.
Beseler declined to comment on leads in the case and said he hasn't ruled out that more than one person was involved.
A county official who spoke with someone familiar with the investigation was told that tracking dogs followed Somer's trail from where she separated from her brother on the way home from school. At some point between there and her home, which was about a mile away, the trail stopped. Beseler declined to confirm or deny that account.
Beseler said that the tenative identification of Somer was based on a birthmark on her leg and clothing, including a cranberry jumpsuit, that she was wearing at the time of her disappearance.
Beseler said the body, found as investigators were sifting through 100,000 tons of garabage at the Chesser Island Road Landfill, was removed last night. An autopsy will be performed this morning in Savannah to determine the cause of death.
Somer's father, Samuel Thompson told the Times-Union Wednesday that he believed it was his daughter because police told him about the birthmark. Beseler said he told the child's mother, Diena Thompson, about 9 p.m. last night in a phone call.
"Needless to say she was absolutely devastated," Beseler said. "It was the hardest phone call that I've ever had to make in my life and I hope I never have to make another one like that."
One of the many impacts of the crime has been grief felt by Somer's classmates, teachers and administrators at Grove Park Elementary School. Principal Lynda Braxton said this morning that grief counselors are on hand to help those at the school. She also said that among the activities were sympathy cards being prepared by students for Somer's family.
"We are just extremely heartbroken," Braxton said.
Braxton also said that absenteeism has increased at the 539-student school. She said 64 students were absent Tuesday, double the regular amount. She didn't say how many were absent Wednesday or today.
Beseler credited Sheriff's Office investigator Bruce Owens' with suggesting Tuesday that authorities check for the body or other evidence in trash being picked up that day in Orange Park. Beseler assigned personnel to track all trash trucks and follow-up by checking trash that had been taken to the Rosemary Hill landfill in Green Cove Springs and then transferred to Folkston.
Beseler said much of the trash was segregated as to which Dumpster it came from and then sorted and checked.He called the discovery of the body and preservation of fresh evidence a key in the case.
"I thought that was an outstanding idea," Beseler said. "I believe that body would have been buried under hundreds of tons of debris [and] probably would have gone undiscovered for ever."
Owens said investigators sifted through 200,000 tons of trash at Rosemary Hll and 100,000 tones at the landfill in Folkston.
Owens, a 10-year Sheriff’s Office veteran, works in internal affairs but is also part of a regional Child Abduction Response Team. He said this morning that his idea that the Dumpster and dump sites be searched is a normal procedure when it comes to such cases.
When Somer hadn’t been found by Tuesday morning, Owens said he feared the worst.
“At that time I realized that this is probably not going to turn out good,” said Owens, 40. “The next thing we need to do is move into another phase. We need to start looking at other avenues. That’s why I brought it to the sheriff’s attention.”
Outside Somer's Horton Drive home Thursday afternoon, scores of people walked by a growing anshrine of stuffed animals, melted candles and notes written in memory of Somer - all placed under or on a water oak. The normally quiet residential street of neatly-kempt single family homes were lined with cars moving slowly by the home.
James and Karen Harris, who live about a mile away, stopped by with their 3-year-old son, Brodie. The boy's father place a bouquet of flowers in the pile and stepped away slowly.
"We're here just to pay our respects and do what we can do to comfort the mother and family," said James Harris, 25.
A mood that was once full of hope that Somer would be found alive clearly turned somber, with visitors worries now focused on protecting their own children.
"I think everybody in general is going to be more aware of their surroundings," Harris said. "Something liek this doesn't happen out here."
Tyler Rukab, a 12-year-old neighbor of Somer's, stood in the street holding an empty red Folger's coffee container, which quickly began filling up with donations for the family. One woman plunked two $20 bills inside.
"It's kinda like a second family to me," Tyler said.
There was true sense of people coming together to support each other and the community's children, as well.
Nerida Martinez-Ruiz was taking names of people who wanted to join a group she was forming, whfch she called Mothers Against Predators. She said she hopes to find people who will have backgrounds done and then walk the streets wearing T-shirts letting children know they can come to them if they feel they are in danger.
",We've got to keep our kids safe," said Martinez-Ruiz, an Orange Park mother of three. "We have to come together as a community."
Wednesday night, as about 200 people showing their support outside Diena Thompson’s home on Horton Drive, Somer’s mother thanked them and blamed herself for not knowing how this can happen.
She asked that they sing Somer’s favorite song, “You Are My Sunshine,” which the crowd aptly obliged.
They also sang “Jesus Loves Me” and “This Little Light of Mine” before the 34-year-old mother collapsed, overcome from the day’s developments. Surrounded by her family and boyfriend, she was carried back into their home as the crowd began singing “Amazing Grace.”
Another couple of hundred people also paid tribute at First Baptist Church of Orange Park praying for Somer and the family.
Samuel Thompson, Somer's father, wept Wednesday afternoon as he spoke with the Times-Union by phone from his North Carolina home.
“I’m angry. I’m so angry. I’m so hurt,” said Thompson, 41, who is getting a divorce from Somer’s mother. “My baby daughter laying in trash. Discarded like a piece of trash.”
Sgt. Dan Mahla of the Sheriff’s Office said investigators spent two hours Tuesday searching the Georgia landfill, then returned Wednesday at 7 a.m.
Into the night on Wednesday, lights had been erected to enable investigators to seek more clues.
The body was found about 3:30 p.m., almost exactly 48 hours after Somer disappeared after breaking away from her twin brother and an older sister on the way home Monday from Grove Park Elementary School.
The landfill discovery came at the end of two days of intense searching in and around the Orange Park neighborhood where the school is about a mile from Somer’s home. Thousands of fliers were distributed by hundreds of volunteers while law enforcement officers, military members and other searchers looked for the little girl.
Anyone with information should call the Sheriff's Office at (877) 227-6911 or Crime Stoppers at (866) 845-TIPS or email CART@claysheriff.com.


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