February 23, 2012
While GPS tracking technology is used to protect cars and cellphones, the use of GPS tracking to keep children safe is largely controversial. Some parents are conflicted when it comes to watching a child’s every move. Other parents feel that GPS tracking is a necessity. While rare (and not always preventable), child tragedies do strike.
The story below is one such tragedy that a Quebec family recently suffered.
As reported by the Canadian Broadcasting Company, Laval, QC, officers with police dogs and helicopters searched desperately to find three-year-old Adam Benhamama, after he was reported missing on Sunday, April 3, 2011. The search was made particularly difficult because the child in question is autistic, mute and deaf, meaning that he could not call out for help or hear the search and rescue team trying to find him. The team spent all day, Monday, searching a nearby forest that Adam may have wandered into.
The ground search has been called off after finding zero signs or leads as to where Adam Benhamama could be. Laval Const. Nathalie Lorrain reported that “there is no sign at all in the woods that he may have gone in there.” The search will continue at the nearby Mille-Illes River, but Lorrain adds, “As time goes by, we’re not losing hope, but we think, more and more, that something bad has happened, and he fell into the river.”
The search continues and any information about the location of this child should be reported immediately. Adam Benhamama is two feet tall, weighs 25 pounds, and was last seen wearing a black jacket, jeans, and a black and purple beanie hat.
Update: as of April 11, 2011, the Laval Police Department has called off the search for Adam Benhamama. Police believe that the child fell into the river, though divers have not recovered any clues.