Searchers scour Ark. Scout camp for missing boy, 4

HARDY, Ark. (AP) - Searchers held out hope Monday that they would find a 4-year-old boy who went missing at a northeastern Arkansas Boy Scouts camp over the weekend, shouting his name, Caleb, as they walked through the woods along the riverbank where he was last seen.

More than 150 people turned out Monday to search the Kia Kima Boy Scout Camp for Caleb Linn, who was last seen Saturday at the end of a bridge where he and several other children were clearing away storm debris, Fulton County Sheriff Buck Foley said.

The children, who are related and who are not affiliated with the Boy Scouts, were staying in cabins with Caleb's aunt, Rhonda Wright, who was watching the grounds while its caretaker was away, said Foley.

According to the sheriff, Wright said five of the nine children who were staying there decided to head back to the main campsite around lunchtime. Foley said the kids were about 300 yards away when Caleb said he wanted to join them. Caleb's aunt told him to follow the dirt road to the cabins, and then turned around to continue clearing debris, Foley said.

Investigators don't suspect foul play. There are other paths that lead from the dirt road that don't go to the cabins, and Caleb could have taken one of those and gotten lost, the sheriff said.

"I think he just wandered off," Foley said. He also could have fallen in the nearby Spring River tributary, which was saturated with rain from storms that swept the region.

"The way the water's running, you wouldn't hear a splash," Foley said.

Authorities are proceeding as if Caleb is alive, and the dry weather and moderate temperatures since Saturday gave hope to searchers, who could be heard in the woods calling out "Caleb!" then waiting for a reply.

Searchers in boats were checking the Spring River tributary that passes beneath the bridge where Caleb was last seen. Others took to horses, mules and four-wheelers to navigate the dirt road and trails.

The tributary had receded by Monday, so divers could get in the water to clear debris from beneath the bridge and look at images from an underwater camera.

Authorities set a net downstream that could catch a body if the boy did fall into the river. But it's possible the body could have passed that point before the net was put up, said Major Todd Smith, the assistant chief of enforcement for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission.

"It's like looking for a needle in the haystack," Smith said. "There's no way to search the whole river."