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Site searched for clues to missing woman

Kathleen Foody | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 11 months AGO
by Kathleen Foody
| December 15, 2018 12:00 AM

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Community members hold a candlelight vigil for Kelsey Berreth under the gazebo of Memorial Park in Woodland Park, Colo., on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018. Berreth was last seen on Thanksgiving Day, captured on surveillance video entering a grocery store with what appears to be her 1-year-old daughter in a baby carrier. Weeks later, investigators don’t know what happened to the 29-year-old Colorado mother. (Kelsey Brunner/The Gazette via AP)

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FILE - In this undated file photo, Woodland Park Police Chief Miles De Young answers questions about the disappearance of resident Kelsey Berreth, 29, while her mother, Cheryl Berreth, stands in the background during a news conference at City Hall in Woodland Park, Colo. Kelsey Berreth’s disappearance has mystified her family and the Colorado police leading a multi-state search for the missing mother of a one-year-old daughter. Berreth was last spotted on Thanksgiving, Nov. 22, 2018, when a surveillance camera recorded the 29-year-old woman entering a grocery store near her Colorado home. (Christian Murdock/The Gazette via AP, File)

DENVER (AP) — Colorado police investigating the disappearance of a woman last seen on Thanksgiving Day searched her fiancé’s property on Friday morning.

Police did not immediately disclose any information about the purpose of the search at the property in the tiny community of Florissant, south of Denver. Police announced that they would hold a news conference Friday afternoon to provide updated information about the disappearance of 29-year-old Kelsey Berreth, who has family ties to Bonner County.

Her disappearance has mystified her family and investigators. She was last seen on Thanksgiving Day entering a grocery store with what appears to be her 1-year-old daughter in a baby carrier, in images captured on surveillance video.

Patrick Frazee, her fiance, told police the couple met sometime that afternoon so he could pick up the child from her. They did not live together.

Police said the only sign of Berreth after that were text messages from her cellphone. Location data later suggested that by Nov. 25 the phone was in Idaho, 800 miles (1,290 kilometers) from Berreth’s home in the Colorado city of Woodland Park, about a 20-minute drive from Florissant.

Frazee has not been named as a suspect in the disappearance of Berreth, a pilot who works as a flight instructor for an aviation company. Public records show that property associated with Frazee’s name in Florissant covers 35 acres (14 hectares).

Teller County Sheriff spokesman Commander Greg Couch said Frazee was on the property when investigators arrived Friday morning to conduct the search. Couch said Frazee was not arrested.

Frazee’s attorney, Jeremy Loew, said in a statement that his client is continuing to cooperate with the investigation. Loew said Frazee was not asked to participate in the property search.

“We encourage law enforcement to take whatever steps it deems necessary to find Kelsey Berreth and to be able to exclude Patrick Frazee as a possible suspect in this missing person investigation,” Loew said.

Loew had previously said that Frazee provided police with DNA samples and gave investigators access to his cell phone. The couple’s daughter has remained with her father.

Frazee told police Berreth last texted him on Nov. 25, the Sunday after Thanksgiving.

Her employer received a text message from her cellphone that day saying she planned to take the following week off.

A police investigation was opened Dec. 2 after Berreth’s mother asked for a welfare check of her daughter.

Police said they found both of Berreth’s cars outside her Woodland Park home.

Police also said Doss Aviation, Berreth’s employer, has accounted for all their planes and police have no reason to believe she used someone else’s plane for a flight.

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