AUBURN — A 5-year-old boy remained missing and his 9-year-old brother was in critical condition at Maine Medical Center on Wednesday night, a day after they tumbled into the frigid, fast-moving Androscoggin River.

Rescuers suspended the daylong search for the younger boy at 5 p.m. Wednesday, roughly 22 hours after the boys fell into the river near Bonney Park in Auburn. The 9-year-old was pulled from the river by rescuers just before 8 p.m. Tuesday.

When the search resumes Thursday morning, it will involve dive teams and aircraft, if the weather allows, said Deputy Police Chief Jason Moen.

Rescue crews on both sides of the river had searched the 2-mile stretch between Bonney Park and Durham, he said. Air searches began early Wednesday, but were suspended because of deteriorating weather later in the morning.

The boys’ family was with the 9-year-old at the Portland hospital on Wednesday, Moen said. The family lives in a home on Main Street in Auburn. Officials declined to release their names while the search continues.

Bonney Park is between Main Street and the river.

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FAMILY IS NEW TO THE AREA

The two brothers were playing near the river Tuesday when the 5-year-old fell into the water shortly after 7 p.m. His brother tried to rescue him, but also fell in, police said. Their 8-year-old sister and father also went into the water, but could not reach the two brothers.

The father and daughter got back on shore and were not injured, Moen said.

The 9-year-old was pulled from the river by firefighters at about 7:40 p.m. Tuesday. He was brought to shore in a canoe, taken to Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston and then flown by helicopter to Maine Med.

The family is new to the area, police said. On Monday, they had registered the 9-year-old boy and his 8-year-old sister at Sherwood Heights Elementary School, said Auburn Superintendent Katy Grondin. The children were scheduled to begin classes Wednesday, she said.

A guidance counselor from Fairview Elementary School went to Sherwood Heights on Wednesday to meet with students and staff, Grondin said.

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“We are prepared for the family if they need our support when they come back to school,” Grondin said.

DIFFICULT SEARCH CONDITIONS

Local businesses were filled with talk of the incident and the missing boy Wednesday morning as people had breakfast, stopped for gas and bought lottery tickets.

“It just amazes me how it happened here,” said a man who declined to give his name, but said he lives at the Roak Block on Main Street in Auburn, near Bonney Park.

A number of people said they were surprised that a 5-year-old was able to get down to the water.

“They should have already made a border so no one could get in the river,” said Charles Michaud of Auburn. “This has happened before, so obviously it’s a problem.”

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His fiancee agreed, saying she was dismayed that rescue workers stopped the search by 10 p.m. Tuesday.

“They should have kept going,” she said.

Moen said the search was suspended Tuesday night because it was too dark and the waters were too choppy to continue.

On Wednesday, Moen told people to stay back from the river while authorities continued the search, calling conditions “harsh.”

“River conditions are very dangerous right now,” Moen said. “This is a bad time of year to conduct any type of operation due to the high water and the current. We had one person that was doing a Facebook Live video as he was doing a search and fell in the river himself.”

Along with Auburn police, the search has included the Auburn Fire Department, the Maine Warden Service, the Maine Marine Patrol, the Lewiston police and fire departments and a LifeFlight medical helicopter.


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