The high-resolution cameras were donated to Skyline School, and they are a first in the district. Some hope the cameras will someday be on every Portland campus.
Next Saturday marks three months since Kyron Horman disappeared, with dozens still visiting the Wall of Hope at the edge of Skyline School almost daily. On Sunday morning, however, that will all change.
While the massive search for Kyron continues, a Portland woman is feeling the same type of pain ... now wondering where her two-year-old nephew could be.
It's been a month-and-a-half since the disappearance of second-grade student Kyron Horman, but people aren't giving up hope that he's found as several people traveled Sunday to the school where he was last seen.
Police said Ian Torres-Petersen, 10, may have been ill with fever and possibly had a history of sleepwalking. He was reported missing at about 2 a.m. Monday and was found at about 7:30 a.m.
The flow of new information from investigators has slowed to a trickle in the search for Kyron Horman but at the same time they are struggling to keep him on the public’s mind.
Portland Schools Superintendent Carol Smith spoke publicly for the first time since Kyron Horman's Friday disappearance at a press conference Sunday, saying "we're hoping for his safe return." The tipline number is (503)-916-3931.
The FBI is bringing in members of its Child Abduction Rapid Deployment team as searchers move into the third day without a sign of a 7-year-old boy last seen at a Skyline Elementary science fair.