Update on missing child – Lisa Irwin

 

Lisa Irwin with her father.

On Friday, a teenage neighbor of Lisa‘s parents was questioned by investigators and forensic experts took a DNA sample, a source said. That neighbor was apparently at the home the day Lisa vanished and also knew the access code to the family’s garage.
However, police said they still have no suspects.
As reported first by The Ozarks Sentinel, investigators are also looking into reports from the west coast, where a couple was seen with a small child fitting Lisa’s description.
LATEST… A frantic search for a missing 10-month-old Missouri girl left investigators scouring a Kansas City neighborhood Saturday, a day after searching a nearby creek and landfill.
Federal authorities joined police in the search effort this week, speaking with neighbors and sweeping the area with metal detectors in an expanded search for Lisa Irwin.
Michael Lerette, a family spokesman for the parents of the missing infant, said police collected what could be forensic evidence in the case, but authorities have declined to comment on that claim.

“They’re pursuing surveillance tape on a couple with the baby in California,” said Lerette.

FBI Special agent and ABC News consultant Brad Garrett said the first of those leads is a more feasible possibility than the second from California.

“I can tell you based on experience of working high profile abductions that you get leads from literally all over the world. Is that possible? Of course it’s possible. Is it likely? I don’t think so,” Garrett said. “I think this situation is probably going to stay within the Kansas City area.”

Earlier on Friday, the FBI and police searched through a landfill for a second time, but found nothing.

Agents armed with metal detectors were back at the home shared by Lisa’s parents, Jeremy Irwin and Deborah Bradley.

Police are not commenting but the leads could be the first real progress since Tuesday — when Jeremy Irwin said he came home from working an overnight shift and found his daughter’s crib empty, a window open and the family’s three cell phones gone.

“The windows were open and lights were on and she was nowhere to be found,” Irwin told “Good Morning America” Thursday. “We’ve been going over everything in our minds. We just don’t have any idea.”

Irwin said that his front door was unlocked when he returned home from work as an electrician at 4 a.m. to find his daughter missing.

Parents Questioned in Lisa’s Disappearance

On Friday, Lisa’s mother, Deborah Bradley said that police accused her of having done something to her child.

“From the start when they’ve questioned me, once I couldn’t fill in gaps, it turned into ‘You did it, you did it,’” Deborah Bradley told “Good Morning America.” “They took a picture down from the table and said, ‘Look at your baby! And do what’s right for her!’ I kept saying I don’t know … I just sat there. I didn’t even ask to leave. I just let them keep asking questions.”

Bradley also said police accused her of failing a polygraph test. Police said they could not comment on this claim, but said Bradley is “free to say whatever she wants.”

Bradley, who sobbed through her interview with “GMA,” spoke out after Kansas City police said Bradley and the toddler’s father Jeremy Irwin had stopped cooperating on Thursday.

The parents told “GMA” they have not ended their cooperation with police.

“If they say they’re willing to continue speaking with detectives, I say great. Our door is open,” Police Capt. Steve Young told ABCNews.com this morning. “Their involvement in the case is the best thing for this case. Our only goal is to find this little girl.”

Young said detectives would be happy to resume conversations with Lisa’s parents, but added, “We still haven’t heard from the mother or father as of this morning.”

Irwin said that he needed to take a break from the intensive questioning and soon saw a police press conference where they stated that the parents had ceased to work with police on the investigation.

“We were in interrogated for a really long time Tuesday there again, answering questions….I just couldn’t’ take it anymore,” he said. “I told them I had to have a break — no more questions today. I asked to be let go, and they let me go from police station. An hour later was when we saw the press conference from them.”

Both parents denied on “GMA” that they had any involvement with their daughter’s disappearance, and reiterated their willingness to cooperate.

“We continue to ask, answer all the questions the best we can and do everything they tell us to do and so I mean, we’ve done everything we can do,” Bradley said.

That conflicted with what Kansas City, Mo., police Capt. Steve Young said earlier.

“The mother and father no longer want to talk to detectives,” Young said. “From an investigative standpoint, we enjoyed their cooperation. So far, [it] has been very beneficial to the case. But yeah, you can imagine it doesn’t help the case” [that the cooperation has ended].

“Like I’ve said before, the cooperation of the parents is — they live in the house. They intimately have information of what’s been going on. They know the child. They were maybe one of our best bets to help find this child,” Young said. “This doesn’t help the investigation.”

Young confirms what the police have said since their initial questioning of the parents earlier this week, that they are not suspects in their child’s disappearance.

“The investigation is directed and led by hard information,” Young added. “Again, we don’t have any suspects. If we had enough to charge anybody with, we probably would be issuing charges.”

The dispute over whether Bradley and Irwin were cooperating came after ABC News learned the couple was trying to make lists of possible suspects for police by thinking about all of the people they cross paths with on a daily basis — every grocer, utility worker who may have been in the house, former friend, classmate, neighbor or acquaintances who may have wanted a child.

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