Police say searchers don’t expect to find woman in Pennsylvania sinkhole
alive
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[December 05, 2024]
By GENE PUSKAR and MARK SCOLFORO
UNITY TOWNSHIP, Pa. (AP) — The search for a woman who is believed to
have fallen into a sinkhole in western Pennsylvania has become a
recovery effort after two treacherous days of digging through mud and
rock produced no signs of life, authorities said Wednesday.
The crew working to find 64-year-old Elizabeth Pollard packed up
Wednesday evening and planned to return Thursday morning.
Pennsylvania State Police spokesperson Trooper Steve Limani said during
a news conference that authorities no longer believe they will find
Pollard alive, but that work to find her remains continues.
“We’ve had no signs of any form of life or anything” to make rescuers
think they should “continue to try and push and rush and push the
envelope, to be aggressive with the potential of risking harm to other
people,” Limani said. He noted that oxygen levels below ground were
insufficient.
Emergency crews and others have been trying to locate Pollard for two
days. Her relatives reported her missing early Tuesday, and her vehicle
with her unharmed 5-year-old granddaughter inside was found about two
hours later, near what is thought to be a freshly opened sinkhole above
a long closed, crumbling mine.
“We feel like we failed,” Limani said of the decision to change the
status of the effort from a rescue to a recovery. “It’s tough.”
Limani praised the crews who went into the abandoned mine to help remove
material in the search for Pollard in the village of Marguerite, about
40 miles (65 kilometers) east of Pittsburgh.
“They would come out of there head to toe covered in mud, exhausted. And
while they were getting pulled up, the next group’s getting dropped in.
And there was one after the next after the next,” Limani said.
Authorities had said earlier that the roof of the mine had collapsed in
several places and was not stable.
“We did get, you know, where we wanted, where we thought that she was
at. We’ve been to that spot," Pleasant Unity Fire Chief John Bacha, the
incident's operations officer, said earlier Wednesday. “What happened at
that point, I don’t know, maybe the slurry of mud pushed her one
direction. There were several different seams of that mine, shafts that
all came together where this happened at.”
Searchers were using electronic devices and cameras as surface digging
continued with the use of heavy equipment, Bacha said. In the coming
days, they plan to greatly widen the surface hole, with winter weather
forecast in the region.
Geological engineer Paul Santi said the chances of Pollard surviving if
she slipped into the sinkhole were “pretty small.”
“There’s a lot of problems,” said Santi, a professor at the Colorado
School of Mines. “There’s rock and soil and things that could have
buried her. There is water that could have filled it. You have to go
through with the rescue. But I would be surprised if she came through
this OK ... it would require that she wasn’t killed by the fall, she
wasn’t killed by the rock, that there was an air pocket and she’s able
to survive in it.”
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Rescue workers continue to search, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2024, for
Elizabeth Pollard, who is believed to have disappeared in a sinkhole
while looking for her cat, in Marguerite, Pa. (AP Photo/Gene J.
Puskar)
Sinkholes occur in the area because of subsidence from coal mining
activity. Rescuers had been using water to break down and remove
clay and dirt from the mine, which has been closed since the 1950s.
Crews had lowered a pole camera with a sensitive listening device
into the hole, but it detected nothing. Another camera lowered into
the hole showed what could be a shoe about 30 feet (9 meters) below
the surface, Limani said Tuesday. Searchers also deployed drones and
thermal imaging equipment to no avail.
Pollard's family called police at about 1 a.m. Tuesday to say she
had not been seen since going out at about 5 p.m. Monday to search
for Pepper, her cat. The temperature dropped well below freezing
that night.
Limani said the searchers met with her family before announcing the
shift from rescue to recovery. “I think they get it,” Limani said.
Pollard's son, Axel Hayes, described her as a happy woman who liked
going out to have fun. She and her husband adopted Hayes and his
twin brother when they were infants. She used to work at Walmart but
recently was not employed.
Hayes called Pollard “a great person overall, a great mother” who
“never really did anybody wrong.”
He said at one point Pollard had about 10 cats.
“Every cat that she’s ever come in contact with, she has a close
bond with them,” Hayes said.
Police said they found Pollard's car parked behind Monday's Union
Restaurant in Marguerite, about 20 feet (6 meters) from the
sinkhole. Hunters and restaurant workers in the area said they had
not noticed the manhole-size opening in the hours before Pollard
disappeared, leading rescuers to speculate that the sinkhole was
new.
Pollard lived in a small neighborhood across the street from where
her car and granddaughter were found by state police. It's unclear
what happened to the cat.
___
Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Patrick
Aftoora-Orsagos in Unity Township, Kathy McCormack in New Hampshire
and Sarah Brumfield in Maryland contributed to this report.
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