Version: 2008

January 18, 2007 10:05 PM PST

Report highlights mistakes in search for Kims

  • Post a comment

(continued from previous page)

•  Politics: The incumbent sheriff in Josephine County had not run for re-election the month before and Undersheriff Brian Anderson had been told by the incoming sheriff that he would be out of a job in the new administration. Anderson therefore "was actively looking for employment" after the election instead of working for the entire month of December. In addition, Anderson appeared to be trying to act as Incident Commander even through written plans say Lt. Brian Powers of the Oregon State Police was in charge.

Kati Kim, daughters found

•  Claiming credit: James Kim's body was found by a Carson Helicopter pilot hired by his father, not by government searchers. While in the same area as the body, Carson Helicopter pilot Joseph Rice spotted a bedraggled group of searchers--an exhausted U.S. Forest Service team in such poor shape that they had to be evacuated by medical helicopter. The report says: "Apparently, on her own volition, District Ranger Pam Body sent that Forest Service team out and she was taking credit for finding James Kim."

•  No standards: The searchers had no standard latitude and longitude system to work from. Some expressed coordinates in decimal degrees; some used decimal minutes; others used minutes and seconds of latitude and longitude. Pilots used aviation maps, while ground searchers did not. In addition, Douglas County used orange ribbons on roads to show they had been searched already, while Josephine County did not.

•  Aerial search: Three helicopters chartered by Kim's father, Spencer Kim, were in the air constantly during daylight hours for a total of five days. But government helicopters including two National Guard units flew only a small fraction of that time. A flight log (PDF) shows that chartered helicopters flew for approximately 307 hours, while official ones flew only about 83 hours. The report concluded better coordination could have "made better use of the available air resources."

•  Mobile tracking: Not one of the many police agencies involved thought to ask local mobile providers whether their systems had been "pinged" by the Kims' phones. Instead, a technician at Edge Wireless took the initiative on his own and found a match. Edge provided that information to police at 5:25 p.m. on Saturday, December 2. But police didn't ask the technician to meet with them and explain where the signal likely originated until around noon the next day, hours after helicopters were already in the air.

One of the more puzzling incidents came when Rubrecht, Josephine County's search coordinator, and Stanton, a sheriff's deputy, visited Bear Camp Road early in the search process on December 1. That area--which turned out to be where the Kim family was eventually found days later--is notorious among locals as a place where travelers become lost or stranded.

John James owns the nearby Black Bar Lodge. He called the Josephine County Sheriff's Office that morning and was transferred to Rubrecht's voice mail. After leaving a message, John James and his brother, Denny James, drove snowmobiles up Bear Camp Road until they hit pavement after about a mile and could not continue. After retreating, the James brothers ran into Rubrecht and Stanton in a patrol vehicle.

John James stressed that county authorities should explore the rest of Bear Camp Road. But Rubrecht replied, according to John James: "We don't believe that they are out there. We are doing this just to do it." (Denny James confirms this version of events.)

Stanton initially told investigators that John James did not tell him to check the road and indicated it had already been explored. But during further questioning, Stanton said: "I'm not willing to go to court and say that."

Rubrecht never filed a report about the conversation with the James brothers or at any other point until Kim's body was found. She claims, according to the report, that she "did not remember the whole conversation, but they told her that they had taken their snowmobiles down the road Kati Kim was eventually found on. She went away with the impression that they had already searched that road."

In a conversation with investigators on December 28, Rubrecht denied making the statement: "We don't believe they're out here, we're just doing it to do it."

Information on how to help the Kim family can be found here.

Previous page
Page 1 | 2

See more CNET content tagged:
search and rescue, operator, sheriff, Oregon, agency

advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (0.03%) 3.10 10,548.51
S&P 500 (0.02%) 0.22 1,126.42
NASDAQ (0.13%) 2.88 2,291.28
CNET TECH (0.22%) 3.61 1,664.74
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right