Husband Blasts Search Policy after Wife Waits in WA Wreck
For a week, 33-year-old Tanya Rider - her left leg crushed in the Sept. 20 wreck - hung upside down inside her mangled Honda SUV.

Hours after his wife was found clinging to life in a wrecked car, Tom Rider struggled to restrain his rage at the King County Sheriff's Office, which on Friday defended its decision to wait five days to ask for the cell phone records that led to her rescue.
For a week, 33-year-old Tanya Rider - her left leg crushed in the Sept. 20 wreck - hung upside down inside her mangled Honda SUV. Thousands of drivers passed by on state Route 169 only feet away, but did not see the car, which fell 12 feet down a brushy hillside.
Tom Rider, who lives with his wife in Maple Valley, said Friday that a court order for records from his wife's cell phone provider to determine where she last used her phone could have pointed rescuers to her last Saturday - but a Sheriff's Office procedure prevented investigators from requesting the records.
"The policy that tied those officers' hands nearly cost my wife her life," said Rider, his voice shaky with anger at a news conference Friday morning. "That's something that should never happen."
But Sheriff's Office spokesman Bob Conner said that while he understands why emotions are running high, investigators needed evidence that Rider, who was found Thursday afternoon, was in danger before seeking a court order for the records.
"There was nothing in the first 24 hours that was out of the ordinary or strange," Conner said.
It is standard operating procedure to wait a day in cases involving adults unless circumstances dictate greater urgency, he said, adding that the office responds immediately when the missing person is younger than 12.
While he could not provide statistics, Conner said in his 20 years as a sheriff's deputy he has responded to "a great many missing persons cases," and often, people reappear within 24 hours after "blowing off steam following an argument" or "taking a break."
The biggest trend or growth in missing persons reports is in the elderly, particularly those with dementia and Alzheimer's, law enforcement officials say.
Tanya Rider's ordeal apparently began on her drive home Sept. 20 after working a night shift at a Bellevue Fred Meyer. Her husband said his two jobs as a construction superintendent and night pizza delivery driver meant he and Tanya didn't see each other much during the week, so he didn't suspect anything was wrong until early Sept. 22, when his wife wasn't home from work.
He phoned the police immediately, but said a day passed before he reached anyone willing to help him. Rider said King County authorities should have sought an order for her cell phone records the day he reported his wife missing.
"What did it take them once they made it a criminal investigation, an hour? Two?" he said.
It wasn't until Thursday - nearly a week after she was reported missing - that investigators obtained the order for Tanya Rider's cellular provider to determine her phone's position, Tom Rider said.
Wireless companies receive thousands of such requests each year, and routinely grant them, Verizon Wireless spokeswoman Gloria Taylor said Friday. Technicians determine which cellular tower the missing person's phone last used, then pass the location on to authorities.
Investigators also said Tom Rider told them that only his wife had access to several bank accounts, a claim Rider disputes, but when investigators saw activity on those accounts, they assumed Tanya Rider was using the cards.
State Patrol spokesman Jeff Merrill said the suspected financial transactions made investigators think Tanya Rider wasn't in any danger.
"You can't just track somebody down using their cell phone just because you want to know where they're at," said Merrill, whose agency was not part of the search, but investigated the crash. "The law is designed to protect the rights of those who may not want to be found."
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