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Local Rescuers Join Search for Missing L.A. Attorney

Larry Conn, 53, was supposed to return home last week but bad weather left him stranded. The search continued Monday in the eastern Sierra Mountains.

Local search and rescue teams have joined the search efforts for missing Los Angeles attorney Larry Conn in Kings National Park. 

Sierra Madre Search and Rescue were called Sunday night to join the search for missing hiker from Pacific Palisades in the wilderness of the eastern Sierra Mountains, Sheriff's Reserve Chief Mike Leum told Patch. Montrose team members could also be called in the search. 

Larry Conn, 53, began his hike on Oct. 19 at the Taboose Creek Trailhead in the southern portion of the Sierra Nevada in the Inyo National Forest, according to the National Parks Service.

No clues were connected to Conn on Sunday, when a total of 40 staff from the
Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, in cooperation with Yosemite National Park, Friends of Yosemite Search and Rescue and Sierra Madre Search and Rescue continued the search. 

Search efforts included nine ground search teams, three dogs and two contract helicopters. Search efforts were focused on specific high-probability areas around Pinchot Pass, Taboose Pass and Split Mountain, including likely travel corridors and camp locations.

Conditions continued to be challenging with up to 1 to 1.5 feet of snow, ice, high elevations of 8,000 to 13,000 feet and cold temperatures in the mid-40s in the daytime to the low-20s at night (degrees Fahrenheit).

"I'm just praying he's mobile, hoping he's working on his exit route. Just come home, Larry. Please," Conn's partner, Claus Svendsen, told CBS2.

Svendsen said Conn has been missing for nine days and had food and provisions only for five.

If you have seen or contacted Conn or have more information, call Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks' Dispatch at (559) 565-3195 or the Inyo County Sheriff’s Department at (760) 878-0383.

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rubberband May 20, 2013 at 07:21 am
Figure cost of having carnival in town. (Were we at the same carnival? Been here all my life...toRead More test our bravery every year my father and I would ride on the Zipper. We deserve medals. Also, keep your girls away from the carny workers..shiver!) Figure cost of having police force block off and guard streets and carnival perimeter. Just to have a small parade is expensive with regards to cost. Figure cost of vendor permits, paperwork, city hall staff, and of course the city employees who must set everything up. Go peek at our budget, what happens to it, and people with "good intentions and/or loud angry opinions" who then don't show to do what they said they'd do. I believe that for some time morale has been low, and trust is like thin ice underfoot. We need some humor, reliability, and energy in our city gov't, and with some action and incentive for Monrovians to show up, we will rise again. Enough fighting and snipping in council meetings, more forgiveness and FUN go get it done attitudes. People want to help and participate, let's make it possible for them to do so. Dunk tank needs dunkees for next year. Anyone you'd like to dunk?
Ellen Zunino May 19, 2013 at 01:37 pm
I kind of lost interest when, along with the Lion's barbecue, the carnival disappeared but thereRead More were always people I knew in the parade so I kept the date. Now that the parade is gone, it's just another festival day in town. Times change and this kind of under-stated event is what people want. The old Monrovia Days used to be a day we could all get together and have fun. Now, people are too busy with their own lives and "community" doesn't mean what it once did.
rubberband May 19, 2013 at 01:09 pm
Interesting. There was one person who decided that letting Monrovia Day slide with nothing doneRead More wasn't gonna play. BY HERSELF and her family and friends planned all of it and set everything up. That person was Keely Milliken. It was astounding how much got done, and without financial support or the usual cast of players to do anything. There were many pitfalls, permits that needed approval and what not...Perhaps if you voiced your displeasure to the City Council and volunteered your personal money and weeks of planning and organizing you'd feel a lot better about it. I can say with absolute conviction that Keely should hold her head high, and I was glad to be a part of it. With almost no money, the people that volunteered their time and efforts are not ashamed, but rather glad that at last minute a albeit mellower version, something nice was created. Sometimes being able to apologize is the biggest most wonderful quality a human can have. I am wrong, often, but not on this one. Great job Keely and family/friends. Thank you for all the hard work.
rubberband May 20, 2013 at 07:38 am
Who was that face painter? She was really good with the kids, even the wiggly ones. She also wasRead More giving away little handmaid mermaids. Some of the stuff at the celebration was cool. I think next year the city council should be the dunkees for the dunk booth.
Mike Day May 17, 2013 at 09:56 pm
Thanks for the compliments. mor video to follow
Buzlightyear aka marty May 17, 2013 at 07:37 pm
Yeah, it's cute...... For now......
Ellen Zunino May 17, 2013 at 01:02 pm
Cool presentation. Many of us have had our own encounters and all of us have seen numerous photosRead More and videos so your creative approach freshened it up for us.
Dan Crandell May 16, 2013 at 09:28 pm
A California city will never prevail in a lawsuit against the STATE. All CA. cities must merge toRead More sue in mass under Federal RICO laws while we still have Federal laws. Filing alone at the State level is useless. Wake up people.