Originally posted on 07/10/04
http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/4869997.html
LeeAnna's mom not giving up
Jill Burcum, Star Tribune
July 11, 2004 BEANER0711
CHISHOLM, MINN. -- Kaelin Warner was supposed to wait back at the command center on Saturday while volunteers launched the first large-scale search in more than a year for her missing 5-year-old daughter, LeeAnna.
Private investigators leading the effort worried about the physical strain on the young mom, as well as the devastating impact of what she might find in the thick woods near the Iron Range town.
But Warner would have none of this.
She tromped through woods beside her husband, Chris Warner, batting away bugs, bulldozing through brush, peering into crevices and losing a powder-blue tennis shoe in a mucky creek bed.
"I can't just sit back and watch. It's too hard on me. I need to be out here," said Kaelin Warner, who last saw LeeAnna as the little girl skipped out the door to visit a friend on June 14, 2003.
About 200 volunteers, including several relatives of Dru Sjodin and Erika Dalquist -- Minnesota women whose bodies were found this year in similar searches -- and the private investigator who helped look for the two women, joined the Warners on Saturday in the first part of a weekend-long search for LeeAnna. While searchers didn't find the little girl, or any obvious clues about what happened to her, the Warners said they consider the effort a success.
"It gives us hope," said Kaelin, who was relieved to be out looking again. "It's hard to sit around and wait and wait and wait for answers."
Bob Heales, a Denver private investigator and Sjodin family friend, spearheaded Saturday's search. No new tips or information triggered the effort, he said. Rather, the Warners got in touch with him and felt it was time to get organized.
On Saturday, Heales had searchers focus on brushy, wooded areas 5 to 7 miles north of the town of 5,000.
Last summer, law enforcement-led efforts fanned out up to 4 miles around the girl's home. Heales wanted to expand that. He also thought the area to Chisholm's north seemed a likelier place for someone to dispose of a victim.
Three two-lane highways branch out north of Chisholm and they're connected to dozens of gravel or dirt roads. A four-lane highway is main way out of Chisholm to the south.
"When someone gets rid of a body, they're going to turn off and go down a road or trail," Heales said, adding that perpetrators are looking for a spot where they won't be seen.
Law enforcement agencies were not officially involved.
But Heales said he met with St. Louis County Sheriff Ross Litman last week, and said authorities were comfortable with the strategy.
Authorities have few clues in the girl's disappearance and nothing that indicates she was harmed.
Volunteers gathered at a Chisholm elementary school early Saturday. Heales divvied up assignments with search team leaders in a grim morning briefing.
Grim preparation
On hand was Denny Adams, a South Dakota canine search expert whose dog helped find Dalquist's body near Brainerd.
Adams held up diagrams of the human skull, jawbone and other body parts as LeeAnna's father looked on.
"Let's not send people off with the illusion that they'll find a pretty little girl," Adams said. "What we may locate is not what we last seen."
Chris Warner, a Chisholm first responder, swallowed hard a few times as Adams went on or nodded in agreement as the canine search expert explained what happens when a child's body decomposes.
"It's just a reality that we're dealing with," Warner said.
The rugged Range didn't make volunteers' day any easier. Thick stands of thorny berry bushes, poison ivy, dive-bombing deerflies and warm, humid weather worked against them.
"It's slow moving over here. We got a ravine. You'll have to wait for us," yelled out Lonnie Hartshorn, a friend of the family whose bullhorn of a voice kept the Warners' search group of about 20 organized as they pushed, whacked and stomped their way through the brush.
In the woods, the family flagged several items for investigators: an old McDonald's bag, a beat-up tarp remnant and a dirt pile with some rocks on it.
"Mounds. We're supposed to be looking for mounds," said LeeAnna's grandmother, Lois Warner, explaining that it could be a grave.
Just over the ridge, Lowell Sjodin, Dru Sjodin's uncle, led another team through the woods. A veteran of many cold-weather searches (his niece was abducted Nov. 22 from a mall in Fargo, N.D.), Sjodin said the heat brought its own set of challenges: a physical toll and the challenge of seeing anything in the thick green foliage.
A bone was found
"These are very difficult search conditions," Sjodin said.
By the end of the day, volunteers had reported numerous finds to Heales. One item was particularly interesting: it looked like a leg bone or knee joint and couldn't be ruled out as a human remain.
Heales said the bone will be turned over to authorities but cautioned that searches typically unearth hundreds or thousands of animal bones. "I wouldn't get too excited," he said.
The search will resume today and will held again later this month if necessary.
Amy Dishneau, a volunteer from Britt, Minn., said she'll be back however many times it takes.
She ended the Saturday -- her 31st birthday -- tired, dirty and still shiny from a thick coating of bug spray and sunscreen.
The only gift she wanted was that her family help search for LeeAnna. About six plowed into the woods.
Dishneau doesn't know the Warners. She just felt she had to do something.
"I just can't imagine what they're going through," Dishneau said. "I just had to get out there and help."