Posted on 12/04/2006 3:18:35 PM PST by sockmonkey
Wife and two daughters of senior editor James Kim found in Oregon; search is still on for James Kim, who left the car on foot two days ago.
The wife and daughters of missing CNET senior editor James Kim have been found alive and airlifted to a local hospital, authorities announced at a press conference in Merlin, Ore., Monday afternoon.
James Kim left the car on snowshoes two days ago to seek help and has not been found, the official said. The search for him continues.
According to the official speaking at the news conference, the conditions of Kati, Penelope and Sabine are not yet known. More details are expected at a press conference at 5 p.m. PST, which CNET will stream live.
Kati Kim reportedly flagged down a helicopter rented by families of the missing persons.
After searches in Oregon's Curry and Douglas counties, new information on missing CNET senior editor James Kim and his family narrowed the search back to the Bear Camp area in Josephine County, according to reports Monday.
A cell phone tower received a signal from one of the family's cell phones at about 1:30 a.m. on Sunday near Glendale, but officials say the signal is only an indicator the family could have been within 26 miles of Glendale at that time, according to a report in The Oregonian.
OH SHOOT>...........now they are saying that it did NOT take off! CRAP.....
beautiful scenery but I will stay in the city.
Heli has not taken off,,just heard. Oh my, this is so awful
Somebody is coming to the mike!
Me too. Praying.
Here we go....body found....OMG
Doesn't look happy
Body.
Damnit.
He is dead.
Thhe Undersheriff couldn't talk. I'm so heartbroken.
Calling it a recovery.
Police confirm, Kim body found, it is over. Sheriff chokes up when making announcement, has to step aside to compose himself.
Well, since the Under sheriff is too choked up to speak. I guess it's official. Damn. Prayers for the repose of his soul, and strength for his loved ones.
This poor guy is devastated. Just damn....
Oh, so sad.
Report: Body Found During Search for Missing San Francisco Dad in Oregon
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,234880,00.html
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
MERLIN, Ore. The body of James Kim, who left his stranded family in a car in the Oregon wilderness to try to get help, was found Wednesday, according to FOX affiliate KTVU.
Soon after the news broke, authorities canceled any impending briefings that were previously planned. There was no confirmation from officials as to whether Kim had in fact been found, nor if he was dead or alive.
KTVU reported that airborne rescuers spotted a flash in a heavily wooded area and caught a glimpse of a man laying face down. Searchers were being lowered from the helicopter to assist the man.
Fresh search teams had joined the hunt earlier in the day for the San Francisco man who set out on foot Saturday to help his family out of the snowy coastal mountains. Kim had left clothing and other items such as bits of an Oregon map that appeared arranged to guide searchers, officials said Wednesday.
"He is a sharp individual and has a strong will to live," Jackson County Sheriff Mike Winters said. "He has done a heck of a job out there."
The clothing, which was wet, included two gray sweat shirts, a red T-shirt, a sock and a blue girl's skirt, said Lt. Gregg Hastings of the Oregon State Patrol. Family members said Kim had taken the items when he left. "They were laid out in a well defined area, in a pattern," Hastings said. The pattern led officers to believe that "little signs are being left by James."
Searchers also found a pair of gray pants they believed belonged to Kim. The family said he was wearing the pants over blue jeans when he left.
Teams were trying to resume their search Wednesday, but were hampered by fog which they hoped would lift by midday.
Searchers planned to drop 18 rescue packages containing clothing, emergency gear and other survival provisions into the area Wednesday in hopes that Kim could find one. The packages, clear plastic bags the size of pillows, also contained a note from his family.
Searchers said the packages would be dropped in a 3-square-mile area where "hot spots" showed up two nights earlier in thermal imaging.
"This is frustrating. We are so close," Josephine County Undersheriff Brian Anderson said. "There are people pouring their heart and soul into this. We are not going to quit until we find him."
Temperatures at night in the search area have been dipping below freezing in lower elevations. No precipitation is expected until Friday.
Kim's wife, Kati, and two daughters were rescued Monday at their car, stuck in the snow on a remote road.
When he left the car Saturday, James Kim went about two miles along the road, and then headed down into a drainage area, said Lt. Gregg Hastings of the Oregon State Police.
About 100 rescue workers and four helicopters were searching for Kim, following his footprints down a drainage called Big Windy Creek that leads to the Rogue River.
Anderson said he does not know why Kim went into the drainage area. "I hope to have the opportunity to ask why he did that," he said.
Kim, a senior editor for the technology media company CNET Networks Inc., had two lighters and was wearing tennis shoes, pants and a heavy coat, but no hat, Anderson said. He would likely be within about five miles of the car, he said.
The Kims had been missing since Nov. 25, when they left Portland and headed home after a holiday trip to the Pacific Northwest.
Kati Kim told officers they were traveling south from Portland on Interstate 5 and missed the turnoff to a state highway, Oregon 42, that leads through the Coast Range to Gold Beach, where they planned to stay at a resort.
Officers said the couple used a map to choose the road they were on. "They got the map out a regular highway map that showed the route," Anderson said.
However, it wasn't clear whose map the couple used. The 2005-2007 state highway map distributed by the Oregon Department of Transportation has a warning in red print, inside a red box: "This route closed in winter." A Rand-McNally map did not have a similar warning.
On Monday, searchers in a private helicopter hired by the family spotted Kati Kim, 30, and daughters Penelope, 4, and Sabine, 7 months. They were released from a hospital in Grants Pass on Tuesday.
After leaving Portland on Interstate 5, search leaders said, the couple missed a turnoff that leads to the coast and took a wrong turn on a twisty mountain road they chose as an alternative.
Stuck, they used their car heater until they ran out of gas then burned tires to stay warm and attract attention. With only a few jars of baby food and limited supplies, Kati Kim nursed her children.
The area's complicated road network is commonly used by whitewater rafters on the Rogue River or as a shortcut to the coast in the summer, but it is not plowed in the winter.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Yeah. Damm damm damm
I'm sorry. I was napping and just woke straight up a little bit ago. It had been questionable about his condition, but now I see that it was his body that was found.
I'm so, so sorry.
I'm crying, too. So many prayers and hopes for his safe return.
Nah, don't let this turn you away. Just follow some pretty simple guidlines. It's worth it.
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