Post by LadyBlue on Jul 19, 2007 17:10:23 GMT -5
They’re hoping for anything. Any sign of their missing daughter and sister, or anything suspicious they could turn in to police to advance the investigation into Jaclyn Funderburg’s disappearance.
"If you find something, make a call," said her father Jerry Wednesday. "Go back to your vehicle and let me know."
Funderburg is a desperate man.
"We went up Garden of the Gods Road, or Garden of the Gods, nothing was out there," he said.
He's working with a search party of volunteers. Friends of Jaclyn's who are just as eager to find her and are making time to team up and spread out.
"I'm going to utilize them as much as I can," he said.
Their grid is a series of roads along a lonely stretch of Highway 94. It is an area Salvator Esquivel-Castillo, Jaclyn's ex-boyfriend and investigator's only person of interest, is known to spend time.
"He may have lived out here," said Funderburg.
Their only rules: stay out of private property, and report anything suspicious to police.
"If there's tire tracks going in this area, there could be something back there," explained Richard Keske, Jaclyn’s brother-in-law.
Keske will walk miles, side by side with Jaclyn’s sister Jessica in a search for answers.
"I think I'd go crazy just sitting at home not being able to do anything," he said.
With every step the search party hopes Jaclyn is somewhere alive, but they also fear they could find the worst in the tall El Paso County grass.
As long as they don't have Jaclyn, they have time to keep up the search.
"Till I find her. Till I find her," her father said.
The group plans to resume their search on Saturday.
www.kktv.com/home/headlines/8585447.html
"If you find something, make a call," said her father Jerry Wednesday. "Go back to your vehicle and let me know."
Funderburg is a desperate man.
"We went up Garden of the Gods Road, or Garden of the Gods, nothing was out there," he said.
He's working with a search party of volunteers. Friends of Jaclyn's who are just as eager to find her and are making time to team up and spread out.
"I'm going to utilize them as much as I can," he said.
Their grid is a series of roads along a lonely stretch of Highway 94. It is an area Salvator Esquivel-Castillo, Jaclyn's ex-boyfriend and investigator's only person of interest, is known to spend time.
"He may have lived out here," said Funderburg.
Their only rules: stay out of private property, and report anything suspicious to police.
"If there's tire tracks going in this area, there could be something back there," explained Richard Keske, Jaclyn’s brother-in-law.
Keske will walk miles, side by side with Jaclyn’s sister Jessica in a search for answers.
"I think I'd go crazy just sitting at home not being able to do anything," he said.
With every step the search party hopes Jaclyn is somewhere alive, but they also fear they could find the worst in the tall El Paso County grass.
As long as they don't have Jaclyn, they have time to keep up the search.
"Till I find her. Till I find her," her father said.
The group plans to resume their search on Saturday.
www.kktv.com/home/headlines/8585447.html