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Wed Jan 29 10:29:00 CET 2014


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 NEW YORK  Times Square was awash in hopeful sentiments as it 
prepared to welcome hordes of New Year's Eve revelers looking to cast 
off a rough year and cheer their way to something better in 
2012.For all of the holiday's bittersweet potential, New York City always treats 
it like a big party -- albeit one that, for a decade 
now, has taken place under the watchful eye of a massive security 
force.Pessimism has no place on Broadway. Not this week, anyway. The masses 
of tourists who began streaming through the square Friday for a glimpse 
of the crystal-paneled ball that drops at midnight Saturday were there to 
kiss, pose for silly snapshots and gawk at the stages being prepared 
for performers like Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber. Glum wasn't on the 
agenda, even for those whose 2011 ended on a sour note."2012 is 
going to be a better year. It has to be," said Fred 
Franke, 53, who was visiting the city with his family even after 
losing his job in military logistics this
  on television and the Internet.
heir investigation into two parts, one team looking at people with access 
to her, such as relatives and family friends, and another group looking 
at the potential for an abduction by an outsider or stranger, Van 
Zandt said. Under both scenarios, he said, the odds are that the 
person who took Ayla knew her or her family.Strangers' abductions of children 
do occur, but they're rare, accounting for only 105 to 115 children 
out of 750,000 to 900,000 missing-persons cases each year in the United 
States, Van Zandt said.Van Zandt, who has worked similar cases, said Ayla's 
disappearance, which once had more than 80 searchers and law enforcement officers 
involved, has been difficult for law enforcers as well as for distraught 
family members."As an FBI agent working these cases, you never turn off 
the emotional porch light," he said. "You always leave on the light 
with the hope that the child will come home again."
 
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