Canada DARIUS MACDOUGALL: Missing from Crowsnest Pass, Alberta, Canada - 21 Sept 2025 - Age 5 (1 Viewer)

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‘Bring this little guy home’: Alberta RCMP continue search for missing 5-year-old​

Alberta RCMP members are continuing to search for a five-year-old boy who went missing in the Crowsnest Pass area over the weekend.

Darius Macdougall was reported missing on Sunday at 11:30 a.m.

He was last seen walking with his family about four kilometres south of Crowsnest Pass near Island Lake Campground – about 150 kilometres west of Lethbridge.

Officials say Macdougall was camping in the area with his family.

He went for a walk with six of his siblings a short distance from their campsite but became separated from the group.

“Darius was not among the ones that returned,” said Sgt. Mark Amatto, detachment commander of Crowsnest Pass RCMP, in a Monday news conference. “They went back to the site, searched for a good time before calling 911 and search and rescue was deployed immediately.”
 

Search for missing five-year-old boy continues in full force in Crowsnest Pass​

RCMP said Wednesday the search is continuing in full force for a five-year-old Lethbridge boy who has been missing since Sunday.
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Darius Macdougall was last seen Sunday morning, when he went for a walk with six family members, none of whom were adults, four kilometres south of Crowsnest Pass near Island Lake Campground. He was reported missing around 11:30 a.m. Sunday.

Since then, search and rescue teams have scoured the area looking for the boy, with about 100 people involved in the search, in one way or another, on Wednesday.

RCMP spokesperson Gina Slaney said Mounties had drones, a helicopter, forensic identification services, divers and investigators on scene Wednesday, and the RCMP plane was on the way.
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Adam Kennedy with Alberta Search and Rescue said Wednesday search teams expanded into new areas and again covered some previous search areas. The current search radius is three kilometres from the campsite and is gradually widening to 6.6 kilometres.

Overnight Tuesday, ground teams continued to look for Macdougall, with the support of one RCMP helicopter and two search and rescue dogs from the Canadian Search Dog Association.
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On Wednesday, search teams from Alberta and British Columbia worked alongside two RCMP dog teams, one helicopter and multiple drones.

“After consultation with two Canadian wilderness survivability physicians, the search effort and tempo reflects our continued hope and assumption that Darius will be found alive,” said Kennedy.
 
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‘Bring this little guy home’: Alberta RCMP continue search for missing 5-year-old​

Alberta RCMP members are continuing to search for a five-year-old boy who went missing in the Crowsnest Pass area over the weekend.

Darius Macdougall was reported missing on Sunday at 11:30 a.m.

He was last seen walking with his family about four kilometres south of Crowsnest Pass near Island Lake Campground – about 150 kilometres west of Lethbridge.

Officials say Macdougall was camping in the area with his family.

He went for a walk with six of his siblings a short distance from their campsite but became separated from the group.

“Darius was not among the ones that returned,” said Sgt. Mark Amatto, detachment commander of Crowsnest Pass RCMP, in a Monday news conference. “They went back to the site, searched for a good time before calling 911 and search and rescue was deployed immediately.”
Seems like another case where everybody thought everybody else was watching him.
 

Approximately 100 people now involved in search for missing Alberta boy​

It’s day four of the search for five-year-old Darius Macdougall who went missing while on a camping trip with his family near Crowsnest Pass, and still there is no sign of the missing Lethbridge, Alta., boy.

During their daily update on Wednesday, RCMP and search experts provided more details on both the search and how the little boy went missing.

Adam Kennedy, provincial training manager with Search and Rescue Alberta, said the boy was out walking with other family members on Sunday, within a kilometre of their campsite, at Island Lake Campground in soutwestern Alberta, located about 250 km south of Calgary.

“Darius was with six family members, but it’s my understanding they were all young. There were no adults in the group,” said RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney, noting she couldn’t provide their exact ages.

When the group returned to the family’s campsite, Darius was not with them.

“Our general investigation section is currently on scene and they are doing very detailed interviews with everybody. So hopefully we’ll have a little better of an understanding in the hours to come,” added Slaney.

However, the RCMP have insisted there is no indication that foul play was involved in the boy’s disappearance.

There are now approximately 100 people involved in the search, including multiple search and rescue agencies from both Alberta and British Columbia, conservation officers, fish and wildlife officers, Alberta sheriffs and members of Canada Task Force 2, with other agencies like the Salvation Army on the ground providing support.

Kennedy said the Canadian Armed Forces have also been contacted to determine if they have any assets that might benefit search efforts.


The area has been described as a combination of thick forests, steep alpine terrain and open areas with multiple creeks and river, including some beaver dams and bogs, forcing searchers to work almost shoulder to shoulder to cover the area effectively.


The search for the little boy has been made more challenging because he is autistic.

Slaney confirmed he is able to verbally communicate, but “there are concerns he might not interact well with people calling out his name. If he hears the research and rescue personnel calling his name, he might not answer.”
 

'Shoulder-to-shoulder search' for 6-year-old Alberta boy missing for nearly a week​

The search for a missing six-year-old Alberta boy is now in its seventh day, with more than 200 searchers looking for Darius Macdougall in a forested area in the Crowsnest Pass.

"I want to stress that we are not scaling back the search," Alberta RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney said during a Saturday media availability.

She said 60 officers with the RCMP Tactical Support Group have now joined the investigation, doing a "shoulder-to-shoulder search" to find Macdougall, or any sign of his whereabouts.

"These officers are trained to search for even the smallest piece of evidence," she said. "They're re-searching the area where Darius was last believed to be."

He thanked members of the public for expressing interest in joining the search, but insisted that efforts on the ground be left to trained professionals.
 
Readng here but don't really have much to say other than the usual, that I pray he is found safe. Been a long time already but if lost, he could have traveled a ways.

If he isn't found safe, the other children are going to likely carry a burden from that, one that is not deserved.
 

Survival chances less than 5 per cent as search for missing Lethbridge boy enters second week​

Officials say the chance of survival is now less than five per cent for a six-year-old boy missing in the Alberta wilderness since last weekend, as an exhaustive search effort enters its second week.

At a media briefing Sunday, RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney said search officials met with the boy’s family earlier in the day to discuss “survivability concerns.”

“At the point we are at with regards to the search, the survivability is less than five per cent,” Slaney said. “Unfortunately, that conversation was had with the family today, and they understand how we come to that number.”

Slaney said the determination was based on multiple factors, including the clothing he was wearing, his health status, weather conditions, terrain and statistical survival data.

Despite the grim update, Slaney stressed the search is ongoing and has not been scaled back.

“Just because we’re saying survivability is limited right now does not mean we’re stopping looking for Darius,” she said. “We will continue until we find him.”

Search methods are being adjusted in light of the reduced survival odds. Adam Kennedy with Alberta Search and Rescue said both ground and air search tactics are being modified, including a shift away from using infrared technology. The change, he said, is based on an assumption that infrared technologies “won’t be picking up any heat signatures on the ground.”

About 200 personnel were involved in the search Sunday, including about 100 SAR volunteers, along with surface and underwater search crews. Resources deployed have included an RCMP helicopter, drones and search dogs. Seven square kilometres have been searched multiple times, with some searches extending to a 10-kilometre radius.
 

Alberta RCMP call off search for missing 6-year-old boy after 11 days​

The search for a missing six-year-old boy in southern Alberta has been called off, RCMP said Wednesday.

Searchers, helicopters, dogs, drones and underwater teams have scoured 22 square kilometres of the woods since the boy disappeared, but nothing found in the search has been linked to him, RCMP said. Searchers have described the area as mountainous, with lots of elevation changes, streams and deadfall.

"The scene will be demobilized," said RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney. "That being said the investigation will carry on until Darius is found."

Slaney said the area that has been the focus of the multi-agency search for the past 11 days will be reopened to the public.

"At this point, if Darius is still in the search site, it is our belief that he is no longer alive," she said.

There is no evidence that the boy is outside of the search area, and there has been nothing to indicate foul play in his disappearance, she said.

Slaney said the investigation will continue as officers check tips and other leads.

"We never stop investigating," she said.

"Please trust that we are still here for the family of Darius."
 

Alberta RCMP call off search for missing 6-year-old boy after 11 days​

The search for a missing six-year-old boy in southern Alberta has been called off, RCMP said Wednesday.

Searchers, helicopters, dogs, drones and underwater teams have scoured 22 square kilometres of the woods since the boy disappeared, but nothing found in the search has been linked to him, RCMP said. Searchers have described the area as mountainous, with lots of elevation changes, streams and deadfall.

"The scene will be demobilized," said RCMP Cpl. Gina Slaney. "That being said the investigation will carry on until Darius is found."

Slaney said the area that has been the focus of the multi-agency search for the past 11 days will be reopened to the public.

"At this point, if Darius is still in the search site, it is our belief that he is no longer alive," she said.

There is no evidence that the boy is outside of the search area, and there has been nothing to indicate foul play in his disappearance, she said.

Slaney said the investigation will continue as officers check tips and other leads.

"We never stop investigating," she said.

"Please trust that we are still here for the family of Darius."
There is no evidence that the boy is outside of the search area


umm, doesn't that also mean there is no evidence he is IN the search area?
 
There is no evidence that the boy is outside of the search area


umm, doesn't that also mean there is no evidence he is IN the search area?
Yeah I think they have no evidence of him being anywhere at this point. Unfortunately searches like this are so hard. Especially when they’re so small and so likely to have hunkered down somewhere.

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Yeah I think they have no evidence of him being anywhere at this point. Unfortunately searches like this are so hard. Especially when they’re so small and so likely to have hunkered down somewhere.

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I don't recall it ever being mentioned on what he was wearing??? I would hate to think it was camouflage or some other earthy color. That would make it even harder and you very easily miss them when they are "right there".
 
The area they were camping in was actually Tent Mountain that is south of Crowsnest. I was looking at it on Google Earth ap and used the elevation tool and it's kind of no wonder why they haven't found him. There are so many trails that all crisscross and wild terrain.
 

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