ORANGE PARK, Fla. -- Authorities on Friday continued to search a home not far from where Somer Thompson disappeared, looking for clues to who killed the girl.
During a news conference on Thursday, police said a body found under trash in a landfill is that of the 7-year-old north Florida girl who vanished on her walk home from school.
In addition to the house, which is just one block from Somer’s school, authorities also were searching a trash bin near the house. Investigators in white jumpsuits had removed a few plastic bags and a piece of carpet foam, Local 6 News reported.
The trash bin is located where Somer was last seen on Monday just before she ran from two other children and vanished.
It was not clear what led investigators to the vacant home, but the house does have a history. Local 6 News reported that there was a fire there one year ago and it has been under construction for several months.
Detectives also searched a public rest room in a playground across the street from the house. They went into the men’s room for several minutes and came out carrying a bag, Local 6 News reported.
Somer’s mother said she just hopes that the search will bring police closer to her killer.
“Please keep praying that we find this person and he gets what he deserves,” Diena Thompson said. “Justice for Somer. Justice for Somer.”
During Thursday's news conference, a Clay County Sheriff's Department official said the body was positively identified as Somer through dental records.
The sheriff's department said all but 5 sexual offenders in a five-mile radius of the girl's home have been interviewed and cleared. Investigators are still working on numerous leads.
Clay County Sheriff Rick Beseler said the initial tentative identification was based on clothing and a birthmark that matched the girl's. An autopsy was performed Thursday by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation in Savannah after the body was found near the Florida state line.
The Sheriff's Department said it does know preliminary results on the autopsy, but it cannot disclose details.
During a news conference Thursday evening, Diena Thompson thanked people for the outpouring of support she has received.
"I said yesterday on the news that I didn’t care if you ever got into trouble. I want you to know that I will not sleep until this person is found," Thompson said. "I hope they get you and I hope they make you pay for a long time."
"You don’t do this to a little baby. You put my little baby in the trash like she's nothing. That's not OK," Thompson said.
Detectives spotted the legs first and found the body partially covered by garbage Wednesday in a Georgia landfill, after investigators followed garbage trucks leaving the neighborhood where the child disappeared Monday.
Somer's father and other family members were "torn up" after hearing the news, aunt Laura Holt said. She hopes authorities will find her niece's killer.
"I don't think they deserve to live," Holt said. "I don't think there's anything worse that a person can do -- to kill a child and dump her in the dump like a piece of trash
Beseler wouldn't talk about what evidence police have recovered, or whether investigators believe the crime was committed by one or more people. He said police have questioned more than 70 registered sex offenders in the area, and that process was continuing. Florida Department of Law Enforcement records show 161 offenders live in a 5-mile radius of Somer's home.
"I fear for our community until we bring this person in. This is a heinous crime that's been committed," Beseler said. "And we're going to work as hard as we can to make this community safe."
The sheriff said he told the girl's mother to prepare for the worst, and called her after receiving the news Wednesday night.
"Needless to say, she was absolutely devastated," he said. "It was the hardest phone call I've ever had to make in my life, and I hope I never have to make another one like that."
Beseler credited one of his detectives with suggesting on Tuesday that the landfill be checked. Trucks were scheduled to pick up garbage in Orange Park on Tuesday morning. He said detectives were told to go through the debris looking for evidence as the trucks brought it in.
"Had we not done this tactic, I believe that body would have been buried beneath hundreds of tons of debris, probably would have gone undiscovered forever," he told reporters. Even if the body had been found later, key evidence could have been destroyed or degraded, the sheriff said.
An FBI forensic unit is helping process evidence from the landfill in Folkston, Ga., about 48 miles from where the girl disappeared.
Two deputies stood guard at mother Diena Thompson's home early Thursday morning. It appeared to be full of supporters. An oak tree across the street was decorated with flowers, candles and pictures of Somer.
"This has been so unreal for the neighborhood," said Sharon Galloway, who lives across the street from the Thompsons. "I just hope they get that son of a gun."
At a nearby shrine formed by flowers and dozens of teddy bears, Catherine Sullivan held her teary-eyed 5-year-old daughter, Nya Frederick. They drove to the Thompsons' neighborhood from Jacksonville because Sullivan wanted to show her child the danger of being too friendly with strangers.
"She seemed to understand when I explained to her, her mommy wouldn't see her anymore," she said.
Somer vanished on her mile-long walk home from school in Orange Park. She was squabbling with another child, and her sister told her to stop. The girl got upset, walked ahead of the group and wasn't seen again.
Authorities launched a countywide search involving helicopters, dogs and volunteers walking arm-to-arm through wooded areas.
Orange Park is a suburb of Jacksonville just south of Jacksonville Naval Air Station. The area where the girl disappeared is a heavily populated residential area with homes, apartment complexes and condominiums.
The girl's father, Sam Thompson, lives in Graham, N.C.
The family is expected to make funeral arrangements on Friday.
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