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Approached at the home Thursday, Bill James declined to speak with an Associated Press reporter. Cassell said initial reports had James last seen walking away from the house in late April. He said along with the dogs, police visited the house several times and searched the desert with a helicopter equipped with infrared detection. Friends and family searched the nearby desert several times on foot, horseback and with all-terrain vehicles. They created a Facebook page to help coordinate efforts, while the family offered a $10,000 reward in hopes of finding a woman described as a peace activist who to loved hiking, camping and the arts. Nine digital billboards publicized her search amid the bright lights of Las Vegas to draw attention the search, and Connolly said they hired someone to hold a banner in a spot near the home where a woman reported possibly seeing James. "This was certainly something that was not glossed over," Cassell said. "We did everything that we could." But Connolly said she and friends think police may have botched the search. "I'm trying to figure out how a body couldn't smell so bad
-- that's what everyone's saying," she said. "It's the million-dollar question right now." The case is not completely surprising given the fact that 2 to 5 percent of Americans are chronic hoarders, said Dr. David Tolin, a hoarding expert from Hartford Hospital who co-wrote "Buried in Treasures" to help people who compulsively collect things. "Every year, there's at least a few deaths that can be attributed to hoarding," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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