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Endhi Raa Ayya Ee Missing Laa Golaa .. Malli Avaro Peddayanaa


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Authorities ended the Delta search Tuesday for the 55-year-old Indian native who went missing after his daughter’s wedding at Grand Island Mansion in Walnut Grove.

The announcement by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department came roughly 72 hours after Prasad Moparti was reported missing.

Sheriff’s spokesman Tony Turnbull said there was no “suspicious circumstances or foul play leading to his disappearance.”

In a prepared statement, Turnbull said Moparti was considered a voluntary missing person but considering his lack of familiarity with the area and history of depression, the department used “all resources available in attempts to locate him.”

“Family members ... indicated Moparti suffered from depression, and that he showed indicators of his depression leading up to the wedding,” the Sheriff’s Department stated in news release.

That contradicts the picture painted earlier Tuesday by daughter Durga Moparti, 29. She could not be reached after the search was suspended.

“Our dad was really very happy. He was dancing. He was really joyful,” she told reporters hours before the search was called off.

She said her father, an avid walker who manages apartments in the city of Hyderabad in southern India, danced at the party Friday and enjoyed the ceremony Saturday. She said as people were packing to leave the mansion on Saturday afternoon, Prasad Moparti told a family member that he was going for a short walk.

When he didn’t come back, she said the family searched for 10 miles before calling the police. Moparti is about 5 feet, 10 inches tall and 180 pounds and dressed in traditional Indian attire when last seen. The family posted fliers from Isleton to Rio Vista.

On Saturday and Sunday, searchers from the Sheriff’s Department, California Highway Patrol and Coast Guard units meticulously combed the shores as the bride’s family circulated the fliers. On Monday, a CHP plane searched by air while a sheriff’s dog attempted to pick up a scent.

“We’ve done just about everything imaginable,” Deputy Dave Kirby said before the search was called off.

Earlier Tuesday, Durga Moparti said that she could not comprehend a scenario in which her father would vanish. He does not have his passport or money, she said. Moparti had been in the United States for about a month.

“The only indication that we had was that he had been idle” since arriving in the U.S., she said. “He was a workaholic back in India and was managing several projects. He was bored.”

 

 

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WALNUT GROVE, Calif. (KCRA) -
A second day of searching revealed no clues in the search for a man who disappeared while attending his daughter's wedding reception.

A Sacramento's Sheriff's Department boat patrolled the waters of Steamboat Slough near Walnut Grove on Monday.

A cadaver dog on board sniffed the water's surface.

However, by late afternoon, crews said they were calling off the water search at least for the evening.

According to deputies, 55-year-old Prasad Moparti had traveled from India to attend his daughter's wedding.

The reception took place at the Grand Island Mansion on Saturday afternoon.

Deputies said Moparti walked away by himself at about 4 p.m. and never returned.

Friends and family members stood on the banks of Steamboat Slough and watched the search. They said the bride was from Los Angeles, the groom from San Francisco and the wedding guests from all across the country.

Some relatives were also looking in nearby fields and orchards.

The banks of the levees in the Delta are often steep and slippery. Ron Retlzlaff, who regularly fishes in this area, said he wasn't surprised to hear someone might have fallen into the water.

"No, not all," he said. "You go to be careful. Yeah, a rock slips out. You hit your head."

Authorities have not yet said if they plan to resume the search on Monday.

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Authorities ended the Delta search Tuesday for the 55-year-old Indian native who went missing after his daughter’s wedding at Grand Island Mansion in Walnut Grove.

The announcement by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department came roughly 72 hours after Prasad Moparti was reported missing.

Sheriff’s spokesman Tony Turnbull said there was no “suspicious circumstances or foul play leading to his disappearance.”

In a prepared statement, Turnbull said Moparti was considered a voluntary missing person but considering his lack of familiarity with the area and history of depression, the department used “all resources available in attempts to locate him.”

“Family members ... indicated Moparti suffered from depression, and that he showed indicators of his depression leading up to the wedding,” the Sheriff’s Department stated in news release.

That contradicts the picture painted earlier Tuesday by daughter Durga Moparti, 29. She could not be reached after the search was suspended.

“Our dad was really very happy. He was dancing. He was really joyful,” she told reporters hours before the search was called off.

She said her father, an avid walker who manages apartments in the city of Hyderabad in southern India, danced at the party Friday and enjoyed the ceremony Saturday. She said as people were packing to leave the mansion on Saturday afternoon, Prasad Moparti told a family member that he was going for a short walk.

When he didn’t come back, she said the family searched for 10 miles before calling the police. Moparti is about 5 feet, 10 inches tall and 180 pounds and dressed in traditional Indian attire when last seen. The family posted fliers from Isleton to Rio Vista.

On Saturday and Sunday, searchers from the Sheriff’s Department, California Highway Patrol and Coast Guard units meticulously combed the shores as the bride’s family circulated the fliers. On Monday, a CHP plane searched by air while a sheriff’s dog attempted to pick up a scent.

“We’ve done just about everything imaginable,” Deputy Dave Kirby said before the search was called off.

Earlier Tuesday, Durga Moparti said that she could not comprehend a scenario in which her father would vanish. He does not have his passport or money, she said. Moparti had been in the United States for about a month.

“The only indication that we had was that he had been idle” since arriving in the U.S., she said. “He was a workaholic back in India and was managing several projects. He was bored.”

 

thanks doling

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