Families of missing Iowa girls await IDs of bodies
Topics: From the Wires, News
Amanda Smith holds a candle during a vigil held at Meyers lake Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012, in Evansdale, Iowa. Hunters discovered two bodies Wednesday believed to be the young Iowa cousins who vanished five months ago while riding their bikes, authorities said. (AP Photo/Waterloo Courier, Matthew Putney)(Credit: AP)EVANSDALE, Iowa (AP) — Five months after two young cousins vanished while riding their bikes, residents of the northeast Iowa community where they were last seen are anxiously waiting to hear whether two bodies found by hunters are those of the missing girls.
The families of 9-year-old Elizabeth Collins and 11-year-old Lyric Cook asked for privacy after being told that the bodies were discovered Wednesday in a wooded area, Black Hawk County sheriff’s Capt. Rick Abben said.
Abben wouldn’t say where the bodies were found, and said they were being sent to the state medical examiner’s office for identification. He said he hoped to release more information Thursday.
“It’s definitely not the outcome that we wanted, obviously,” said Abben, appearing to fight back tears. He spoke at a news conference in Evansdale, where the girls had been staying with their grandmother when they disappeared.
“This is a difficult thing for us to go through. It’s a difficult thing for the community,” he said.
The cousins disappeared July 13 near a popular recreational lake in Evansdale, about 110 miles northeast of Des Moines. Investigators found their bicycles and a pink purse near the lake hours later, but no sign of the girls.
On Wednesday night, about 70 people attended a prayer vigil at the lake, some cradling plastic cups with candles to protect the flames from the cold wind. Some were holding out hope that the bodies weren’t those of the missing cousins, though others seemed resigned to accept tragic news.
“I don’t want to think the worst, but two bodies. It’s just really heartbreaking,” said Amanda Mulzac, who lives in nearby Waterloo and was among hundreds of volunteers who helped in the initial search. “At their age I was out by myself, but now it’s different. Hold your babies close.”
Barb Collins, a machinist who grew up in Evansdale and helped lead the group in prayer, said the community was grieving.
“These were just innocent children. These girls should have been left alone. They should be home safe in their beds, and it’s only a coward who would have done something like this,” she said after the vigil.
Abben declined to say Wednesday if there were any suspects in the cousins’ disappearance.
Hundreds of volunteers helped investigators to search for girls, traipsing through cornfields and wooded areas in and around Evansdale, a city of 8,000 residents. The mayor even joined the search in his private plane.




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