The Royal Canada Gendarmerie (RCMP) deployed four drones on the night of Monday to Tuesday in the County of Pictou, in the north of Nova Scotia, in the hope of finding the young Lily and Jack Sullivan, who had been missing for five days.
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Telepilotic aircraft systems (SATP) used by federal police are particularly useful during the night, since they use thermal cameras to detect temperature fluctuations.
These tools are added to the efforts already deployed in the field in order to trace the two children aged 6 and 4 respectively.
In the last three days, RCMP agents and volunteers raked the kilometers around the perimeter where the two children have vanished. Masters, rescuers specializing in plane rescues and natural resources experts are also on site.
-“Research teams act strategically. They use a variety of tools and resources while they are trying to find children in a rural and very wooded sector, “Inspector Mike Inspector, acting district police officer, said on Saturday.
An alert for disappeared vulnerable people was launched for the counties of Antigonish, Colchester and Pictou.
Lily and Jack Sullivan were seen for the last time on May 2 around 10 a.m. at Lansdowne Station, a rural community in Nova Scotia. The RCMP believes that they would have lost their residence.
Little Lily, 6, has brown hair with a frank above the eyes. She could wear a sweater, pants and pink boots.
Jack, 4, has blond and short hair. He wore blue boots with patterns of dinosaurs on it. No other information exists on the clothes he wore the day of his disappearance, said the RCMP.